Those are the magic words Nigel...Nigel Wright wrote:If money was no option I'd be happy to help do it
Chess on TV
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Reposted from the Development Thread....
Having watched the various late night poker TV shows, I wonder if late night chess might be of interest?:D
Does late night poker appeal to those who might like to take up poker but haven't yet? Maybe Stewart Rueben could comment authoritatively on this?
Provided it was tightly edited and presented (a Steve Davis / Andrew Martin double act) then chess could work provided that :
The games were Blitz or bullet with a commentary.
There was some focus on the individual players and that those chosen were socially acceptable to Joe Public.
There was interactive betting functionality on the blitz games
There was a beginners feature of around 5 minutes
There was a glamour element maybe with Kostenuik comparing the show.
Perhaps a feature on a recent exotically located tournament by Judith Chalmers (!)
In short, with enough variety and not too much technical chess (nothing on Q vs R endings for example) it could be made to work.
John
Having watched the various late night poker TV shows, I wonder if late night chess might be of interest?:D
Does late night poker appeal to those who might like to take up poker but haven't yet? Maybe Stewart Rueben could comment authoritatively on this?
Provided it was tightly edited and presented (a Steve Davis / Andrew Martin double act) then chess could work provided that :
The games were Blitz or bullet with a commentary.
There was some focus on the individual players and that those chosen were socially acceptable to Joe Public.
There was interactive betting functionality on the blitz games
There was a beginners feature of around 5 minutes
There was a glamour element maybe with Kostenuik comparing the show.
Perhaps a feature on a recent exotically located tournament by Judith Chalmers (!)
In short, with enough variety and not too much technical chess (nothing on Q vs R endings for example) it could be made to work.
John
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Of course poker on TV helped popularise the game, along with internet ply and the fact that poker is the most popular of all sports in the
US.
Chess in Britain used to be well-served on TV. First there was the David N ixon Series on ITV. Then the wonderful Master Game. Then the 1986 WC match in London sparked off about 100 programmes on chess. Then there was the 1993 match and also the Intel tournaments. Since then nothing at all.
Look up http://www.englishchess.org.uk/articles ... _mar03.htm for my somewhat out of date list of TV programmes I have in my archive and so shortly will Hastings Library.
We could get chess on such as Challenge TV. All we need is good programmes which will cost the broadcaster nothing. Say £20,000 for 30 minutes. You want a poker series on Channel 5. The sponsors have to pay about £50,000, in addition to production costs.
Chess sponsorship has become unfashionable. indeed football has sucked the blood out of sponsorship for lesser sports.
We score very heavily on web hits, but people who access information that way are already chessplayers.
Stewart Reuben
US.
Chess in Britain used to be well-served on TV. First there was the David N ixon Series on ITV. Then the wonderful Master Game. Then the 1986 WC match in London sparked off about 100 programmes on chess. Then there was the 1993 match and also the Intel tournaments. Since then nothing at all.
Look up http://www.englishchess.org.uk/articles ... _mar03.htm for my somewhat out of date list of TV programmes I have in my archive and so shortly will Hastings Library.
We could get chess on such as Challenge TV. All we need is good programmes which will cost the broadcaster nothing. Say £20,000 for 30 minutes. You want a poker series on Channel 5. The sponsors have to pay about £50,000, in addition to production costs.
Chess sponsorship has become unfashionable. indeed football has sucked the blood out of sponsorship for lesser sports.
We score very heavily on web hits, but people who access information that way are already chessplayers.
Stewart Reuben
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Also, due to the more hectic lifestyles people lead these days, they have no time to watch/study chess in great detail, as I think either Marshall or Max Euwe once said something about having to study chess constantly, and have nothing else going on in their lives to be able to play at the highest level (I can't quite quote it exactly, and I'm a little rusty on who said it, but at the time they were contemplating quitting chess and committing suicide).
If chess was made more glamorous, then we might get an increase in popularity, but until BCM starts having Keeley or Jordan on it's front cover (or something along those lines), I fear we are doomed to fail at whatever we try.
If chess was made more glamorous, then we might get an increase in popularity, but until BCM starts having Keeley or Jordan on it's front cover (or something along those lines), I fear we are doomed to fail at whatever we try.
To Drink or not to Drink, that is the question.
I Drink therefore I am.
I'm not as think as you drunk I am.
I Drink therefore I am.
I'm not as think as you drunk I am.
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Within a few minutes of posting the above comment, I was advised by a famous doyen of British chess that Nigel Wright probably did mean Keeley and not Kylie. I am grateful for the link he indicated (which provides near conclusive proof) and also for the insight into how he whiles away the long winter evenings...
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I believe that Greg Breed hits the nail on the head with his comments.
Chess is too difficult for none players to understand on the television. I have only seen one man present chess on the television with a spark of humour and provide the insight to allow a none player to understand which colour is winning and that’s Danny King.
Alan Ruffle
Chess is too difficult for none players to understand on the television. I have only seen one man present chess on the television with a spark of humour and provide the insight to allow a none player to understand which colour is winning and that’s Danny King.
Alan Ruffle
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I'd like to see Steve Davis (the snooker guy) present it, as he'd be the humourous/witty guy, along with a dull 'analytical genius' like Nigel Davies or someone similar. Their contrasting styles would make an interesting show!
To Drink or not to Drink, that is the question.
I Drink therefore I am.
I'm not as think as you drunk I am.
I Drink therefore I am.
I'm not as think as you drunk I am.
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Re: Chess on TV
The ECF has a Director of maketing, that has to be the starting point surely?
Blitz and rapidplay are the only formats that would work on TV.
With a good presenter like Danny King it could work, it could be like a chess variety show, with small segments on players, history, tournaments, openings and endgames etc costs could be partially covered through advertising.
Blitz and rapidplay are the only formats that would work on TV.
With a good presenter like Danny King it could work, it could be like a chess variety show, with small segments on players, history, tournaments, openings and endgames etc costs could be partially covered through advertising.
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Re: Chess on TV
My opinion is simple on this front. Chess and TV will always struggle. It always becomes a teaching course, excitement and thrills put with chess is not going to happen. Some of the super coaches could just about get away with it but even then it would lose its appeal very quickly. Internet is the key, a production team can hammer out a great event and broadcast it with a few blows and punches. But would you like a camera crew at your next tournament, or even at the British Championships. It would put me off and I have a huge ego.
Charles W. Wood
Captain of Legion
Captain of Legion
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Re: Chess on TV
Having watched the various late night poker TV shows, I wonder if late night chess might be of interest?
Does late night poker appeal to those who might like to take up poker but haven't yet?
Maybe Stewart Rueben could comment authoritatively on this?
Provided it was tightly edited and presented (a Steve Davis / Andrew Martin double act) then chess could work provided that :
Does late night poker appeal to those who might like to take up poker but haven't yet?
Maybe Stewart Rueben could comment authoritatively on this?
Provided it was tightly edited and presented (a Steve Davis / Andrew Martin double act) then chess could work provided that :
- The games were Blitz or bullet with a commentary.
There was some focus on the individual players and that those chosen were socially acceptable to Joe Public.
There was interactive betting functionality on the blitz games
There was a beginners feature of around 5 minutes
There was a glamour element maybe with Kostenuik comparing the show.
Perhaps a feature on a recent exotically located tournament by Judith Chalmers (!)
In short, with enough variety and not too much technical chess (nothing on Q vs R endings for example) it could be made to work.
British Chess News : britishchessnews.com
Twitter: @BritishChess
Facebook: facebook.com/groups/britishchess
Twitter: @BritishChess
Facebook: facebook.com/groups/britishchess