Eggheads

Image:Eggheads_wide_logo.jpg

Contents

Host

Dermot Murnaghan (2003-14)

Jeremy Vine (in rotation with Murnaghan 2008-15, main host 2015-)

Co-hosts

Eggheads:
Kevin Ashman (2003-)
Christopher Hughes (2003-)
Judith Keppel (2003-)
Daphne Fowler (2003-14)
CJ de Mooi (2003-12, 2014-16)
Barry Simmons (2008-)
Pat Gibson (2010-)
Dave Rainford (2012-)
Lisa Thiel (2014-)
Steve Cooke (2016-)
Beth Webster (2016-)

Broadcast

12 Yard for BBC One, 10 November 2003 to 28 October 2004 (60 episodes in 2 series)

12 Yard for BBC Two, 23 May 2005 to present

as Celebrity Eggheads: 12 Yard for BBC Two, 15 December 2008 to present

Synopsis

Typical 12-Yard fare, five amateur quizzers take on five quiz professionals in a big money quiz.

Original host, Dermot Murnaghan

In the first four rounds the challengers are given a category and must decide which one of them will take it and which of the Eggheads they want to take on. Each Egghead normally has some kind of weakness, so boning up by watching past episodes is a must.

"...That's the way we all became The Brady Bunch."
Top: Chris, CJ; Middle: Barry, Pat, Judith; Bottom: Daphne, Kevin.

Because there is to be no conferring, the selected players are moved to a separate "question room" and are shown on a large screen behind the rest of the team. Each person is fired three multiple choice questions and whoever gets the most correct wins the duel. In the case of a tie, sudden death non-choice questions are asked until there is a winner. Losing the duel means not being involved in the all important final round.

The options appear on screen. This question asked which band recorded the album "Through the Barricades".

The prizemoney increases £1,000 every day the Eggheads aren't beaten in the final round. All losing duelists are banished to the "question room" and appear on the large screen behind the rest of the players. The remains of each team are now asked three multiple-choice questions as before but now they can confer with anyone left in the game. (A brief series of 45-minute editions shown in 2005 had five questions per team in this final round, which helps to stretch out the show, but does add to the ever-increasing roster of shows which have this exact format for the final.) Again, ties are broken by non-choiced sudden death questions. If the challengers win then they win the Jackpot. If the Eggheads win then their reputation stays intact.

The progress of this round is summarised over a wide shot of the studio.

The production team have come under fire from many in the quizzing community over the vetting of contestants. Anyone who sounds as though they might be a 'professional quizzer' seems to be vetted in favour of the average pub team who doesn't try out for many television programmes. Whilst this does make a slight mockery of the "can nobody beat these Eggheads" idea, it does turn the show into an intellectual version of Gladiators which for some is where its strength lies.

Catchphrase

Dermot to the Eggheads: "You're playing for something money can't buy - the Eggheads' reputation."

"Can nobody beat these Eggheads?"

Inventor

12 Yard format

Theme music

David Hubbard and Rumble Music

Trivia

The record win is £75,000, won by a team of five Oxford Brookes University students called "Beer Today, Gone Tomorrow".

Jade Goody once appeared with a team from her beauty salon, and through a series of lucky guesses managed to singlehandedly take the Eggheads to sudden death in the final round.

The first two series went out at 12.30 on BBC1, a slot previously occupied by Wipeout and later taken over by Bargain Hunt. From October 2005, Eggheads took up residence at 6pm on BBC2; popular cartoon The Simpsons had filled that slot for a number of years, but Channel 4 bought the rights from November 2004, and BBC2 had tried many shows there (games included Traitor, an edit of Spy, Dick and Dom's Ask the Family) without much success.

Eggheads has remained at 6pm, with occasional shifts to 6.30 for the Richard Osman shows Two Tribes and House of Games. Are You an Egghead aired at 4.30, Make Me an Egghead went out at 6.45 (after Debatable). There's never been any other attempt to push Eggheads deep into primetime, although it did shift earlier in the day during bank holidays (at 5.15, as the news was shorter and Pointless aired at 5.45) and during autumn 2018, when repeats went out as early as 4.45 due to Letterbox at 6pm and It Takes Two at 6.30. A brief run of repeats between 30 March and 22 May 2020 aired in apparently random slots between 1pm and 4.45pm, while a final run of repeats of Celebrity Eggheads in August 2020 was repeated at 2.15pm on BBC1, its first broadcast on that channel for over fifteen years.

In the last series, the Eggheads would pose a question for the audience at home to work on, which they would answer at the end of the show. An odd decision to introduce, since regular viewers would be used to at least 20 questions in a half-hour slot; this may have contributed to the decision to air the 40-episode series in two blocks a year apart.

Merchandise

The Ultimate Eggheads Quiz Book

Nintendo DS game

Board game

Web links

Official site

Wikipedia entry

See also

Are You an Egghead?

Revenge of the Egghead

How to Apply

Visit 12yard.com/eggheads to fill out an application form online.

Alternatively you can email: eggheads@12yard.com

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