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1A long-running Creator/{{BBC}} light entertainment GameShow, based on a Dutch format by Rudi Carrell, which first aired in 1971; it is played between four teams, each consisting of a contestant and one of their grandparents (hence the name of the show, since they are a ''[[TheGenerationGap generation]]'' apart).
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3The four teams were split into two pairs, and each pair competed in two rounds each. Typically, the first round involved the four contestants watching an expert or celebrity guest demonstrate an activity (such as, for instance, making a clay pot), and then trying to replicate the results (with the expert as a judge). The second round typically involved more quiz-like tasks. The winning teams in the two semi-final matches went on to the final, which typically involved putting on a play or some other entertainment performance. The champions went onto the conveyor belt BonusRound to win prizes.
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5The series was one of the major breakout roles for British television personality Creator/BruceForsyth, who had previously hosted a British version of ''Series/BeatTheClock'' as part of the variety show ''Sunday Night at the London Palladium''. In 1978, Forsyth was poached by London Weekend Television to host a competing Saturday night show on Creator/{{ITV}}, ''Bruce Forsyth's Big Night''. Meanwhile, comedian Larry Grayson was brought on as the new host of ''The Generation Game'': with an aim to differentiate it from Brucie's version, Grayson hosted the programme as a [[CampGay camp]], [[TheDitz incompetent]] character, with his [[LovelyAssistant co-host]] Isla St Clair keeping things from going too far off the rails.
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7''Larry Grayson's Generation Game'' remained dominant over its competition, while Isla was elevated from a local personality to a national name. In comparison, besides two one-off specials in 1980, ''Bruce Forsyth's Big Night'' was quickly canned after 12 episodes. When a television technicians' strike brought down the entire ITV network for eleven weeks in 1979 (and resulted in continued residual effects for some time afterward), ratings for ''The Generation Game'' were recorded as being around 25 million viewers -- the highest ratings ever recorded for a game show at the time. After its original run ended in 1982, it was revived in 1990 with Forsyth returning as host. After filling in for Forsyth on one episode, Creator/JimDavidson took over from 1995 to 2002.
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9There have been off-and-on talks about a potential revival, beyond a failed 2003 pilot with Paul O'Grady, and one-offs in 2005 (the CelebrityEdition ''Generation Fame'' with Graham Norton) and 2011 as part of the Comic Relief charity stunt ''24 Hour Panel People''. Miranda Hart, who participated in said one-off, was being considered as host of a revival too, but it never came to fruition.
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11The most recent rumour of a potential revival came in 2017, when it was speculated that Mel Giedroyc and Sue Perkins, of ''Series/TheGreatBritishBakeOff'' fame, were being offered to host a revival (presumably as compensation for leaving ''Bake-Off'' due to its ChannelHop). In July 2017, the BBC announced that ''The Generation Game'' would be revived with Mel & Sue as hostesses, which premiered as a series of specials in April 2018; four episodes were initially announced, but only two were eventually aired. Upon its premiere, the revival was not received well by critics, who felt that it [[NostalgiaFilter relied too much on trying to emulate the iconic Bruce Forsyth and Larry Grayson eras]] rather than go in a new direction.
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14!! This series provides examples of
15* AffectionateParody: ''Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook'' did a post-apocalyptic version of the conveyor game on their recurring sketch "The Quiz Broadcast", with prizes including a skull, "food objects", a traffic cone and a clock stand ("We don't know, but they're everywhere"), tablets (of medicinal ''and'' Holy varieties), stones, and a "frightening animal". The prizes were [[ComicallyMissingThePoint carried in front of the conveyor belt by stagehands instead of on it]] because they don't know how to actually operate the conveyor, and the contestant recalled memories of "[[ZombieApocalypse The Event]]" rather than the prizes.
16* BonusRound: Watch 20 prizes that pass by on a conveyor belt, and recall as many of them under a time limit to win. In the Davidson era, getting 15 prizes awarded everything and a bonus prize too.
17* CatchPhrase: If there was something there was no shortage of during the Forsyth and Grayson eras, it was catchphrases;
18** Bruce Forsyth
19*** "Nice to see you, to see you..." ("[[StudioAudience Nice!]]")
20*** "Our contestants have no idea what's coming up. They have not rehearsed. [[PunctuatedForEmphasis This... is their... rehearsal!]]
21*** "Good game, good game!" (ironically, this was often said after [[SarcasmMode particularly rough rounds.]])
22*** "Didn't they do well?"
23*** "Let's have a look at the old scoreboard..."
24*** In the early 1990s: “What have they scored, [[LovelyAssistant Miss Ford?]]/What's on the board, Miss Ford?”
25** Larry Grayson
26*** "What are the scores on the doors, Isla?" "[[PhraseCatcher The names in the frames say...]]"
27*** "What a lot they got!"
28*** "Seems like a nice boy..."
29** "[Item]. [item], Cuddly toy!"
30* ClipShow: Each series had a highlights special, while Creator/{{UKTV}} Gold picked up ''Brucie's Generation Game: Now and Then'' in 2007, which featured classic moments, and inviting back runner-ups to play the conveyor.
31* CoveredInGunge: The bonus round in the Davidson era added a strange mechanic involving "Phantom Prizes"; if you named one of them, you got gunged. It still counted.
32* DoItYourselfThemeTune: The original theme music was actually written and performed by Bruce.
33* LovelyAssistant:
34** Bruce Forsyth had Anthea "Lin Li" Redfern (in fact, from 1973 to 1979, they were actually a married couple!). During Forsyth's second run, Rosemarie Ford filled the roll.
35** Larry Grayson's version had Scottish singer Isla St Clair; she largely served as the [[StraightManAndWiseGuy straight (wo)man]] to Grayson's [[TheDitz ditziness]].
36* {{Mascot}}: The ''de facto'' mascot of the series were the "cuddly toys" that always appeared on the conveyor belt.
37* PointAndLaughShow: A more lighthearted variety, but much of the show's fun came from watching people inevitably botch up the challenges.
38* TakeThat: In one episode, comedian and impressionist Allan Stewart was a guest, instructing the competitors on being [[CelebrityImpersonator celebrity impersonators]]. Bruce Forsyth inevitably came up, prompting Stewart to remark that the competitors were a better version of Forsyth than the real thing. Predictably, he wasn't amused.
39* TransatlanticEquivalent: An American version was piloted as ''Piece of Cake'' with Forsyth hosting, but it didn't get picked up.
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