• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
The Blog of Jorge de la Cruz

The Blog of Jorge de la Cruz

Everything about VMware, Veeam, InfluxData, Grafana, Zimbra, etc.

  • Home
  • VMWARE
  • VEEAM
    • Veeam Content Recap 2021
    • Veeam v11a
      • Veeam Backup and Replication v11a
    • Veeam Backup for AWS
      • Veeam Backup for AWS v4
    • Veeam Backup for Azure
      • Veeam Backup for Azure v3
    • VeeamON 2021
      • Veeam Announces Support for Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV/KVM)
      • Veeam announces enhancements for new versions of Veeam Backup for AWS v4/Azure v3/GVP v2
      • VBO v6 – Self-Service Portal and Native Integration with Azure Archive and AWS S3 Glacier
  • Grafana
    • Part I (Installing InfluxDB, Telegraf and Grafana on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS)
    • Part VIII (Monitoring Veeam using Veeam Enterprise Manager)
    • Part XII (Native Telegraf Plugin for vSphere)
    • Part XIII – Veeam Backup for Microsoft Office 365 v4
    • Part XIV – Veeam Availability Console
    • Part XV – IPMI Monitoring of our ESXi Hosts
    • Part XVI – Performance and Advanced Security of Veeam Backup for Microsoft Office 365
    • Part XVII – Showing Dashboards on Two Monitors Using Raspberry Pi 4
    • Part XIX (Monitoring Veeam with Enterprise Manager) Shell Script
    • Part XXII (Monitoring Cloudflare, include beautiful Maps)
    • Part XXIII (Monitoring WordPress with Jetpack RESTful API)
    • Part XXIV (Monitoring Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure)
    • Part XXV (Monitoring Power Consumption)
    • Part XXVI (Monitoring Veeam Backup for Nutanix)
    • Part XXVII (Monitoring ReFS and XFS (block-cloning and reflink)
    • Part XXVIII (Monitoring HPE StoreOnce)
    • Part XXIX (Monitoring Pi-hole)
    • Part XXXI (Monitoring Unifi Protect)
    • Part XXXII (Monitoring Veeam ONE – experimental)
    • Part XXXIII (Monitoring NetApp ONTAP)
    • Part XXXIV (Monitoring Runecast)
  • Nutanix
  • ZIMBRA
  • PRTG
  • LINUX
  • MICROSOFT

We Asked 100 People...play Your Cards Right Questions Uk -

This paper examines how this polling mechanism functioned within the UK version of Play Your Cards Right , its psychological impact on contestants, and why it resonated with a British audience accustomed to both skepticism of statistics and an affinity for light-hearted social observation. In the standard US Card Sharks , two contestants faced a row of five playing cards. The goal was to guess whether the next card was higher or lower than the current one. However, before touching the cards, contestants had to answer a survey question posed to “100 people in the audience” (or a pre-selected panel).

| Feature | US Card Sharks | UK Play Your Cards Right | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Personal behavior (“Have you ever...?”) | General knowledge/opinions (“Name a...”) | | Tone | Competitive, dramatic | Witty, self-deprecating (due to Forsyth) | | Common Topics | Sex, money, embarrassment | Weather, TV shows, food, royalty | | Audience Reaction | Cheers for high numbers | Laughs for absurdly low numbers (e.g., “2 people said...”) | we asked 100 people...play your cards right questions uk

The UK version’s questions often leaned into . Asking “Name something you’d find in a shed” (real example) is quintessentially British—celebrating the mundane as a source of collective identity. 6. Legacy and Relevance in the Data Age Although Play Your Cards Right has not been in regular production since the early 2000s (though revived briefly in 2021–2022 with Alan Carr), its “100 people” mechanic has proven prescient. Modern social media polls, Twitter (X) votes, and Reddit’s “AskReddit” threads operate on the exact same principle: aggregating popular opinion as a proxy for truth. This paper examines how this polling mechanism functioned

Quantitative Nostalgia: An Analysis of the “We Asked 100 People...” Mechanic in the UK Game Show Play Your Cards Right However, before touching the cards, contestants had to

Media Studies / Television Game Show Mechanics Context: United Kingdom (ITV/BBC formats) 1. Introduction The British adaptation of the game show Play Your Cards Right (originally the US-based Card Sharks ), which aired intermittently on ITV from 1980 to 2003 (hosted by Bruce Forsyth and later Max Bygraves), occupies a unique position in television history. Unlike purely luck-based card games or trivia-based quizzes, the show’s central mechanic relied on a specific form of quantitative polling: “We asked 100 people...”

The show’s format anticipated the 21st-century obsession with viral metrics. In an era where “the algorithm” decides what we see, Play Your Cards Right offered a gentle, analog version: the algorithm of the studio audience. The phrase “We asked 100 people...” on Play Your Cards Right was more than a gimmick. It was a sophisticated game mechanic that replaced objective fact with subjective consensus, rewarding contestants who best understood the average British psyche. For viewers at home, it provided a dual pleasure: laughing at those who misjudged the public, and nodding along when they got it right.

Primary Sidebar

  • File
  • Madha Gaja Raja Tamil Movie Download Kuttymovies In
  • Apk Cort Link
  • Quality And All Size Free Dual Audio 300mb Movies
  • Malayalam Movies Ogomovies.ch

Posts Calendar

January 2019
M T W T F S S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  
« Dec   Feb »

Disclaimer

All opinions expressed on this site are my own and do not represent the opinions of any company I have worked with, am working with, or will be working with.

Copyright © 2026 · The Blog of Jorge de la Cruz

Copyright © 2026 Grand Node