Social experiment/reality TV competition format. Participants are split into the have's and the have-nots, either in a position of power or powerless, living in an opulent penthouse or a bas... Read allSocial experiment/reality TV competition format. Participants are split into the have's and the have-nots, either in a position of power or powerless, living in an opulent penthouse or a basement workplace with the chance to Rise or Fall.Social experiment/reality TV competition format. Participants are split into the have's and the have-nots, either in a position of power or powerless, living in an opulent penthouse or a basement workplace with the chance to Rise or Fall.
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This is nothing new, this was the same rubbish that's always on. Group of ppl, pathetic experiment...watch them fight, argue and msm hopes they will have sex, fight...utter rubbish. Especially with certain ppl on the show trying to get in to gov...messed up. It was truly rubbish. They have no ideas for something new, it's always the same old ideas, they can't think of anything new. Lazy useless writers....am just surprised it wasn't mega PC. I mean did we all the the pathetic acting, made rhem feel special, some were told there stunning...as usual.. they really wernt. There's literally nothing good to say about this show. I've read other comments that praised it..braindead.
RastaVari (23 March 2023) in an extremely perceptive post has pointed out that the first episode task is like Stanley Milgram's experiment. I think that the characters are professional actors who are role-playing. Otherwise, there is no way that the series can make enough revenue to cover production costs. The lift voice is by an actress (Emma Clarke). The red room interactions are for real but in a studio: and similarly with the basement interactions. The tower has been hired briefly for scene-setting and general filming. The role-playing actors compete against each other for real, even if the prize fund is imaginary and the results of the tasks are agreed beforehand. The electric shocks were faked; the dog food was ordinary palatable food; and so on. It is like playing Monopoly: no-one can buy a house in Mayfair for £200 but one suspends disbelief and the game is good fun. The series is addictive and unpredictable. I am expecting Matt to be sent to the basement in tonight's seventh episode: we shall see.
I stumbled across Rise & Fall but thought the premise was interesting so checked it out. I was initially impressed with the production quality so even though "meeting" the contestants left me ambivalent. I am not sure how many people applied to play the game but I am guessing a lot given the fact they managed to get such an "interesting" group. Anyway I hung in there. I don't want to give away anything but the manner in which the first "leaders" were selected made me think that this was going to get ugly at some point. The first task the workers had to perform shocked me a little. I am not going to say any more, other than I can't wait for episode two!
So the basis of this show is that the 'Rulers' manage the 'Grafters'. The problem is, they don't actually do anything. All this talk about leadership, yet they don't lead, other than saying if a task goes on or not. Instead it feels like 2 different 'big brothers'.
To make this work, the rulers need much more of a say as to how the grafters live. They should budget electricity and hot water, as well as food and challenges.
The Grafters should be the ones who vote for which rulers stay in power like a democracy - don't base the show on a clique within a group of 6 people.
The rulers shouldn't leave the show when voted off, but return to the Grafters.
The idea is there, but the rules let it down massively.
Nothing happens.
To make this work, the rulers need much more of a say as to how the grafters live. They should budget electricity and hot water, as well as food and challenges.
The Grafters should be the ones who vote for which rulers stay in power like a democracy - don't base the show on a clique within a group of 6 people.
The rulers shouldn't leave the show when voted off, but return to the Grafters.
The idea is there, but the rules let it down massively.
Nothing happens.
So its basically Milgrim's banned experiement, in fact so much so that the first work shifts are a pretty literal a replica, but instead of men with white coats, its men in suits and instead of 'science' being the lever its the possibility of maybe getting a little bit of money - so kinda more like the IRL horror that led Milgram to design the experiments following WWII - but for TV.
Its nothing new, pretty predictable and whilst some of the casting is good and somewhat understandable, it also kinda feels like the UK has run out of complex driven people and producers are left having to pick from pretty unpleasant sociopaths who are lying before they begin (surely not even Ramona's surgeon thinks she can pass for 35!?)
I love reality TV, and people watching, cultures and communities are my passion but I don't think I'll be able to see this one through as it is derivative, dull and discomforting all at once.
Greg James is, I am sure, a perfectly nice fellow but to say he is vanilla would be to suggest vanilla has no flavour, noooo is an anti-flavour, a flavour neutraliser - perhaps this a choice as if the presenter of this show had too much personality or presence them conducting a handful of greedy eejits to enforce what are essentially extremely cruel, dubiously required and (as demonstrated by the fact that Milgram had to drop his shiz) ethically unacceptable experiments/tasks/jobs would seem really dark and machiavellian.
One of the most interesting, probably accidentally, symbols central to the show is the location - a beautiful deco central London building, built to house and allow the development of a public transport system in London and SE UK in the early C20th, was the home of Transport of London for many years (so effectively a public building open to the public doing work for the public) but then once the tube was part privatised it was sold off to be developed into a 'luxury hotel' - but has had to become a set for a reality TV show as there are more luxury rooms in cities like London than there obscenely wealthy oligrachs/Emirati/yankie tourists/Chinese party members/Old Etonians/Instahookers. Short sighted greed, bailed out by tax payers, having to be used for something flippant so as not to sit empty whilst homelessness is rife and workers have to live in zone6 and commute for hours to sweep the floors.
Its nothing new, pretty predictable and whilst some of the casting is good and somewhat understandable, it also kinda feels like the UK has run out of complex driven people and producers are left having to pick from pretty unpleasant sociopaths who are lying before they begin (surely not even Ramona's surgeon thinks she can pass for 35!?)
I love reality TV, and people watching, cultures and communities are my passion but I don't think I'll be able to see this one through as it is derivative, dull and discomforting all at once.
Greg James is, I am sure, a perfectly nice fellow but to say he is vanilla would be to suggest vanilla has no flavour, noooo is an anti-flavour, a flavour neutraliser - perhaps this a choice as if the presenter of this show had too much personality or presence them conducting a handful of greedy eejits to enforce what are essentially extremely cruel, dubiously required and (as demonstrated by the fact that Milgram had to drop his shiz) ethically unacceptable experiments/tasks/jobs would seem really dark and machiavellian.
One of the most interesting, probably accidentally, symbols central to the show is the location - a beautiful deco central London building, built to house and allow the development of a public transport system in London and SE UK in the early C20th, was the home of Transport of London for many years (so effectively a public building open to the public doing work for the public) but then once the tube was part privatised it was sold off to be developed into a 'luxury hotel' - but has had to become a set for a reality TV show as there are more luxury rooms in cities like London than there obscenely wealthy oligrachs/Emirati/yankie tourists/Chinese party members/Old Etonians/Instahookers. Short sighted greed, bailed out by tax payers, having to be used for something flippant so as not to sit empty whilst homelessness is rife and workers have to live in zone6 and commute for hours to sweep the floors.
Did you know
- TriviaEmma Clarke provides the voice of the lift throughout the series. Emma is a very experienced voice artist who is perhaps best known for providing the voice for the "Mind the Gap" safety warnings on the London Underground network.
- How many seasons does Rise and Fall have?Powered by Alexa
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