The Einstein Factor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Einstein Factor
Image:Einsteinfactor.jpg
Genre Game show
Picture format 16:9
Running time 30 minutes
Starring Peter Berner (host)
Country of origin Australia
Original channel ABC
Original run February 8, 2004
No. of episodes 120
(As of November 12, 2006)
Official website

The Einstein Factor is an Australian television quiz show, broadcast on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The show's host is comedian and broadcaster Peter Berner. It was first broadcast in 2004 and has currently completed its third season, returning in 2007. It is broadcast on Sunday nights at 6:30 pm.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The show's self-styled goal is to find the person who "knows everything about something and something about everything." To that end, contestants with specially nominated subjects appear each week.

The key to the program's uniqueness is the use of a Brains Trust, a panel of three "experts", usually celebrities, who compete alongside the contestants. Regular Brains Trustees have included Barry Jones, Berner's radio colleagues Tony Moclair and Matt Parkinson, comedians Tim Ferguson and Michael Veitch, musician Red Symons and scientist Dr Karl Kruszelnicki.

The show is also noted for Berner's offbeat manner and humorous approach to being a quizmaster. The program has proved quite popular with a wide audience, unusually so for a program broadcast on the ABC.

[edit] Show format

  • The first round simply involves Berner asking 15 questions to each contestant on their special subjects. These subjects are often quite specific and the questions difficult for outsiders to know. Special subjects have included Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Ned Kelly, Harry Potter, Star Wars, Michael Collins and World War II aircraft. This will be followed by banter between contestant and brains trust. Each correct response earns the contestant 100 points. In the 2005 series, a "bonus question" was introduced, which the contestant can either answer correctly themselves for 100 points or place their faith in the brains trust to answer the question, in which case a correct answer yields 200 points.
  • In round two, contestants are given nine 'subject headings' (which generally have only an indirect and allusive relation to the topic underneath - for example, a question labelled "Rock and Roll" is as likely to be about geology as to be about music. However, in the first season these categories were a lot more clearly named) and are asked to choose, in turn, one subject on which to receive a question. Each contestant makes two picks, so only six out of the nine subjects are asked. The question is then asked to all contestants and the brains trust. The contestants are given five seconds to select their answer from a multiple choice question, then the brains trust discuss the question and devise an answer of their own. If the brains trust get the question right, all the players who also got the question right receive 50 points; if the brains trust are wrong, players who answered correctly receive 100 points.
  • In round three, fifteen questions are put to the contestants and the brains trust. Two questions come from each of the contestants' special subjects, which are mixed in with nine other general knowledge questions. The round is a "hands on buzzers" round as seen in many quiz shows, with the brains trust sharing a buzzer. Contestants who get a question right receive 100 points - an incorrect answer means 100 points are deducted from their score. The brains trust receive no points for correct answers, but their intervention can deprive the contestants of points.

[edit] Finals

The winners of each program's quiz compete at the end of the series in a series of "play-offs", the winners of which compete in a "series final". The three winners of the "series finals" compete in "The Einstein Factor Grand Final" to determine the series overall winner. Specialised subjects remain the same throughout. These are the winners of the grand finals:

[edit] See also

[edit] External links