TablePop - Season 1
Pop culture gets gamed when Brian Miller, Eli Yudin, Carolyn Page, and special guests grab dice and turn your favorite movies and TV shows into tabletop RPGs.
Pop culture gets gamed when Brian Miller, Eli Yudin, Carolyn Page, and special guests grab dice and turn your favorite movies and TV shows into tabletop RPGs.
Pop culture gets gamed when Brian Miller, Eli Yudin, Carolyn Page, and special guests grab dice and turn your favorite movies and TV shows into tabletop RPGs.
Critical Role is a weekly actual play series that uses tabletop role-playing game mechanics as a means to explore and develop stories from the vast fantasy worlds of Exandria, Aramán, and beyond, with sweeping narratives intricately woven through collaboration between Game Masters and players.
Shooting Stars is a British television comedy panel game broadcast on BBC Two as a pilot in 1993, then as 3 full series from 1995 to 1997, then on BBC Choice from January to December 2002 with 2 series before returning to BBC Two for another 3 series from 2008 until its cancellation in 2011. Created and hosted by double-act Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer, it uses the panel show format but with the comedians' often slapstick, surreal and anarchic humour does not rely on rules in order to function, with the pair apparently ignoring existing rules or inventing new ones as and when the mood takes them.
This game show sees contestants solve word puzzles, similar to those used in Hangman, to win cash and prizes determined by spinning a giant carnival wheel.
Never Mind the Buzzcocks is a comedy panel game show with a pop and rock music theme. The show is infamous for its dry, sarcastic humour and scathing, provocative attacks on the pop industry.
Each week a group of four famous faces go toe to toe in testing their general knowledge skills in a variety of entertaining games.
The outrageous comedy panel show hosted by the irrepressible Keith Lemon. Each episode sees top celebrities going head to head in a series of hilarious rounds unlike any other panel show.
A weekly, topical panel show based around a huge series of opinion poll surveys carried out around Britain.
A comedic journey into the hilarious world of fantasy roleplaying with Dan Harmon and his Comedian Companions.
The show where everything's made up and the points don't matter. Not a talk show, not a sitcom, not a game show, Whose Line Is It Anyway? is a completely unique concept to network television. Four talented actors perform completely unrehearsed skits and games in front of a studio audience. Host Drew Carey sets the scene, with contributions from the audience, but the actors rely completely on their quick wit and improvisational skills. It's genuinely improvised, so anything can happen - and often does.
Four panelists must determine guests' occupations - and, in the case of famous guests, while blindfolded, their identity - by asking only "yes" or "no" questions.