Elimination competitions
Nov. 8th, 2025 04:58 pmMany television reality competitions have a format where they start with many contestants and eliminate one-ish each episode. Once we get to the last small handful, we hold the final.
One thing that surprised me at first but seems commonplace is the idea that the semifinal is before the final, then before that is the quarterfinal, etc. I can understand that in two-contestant-trial knockout matches, as one can find in some tournaments between sports teams. Then, the teams in the quarterfinals are in the final for a quarter of the teams, the teams in the semfinals are in the final for half (semi) of the teams, etc. However, this model doesn't fit the current reality shows at all.
Perhaps my reasoning fits the original meaning, then the typical thing happened where a precise word was broadened into becoming rather less useful. Or, I was just mistaken from the start.
One thing that surprised me at first but seems commonplace is the idea that the semifinal is before the final, then before that is the quarterfinal, etc. I can understand that in two-contestant-trial knockout matches, as one can find in some tournaments between sports teams. Then, the teams in the quarterfinals are in the final for a quarter of the teams, the teams in the semfinals are in the final for half (semi) of the teams, etc. However, this model doesn't fit the current reality shows at all.
Perhaps my reasoning fits the original meaning, then the typical thing happened where a precise word was broadened into becoming rather less useful. Or, I was just mistaken from the start.
no subject
Date: 2025-11-10 10:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-11-10 11:17 am (UTC)But yes, in things like Bake Off or Pottery Throw Down or Sewing Bee you have a very different structure, with typically 12 players at the start, one lost each episode, and three being left in the final, so that you have a ten-episode series. By analogy with knockout competitions, the episode before the final is called the semifinal, and the one before that the quarterfinal. Masterchef has an even more elaborate and linguistically curious approach: there are several weeks of multi-episode heats, each ending in a "quarterfinal" episode; then there is a "knockout" week which whittles the survivors of the heats down a bit; then a "semifinal" week and a "finals" week, each containing multiple episodes. The very last episode, at the end of finals week, is sometimes called the "grand final" to distinguish it!
no subject
Date: 2025-11-11 12:14 pm (UTC)Oh wow! I have paid almost not attention to reality TV, and that sounds very confusing.
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Date: 2025-11-15 03:56 pm (UTC)My father watched snooker so perhaps it makes sense for me to feel rather aware of the what the words may mean in that regard. I still like watching snooker but it's more a case of if it happens to be on and I want to kill some time gently (and the sports betting advertising is now a bit in-one's-face). I rather miss the past workplace where my typical Friday afternoon included my playing a colleague in the campus' nice snooker room, we were equally bad at it.