The New Catch 21 (TV Series 2019–2020) Poster

(2019–2020)

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8/10
The beginning dance
chitchings-725298 December 2020
Please get rid of that ridiculous dance at the beginning. It is so ridiculous. Everyone knows they win DWTS but it doesn't belong on this show
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7/10
Its title is actually The New Catch 21
gdhosford22 January 2020
It's unfortunate that didn't include the full title, as it can be confused with the prior show. The new one is ok, but it really lacks the energy that the original show had. The original show was almost too over-the-top with the energy of its contestants, but it made it more interesting. I find I'm interested enough to keep watching, but at times it teeters on the edge of boring. The combination of the new display and Whitney's non-empathetic delivery doesn't help add excitement. It probably wouldn't seem so bad if Nikki Padilla hadn't set the bar so high in the original show.
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6/10
Meh...
pokey41611 March 2021
Still like Alfonso, but I SO want Mikki back. :'( She MADE this show, it is just so not the same without her. This Witney chick is... cute, I guess, but has next to no personality in dealing the cards. Just a pretty face. But I still like GSN, and I'll still watch if there's nothing else on.
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1/10
Liked the old version better
dskaff10 January 2020
I liked the old version better with the audience behind host. Don't like new dealer. Would rather have Mikki Padilla back.
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Catch 21
thelmahalvorson25 March 2022
Bring back Mickey!!!!! I like her better than Whitney. She's better with the contestants!! Mickky is adorable why was she replaced??? Any chance she will ever be back???? I'm a real die hard game show watcher and I can tell you she's the best for that show!
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8/10
Give it a chance!
okgrammyofboys22 March 2021
Fun game! I love Whitney...She's so cute! Alfonso used to bug me but now I like him. The overall playing of the game is fun to watch, also.
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1/10
The old version was much better.
dskaff20 May 2020
The new dippy blonde does nothing for the show. The dance moves at the beginning are stupid. I likeed Nikki 10 times better than Whitney. Also I would rather see the audience instead of the backdrop. Done watching.
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8/10
New show
cdevault-9848520 May 2020
Thank you so much for getting rid of the screaming, arm-waving jumping, big mouth contestants! I can't believe there are that many ridiculous women, so my conclusion was that you encouraged this atrocious behavior. I like the new version so much better!
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5/10
The producers of this, and the other, new GSN shows are too cheap and too greedy.
friedmanlaw-0077325 March 2020
I previously wrote a critical review of "America Says" for the same reason I'm criticizing the new Catch-21: the show's producers are greedy, too greedy:

When I reviewed "America Says," I pointed out that the "grand prize" is difficult to win, and the occasional group of four people who are smart and/or lucky enough to win it have the privilege of dividing $15,000 among themselves. In other words, $3,750 each. Although I haven't reviewed "Common Knowledge," the same criticism would apply: A group of three wins the right to divide a "grand prize" of $10,000 among themselves, or $3,333.33 per contestant.

The paltry nature of these "grand prizes" for a TV game show is highlighted when GSN viewers watch contestants on the original "Deal or No Deal" routinely turn down offers of amounts well into six figures.

Although "Deal or No Deal" is admittedly an outlier when it comes to showering their winning contestants with life-altering amounts of money, and GSN and/or "Catch 21's" producers might well be unable to turn a profit if they gave away six-figure prizes, I suspect that they could be a helluva lot more generous and still pocket tidy sums.

Since times have never been better for this nation's wealthiest people, I find it very difficult to understand why the producers of shows Like "America Says" and "Common Knowledge" and/or GSN don't offer more generous prizes to their shows' winning contestants. Unless the answer is the obvious one: plain old garden variety, insatiable greed.

Which brings me to "Catch 21" because it seems like runaway greed must be contagious among the producers of these three shows and the Game Show Network. This excessive "frugality" - to use a kinder term - is why I only gave five stars to "Catch-21" instead of the nine I would give to the original version when the producers were substantially more generous.

As opposed to others who have reviewed this program, the new seating arrangement doesn't bother me in the least, and, while Mikki Padilla is an example of the universal truth that the original (anything or anyone) is almost always the best, I think Whitney Carson does a more than creditable job of stepping into a pair of very difficult shoes to fill.

Nevertheless, I have been colossally disappointed in the reincarnation of one of my very favorite game shows for one main reason: the same reason why I stopped watching "America Says" and "Common Knowledge" altogether. If I could divine any other reasonable explanation for the relatively microscopic amounts of money given away on these shows except pure, unadulterated greed, it wouldn't bother me in the least, certainly not enough for me to pen this review. But I have to believe that the producers of game shows, which are broadcast four times a day, five days a week can well afford to award sums of money that are far in excess of the relatively paltry sums they think they can get away with. And, sadly, are getting away with.

As to "Catch-21" specifically, the "tell" is revealed by several changes from the original rules which are not nearly as subtle as the producers presumably believe they are. I'm referring to three rule changes in particular, each of which operates to significantly disadvantage the winning contestant:

(1) The most obvious is the elimination of the extra power chip that used to be automatically awarded to the contestant who moved on to the final round. It may not seem like much, but, as a former blackjack dealer, I can unequivocally state that the ability to avoid one more card that the player doesn't want is an enormous advantage for the contestant. This rule change will consistently make it more difficult for players to win the $5,000 and $25,000 top prizes.

(2) In the show's original iteration, the player who emerged from the first three rounds with the right to play for the cash prizes was awarded $1000 for winning those rounds and was automatically allowed to keep that money regardless of how he or she did in the final round. So, if the player didn't get any 21s in the last round, they would nevertheless be allowed to keep the thousand dollars they had won earlier. And, if they managed to get one, two, or three 21s in the final round, the thousand dollars would be added to the $1,000, $5,000, or $25,000 they won in that round.

But now, the player only keeps the $1,000 if he or she doesn't win anything else in the final round. Granted the prize for getting one 21 has been increased from $1,000 to $2,500 in the new version. However, the benefit to the player from this rule change is only $500 because, in the show's previous iteration, the player who made one 21 was allowed to keep the $1,000 they had won earlier in addition to the $1,000 they pocketed for the one 21 they got in the final round for a total $2,000. So even though they are currently being awarded $2,500 for getting one 21 at the end, the $1,000 they had won earlier is NOT added to that amount so $2,500 is the total amount of winnings they take home. (Before taxes of course.) So the seeming increase from $1,000 to $2500 for building one 21 is only a $500.00 benefit to the player. However, if the player in the current version wins the $5,000 or $25,000 enhanced prizes, the $1,000 they won in the earlier rounds is N OT added to those amounts. So, once again, Advantage: House.

(3) The final rule change that benefits the house is that the forts player to draw a 21 no longer receives a separate prize for just doing that. Granted. the prizes in the former version of the show weren't exactly extravagant: either a two-night hotel stay in Reno, Santa Cruz or San Francisco or a vacuum cleaner(?) However, it was something that added fun to the game and, I imagine, it was especially significant to the contestant who received that prize but did not move on to the final round. At least they left the stage with something.

Again, the only plausible rationale that I can figure out for these three rule changes, each of which benefits the house and negatively impacts the contestants, is to enhance the bottom line for the network and the show's producers, bottom line which, I presume, is already reasonably lucrative, especially in light of the number of times these shows are repeated.

Finally, I have one more criticism that does not pertain to the prize amounts. In the previous iteration, the contestants received 100 points for each question they answered correctly, and the number of questions that each contestant answered correctly frequently came into play in the determination of which two players would move on to the final round, which in turn determines which contestant wins the right to play for the largest prizes at the end.

Whenever one contestant won each of the first two rounds, their opponent for the third round would be the player with the larger number of points of the two remaining, i.e. the one who answered more questions correctly than the other player whom didn't win a round. The number of correct answers determined who would challenge the player who won the first two rounds for the right to play for the prizes in the final round. The only time the cards were essentially cut to determine which player would move on to challenge the winner of the first two rounds was when the the remaining players each had the same number of points. However, in the current version, points don't matter so answering questions correctly doesn't improve a player's chance to advance to the final round (beyond the obvious advantage of controlling the card that is dealt when the question is answered).

In the current version, if one contestant the first two rounds, the other two engage in what is tantamount to a coin flip which to determine who moves on and who is done for the night.

In other words, this rule change often diminishes the fairness of the contest because if one player wins the first two rounds, it is not unusual for their opponent in Round 3 to be a player who didn't answer a single question correctly but happened to prevail in a coin flip.

We Americans prefer fair sporting contests. After all, isn't one Electoral College enough?

The bottom line is this program can be enormously entertaining especially for those of us who have spent a time or two seated in front of the green felt, and the host - Alfonso Ribero, is one of the best ever. So it would be a shame if the small handful of quick fixes that I suggested in this review aren't acted upon.
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Bring back old version
marissonis1 October 2020
OK, I'm sure now we all know Whitney is a dancer. Can you please Cut that at the beginning? also I like the older version because the audience was much more involved, this one is dry and it's boring. On GSN, my tv shows the new pair so, since I didn't like that version, I stopped watching, but my Catch 21 group said it's the old one, so I'm back.
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2/10
Host is annoying.
dz50592 March 2022
How they ever nominated Riberio for an Emmy is confounding. He's awful. He speaks down to you and constantly states the obvious. Hey Alfonso.....we're not all morons out here.
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5/10
The unknowns
sdansker200214 May 2020
To begin with, I would like an article by the show's producers that explain how the Cards that are used come up for display. Are the cards a full deck? Are they shuffled? The mystery of the draw intrigues me.

More interesting to me is how come the host encourages the contestant to quit the game when they still have chips to play? Only morons would quit, but yet because many contestants are not the sharpest knives in the drawer, the host gets away with this theft. Advantage: the House. The host knows the player is under intense stress, and keeps yakking in the player's ear to walk away with something less than $25K. Boo on the host. I would like to attend an episode just to confront the host re this tactic.
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Catch 21 is a failure
antfitz16 July 2020
GS San itself advertises that the original catch toward one is the most popular game show on its network. If that is true, why in the world did they change the show? I don't like the new version. I like the questions when they were multiple choice. I like the way the rules were before. We tend to watch the old ones but we don't watch the new ones.
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