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Only Connect

Only Connect
Only Connect title.png
Genre Game show
Presented by Victoria Coren Mitchell
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 12
No. of episodes 225 (as of 19 December 2016) (inc. 23 specials)
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) Presentable (2008–13)
RDF Television and Parasol (2013–)
Distributor Zodiak Media
Release
Original network BBC Four (2008–14)
BBC Two (2014–)
Picture format 16:9
Original release 15 September 2008 (2008-09-15) – present

Only Connect is a British game show presented by Victoria Coren Mitchell. It aired on BBC Four from 15 September 2008 to 7 July 2014 and then moved to BBC Two from 1 September 2014. In the series, teams compete in a tournament of finding connections between seemingly unrelated clues. The latest series began on 11 July 2016. From 6 January 2017 the show moved from Mondays to Fridays, leaving the fellow BBC Two quiz show University Challenge as the only quiz show that occupies the Monday 20:00 slot.

The phrase "Only connect" was originally used in E. M. Forster's 1910 novel Howards End. It was spoken by the character Margaret Schlegel, and occurs in chapter 22:

The quote was the basis of an unanswered question in the grand final of series nine – the beast, the monk, the prose, the passion, to which the answer was Only Connect.

Each programme has two teams of three people competing in four rounds of gameplay. In the first three series, clues in Rounds 1 and 2 and the connecting walls in Round 3 were identified by Greek letters. In series 4 Coren Mitchell announced that this idea had been dropped, ostensibly due to viewer complaints that it was too pretentious, and that henceforth Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs (two reeds, lion, twisted flax, horned viper, water and the eye of Horus) would be used instead. The show's opening sequence continued to display Greek letters until series 5, when they were replaced with the hieroglyphs.

In series 7 the "knockout" format was modified to a double-elimination tournament with the exception of the single-elimination final round, in a rule change that Coren Mitchell said that even she did not fully understand. This reduced the number of competing teams from 16 to 8, and the episodes from 16 to 13, compared with the previous series except Series 2. The number of competing teams was restored to 16 with Series 10, expanding the series to a total of 27 episodes. In Series 12, the number of competing teams was expanded to 24; this expanded the series to a total of 37 episodes, and as it is in the fellow quiz show on BBC Two, University Challenge.


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