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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Silver, David H.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.02886
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author Silver, David H.
author_facet Silver, David H.
contents Taskmaster is a British television show that combines comedic performance with a formal scoring system. Despite the appearance of structured competition, it remains unclear whether scoring dynamics contribute meaningfully to audience engagement. We conducted a statistical analysis of 162 episodes across 18 series, using fifteen episode-level metrics to quantify rank volatility, point spread, lead changes, and winner dominance. None of these metrics showed a significant association with IMDb ratings, even after controlling for series effects. Long-term trends suggest that average points have increased over time, while volatility has slightly declined and rank spread has remained stable. These patterns indicate an attempt to enhance competitive visibility without altering the show's structural equilibrium. We also analyzed contestant rank trajectories and identified five recurring archetypes describing performance styles. These patterns suggest that viewer interest is shaped more by contestant behavior than by game mechanics.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2505_02886
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Taskmaster Deconstructed: A Quantitative Look at Tension, Volatility, and Viewer Ratings
Silver, David H.
Physics and Society
Artificial Intelligence
62P25 (Applications to social sciences), 91B14 (Social choice) 62P25
H.5.1; I.2.7; J.4
Taskmaster is a British television show that combines comedic performance with a formal scoring system. Despite the appearance of structured competition, it remains unclear whether scoring dynamics contribute meaningfully to audience engagement. We conducted a statistical analysis of 162 episodes across 18 series, using fifteen episode-level metrics to quantify rank volatility, point spread, lead changes, and winner dominance. None of these metrics showed a significant association with IMDb ratings, even after controlling for series effects. Long-term trends suggest that average points have increased over time, while volatility has slightly declined and rank spread has remained stable. These patterns indicate an attempt to enhance competitive visibility without altering the show's structural equilibrium. We also analyzed contestant rank trajectories and identified five recurring archetypes describing performance styles. These patterns suggest that viewer interest is shaped more by contestant behavior than by game mechanics.
title Taskmaster Deconstructed: A Quantitative Look at Tension, Volatility, and Viewer Ratings
topic Physics and Society
Artificial Intelligence
62P25 (Applications to social sciences), 91B14 (Social choice) 62P25
H.5.1; I.2.7; J.4
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.02886