BBC The Master Game - 1981 - S06E02 - Byrne - Hort
The Master Game was the first program to show chess on television in a way that had a chance of connecting with the larger chess-playing public. As producer Robert Toner notes: I had seen many forms of television chess coverage, but none of them was satisfactory. Pieces would disappear from one square and appear in another, and only experts seemed to be able to follow a game. Also, it was all so remote, I felt no involvement with the game or the players. What we needed was direct access into their thoughts, not the high-speed technical thoughts of a chess-playing mind, but thoughts put in such a way that anyone who knew the rules would be able to follow the most complicated game. (Foreword, The Master Game, 1979) The system Toner developed had players compete in a knock-out tournament at a BBC studio, where the games themselves were recorded; then, about two days later, the players recreated their thoughts during the game in a sound studio. The games were played under tournament conditions, with forty moves in two-and-a-half hours followed by an hour sudden death. (In the first three series, with absolute knockout format, there were also rules for replaying drawn games, but in later tournaments the rules were changed to avoid replays.) The game play was edited to a 30-minute program, so the audience did not have to endure long and unpredictable delays between moves, and commentary by the players was added. What made the program so successful was the fiction that the players were commenting on the games as they were happening, with the comments always expressed in present-tense form, thus creating a sense of engagement and immediacy that is not achieved in other formats, except perhaps in the now ubiquitous videos where players comment on their blitz games while in progress. The types of comments offered by the players were also quite effective at communicating the way GMs usually choose a move, relying more on chess reasoning and intuition than the calculation of long variations, except where the position called for that. Though we now have access to a lot of chess on video, no one seems to have invested the time and resources to create a similar product. Directors: Sandra Wainwright Hosts: Jeremy James, Bill Hartston Starring: Robert Byrne, Svetozar Gligorić, Vlastimil Hort, Nigel Short, Jan Hein Donner, Bent Larsen, Tony Miles, Lothar Schmid, Andras Adorjan, Larry Christiansen, Hans-Joachim Hecht, Walter Browne, Raymond Keene, Eric Lobron, Miguel Quinteros

BBC The Master Game - 1981 - S06E03 - Hort - Gligorić

BBC The Master Game - 1981 - S06E10 - Larsen - Schmid

The Sting | Paul Newman Cons a Con Man in a High-Stakes Poker Game in 4K HDR

World Cup 1983 Chess | Stefan Kindermann - Vlastimil Hort | B67 Sicilian

Magnus Carlsen Gets a FREE PIECE After Insane GM Blunder!

German Pilots Laughed At Canada’s “Wooden” Mosquito, Until Its Four 20mm Opened Up On Them

50-Year-Old Carpenter's Amazing Idea Leaves Engineers Stunned! DIY Woodworking Tools

Why Britain Deliberately Destroyed Its Manufacturing Industry

FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE | Kronsteen Outlines His Plan To Blofeld and Klebb

World Cup Uncut | 15 Incredible Minutes | Germany vs France (1982)

🔥Karpov’s 5 Golden Rules 👉 To Win Without Doing Anything

BBC The Master Game - 1981 - S06E06 - Short - Hort

Unbelievable Smart Worker & Hilarious Fails | Construction Compilation #8 #adamrose #smartworkers

What makes Magnus Carlsen unbeatable? The psychology behind chess – with Fernand Gobet | Part 1

Top Best Poker Scenes from Movies

Trump's Mental State is Unraveling In Front of Us - Dr. John Gartner

Ding Liren DESTROYS Hans Niemann in an INSANE ITALIAN OPENING | FIDE World Team Blitz 2026 FINALS

William Dunham, A tribute to Euler

The Biggest Poker Fights In WSOP History!

