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Netflix’s Squid Game competitors say it’s as nightmarish as the original show

Following the enormous success of Squid Game, Netflix greenlit its own reality game show inspired by the South Korean series. Much like the show, 456 contestants are expected to compete in reflections of the deadly contest in hopes of winning $4.56 million USD (around $6.07 million CAD). However, the production of this series has been said to be nothing short of disastrous.

According to contestants (who chose to remain anonymous when speaking to Rolling Stone), the Squid Game reality game show is rigged and working conditions are intense. In an extensive report, contestants recount their experience being recruited and what it was like on set.

Squid Game: The Challenge is the official name of the game show and filming began last Monday. The show is being co-produced by Studio Lambert and The Garden, who recruited contestants through a variety of means. Some applied after seeing targeted ads on social media. It’s alleged that others, including TikTok influencers, were pre-selected. A former participant speaking to Vice said that they underwent a background check, had a physician sign off on a medical assessment and were told by a psychologist that the experience would be intense.

Production of the show is being held in England. All 456 participants were reportedly expected to be available between two to four weeks, depending on how long they lasted in the mock version of the deadly games. Participants were settled into a London-based hotel and fitted with a green bracelet. Studio Lambert is said to have issued detailed onboarding procedures, COVID-19 tests, and orientation videos. However, participants were strictly forbidden to speak to one another while in the hotel and travel to the set via bus. Production staff monitored the actions and reprimanded anyone breaking this rule.

Adding to this, the accommodations on site of productions sound akin to the Fyre Festival. Participants were taken to a freezing airplane hangar at Cardington Airfield. Here, they were enacting a version of ‘Red Light, Green Light.’ It’s alleged that the hangar felt as cold as -10 degrees Celsius and this segment lasted as long as nine hours. However, producers allege filming only took two hours. Participants were also apparently served cold breakfast sandwiches and “weak coffee.”

However, it wasn’t until many participants began breaking the ‘no communications’ rule that a bigger picture was painted. In a holding room, contestants began noticing that certain people were given microphone packs that worked. Others were given a pack that wasn’t even functional. It’s alleged that some contestants were pre-selected to advance despite what happened in the actual game. One specific contestant claims an eliminated player was actually put back into the game.“It really wasn’t a game show. It was a TV show, and we were basically extras in a TV show,” one source explains to Rolling Stone.

Thus, Squid Game: The Challenge earned an internal moniker of “Rigged Game.”

Once it became time to shoot the Red Light, Green Light game, participants were given hand and foot warmers and a fake blood pack. The latter of which was used to mimic the deaths eliminated participants experienced in the series. When filming began, foot warmers were taken away from the contestants. As the game progressed, many participants were stuck in place for upwards of 30 minutes, unable to move due to the game’s rules.

The freezing conditions are said to have led to at least 10 people collapsing during the game. In a horrifying mirror image of the Squid Game series, other contestants couldn’t offer their help due to the risk of being eliminated. It’s alleged that as people fell, some began to convulse on the ground. Medics were then sent to the site. Rather than forego filming, masked production members in jumpsuits made their way onto the field with black coffins and blocked the medics.

“People were beating themselves up, including myself, around the fact that you’ve got a girl convulsing and we’re all stood there like statues. On what planet is that even humane?” one contestant said in the report.

More evidence supporting the pre-selected contestants and their “storyline” was noticed during filming. It’s alleged that some contestants who had an operational microphone clearly moved and were not eliminated. Others claim that they were told they had been eliminated despite not moving.

At the time of writing, Studio Lambert and The Garden have not commented on the allegations. Before production even began, many questioned whether Netflix even saw the irony in greenlighting a game show like this given the themes of the series. Currently, there is no release date set for the 10-episode reality series.

Image credit: Netflix

Source: Rolling Stone

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Netflix reveals Squid Game reality series, completely missing point of original show

Netflix is working on a 10-episode reality competition series based on its massively popular Squid Game series.

Announced at Alberta’s Banff World Media Festival, Squid Game: The Challenge will feature 456 global contestants who compete in a series of games to win $4.56 million USD (about $5.9 million CAD). Netflix says this is the largest lump-sum cash prize of any reality series ever, although, as The Hollywood Reporter notesX-Factor has given out recording contracts worth $5 million USD (about $6.49 million CAD).

Overall, The Challenge has a similar premise to the scripted Squid Game series, in which 456 people also vie for large cash prizes, albeit with life or death stakes. It’s currently unclear how Netflix will alter the games in the reality series to make them decidedly less fatal.

Regardless, people were quick to point out that making a reality series based on Squid Game is rather tone-deaf. After all, creator Hwang Dong-hyuk quite clearly intended for the series to be a critique of capitalism and economic class struggles. On Twitter, several people shared a rather astute tweet from writer Alex Blechman:

Several people naturally pointed out this series goes against the entire point of Squid Game.

Other responses were more humorous, but still in the same vein. Some shared images from Parasite, another South Korean drama about the disparities between classes:

Others posted other popular memes:

While it makes sense that Netflix would want to capitalize on its most-watched series of all time, perhaps a different approach was in order. In any event, those interested in taking part in Squid Game: The Challenge can visit SquidGameCasting.com. It’s important to note that Netflix requires applicants to be English-speaking, which is a questionable choice considering the original series was almost entirely in Korean.

A second season of the fictional Squid Game series was also recently confirmed to be in development.

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Squid Game worth almost $900 million USD according to Netflix estimate

Squid Game has proven popular for Netflix — so much so, the company reportedly expects the show will create almost $900 million USD (roughly $1.1 billion CAD) in value for it.

The figure comes from documents seen by Bloomberg. Those documents also give a peek inside how Netflix evaluates its content, something the company has previously been secretive about. As Bloomberg points out, Netflix doesn’t generate sales on specific titles like traditional movie studios and TV networks. Instead, Netflix rolls out new content to keep subscribers paying and to entice new customers.

Because of that, Netflix gathers a lot of data about what subscribers watch and uses that data to derive value from the content it makes. For example, the Netflix document cited by Bloomberg notes that Squid Game generated $891.1 million in “impact value.” Netflix uses that metric to assess the performance of individual shows.

Further, Squid Game cost Netflix just $21.4 million USD (about $26.5 million CAD) to make, or about $2.4 million USD per episode.

A Netflix attorney told Bloomberg in a letter that it would be “inappropriate” for it to publicize the confidential data contained in the document, explaining that the streaming giant “does not discuss these metrics outside the company.”

Netflix document details “value” of Squid Game

Bloomberg says that some figures from the document are self-explanatory and mirror information shared by other companies. For example, roughly 132 million people have watched at least two minutes of Squid Game in the show’s first 23 days, beating the record set by Netflix’s Bridgerton.

Although Netflix releases the two-minute metric to the public, it hasn’t disclosed how many people watched more than two minutes or how many people completed the show. Bloomberg explains that the two-minute measurement can make Netflix’s numbers look inflated compared to traditional TV shows, which report the average number of people that watch a show for its duration.

However, Netflix does estimate that 89 percent of people who started Squid Game watched at least 75 minutes (more than one episode), while 66 percent of viewers (87 million people) finished the series in the first 23 days. All told, people have spent more than 1.4 billion hours watching the show.

Other metrics found in the document are less clear, and Bloomberg says it’s uncertain what data Netflix uses to calculate the metrics. Squid Game reportedly scored 353 points in Netflix’s adjusted view share (AVS) metric. Bloomberg explains that AVS measures both how many people watch the show and how “valuable” those viewers are. For example, new customers and existing subscribers who don’t use the service often are considered more valuable because the content they watch indicates what drew them to the service or kept them subscribed.

Moreover, Squid Game’s value is increased in part due to its low cost to make. The show cost less than the recent Dave Chappelle special and less than making a few episodes of The Crown. Netflix has an “efficiency” metric that considers AVS relative to cost — Squid Game scored 47.7x in the efficiency metric, while the Chappelle special Sticks & Stones scored 0.8x, according to Bloomberg. Netflix considers a score of 1.0x “solid.”

Source: Bloomberg

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Netflix is looking into making a ‘Squid Game’ video game

Netflix has teased that a video game adaptation of its massively popular Squid Game series could be on the table.

Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter, Minyoung Kim, Netflix’s vice president of content for Asia Pacific, was asked about “what comes next” for South Korean survival drama series. In response, Kim floated the possibility of a video game adaptation.

“We’ve been getting an overwhelming but happy volume of requests from the organization [Netflix] — from the consumer product department, from the gaming group, from our other international teams. My team’s role is to really look at all of those opportunities together, to create that roadmap for the Squid Game IP,” said Kim. “We are looking at multiple different areas — from games, consumer product, and others — to really figure out what we can bring to our audiences to increase their affinity towards our content and give them more joy, while staying true to the world that our creator has built.”

Of course, that’s by no means a confirmation, but a Squid Game video game would make a lot of sense. As THR noted to Kim, gaming, in particular, seems like a natural fit for the property, especially given Netflix’s recent push into the medium. However, Netflix has said the bulk of its gaming efforts will be on the mobile front, so it remains to be seen what platform(s) game based on Squid Game would come to.

In terms of the type of game, the most logical genre seems to be a Fortnite-style battle royale. The series follows hundreds of cash-strapped players as they take part in deadly children’s games. Alternatively, a Fall Guys-inspired multiplayer game (think: Wipeout but even more chaotic and violent) also seems like it could work for Squid Game.

In any event, Squid Game is too big of a hit for Netflix to lay dormant. Therefore, it’s not a question of whether we’ll see more Squid Game, but rather what we’ll next see from it.

Image credit: Netflix

Source: The Hollywood Reporter

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Thousands try to join Squid Game by calling on-screen phone number

South Korean series Squid Game is one of Netflix’s most popular shows right now.

However, an odd real-world situation related to the show has occurred. Participants in Squid Game are given a business card that features PlayStation-like icons on one side and a phone number that’s visible during the episode on the other.

Naturally, thousands of people tried calling the number shown by the main character Seong Gi Hun, and the real-world owner of the actual number is upset, according to South Korean blog Koreaboo.

“After Squid Game aired, I have been receiving calls and texts endlessly, 24/7, to the point that it’s hard for me to go on with daily life. This is a number that I’ve been using for more than 10 years, so I’m quite taken aback. There are more than 4000 numbers that I’ve had to delete from my phone (viewers) and it’s to the point where due to people reaching out without a sense of day and night due to their curiosity, my phone’s battery is drained and turns off. At first I didn’t know why but my friend told me that my number came out in Squid Game and that’s when I realized,” said the owner of the number in an interview with Koreaboo.

People probably aren’t calling the number to try to join the Squid Game in the real-world… we hope.

According to Koreaboo, the series’ producers assumed displaying the number was fine since the first three digits were blocked, but calling the last eight digits was enough to reach the victim’s local phone number.

The owner of the number told local South Korean media that they can’t change their number because it’s used for business purposes. Further, Koreaboo explained that Netflix initially said it wouldn’t do anything about the issue. When Netflix received backlash for the response, the owner of the number was reportedly offered 5 million KRW (roughly $5,280 CAD).

Netflix South Korea has announced that it will edit the number out of the series and is asking viewers to stop calling it.

Source: Koreaboo, Kotaku