The Arena (TV series) explained

Executive Producer:Ignatius Teo
Julie Sim-Chew
Producer:Tan Ing How
Prem Anand
Lindsay Jialin
Monica Goh
Vivian Chew
Runtime:60 Minutes
Presenter:Jason Chan, Adrian Pang
Country:Singapore
Network:Mediacorp Channel 5
Num Seasons:2
Num Episodes:23

The Arena is a debate-style television show produced by Mediacorp Channel 5 in Singapore. Season 1 of the show was broadcast from January–March 2007. A second season, known as The Arena II, was aired from March–May 2008. The show involves teams of students from secondary schools in Singapore debating against each other on issues of topical interest.

Season 1 of the show was won by the team from the United World College of South East Asia, who defeated Hwa Chong Institution in the final. The season was hosted by the popular Singapore TV personality Adrian Pang.

For The Arena II, Jason Chan replaced Adrian Pang as the show's host. The season was won by Raffles Institution, who defeated Nanyang Girls' High School in the final.

The Arena was one of the four nominees for the 2007 International Emmy Award in the 'Children and Young People' category, alongside shows from Australia, Brazil and Poland.[1] (The winning show in the category was The Magic Tree from Poland.[2])The Arena was also one of six nominees for the 'Best Game or Quiz Programme' at the 2008 Asian Television Awards.[3]

The Arena Season 1

Season 1 of The Arena was broadcast from January–March 2007, and ran for 11 episodes. In each episode, teams from two secondary schools in Singapore debated against each other. The topic for debate was different for each episode. Ten schools competed in the first round, from which the five winning teams and the best-scoring losing team progressed to the quarter-finals. The semi-finals were contested by the three winners and the best-scoring losing team from the quarter-finals. In the Grand Final, held at the MediaCorp TV Theatre and telecast on 27 March 2007, the team from the United World College of South East Asia defeated the team from Hwa Chong Institution to win the competition. Each episode was hosted by Adrian Pang.

Progress of teams

Ten schools qualified for the televised rounds of The Arena Season 1.

SchoolRound OneQuarter-FinalsSemi-FinalsGrand Final
United World College of South East AsiaWonWonWonWon
Hwa Chong InstitutionWonWildcardWonLost
Loyang Secondary SchoolWonWonLost---
Raffles InstitutionWildcardWonLost---
Methodist Girls' SchoolWonLost------
Xinmin Secondary SchoolWonLost------
CHIJ Katong ConventLost---------
CHIJ St. Nicholas Girls' SchoolLost---------
Kuo Chuan Presbyterian Secondary SchoolLost---------
Nanyang Girls' High SchoolLost---------

Note: In both Round One and the Quarter-Finals, the highest-scoring losing team also advanced to the next round as a 'Wildcard'.

Topics and results for each episode

AirdateTopicCompeting Schools
19 January 2007Hey Good Looking, You're a Winner! – Good looks triumph over effort.Loyang Secondary School vs Raffles Institution (Loyang won 51-49)
216 January 2007Selfish? Yes We Are! – Today's youth are motivated by self-centeredness alone.Methodist Girls' School vs CHIJ St. Nicholas Girls' School (MGS won 72-28)
330 January 2007Don't Try to be Funny! – Our society does not encourage a sense of humour.Xinmin Secondary School vs Kuo Chuan Presbyterian Secondary School (Xinmin won 57-43)
46 February 2007Singapore, a Self-Service Nation! – Local service standards have a long way to go.United World College of South East Asia vs Nanyang Girls' High School (UWC won 74-26)
513 February 2007Teach First Sex Later! – Protecting our youth from sex now causes social problems later.Hwa Chong Institution vs CHIJ Katong Convent (HCI won 78-22)
620 February 2007To Hide or Not to Hide? – Internet anonymity is bad for us all.Xinmin Secondary School vs Loyang Secondary School (Loyang won 55-45)
727 February 2007Where Do We Stand? – Singapore's youth are politically apathetic.Raffles Institution vs Hwa Chong Institution (RI won 54-46)
86 March 2007Mother Knows Best – Mothers should stay at home to raise children.United World College of South East Asia vs Methodist Girls' School (UWC won 80-20)
913 March 2007The Pressing Issue – Bloggers are becoming more influential than journalists.Loyang Secondary School vs Hwa Chong Institution (HCI won 89-11)
1020 March 2007First Among Equals – Singapore's education system breeds elitism.Raffles Institution vs United World College of South East Asia (UWC won 94-6)
1127 March 2007Modern Softies – Youth today are less prepared for future challenges than their parents' generation.Hwa Chong Institution vs United World College of South East Asia (UWC won 78-22)

Debate format

The format of debates for The Arena Season 1 was created specially for the show and differed from other competitive debate formats.

Each team had three speakers. The first speaker on each team spoke for 3 minutes and 30 seconds, the second speaker for 4 minutes, and the third speaker for 4 minutes and 30 seconds. Each set of two speeches was considered to be one 'Round' within the debate, and each 'Round' was judged separately. Speakers stood in the middle of the room, and spoke directly to one opponent from the other team (rather than facing to the audience and the judges as in most other debate formats). This opponent was allowed interrupt the speech with points of information (POIs – a feature of both the World Schools style and British Parliamentary stylëe of debating). However unlike other debate formats which use POIs, the speaker is not allowed to decline to hear a point when it was offered by the opposing speaker. Each team had a 1-minute and 30 second POI 'Rebuttal Bank', which they could use over the course of the three speeches by the other team. In between the second and third speeches of the two teams, there was an additional 3-minute 'Group Rebuttal Round' involving all 6 debaters in a series of short arguments and immediate responses on the topic.

Each episode was judged by four judges. Each judge decided which team they thought has won each 'Round' within the debate, and the team with the most points at the end was declared the winner.

Judges

Each episode was judged by three regular judges and one guest judge. The regular judges on the show were:

Guest judges for the show included Singapore celebrities like Tan Kheng Hua and Daisy Irani, and Gaurav Keerthi, who was also from the Debate Association. The guest judge for the final (and the only guest judge to appear on the show twice) was Viswa Sadasivan, the Chairman of the Political Development Feedback Group of Singapore's Feedback Unit, who is also the Chairman of the Right Angle Group and a former TV presenter.

For the preliminary selection rounds of the show (which were not televised), the teams were also judged by Geetha Creffield (ex-President of Debate Association Singapore and former coach of the Singapore national schools debating team) and Mark Gabriel (Secretary of the World Schools Debating Council and Tournament Director of the Singapore Secondary Schools Debating Championships).

Reaction and criticism

The show was generally well received by the public and the press, though some criticisms were also raised by the Singapore media.

One area of the show that came in for criticism was the debate topics, some of which were thought to be too one-sided. Shortly after the show began airing, 8 Days magazine criticised the topic used for the preliminary round match-up between Methodist Girls' School and CHIJ St. Nicholas Girls' School ('Selfish? Yes We Are! – Today's youth are motivated by self-centeredness alone'), saying that it was significantly easier for the team arguing against the topic (MGS – who won by a 72-28 scoreline).

The scoring system, which required judges to allocate all their points for each round to one team, even if they felt that team was only slightly better, also came in for criticism. The scoreline of the second semi-final between the United World College of South East Asia and Raffles Institution, which ended in a 94-6 victory for UWC, was particularly highlighted as being an unfair reflection on the closeness of the match-up.

The show concluded around the same time as a series of letters from members of the public were published in the Forum section of The Straits Times, discussing the relative merits of Singapore's education system and that of international schools in Singapore. A number of these letters made reference to UWC's success in the competition, some of them arguing that this was an indication that the school was better at producing students with stronger thinking skills and presentation ability than local schools, and others disputing this.

Emmy Award nomination

The Arena was one of the four nominees for the 2007 International Emmy Award in the 'Children and Young People' category. The award was won by the Polish show The Magic Tree. The other two nominees in the category were Mortified (Australia) and Nutty Boy (Brazil).

The Arena II

A second season of The Arena was broadcast from March–May 2008, and ran for 12 episodes. Jason Chan has replaced Adrian Pang as the host for season 2 of the show. The number of teams participating in the first round was increased to 12. There was no 'Wildcard' in the first round, but at the quarter-final stage the highest-scoring losing team gained a spot in the semi-finals. The Grand Final was held at the MediaCorp TV Theatre and telecast on 26 May 2008, and was won by Raffles Institution defeated who the team from Nanyang Girls' High School. An award was given for the Best Speaker of the Series, which went to Nicholas Quah of Raffles Institution.

Changes to the debate and judging format

A new scoring system was introduced for The Arena II, with judges being able to allocate up to 20 points to each team for their performance in each round, plus an extra 'Team Strategy Score' of up to 20 points at the end of the debate, with a full score of 100 points. The number of judges was reduced to three judges per episode. The winning team was determined by the number of judges who awarded the win to each team (with the winning team claiming either a unanimous 3-0 decision or a 2-1 split decision).

The lengths of all speeches was also standardised at 4 minutes per speaker. The 'Group Rebuttal Round' was renamed the 'Quick-Fire Round', and remained 3 minutes long.

At the end of each episode, the judges selected one of the debaters as the best speaker of the debate.

Progress of teams

12 schools were selected to participate in The Arena II following audition rounds in October–November 2007. (Defending-champions the United World College of South East Asia elected not to enter The Arena II as the planned recording dates coincided with their students' examinations.)

SchoolRound OneQuarter-FinalsSemi-FinalsGrand Final
Raffles InstitutionWonWonWonWon
Nanyang Girls' High SchoolWonWonWon Lost
Hwa Chong InstitutionWonWonLost---
Singapore American SchoolWonWildcardLost ---
Jurong Secondary SchoolWonLost------
Dunman Secondary SchoolWonLost------
CHIJ St Joseph's ConventLost---------
CHIJ St Nicholas Girls' SchoolLost---------
Fairfield Methodist Secondary SchoolLost---------
Global Indian International SchoolLost---------
Madrasah Al-Maarif Al-IslamiahLost---------
St Joseph's InstitutionLost---------

Note: The highest-scoring losing team in the Quarter-Finals advanced to the Semi-Finals as a 'Wildcard'.

Topics and results for each episode

AirdateTopicCompeting Schools
110 March 2008Going for gold, but on our steam only – Only native-born citizens should be allowed to represent Singapore in international sportsRaffles Institution vs CHIJ St. Nicholas Girls' School (RI won 2-1)
217 March 2008Saving the environment, just a load of hot air! – Singapore should be playing a bigger part in the battle against global warming Global Indian International School vs Jurong Secondary School (Jurong won 2-1)
324 March 2008A First World city, but without social graciousness – Singaporeans lack the civic-mindedness of other modern societies Hwa Chong Institution vs CHIJ St Joseph's Convent (HCI won 3-0)
431 March 2008Intelligent clones, but not ready for the world – Singapore's education system does not prepare students for the challenges of the working world Dunman Secondary School vs St Joseph's Institution (Dunman won 3-0)
57 April 2008New media, new dangers! – The Internet has brought more harm than good to today's youth Madrasah Al-Maarif Al-Islamiah vs Singapore American School (SAS won 3-0)
614 April 2008Blame the parents for delinquent children! – Parents should also be held responsible for crimes committed by their children Fairfield Methodist Secondary School vs Nanyang Girls' High School (NYGH won 2-1)
721 April 2008Just a little red dot with an identity crisis! – Singapore suffers from the lack of a clear national identity Hwa Chong Institution vs Singapore American School (HCI won 2-1)
828 April 2008With great exposure comes great responsibility! – The media should stop giving publicity to celebrities who have poor morals Raffles Institution vs Dunman Secondary School (RI won 3-0)
95 May 2008A shared security – Singapore should introduce National Service for womenJurong Secondary School vs Nanyang Girls' High School (NYGH won 3-0)
1012 May 2008Break the glass ceiling! – Organisations should be forced to place more women in senior positionsRaffles Institution vs Hwa Chong Institution (RI won 2-1)
1119 May 2008The promise of science – Science is progressing too fast for the good of societyNanyang Girls' High School vs Singapore American School (NYGH won 3-0)
1226 May 2008Too much of a good thing! – Freedom of speech has gone too far on the WebNanyang Girls' High School vs Raffles Institution (RI won 3-0)

Judges

For season 2 of The Arena, the number of judges for each episode was reduced from four to three. K.K. Seet has returned from the first season as a permanent judge, joined by the President of Debate Association Singapore, Gaurav Keerthi. The third judge for each episode was a guest judge. Guest judges included Mark Gabriel and Adrian Tan. Viswa Sadasivan was again the guest judge for the Grand Final.

The preliminary selection rounds (which were not televised), were judged by Mark Gabriel, Geetha Creffield, Ashraf Safdar and Gaurav Keerthi.

Winning team

The winning team for The Arena II came from Raffles Institution. Their team members were Adil Hakeem, Jarret Huang, Ashish Kumar and Nicholas Quah.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Channel 5 - Mediacorp TV. 2008-03-24. https://web.archive.org/web/20080324003656/http://5.mediacorptv.sg/wassup/ch5announcements/view/938/1/.html. 2018-08-03. 2008-03-24. live.
  2. Web site: Awards - Previous Winners - International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. www.iemmys.tv. 2018-08-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20171019013207/https://www.iemmys.tv/awards_previous.aspx. 2017-10-19. dead.
  3. Web site: Asian TV Awards 2007 Nominees . 2008-02-11 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080225013045/http://www.asiantvawards.com/ATA2007nominees.htm . 2008-02-25 .