Some Fans Think the Questions Have Gotten Dirtier Over the Years

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With a name like Family Feud, most people assume the popular game show will be family-friendly. But over the years, some have become concerned that the game is including too many sexually suggestive questions.

Should the show be concerned about its younger viewers, or is it all in good fun?

What is ‘Family Feud’?

'Family Feud'
STEVE HARVEY, STEPHEN CONRAD MOORE | Byron Cohen via Getty Images

The classic television game show, Family Feud has been on air for almost half a decade. Beginning in 1976, the show has been through a number of hosts, including Richard Dawson, who hosted from 1976 to 1985, and again from 1994 to 1995.

The current version of Family Feud is hosted by comedian, Steve Harvey who started with the show in 2010.

Family Feud is played by pitting two families against one another to guess the answers to survey questions. Contestants are split into two teams, each consisting of five members from each family, which sometimes includes children. The host asks a survey question, which was previously posed to 100 people, and the contestants must guess the most popular responses. Points are given for guessing the top answers.

Is ‘Family Feud’ too sexually suggestive?

RELATED: ‘Family Feud’ Host Steve Harvey Shares The Dumbest Answers on the Game Show

Throughout its run, Family Feud has included some questions which could be considered sexually suggestive. For example, Harvey once asked for a response to “the last thing you stuck your finger in.”

Obviously, answers to this could range from completely benign to overtly sexual. But because people are sexual creatures, sometimes our minds will automatically lean sexual, which is exactly how one contestant responded.

“My wife,” the contestant said, which caused the audience to erupt into laughter.

This question was posed during a 2015 episode, but some say Family Feud has always included sexually suggestive questions on the show, even in its first decade, and during its previous game version, Match Game.

“Even the 1970s/early 80s Match Game (where Family Feud had its genesis) had a couple of occasions where they had to super-impose “OOPS!” and replace the audio with a slide whistle,” said one person, who called themselves a game show fan since kindergarten, commented during a Quora discussion on the topic.

But some think the show has become worse with time. In 2018, NCIS star, Pauley Perrette voiced her concern on Twitter.

“Dear @FamilyFeudABC I love @SteveHarveyFM and I love game shows. WHY DO YOU MAKE YOU PROGRAM SO FILTHY? Even with child players? No reason,” Perrette wrote.

Dan Gainor, vice president of business and culture of the Media Research Center, thinks the recent sexually suggestive questions are only an extension of our culture becoming more sexually open in general.

“I think what has changed is that Hollywood has so…



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