Reports | May 02, 2012 12:46

Extreme Chess Championships part IV: the Final

Extreme Chess Championships part IV: the Final

The fourth episode of the Extreme Chess Championships was recently published and uploaded to YouTube. In this chess reality TV show, created by Jennifer Shahade, her brother Greg Shahade and Daniel Meirom, a group of young Americans of different cultures fight each other at the board with 15 minutes plus 5 seconds increment. The games are played at the offices of Chess-in-the-Schools, the New York City non-profit that brings chess to kids all over the city.

In the dramatic finals of the Extreme “X Chess” Championships, 13-year-old Justus Williams plays Stanford student Elliott Liu, 22. Both players defy the traditional image of chessplayers. Justus is the top board on the powerhouse Brooklyn middle school IS 318, and was just featured on the Rachel Maddow show, and the New York Times. Elliott is a fun-loving college senior who attends music festivals like Coachella on the weekends while maintaining both a strong international chess ranking and a demanding schedule at Stanford University.

The fourth and final episode crowns the first-ever Extreme “X Chess” Champion, who takes home a cash prize, the title and an automatic bid into the second season of X Chess. Co-creator and director Daniel Meirom talked about potential second season of the Extreme Chess Championships, “It will be even more exciting as fans learn more about the personalities behind the game as well as key strategies from beautiful checkmates to running your opponent out of time.”

 

The Extreme Chess Championships is a made for TV competition that showcases the drama of chess and the rush of checkmate. The pace in this single elimination knockout competition, also known as X Chess, is much closer to basketball than golf—each player has less than 20 minutes to complete all his or her moves. The show aims to heighten the awareness of chess and to prove that intellectual pursuits can create thrilling television.

The Extreme Chess Championships is created by filmmaker Daniel Meirom, US Chess League founder and International Master Greg Shahade and author and two-time US Women’s Champion Jennifer Shahade. X Chess is hosted by model and actress Kacie Marie. Jeopardy! Champion Jonathan Corbblah, who has appeared on ESPN, Cash Cab and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, provides accessible commentary with Jennifer Shahade. The event was hosted at Chess-In-The-Schools, a New York non-profit.

You can find the X Chess Champs on FacebookTwitter and YouTube. We previously wrote about them in this and this and this article, where you can find the trailer and the first three episodes.

Editors's picture
Author: Editors

Chess Master School

Comments

Parkov's picture

"The fourth episode of the Extreme Chess Championships was recently published and uploaded to YouTube"

So hang on, this show didn't even make it on TV, just Youtube? So really the only people watching it are young people who are already interested in chess?

fen's picture

The show is so bad I'm amazed YouTube allows it. I also don't understand why this website felt the need to promote it so heavily. I can understand writing an editorial about it, or an article informing us of its existence, but a new article for every episode? Really?

silvakov's picture

A trick called press-release...

Edward R's picture

Thank goodness it's over. Doubt about a second series as Jennifer Shahade has been whisked away to an undisclosed location to examine possible military uses of her voice...

The Devil's picture

Things to do with this series:

-Give a thumbs up to Elliott Liu for the performance and on winning, even though I wanted Justus to win.

-Keep Jennifer Shahade a minimum of 2 miles away from any microphone and anything that looks similar to a microphone, just incase.

-Google Kacie Marie and fall in love

-Give a thumbs up all around to everyone who helped produce this to try and popularize chess. Although Jennifer Shahade has the most annoying voice in the entire world. Sorry Greg, I like you but your sister's voice is like nails on a chalk board.

Lee's picture

Didn't hit the mark for me, but kudos to them for trying something different.

Bob's picture

I think this series was enjoyable, and the game the winner played in the semifinal was very entertaining. Good job Elliott! Some people can't see the point of popularising chess in this way, my personal opinion is that they did a good job, and they managed to dramatise the situations and their characters nicely. I wonder how the participants feel about it all now?

I thought the time control could have been a bit longer in all the games, to avoid the stupid loss on time, since they did so much clipping anyway.

Parkov's picture

The question is how much popularizing of chess did this show actually do? It only attracted ~16,000 views, modest numbers indeed for Youtube. I suspect many of those viewers found the show by way of referral from Chessvibes and others. Did the dumbing down and glitzing up of this show attract demonstrably more viewers than it otherwise would have done?
I hold no animosity toward the production team but they had an opportunity to do something great for the development of chess. Of course, it's better to try and fail than fail to try.

People love to berate Carlsen for his media appearances but despite the lack of real chess content in those cases, he at least is presenting the game to audiences of millions.

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