Awful title for an excellent book about one of the funniest shows ever. "The Gong Show" was like the later "Mystery Science Theater 3000" in that people either got it or were baffled by its appeal, although "MST3K" never inspired the sort of rage that Chuck Barris' talent/comedy show drew from those paid to type about TV.
If you happen to be one of the people who laughs themselves sick at the YouTube clips, you'll appreciate this book -- nearly an oral history, considering how many interviews Nedeff conducted with surviving contestants, judges, staffers and network types. It doubles as a Barris bio, well worth reading despite the existence of three memoirs (two of them semi-fictional) by the man himself. As connoisseurs of Barris' novels and nonfiction books already know, he was, for all his oddities, smart and introspective; what's new here is how creative and charismatic he could be, running a production company staffed by people, mainly in their 20s, who adored him and found themselves capable of, if not greatness, then at least hilarity under his guidance.
The accounts of acts that appeared and of the tapings are almost as funny as the shows themselves, and Nedeff demolishes one of the main arguments used by those who loathed Barris: his supposed cruelty. The tuneless singers, musical belchers, two-headed dancers, tragic standups, the guy who stuck his hands in flames of varying heights while screaming out the melody of "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" -- they were only rarely innocents convinced of their genius and devastated when they were gonged. More often than not they were aspiring entertainers who understood the premise and were motivated by the fact that Barris, being no fool, paid real money to members of performers' unions who appeared. And whether they were pros or not, he seems to have loved them all.