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Tip the Logies 2016
Survey says it's time to predict the winners once again. Vote here!
- Published by David Knox
- on
- Filed under News, Top Stories
It’s time once again to see if we can successfully predict the TV Week Logies Awards in the annual Tip the Logies survey!
In theory a large pool of TV fans should choose fairly similar results to the wider public. Last year readers correctly tipped 7 of 11 categories.
It’s important you choose who you would LIKE to see win, not who you THINK will win.
Last year some readers did the latter because they were hoping to win a prize on offer -so this year there is NO prize and no reader will be announced for guessing the most.
Survey closes 5pm AEST Friday May 6th 2016.
Voting requires a valid email.
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- Tagged with Logie Awards
12 Responses
Having voted for who I want to win, I can now rest easy in the knowledge that they will certainly not win!
There were some categories where I had no idea what was going on, but all the questions were mandatory so sorry if I wrecked your data, haha (unless all categories are mandatory in actual Logies voting as well, in which case I guess it’d be all right).
By the way, I just noticed this but it is nice to see The Project in the News/Panel category, where it belongs, rather than [Light] Entertainment!
I stopped at Q9 (Best Reality) due to the mandatory answer requirement. I wouldn’t like any of them to win. I didn’t want to skew the data with a donkey vote.
I couldn’t vote in a few Questions, hated them all in most!
I voted for 60 Minutes. I don’t think they deserve it but I would *like* them to win just to see how the room reacts to that news, watch Twitter go into meltdown, the days of analysis afterwards, and hear what Paul Barry has to say on the following Media Watch.
I’m sure I could have accurately predicted the winners, but you asked us to put who we’d like to win so…
Gogglebox is factual? Interesting. I would have thought Gruen is factual and Gogglebox is entertainment. I guess I need to refresh on how the categories are defined.
I think the word ‘tip’ is why people give a ‘tip’ as opposed to who they would like. If asked for a tip for the Melbourne Cup, one would tell you who they believe will win – not who they would like to win. A tip is simply a prediction of the winner which is whom one would think would win – not like. Are you asking for predictions or just whom people would like to win? This survey completely will spew out a whole set of different results depending. I predict or tip Better Homes and Gardens to win its category, however it would be nice to see The Living Room win. Not sure what you are wanting here – a tip or wishful thinking beliefs?
Story already clarifies this. I even put it in bold, thx.
I understand that if you read the full article it clarifies. But the main story was tip the winners plus the comment of “Survey says it’s time to predict the winners once again. Vote here!” Obviously tipping and predicting the winner as a headline implies something different to what the story actually is asking. It’s fine. Just saying that is why people may have done that last year and may do again this year if they read the headline and front page blurb.
I’m with aryan3 – tip is definitely the wrong word.
“Not sure what you are wanting here – a tip or wishful thinking beliefs?”
Gees, how much clearer can it be- “It’s important you choose who you would Like to see win, not who you Think will win”.