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Barris' new novel, "The Big Question," feels like a dated reality show parable, although the story begins in 2011, after the president has declared euthanasia legal and CNN has televised a Texas execution. On "The Big Question," six people vie for $100 million in the ultimate Draconian contest: Answer the final question wrong and you die (by drinking poison for all the world to see).
Barris had a large hand in stirring the reality TV pot but then, it turned out, he wasn't around to revel in its actual boiling point. He became a Museum of Radio and Television footnote then re-emerged in 2002 with the re-release of his kooky 1982 memoir, "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind," which revealed that he not only produced popular TV shows but, he claimed, also took side trips out of the country as a covert assassin for the CIA.
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