1) Wheel of Fortune
Wheel
of Fortune is an American television game show created by Merv Griffin.
Contestants compete to solve word puzzles, similar to those used in
Hangman, to win cash and prizes. The title refers to the show's giant
carnival wheel that contestants spin throughout the course of the game
to determine their cash and/or prizes. The current broadcast syndicated
version of the program premiered on September 19, 1983 and is hosted by
Pat Sajak and Vanna White. In a 2008 article, TV Guide named Wheel of
Fortune as the "top-rated syndicated series."
Merv
Griffin was responsible for creating the original version of Wheel of
Fortune and also served as executive producer until his retirement in
2000.
2) Beat the Clock
Monty
Hall hosted as two male-female couples (husband & wife,
boyfriend-girlfriend, mother-son, father-daughter, etc. a red team &
green team) competed in stunts. Each stunt awarded $250 to the winning
team + a bonus stunt for an additional $250 more. Two rounds were
played.
Then comes the bonus shuffle. There's a shuffleboard table with amounts from $300-$1,000. Each team had two discs (red & green) & had two chances to reach the furthest without going off the table. The disc that's the furthest in money value won the amount & played a super stunt for 10 times the value (up to $10,000).
Then comes the bonus shuffle. There's a shuffleboard table with amounts from $300-$1,000. Each team had two discs (red & green) & had two chances to reach the furthest without going off the table. The disc that's the furthest in money value won the amount & played a super stunt for 10 times the value (up to $10,000).
Teams stayed on as champions until defeated or reached the CBS $25,000 limit.
In November, civilians were dumped & celebrities were in as the show became "All Star All New Beat The Clock". And just like Tattletales, the audience were divided into two rooting sections; the red & the green. In the super stunt round, $1,000 of the jackpot went to the audience while the other amount went to the stars favorite charity. The four stars played for a week.
In November, civilians were dumped & celebrities were in as the show became "All Star All New Beat The Clock". And just like Tattletales, the audience were divided into two rooting sections; the red & the green. In the super stunt round, $1,000 of the jackpot went to the audience while the other amount went to the stars favorite charity. The four stars played for a week.
3) Anything For Money Video
Anything
For Money was a television game show hosted by Fred Travalena and
announced by Johnny Gilbert which ran in syndication from September 17,
1984 to September 1985. Reruns were later aired on the USA Network from
1986 to 1988. Contestants watched video clips in which cast members
Christopher Callen and Ralph Harris attempted to coerce passers-by into
participating in jokes, in exchange for increasing amounts of money. The
series was produced by Bernstein/Hovis Productions and Impact Studios
for Paramount Television. Travalena would introduce clips and, once the
premise of the prank was known, the contestants then guessed whether or
not the participants would consent. Three rounds were played, with a
correct guess worth $200 in round 1, $300 in round 2, and $500 in round
3. The player with the most money after 3 rounds won the game and
received a bonus prize, in addition to their winnings.
4) The Big Showdown
Hard quiz with a dice game determining a possible $10,000 payoff.
Three
players competed. Peck introduced six categories, worth from one to six
points, a payoff point (the first one, for example, would have been
seven) that the contestants tried to reach, and a dollar value for each
payoff point determined by a "money dial" on his podium (worth from $25
to $500). One-point tossup questions determined control of the board.
The goal was to hit the payoff point exactly by ringing in first and
answering questions correctly in the six categories without going over.
If a contestant requested a point value that would have put another
contestant over the payoff point, the second contestant was locked out
of that particular question. After a payoff point was hit, a new payoff
point (which would have been fifteen) and dollar value were established.
Two rounds were played in this manner, with different categories for
the second round.
The
second round ended with a 90-second speed round, in which all payoff
points (after the one already in play had been reached) were worth $100.
The two players with the highest scores went to Final Showdown.
In
Final Showdown, only three categories were offered, worth from one to
three points, and the payoff point was seven. The first player to reach
seven points, in a similar manner as illustrated above, won $250 and the
right to roll the dice for $10,000. All players kept the money earned
during the game.
5) Bullseye
In
2007 Bullseye was once again invited back by ITV to be one of the 8
game shows on ITV’s Game Show Marathon series 2 hosted by Vernon Kay.
The seven other shows in the series were, The Price is Right,
Blockbusters, Blankety Blank, The Golden Shot, Name that Tune, Mr &
Mrs and Play Your Cards Right. For the second time Bullseye had the
highest ratings of all 8 shows in the Marathon and when you consider the
fact that Bullseye was transmitted on Cup Final Day when half of London
and half of Manchester were in the pub celebrating or commiserating the
result of the Cup Final – Bullseye still came out on top, illustrating
Bullseye’s continued and deserved place as the king of British game
shows and cementing its iconic status and eternal popularity with the
Great British public.
6) Bumper Stumpers
Bumper
Stumpers was actually created by Wink Martindale, a popular host of
numerous game shows including Trivial Pursuit and Tic-Tac-Dough.
Martindale didn't host Bumper stumpers, though - that honor went to the
lesser-known Al DuBois.
The show aired from 1987 to 1990, with nearly 1,000 episodes hitting the airwaves.
The entire Bumper Stumpers show had a car theme, from the theme music featuring honking horns to the basic elements of game play. The premise was that contestants would receive clues and use them to try to decode the meaning of vanity license plates.
The entire Bumper Stumpers show had a car theme, from the theme music featuring honking horns to the basic elements of game play. The premise was that contestants would receive clues and use them to try to decode the meaning of vanity license plates.
7) 1 vs. 100
In
1 VS. 100, one player (“The One”) must correctly answer a series of
multiple-choice trivia questions while trying to outlast “The Mob” of
100 people, who are also trying to answer each question. If The One is
correct, all Mob members who answered the question incorrectly are
eliminated, bringing the lone contestant closer to winning the game.
Along the way, The One can “Poll the Mob” or “Trust the Mob” for help
with the answers. If the contestant eliminates all 100 Mob members, he
or she claims the top prize of $50,000. However, if The One is
incorrect, the game ends and he or she leaves with nothing, and the
remaining members of the Mob split the contestant's winnings.
8) Don’t Forget the Lyrics!
“Don’t
Forget the Lyrics!” is a musical game show that tests contestants’
knowledge of song lyrics from different genres, decades and artists.
“Don’t Forget the Lyrics!” is the ultimate rock star fantasy taking
viewers on a dramatic, heart pounding, rollercoaster ride of music and
edge-of-your seat entertainment.
Mark
McGrath, a member of the multi-platinum group, Sugar Ray, hosts “Don’t
Forget the Lyrics!” where he brings ordinary people center stage for a
chance to win a fortune – just by knowing the words to the biggest hit
songs ever recorded. “Don’t Forget the Lyrics!” first premiered on July
11, 2007 on FOX and became one of the most popular shows in America, as
well as an international phenomenon where contestants around the globe
put their winnings on the line as they tried to not forget the lyrics.
In addition, “Don’t Forget the Lyrics!” will be presented on VH1, as well as in primetime on MyNetworkTV.
This
upcoming season the program welcomes celebrity contestants from
“American Idol”, the Backstreet Boys, and the NFL; Plus special themed
episodes including “Movie Music Week”, “Rock the Troops Week”, and “Rock
the Cradle Week” featuring moms-to-be.
“Don’t
Forget the Lyrics!” is produced by RDF USA and Apploff Entertainment.
Executive produced by Jeff Apploff, Tony Yates, Chris Coelen and Grant
Mansfield.
9) Downfall
On Tuesday the ABC’s new
game show Downfall premiered. The newest game show is hosted by
wrestler Chris Jericho and on the show he proved that he is a good host.
Downfall is overall a great show for those who love to watch game
shows.
Chris Jericho kept the game moving in a good way and tried his level best to engage the contestants and he did it very well. Downfall is an hour game show which is divided into many categories with many questions.
In the American television game show series Downfall contestants can win up to one million dollar. The set of this game show is on the roof of a 10-story building. Previously this game show was scheduled to premier on June 29th but later they moved it to 22 June. This game show is produced by Fremantle Media and the executive producer is Scott St. John. In the game show three prizes will be given in the first five rounds and contestants should answer the question as quickly as possible if they want to move to next round.
In the American television game show series Downfall contestants can win up to one million dollar. The set of this game show is on the roof of a 10-story building. Previously this game show was scheduled to premier on June 29th but later they moved it to 22 June. This game show is produced by Fremantle Media and the executive producer is Scott St. John. In the game show three prizes will be given in the first five rounds and contestants should answer the question as quickly as possible if they want to move to next round.
Downfall
also provides a chance to Chris Jericho fans to watch their favorite
again. American-born Canadian professional wrestler Chris Jericho is
also a stage actor, rock musician, television host and radio host.
10) Family Feud
"Family Feud" has been around for decades in one incarnation or another. It started out in 1977 with host
Richard Dawson,
and then came back in 1988 with host Ray Combs. Another version of the
Feud was hosted by comedian Louie Anderson, until 2002, when they
dropped Louis and replaced him with Richard Karn (best known as
Tim Allen's co-host 'Al' on the popular TV sitcom "Home Improvement").
In
2006, Tribune Entertainment announced that there would be a new host of
the Feud. They are replacing Karn with actor John O'Hurley, from ABC's
reality show "Dancing With the Stars" (and before that, as Elaine's boss
on "Seinfeld"), beginning in the Fall of 2006.
As
usual, the Feud gives its witty host plenty of opportunity to interact
and joke with the various contestants while he asks the questions.
And you can be a contestant.
The catch here is that you can't appear on this game by yourself. You have to convince four other family members to participate.
11) Family Game Night
The
Hub, the new kids and family network which is a joint venture between
Discovery and Hasbro, has announced its first game show pickup during
its upfront announcements. The first pickup is Family Game Night.
Instead of specifically focusing on one game, Family Game Night will
encompass many Hasbro properties.
Each
hour-long episode will see teams of families of all ages compete in
various Hasbro games for points and prizes. Some games first announced
are Cranium (which correct me if I’m wrong has been attempted to be
turned into a game show in the past), Bop-It, and Connect 4. Other
games will obviously be included as time goes on. The show looks to be
airing in the network’s “Family Prime” block which will air from 7:00PM
to 11:00PM. Family Game Night is produced by Hasbro Studios.
12) Friend or Foe
Back
in 2002, the Game Show Channel featured a game showed called Friend or
Foe. Friend or Foe is a game show based on both knowledge and trust.
It’s one of those game shows where one gets to see the best and worst of
human nature. The game show premiered on April of 2002, and aired for
two seasons with 130 episodes. It was hosted by Kennedy, a true realist
with a wicked sense of humor.
The
rules for Friend or Foe are very straight forward. The game begins with
six contestants, three of the contestants get to choose their partner.
They are then paired of into three teams. Each team is given a trust
fund, with a minimum of two hundred dollars. The three teams build up
their trust funds by answering multiple choice questions. They work as a
team. Although, the question is, do these partners, who worked so hard
together to build their trust funds, also chose to share the money they
won together, fairly?
13) Catch 21
Catch
21 is an American game show centered around blackjack, created by
Merrill Heatter (who also produced the show's predecessor Gambit) and
taped at the Hollywood Center Studios. The series is hosted by
actor-singer Alfonso Ribeiro, with actress Mikki Padilla as the card
dealer.
Three contestants compete in a game of blackjack with questions (ala Gambit).
The object of the game was to make a blackjack hand total 21 (hence
catching 21), or come closer to 21 than the other contestants without
going over. Anything over 21 is a bust and caused elimination of the
round
14) Card Sharks
Two
contestants try to predict whether the next card will be high or low in
a deck of 52 cards. Contestants would gain control by answering survey
questions of 100 people in a specific group; the contestant who guessed
the closes gets control of the cards. Contestants have a row of five
cards and must successful guess before the other opponent does in order
to go on to the Money Cards, the bonus round.
Duration: 30 minutes; 1709 episodes
Cast: Bob Eubanks - Host (1986-1989)
Jim Perry - Host (1978-1981)
Jim Perry - Host (1978-1981)
Gene Wood - Announcer (1978-1981,1986-1989)
Pat Bullard - Host (2001)
Gary Kroeger - Announcer (2001)
Gary Kroeger - Announcer (2001)
Bill Rafferty - Host (1986-1987)
15) Cash Cab
Unassuming
people enter the "Cash Cab" as simple passengers taking a normal taxi
ride, only to be shocked when they discover that they’re instant
contestants on Discovery Channel's innovative game show!
Ben Bailey, the host and driver of Cash Cab, then offers them the following proposition:
The
Cash Cab will drive you all the way to your destination and ask you
general knowledge questions along the way. The questions start out on
the easy side, then get harder along the way – the harder the question,
the more money it’s worth. The first four questions are worth $25 for
each correct answer. The next four are worth $50 and then every question
after that is worth $100.
A
correct answer is awarded the cash, an incorrect answer means the
contestant gets a strike. The contestants can earn cash all the way to
their destination. But the second they miss their third question (i.e.,
earn their third strike), Ben pulls the Cash Cab over and ejects them
onto the sidewalk, no matter where they are.
16) Let's Make A Deal
The
popular television game show Let's Make A Deal continues throughout the
world -- forty-seven years after its debut on the NBC Television
Network on December 30, 1963! Broadcasters in Europe and Asia have
produced their own versions of Let's Make A Deal - to the delight of
their contestants and viewers. And now CBS network has an all-new
version of Let's Make A Deal!
Let's
Make A Deal is a creation of Stefan Hatos and Monty Hall. Carol
Merrill and Jay Stewart performed on the show through 1977. The
television production has been broadcast by NBC and ABC television
networks, as well as many channels throughout the country on a
syndication basis.
Re-runs
of the original telecasts have been shown on various cable channels.
Since 2001 the Game Show Network has broadcast classic episodes of Let's
Make A Deal from the 1970's and 1980's.
And
Trato Hecho (a Spanish-language version of Let's Make A Deal) was
broadcast in 2005 on Univision stations throughout the U.S.
17) Concentration
Concentration,
based on the children’s card game, was created by Jack Barry, Dan
Enright, Robert Noah and Buddy Piper. NBC itself produced the original
show; Mark Goodson and Bill Todman produced the syndicated show with
Jack Narz. In 1985, Orson Bean was the host of a Concentration pilot.
The latest version of the show, Classic Concentration with Alex Trebek,
was produced by Mark Goodson and aired on NBC from 1987 to 1991.
18) Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?
Are
You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? is a quiz show that takes its questions
from actual school textbooks, from first to fifth grade. On hand are
five actual fifth-graders, who more often than not know all of the right
answers, and help the adult contestants along the way. Hosted by
comedian Jeff Foxworthy, 5th Grader gives trivia-based quizzers a new
twist, resulting in a game show the entire family can watch and play
along with together.
The
game itself is really simple and easy to follow. A few contestant
"helps" are thrown in for good measure, and of course the kids are the
main attraction.
Official web Site : http://www.5thgradertvshow.com/
19) Press Your Luck
Press
Your Luck was based on the short-lived show Second Chance, seen in 1977
on ABC and produced by the Carruthers Company (which also produced
Press Your Luck). A first attempt to revive the show occured in 1980,
when the Carruthers Company pitched Press Your Luck with host Pat Sajak,
then known only as a TV weatherman. When Press Your Luck returned in
1983, Sajak was occupied with Wheel of Fortune, so Tomarken, who had
just come off a 13-week stint hosting his first game show, Hit Man, was
given the job.
Press
Your Luck premiered on CBS on September 19, 1983 at 10:30am, having
replaced the Bill Cullen-hosted Child's Play. Sitauted between the
popular $25,000 Pyramid at 10am and the megahit Price is Right at 11am,
Press Your Luck had a good shot at success.
20) Power of 10
On
POWER OF 10, the contestant who can most accurately predict how the
American public will respond to the most intriguing poll questions could
walk away winning millions.
POWER
OF 10 reaches out all across America to poll thousands of people and
ask them just about everything. The contestant who has the best take on
the American mindset could walk away with a $10 million payday.
21) Identity
Contestants
rely on their own perceptions and judgment in order to match up a group
of strangers with a list of unique characteristics about each person
such as their shoe size, weight or career.
this
show was captivating. i loved watching it and i really really want it
to come back on the air. it was so good. every night i watched it and
every night my love of the show quadrupled. Penn just made it so much
better. He was hilarious and just made the show so suspenseful. Please
make this show a weekly event! It's better than Deal or no Deal!!! watch
it! i promise that you wont be disappointed. if you are then you don't
know a good show when you see one. i cant emphasize enough how good penn
was. he would make great wisecracks and i would end up on the floor
laughing my rear end off. for the sake of everyones entertainment we
need to put this show on the air once again. it was so amazing and i
hope that whoever reads this will comment and hopefully we'll see a 2nd
season of...IDENTITY!!!
22) Who Wants To Be A Millionaire
The
syndicated television quiz show, is an on-air program of thirty (30)
minutes in length (subject to change) (the "Program"). To qualify to
become a Contestant on the Program individuals must go through an
audition process (see Rule 3 below). The dates and locations for
auditions will be announced via various means, including, but not
limited to, www.millionairetv.com and local media. Individuals must
attend an audition session that will be held at designated audition
site(s). Individuals must go to the designated audition site at the
specified audition time(s) and complete a written test within the
specified time limit. Individuals who do not receive a passing score (to
be determined at the sole discretion of Valleycrest Productions Ltd.
(the "Producer")) will be eliminated from the audition. Individuals who
do receive a passing score will continue with an audition interview.
Producer, in its sole discretion, will determine which people have
passed the audition interview. Those people will be put into a pool
along with all other individuals who have received a passing score on
the written test and who have passed the audition interview, for
possible selection as a Contestant (defined below) for the Program
("Contestant Pool"). For each episode of the Program, the Producer, in
its sole discretion, will select Contestants from the Contestant Pool to
appear as Contestants who will play the game on the Program in which
they can win up to One Million Dollars ($1,000,000) by correctly
answering up to fourteen (14) multiple-choice questions of increasing
difficulty ("Game").
23) Million Dollar Money Drop
During
each game, two contestants work together as a team to beat one of the
most difficult challenges of their lives: saving the million-dollar
mountain of cash in front of them from disappearing forever. Unlike any
other game show, the duo is given their prize money - bundles of real
cash totaling $1 million - at the start of the game, and it's up to them
to keep this life-changing cash. Once the question is revealed, the duo
must debate and decide the answer(s) on which they will risk all of
their money. Are they confident enough to place all of their money on
one answer? Or will the relentless pressure cause them play it safe and
spread their money across a few answers?
24) American Gladiators
"American
Gladiators" premiered in 1989. Throughout all of its seasons, it was
hosted by Mike Adamle with a co-host. Those co-hosts have ranged from
talents like Joe Theismann, Larry Csonka and Dan Clark. The show lasted
for seven seasons, with each season having two tournaments and the grand
finale featured the winners of both tournaments competing against each
other. The show also had special episodes featuring former NFL players,
NYPD officers, former Olympians and returning "American Gladiators"
champions.
Most
game shows rely on contestants' knowledge and wit, but the classic show
"American Gladiators" relied on speed, strength and agility. The show
was formatted in a tournament style where two players would compete
against each other every week, as well as being challenged by one of the
"Gladiators." This show was so popular that it will always be a part of
pop culture history.
25) Baffle
Baffle
was a syndicated game show of identifying phrases. It was a revival of
the 1965 show P.D.Q. It was also the show that took the time slot of
Concentration, which ended a 14-year/8 month run on NBC that past
Friday.
Two
teams, each of a celebrity and a civilian, participated. One member of
each team is in a soundproof booth. As the opponent's booth is shut off,
the other's partner is shown a phrase and puts up three letters on a
rack. The object was for the player in the booth to identify the phrase.
A signal told the partner to add a letter. Once the phrase is
identified, the opposing team plays the same phrase. Scoring is based on
the amount of time used to guess the phrase with the quickest time
tallying a point. The top scoring team after four rounds is the winner.
The winning team vied to identify words from three-letter clues for the chance to win a new car.
Baffle began using celebrity teams on September 29, 1973.
26) The Challengers
Revival
of the 1969-74 NBC classic The Who, What, or Where Game hosted by Art
James, now a syndicated current-events quiz with three players (one a
returning champion) and Dick Clark at the helm. While the basics of the
game remained the same through the run, certain aspects of the game were
tweaked along the way.
Each
show was introduced by announcer Don Morrow giving the date (e.g.,
"Today is Monday, September 3, 1990") and began with a 60-second
rapid-fire current events question round called the "Challengers
Sprint", with $100 per correct guess and $100 deducted for an incorrect
guess. (This was later changed to just one toss-up question to decide
who started, but the Sprint eventually returned.) The contestant with
the most money after the Sprint got to select from a board of questions.
Each round had six categories of three questions about current events
and popular culture; each question was worth $150, $200, and $250 (later
$100/$150/$200).
27) Eye Guess
A
wild & wacky game show where contestants use their memory to answer
questions. They do that by uncovering answers on a game board.
Two
rounds of two boards (one for each board) were played and at the
beginning of each round, the eight answers were revealed for six to nine
seconds with the "Eye Guess" square left blank. Then host Cullen read
eight questions pertaining to those answers. The player in control
selected a number he/she thought the correct answer was found under and a
correct choice earned points and kept his/her turn but an incorrect
choice received no points and lost his/her turn. Upon an exposure of a
wrong answer, a funny reaction occurs. On one question, if the correct
answer he/she thinks is not hidden on the board, all that player has to
do is call "Eye Guess" causing the "Eye Guess" square to be revealed and
if the correct answer was exposed, he/she gets the points, but if that
square was blank no points were scored and that player lost his/her
turn. If a player can get five correct answers in a row, he/she also won
a bonus prize
28) The Face is Familiar
USA / CBS / x30 minute episodes / 1966 (7 May - 3 September / Saturdays @ 9.30pm )
Quiz
show. This quiz hosted by Jack Whitaker teamed a celebrity with a
member of the public. There were two teams and the premise involved the
teams having to guess the identity of a person from a jumbled up
picture. $200 was won for each correct guess – the bonus round was worth
$500 and contestants had to identify someone just from seeing a picture
of their nose, eyes, etc.
29) Face To Face
USA / NBC / x20 minute episodes / 9 June 1946 – 26 January 1947
Game
show. This very early show featured an artist (Bill Dunn) having to
draw a picture of a celebrity simply by hearing their voice, the celeb
generally sat on the other side of a curtain to the artist so the
audience could monitor his progress. Eddie Dunn and towards the end of
the shows run a lady called Sugar hosted.
30) The Honeymoon Race
USA / ABC / x30m-e / July 17, 1967-December 1, 1967 (Broadcast Mon.-Fri. 11-11:30 a.m. )
Meshing
nicely in theme with ABCs other games at the time (The Dating Game and
The Newlywed Game), The Honeymoon Race had three newlywed duos compete
in a scavenger hunt of five items hidden in a mall in Hollywood,
Florida. However, unlike its successor Supermarket Sweep, the couples
used electric scooters rather than shopping carts to locate their booty.
Another loser game show, Temptation, replaced this in 1968. Hosted by
Bill Malone.
31) Face The Music
Face
the Music was an American television game show that aired in
syndication from January 14, 1980 to September 1981. The show tested
contestants' knowledge of popular music songs, and association of song
titles with famous people, places and things. The show was hosted by Ron
Ely and also featured the Tommy Oliver Orchestra and vocalist Lisa
Donovan. Dave Williams, now the morning anchor at KNX-1070 in Los
Angeles, was the announcer from January to September, 1980. For the
second season, John Harlan announced with Art James occasionally filling
in. The show was produced by Sandy Frank Productions. Game show fans
remember the show for its cheesy production values (broken lights on the
set, bizarre sound effects, etc.) and the sometimes overenthusiastic
hosting job by Ely. Both these aspects make it a cult favorite today. At
the 1988 NATPE Convention, there was a possible syndicated revival
available for the taking, but not enough stations signed on.
32) Fear Factor
Fear
Factor is an American stunt/dare reality game show. It was originally
created by Endemol Netherlands and first aired on June 11, 2001. The
original Dutch version was called Now or Neverland. When Endemol USA and
NBC adapted it to the American market in 2001, they changed the name to
Fear Factor.
Premiered: Jun. 11, 2001
Normal Runtime: 60 min.
Normal Runtime: 60 min.
33) He Said, She Said
A
few months back there was word that Howie Mandel was casting for a TV
adaptation of the board game Battle of the Sexes. It looks like it’s
finally coming to fruition, apparently without the board game tie-in.
The show is now called He Said She Said and it’s created/executive
produced by Howie and Don’t Forget the Lyrics! producer Jeff Apploff.
The description of the show is contestants of the opposite sex have to
answer edgy polling questions and the winners get some gender specific
prize, like a fishing trip for men or a spa weekend for the ladies.
Pretty standard show.
34) High Rollers
High
Rollers was a daytime game show that ran from 1974 to 1976 and 1978 to
1980 on NBC. This page is devoted to the latter of those two versions,
as the original version has no episodes circulating on the trading
circuit (thus meaning your curator has not seen any).
Current Jeopardy! emcee Alex Trebek hosted both versions of this show.
Broadcast History: NBC Daytime April 24, 1978-June 20, 1980
Host: Alex Trebek
Announcer: Kenny Williams
Packager: Heatter-Quigley Productions
Host: Alex Trebek
Announcer: Kenny Williams
Packager: Heatter-Quigley Productions
35) I've Got A Secret
The
I've Got A Secret TV show was a game show series where the contestants
would tell a secret to the host and the audience. Then a panel of four
celebrities would ask them questions and try to figure out what their
secret was. On one show this really old guy's secret was "I saw John
Wilkes Booth Shoot Abraham Lincoln"! The longer it took the panel to
guess, the more money the guest would win! (with a maximum of $20 in the
early years and eventually up to a whopping $80) Guest celebrities
would also come on the show with their own secrets, join the panelists
in guessing the secrets, or even host the program.
36) The Joker's Wild
The
Joker's Wild was a game show that successfully started in 1972. It
aired on CBS for a few years. It is a game show where "knowledge is king
and lady luck is queen", literally. The game board is literally a
gigantic slot machine with jokers, devils, cars, categories, and prize
amounts; all made possible by what was close as possible to LCD screens
at that time: 3 slide projectors, most likely carousels, and
specifically a Sawyer/GAF group of slide projectors, each shining
backwards on the other side of a clear screen. The spinning slides would
pause randomly, and any slide projectors not in use would have its lamp
turned off. Use of these projectors in this method would result in them
malfunctioning, with having to repair and alternate slide projectors
and replacing the lamp bulbs.
37) Liar's Club
The
Liar's Club Game Show was a game show produced by Ralph Andrews that
first premiered on American television in 1969. The game show had a
panel of celebrities who were given a strange object, based on the
object the celebrities would make up an explanation on what the object
was used for, and the contestants would wager on which explanation was
correct. Starting at ten dollars with a maximum of one hundred, the
contestants would wager until the other opponent refused to challenge
their bid, leaving the celebrities to reveal which one was telling the
truth. Popular celebrities that frequently made appearances were David
Letterman, Betty White, Jim Byrnes, and Jimmy Walker. The show was
canceled after the first season but premiered again in 1976 and ran
until 1989 when it was canceled. Hosts included Bill Armstrong, Allen
Ludden, and Eric Boardman. Eventually the show was syndicated and was
shown in Canada, the United Kingdom, and Australia.
38) The Magnificent Marble Machine
The
Magnificent Marble Machine was an American television game show that
was based on pinball, and starred Art James. The show ran on NBC from
July 7, 1975 to June 11, 1976, but was interrupted for about two weeks
in January, due to scheduling changes on the network. It aired in both
half-hour slots between Noon and 1 p.m. Eastern/11 a.m. and Noon
Central. Merrill Heatter and Bob Quigley packaged this program. Robert
Noah was the executive producer. MMM and the short-lived 1967 ABC game
show Temptation (coincidentally hosted by James also) were the only two
game shows packaged by Heatter-Quigley to not use Kenny Williams as
announcer. Because Williams was so busy at the time on the other H-Q
shows, Johnny Gilbert, best known today as the long-standing voice of
Jeopardy, worked MMM instead.
39) The Moneymaze
The
Money Maze was an American television game show seen on ABC in 1974 and
1975. The host of the show was Nick Clooney, the father of veteran
actor George Clooney and a Cincinnati-based television personality. Alan
Kalter was the announcer. It was produced by Daphne-Lipp Productions, of which Dick Cavett was a principal.
The
object of the game was to negotiate a large maze built on the studio
floor. A contestant would direct his or her spouse from a perch above
the maze; the spouse would need to find his or her way to a pushbutton
on the side of a tower inside the maze.
40) The Newlywed Game
A
game show in which newly-married husbands and wives were separately
asked the same questions and had to predict how their spouses would
answer, was a staple of American television for over twenty years. It
aired in a prime time network version from January 1967 to August 1971
and ran during the day from July 1966 to December 1974. A syndicated
version was produced from 1977 until 1980, and the show was revived yet
again as The Newlywed Game in the fall of 1985, a version that lasted
until 1990.
41) The $1,000,000 Chance of A Lifetime
A gameshow aired in the mid eighties that predated WWTBaM and the clones that
followed. It was essentially a cross between Scrabble and Wheel of
Fortune, with a massive cash prize thrown in. Not the most stable format
in the world, but just like any other big money show, if you knew
someone was going for big money, it was at least watchable. It was even
rated #1 in the primetime Nielsen ratings for a short period of time.
The show bears a resemblance in title, but not in format, to It's Your
Chance of a Lifetime!
Two
married couples compete against each other in the first round, which
has multiple stages that repeat for 3 rounds, where the couple with the
most money moves on to the Bonus Round.
42) Pantomime Quiz
Pantomime
Quiz` was an American television game show produced and hosted by Mike
Stokey. Running from 1950 to 1959, it has the distinction of being one
of the few television series -- along with `The Arthur Murray Party`,
`Down You Go`, and `Original Amateur Hour` -- to air on all four TV
networks in the US during the Golden Age of Television.
Based on the parlor game of Charades, Pantomime Quiz
was first broadcast locally in Los Angeles from November 13, 1947 to
1949; In that format, it won an Emmy Award for "Most Popular Television
Program" at the first Emmy Awards ceremony. The competition involved two
teams of four contestants each (three regulars and one guest). In each
round, one member acts out (in mime) a phrase or a name while the other
three try to guess it. Each team had five rounds (in some broadcasts
there were only four); the team that took the less amount of time to
guess all phrases won the game.
43) New Faces
Popular
talent show, but unlike the amateur Opportunity Knocks, this one was
for smalltime professional acts who already had their Equity cards. It
came in two incarnations.
The
first, hosted by That's My Dog's Derek Hobson saw a variety of turns
being judged by a panel of talent spotters, usually a combination of
celebrities and Tony Hatch, who is generally reckoned to have been the
original plain-speaking "nasty judge" - nowadays every show has one, but
he was arguably the first. (Though not the only one on this show:
Mickie Most was also noted for his harsh comments.) The acts were marked
out of 100 in various criteria with the highest scores moving on to
semi-finals and finals.
The
remake hosted by Marti Caine was set in a large theatre and our acts
were commented upon by three judges sitting high up in a box, of which
Nina Myskow seems to be remembered for being the nastiest towards the
acts. The audience decided who won here, as a gigantic lightboard known
as Spaghetti Junction lit up to a varying degree as the audience pushed
buttons. The final was live and decided on a home vote, with Marti going
round all the ITV regions and the regions giving points on an
Eurovision Song Contest style basis. Excellent!
44) The Biggest Loser
Twelve
overweight individuals (eight couples in the 2009 revival, seven
couples in the 2011 series) live together, cut-off from the outside
world, as they are put through a strenuous exercise regime. During their
stay, contestants must complete weekly tasks, cook all of their own
meals, and stare temptation in the face as they are offered unhealthy
treats. Each week, one person who has lost the least amount of weight
(either individually or as part of a team) is eliminated, until only one
contestant remains and is crowned, The Biggest Loser.
Host Vicki Butler-Henderson, Kate Garraway, Davina McCall
45) Blind Date
This
show was every media students dream for two reasons. First, because it
was so great to analyse. Did you spot the way which Cilla patronized the
females but didn't to the males? Did you notice how Cilla made huge
points about how good people looked, when ironically the contestants
couldn't actually see each other? Ah, hurrah for feminist theory,
dominant ideologies and the Frankfurt School!
Second, because it was the easiest way of getting onto television in prime time, more of which in a moment.
But
first, let's chip away at the show itself. Everybody's collective Mum
Cilla Black played matchmaker to three girls and one guy (and later,
three guys and one girl). After introducing us to each of the three
girls, each "looking for love", we were introduced with the "lucky
fella" who would be going on a date with one of the said three females.
He asked three questions and the females replied as best they can.
46) Sale of the Century
The
Original Series The original Sale of the Century debuted on NBC's
daytime schedule on September 29, 1969. The show was a Jones-Howard
Production (The Howard in question was Al, who was also responsible for
Supermarket Sweep.) Hosted by Jack Kelly until 1971, then by Joe
Garagiola until the series' end, it played virtually the same as the
'80s Grundy versions, except for the lack of a "Fame Game" and the
questions increasing in value from $5 to $10 and finally $15.
In
1973, the show changed its format to allow for two couples to compete
in lieu of three solo players. Also at that time, the $15 round was
replaced with the "Century Round", consisting of five questions worth
$20 each. This format remained in place until the NBC daytime version
left the air on July 13, 1973. It is assumed that the couples rules were
also used during a short-lived syndicated weekly version during the
'73-'74 season.
47) Seven Keys
The
show started out slowly as a local offering on Los Angeles station KTLA
in September 1960; but proved to be such a big hit that the ABC
television network began airing it on April 3, 1961. SK was hosted by
Jack Narz, who had just resigned from his hosting duties on Video
Village due to personal hangups. (Narz had been with SK when it was
local; but VV was still originating in New York)
Seven Keys
ran for almost three years on ABC (one of the network's few successful
daytime efforts at the time) before ending its run on March 27, 1964.
The show returned to KTLA, where it played out until January 15, 1965.
SK would be Jack Narz' first REAL game show success after the "Dotto debacle" back in 1958. He would continue hosting (Beat the Clock, Now You See It, Concentration)
well into the late 1970s. In 2005, Narz and his brother, Tom Kennedy,
were honored with the Bill Cullen Career Acheivement Award at the Game
Show Congress. BTW, Narz was Cullen's brother-in-law at one time. Narz
passed away on October 15, 2008 at the age of 85. He will always be
missed.
48) Shoot for the Stars
Host Geoff Edwards
Announcers Bob Clayton
Taped At Studio 8H, NBC, New York
Air Dates (NBC) 3-January-77 / 30-September-77
Although
it was another BSP word-communication game, Shoot for the Stars was a
different sort of game. Two teams consisting of a celebrity and a
contestant partner attempted to guess two-part phrases based on clues.
Each team began with $100, and one team would pick a box from one of the
twenty-four next to the emcee. Each clue would be worth a dollar
amount between $100 and $500, a star, or a Double Your Score box. A
clue, such as "A Feline/Slumber" would be read, and the contestant would
have to decipher the first part (in this case, "Cat") and the celebrity
would have to decipher the second part ("Nap"). If the team answered
the phrase correctly, they would win that amount of money. There was no
penalty for incorrect answers.
49) Shop 'Til You Drop
Shop
'til You Drop was an American game show that aired on various broadcast
television networks from 1991-2006. Two teams of two contestants
(almost always male-female; married, engaged, dating, siblings, or best
friends) competed. Nearly all of the stunts were one-minute mini-games,
which tested popular culture and consumer knowledge.
Premiered: 1991
Normal Runtime: 30 min
Normal Runtime: 30 min
50) Starcade
In
the 80’s when the masses were really getting into video games and the
arcades were packed with classic games such as Pac-Man, Space Invaders
and Centipede, Starcade began its run. Starcade was the video game show
where contestants competed against each other for prices by answering
questions and playing video games.
The
game began with two players or teams who first hand to answer a video
game related question. Whoever answered the question correctly first
would be able to choose from five arcade games that were setup in the
studio. Once the player selected the game they would have 60 seconds to
get the highest score they could. If the player got the game over screen
their turn would end and the points they gained would be added to their
overall score.
51) Studs
Studs follows a somewhat similar format to that of The Dating Game and Love Connection.
Two men go on dates with three women; afterward, the men would have to
match answers with the women regarding the date. Each correct answer
would win the man a stuffed heart. At the end of each episode, each
woman would decide which man they chose as a "stud" and wanted to go out
with again. If the men could correctly guess which woman chose them,
both received an all-expense paid date to a location of their choice. In
the event that two couples chose correctly, the man with the most
stuffed hearts won the date.
52) Tattletales
Airing:
4-4:30 p.m. Monday- Friday from January 1-June 13 and December 1 on,
11-11:30 a.m. June 16-August 15, 3:30-4 p.m. August 18-November 28, CBS.
Personnel: Bert Convy, host; Jack Clark, Gene Wood, announcers. A Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Production. Taped in Los Angeles.
Description: How well do your favorite celebrity couples know each other?
Played
in four rounds, with three celebrity couples competing. At the start of
the show, the husbands were backstage and unable to hear their wives’
responses to a question posed by Convy, generally in multiple-choice
form. The wives would give their answer, and then the husband would
reappear via a monitor in front of the wife. Correct answers would
result in a share of $150 ($150 if one couple answered correctly, $75
each if two couples answered correctly, and $50 each if all three
responded correctly). Two rounds were played in this manner, then the
couples would switch places and play additional two more rounds, with
the final round worth $300. If none of the couples’ answers matched in
any round, the cash available for the round would be added to the
subsequent one. The couple with the highest score at the end of the game
was awarded an additional $1,000. The money was divided among the
couples’ rooting sections – i.e., the studio audience, which was divided
into red, yellow (or "Banana"), and blue sections.
53) Three's A Crowd
Broadcast History: September 1979 to January 1980, Five-a-Week Syndication
Host: Jim Peck
Announcer: Johnny Jacobs
Executive Producer: Chuck Barris
Producer/Writer: Mike Metzger
Director: John "The Fox" Dorsey
Packager: Chuck Barris Productions
Studios: The Chuck Barris Stages, Hollywood, California
Main
Game: At the beginning of the show, only the husbands are on stage.
They are each asked four questions. Then the secretaries are brought
back. Their objective is to try to match their boss' answers. Later on,
the wives appear and try to match their husband's answer. Whichever
group, the wives or the secretaries, matched the most times, they split
$1000. If the score is tied, all six women divide $1000, which amounts
to about $166.67 apiece.
54) Three on a Match
Three
on a Match was an American television game show created by Bob Stewart
that ran on NBC from August 2, 1971 to June 28, 1974 on its daytime
schedule. The host was Bill Cullen and Don Pardo served as announcer on
most episodes, with Bob Clayton and NBC staffers Wayne Howell and Roger
Tuttle substituting at times. The series was produced at NBC's
Rockefeller Center in New York City. The program's title is wordplay on
the superstition of the same name. In the game, three contestants
competed to determine who could answer the most true-or-false questions
in one of three categories. After Cullen announced the categories, each
contestant bid a number between one and four based on how many questions
he or she could answer on that turn. A player could win the bidding in
two ways: either by having the highest bid or by having his or her
opponents bid the same number, which canceled out their bids. If all
three players chose the same number, another round of bidding was
conducted to break the deadlock. The pot for the round was calculated by
totaling the number of questions bid by all three contestants and then
multiplying by $10 (for example: 4, 3, and 2 totals 9, which becomes
$90),
55) To Say the Least
AIRDATES October 3, 1977- April 21, 1978
NETWORK(S) NBC Daytime
ANNOUNCER(S) Kenny Williams
PRODUCED BY Merrill Heatter-Bob Quigley Productions
Two
teams consisting of two celebrities and one contestant, always all men
vs. all women, compete. Two members of each team are sent into isolation
and the remaining players are shown a sentence of six to ten words, and
the subject the sentence is describing. The players alternate
eliminating words, one at a time, until either (A) a player challenges,
forcing the opposing teams to guess, or (B) only one word remains, which
is an automatic challenge to whomever eliminated the previous word.
56) To Tell The Truth
To
Tell The Truth is a game show that has been on for a very long time. It
is one of those game shows that had a radio format, where the stages
weren't that big, and most of the gameplay can be completed in seated
positions. This game show has been able to do this over the years while
new technologies enabled game shows to have different formats.
It
has an announcer, a host, and 4 panel members including long time
regulars and recurring people that were hosting (or would become hosts)
of other game shows.. There would be 3 guests that would say the things
to the panel and each of them would claim to be the same person. Of
course only one of them would match that profile, but all 3 of them lead
very interesting lives.
57) The New Treasure Hunt
"The
New Treasure Hunt" was a revival of the classic 1950s Jan Murray-hosted
game show, this time produced by Chuck Barris ("The Newlywed Game,"
"The Dating Game"). Hosted by Geoff Edwards, this show offered a lucky
female contestant the opportunity to win valuable prizes contained
within mystery boxes placed onstage.
The
series premiered in once-a-week syndication in September 1973, and ran
until 1977. The show returned in 1981 (this time simply as "Treasure
Hunt") in daily syndication, running one year.
1973-1977
run During the 1970s run, the top prize was a check for $25,000; the
1981-1982 run featured an accuring jackpot, which began at $20,000 and
increased by $1,000 per day until reaching $50,000.
58) Twenty One
Albert Freedman Producer
1956-1958
30 minutes
Black and White
Jack Barry, host
1956-1958
30 minutes
Black and White
Jack Barry, host
Twenty-One
broke the game show scandals wide open. Contestants were placed in
isolation booths, given a category and asked how many points they wished
to risk.
Producer
Freedman approached a young attractive English instructor at Columbia
University, Charles Van Doren, about becoming a player on Twenty-One.
Assistance would be provided to augment the "entertainment value" of the
show. As Van Doren kept winning, his popularity grew until he became a
recognized celebrity. His acting ability didn't suffer either as America
watched him "agonize" over each question. Ultimately, he won $129,000 -
a hefty sum at any time, but a huge amount in the 50's.
a hefty sum at any time, but a huge amount in the 50's.
One
opponent, Herbert Stempel, didn't like being passed over for greatness
by the producers. Bitter, he talked to investigators about Twenty-One
and the practice of supplying some players with answers. Van Doren, now a
broken and humiliated man, gave one last public performance -
testifying before the Congress about his complicity in the deception.
59) Video Village
This
early audience participation quiz show was telecast during 1960. The
edition of the game pictured on the left was donated to the Museum in
1991. It was licensed by Milton Bradley Company, and produced in Canada
by Somerville Industries.
The
television show was a "living board game". The set was designed like a
giant board game, and the contestants were the playing pieces. The night
time version was replaced with a daytime version in 1961-62, and also
with a Saturday morning children's version.
60) Break the Bank
Couples
on two teams answered trivia questions to earn one-word clues to solve a
puzzle, and time for the bonus round. The first couple to solve two of
the puzzles went on to the bonus round. Using the time they earned
answering questions, they played a variety of mini-games to earn bank
cards. At the end of the bonus round, the couple used the bank cards to
try to open a vault. If one of the bank cards opened the vault, they won
whatever was inside. Halfway through the season, Joe Farago took over
as host, and the format changed slightly. Teams could win up to ten bank
cards, but forfeited a bank card if they needed a hint to solve the
puzzle. Each card was revealed in the end to be worth cash and prizes,
bankrupting the couple, or "breaking the bank."
Break the Bank Premiered: September 1985
Break the Bank Hosts: Gene Rayburn, Joe Farago
Break the Bank Announcers: Michael Hanks
61) Battlestars
Six
celebrity guests were seated in a triangular lit wall a la "Hollywood
Squares." Two contestants randomly selected a celebrity by pressing a
button. The celebrity answered a question, and the contestant could
agree or disagree with the answer. If the contestant was correct, one of
the points of the triangle surrounding the celebrity was put out. If
the lights at all three corners of a celebrity triangle were put out,
the contestant "captured" that celebrity. The goal was to be the first
person to capture three celebrities.
Battlestars Premiered: October 1981
Battlestars Host: Alex Trebek
Battlestars Announcer: Rod Roddy
62) What's My Line
Mark Goodson - Bill Todman Production
30 minutes
1950 - 1967
Black and White 1950- 1966
John Daly, host
30 minutes
1950 - 1967
Black and White 1950- 1966
John Daly, host
Panelists included Arlene Francis, Steve Allen, Bennett Cerf, Fred Allen, Tony Randall and Dorothy Kilgallen.
A
panel of four celebrities tried to guess the occupation of the guest by
asking a series of yes or no questions. The guest got $5 for each "no"
answer. Panelists were blindfolded for the weekly mystery guest who was a
celebrity. Some famous folks who dropped by: Warren Beatty, James
Cagney, Bette Davis, Ty Cobb,Walt Disney, Ronald Reagan, Alfred Hitchock
and Elizabeth Taylor.
63) Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?
Where
in the World is Carmen Sandiego? began airing in the fall of 1991. It
lasted until the fall of 1996 when Where in Time is Carmen Sandiego?
took its place. The series was produced by WQED Pittsburgh and WGBH
Boston and featured Greg Lee as the host and Lynne Thigpen as the Chief.
During the course of the show, the 3 contestants would engage in a
general question round about geography. Sometimes, clues for the
questions would be delivered by guest stars or by the group, Rockapella
(who also performed the show's theme song).
The
game would open with the Chief telling the contestants about the crime
and the crook. Then the questions would begin. The first round had
multiple choice questions- each having three choices for answers.
64) Whew
A
Game Show created by former Jeopardy! contestant Jay Wolpert, and one
of his first works after leaving Mark Goodson-Bill Todman productions.
Tom Kennedy was the host, and the show lasted for one season on CBS
between 1979 and 1980.
The
rules...oh, boy. Stay with us here. There were two contestants, one as
the Blocker, one as the Charger. The Blocker would place six Blocks on
the game board, which had five Levels of five boxes each (valued from
$10-$50), plus a sixth Level with only three boxes ($200, $350, and
$500). No more than three Blocks could be placed on any of the first
five Levels, and no more than one on the Level 6. After the Blocks were
placed, the Charger took control of the board, with a 60-second time
limit to get to the top by answering "bloopers" — clues with an
intentionally wrong word (e.g., "Bob Barker is the host of The Price Is
Too Damn High", with the correct answer being The Price Is Right). A
correct answer advanced to the next level, and picking a blocked box
imposed a five-second penalty. In addition, if the Charger wanted, s/he
could call "Longshot!" and advance immediately to Level 6, where the
Blocker would place another Block. The Blocker and Charger then traded
places. Games were played best-of-three, and the winner advanced to the
Bonus Round.
65) Who Do You Trust?
From
1957 to 1962 a popular game show called "Who Do You Trust?" aired on
television. Edgar Bergen and then Johnny Carson hosted, so it was also a
funny show. People participated as pairs, usually married couples. The
premise of the show was that contestants had to choose who would answer
the questions in order to win prizes. The challenge to them was, "Which
of you feels confident with this category? Who do you trust?"
Married
couples, chosen for their unusual backgrounds, compete after being
interviewed by the host. The host askseach couple four sets of questions
for a total of $1200. The husband may answer himself or trust his wife
to do so. The couple who answers the most questions correctly wins the
game, whatever money they have accumulated, and the added bonus of $100 a
week for one year.
66) Win Ben Stein's Money
Win
Ben Stein's Money was a 'Jeopardy' style game show where contestants
get a chance to win $5,000 of Ben Steins'money.It starts out with three
contestants answering questions to try to get as much money as they can.
In round two,the player with the lowest amount of money has to give it
back to Ben, and Ben takes their place for the rest of the round, where
questions' values rise to $200 to $500 of Ben's money. At the end of
round two,again the player with the lowest winnings gets canned, and the
money goes back to Ben. In round three,the player with the most
winnings will face Ben in a 'lightning round' where they have one minute
to get ten questions correct, and if they get more right than Ben, they
get all $5,000 of Ben's money. If they tie with Ben, they get the money
they won in rounds' one and two, plus an extra $1,000. If they get less
than Ben, all they get is the money that they won in round's one and
two. The sad and dismal truth to this show is, Ben Stein's Money is
given to him by Comedy Central, and whatever the player's don't win, he
gets to keep. Thus, he nets anywhere from 15 to 18 thousand dollars a
week!
67) Tic Tac Dough
The
children's game of tic-tac-toe was turned into the question-and-answer
"Tic Tac Dough." The object of the game was for a player to be the first
to put his or her mark, "X" or "O," in three boxes, either across, up,
down, or diagonally. Two players alternated selecting a box and
answering a question from the category indicated on the box in order to
be able to place their mark in the box. Each correct answer added to the
games jackpot, which was won by the player making tic-tac-toe. After
each round of questions, the nine categories were rotated to different
boxes.
After a nineteen-year absence from television, Tic Tac Dough returned with Wink Martindale as host. The game remained the same except for the addition of a bonus game were six boxes contained cash amounts, one said "tic," another said "tac," and in the last was the face of a dragon. The object was to accumulate $1000, before hitting the dragon, which stopped the bonus round. If the player found both the tic and tac boxes, he or she automatically won the game.
After a nineteen-year absence from television, Tic Tac Dough returned with Wink Martindale as host. The game remained the same except for the addition of a bonus game were six boxes contained cash amounts, one said "tic," another said "tac," and in the last was the face of a dragon. The object was to accumulate $1000, before hitting the dragon, which stopped the bonus round. If the player found both the tic and tac boxes, he or she automatically won the game.
68) Stump the Schwab
Welcome
to the Stump the Schwab guide at TV Tome. Basketball had Michael.
Hockey had The Great One. Baseball had The Babe. Sports trivia has ¦ The
Schwab. For years The Schwab has toiled in the bowels of our Bristol
campus, as ESPN's first, and best, fact researcher. His wealth of sports
knowledge is unmatched, his handle on sports stats unparalleled. Almost
any stat you hear dropped by Vitale, Berman, Joe Morgan or any other
ESPN personality almost certainly came from the The Schwab. No one knows
more sports trivia than The Schwab. Or do they? With ESPN's new game
show, Stump the Schwab, hosted by Stuart Scott, that's what we intend to
find out. This summer, we went to New York City to test hundreds of
applicants, grilling them on their sports knowledge. Some were in way
over their heads, others could hold their own, but we only found 12
contestants that we thought could possibly hang with The Schwab.
69) Win, Lose Or Draw
Aired: 1987 – 1990
Show Type: Live Action
Country of Origin: US
"Win,
Lose or Draw" was created by actor Burt Reynolds ("Smokey And the
Bandit", "The Cannonball Run", etc.) and long-time game show host Bert
Convy ("Tattletales" and "Super Password"). The series was basically an
adaption of the old party game Charades, and had two teams of three
players each, with two celebrities and a contestant on each team. The
players had one minute (60 seconds) to give clues to a secret phrase by
sketching on a large tablet, without using letters, numbers or verbal
clues. If the other team member guessed correctly, the contestant
received a cash prize. If not, the other team was allowed to guess.
70) You Bet Your Life
You
Bet Your Life began its run as a radio program in 1947, recorded live
as an hour-long program but edited down to half an hour for radio
broadcast—a technique used to cut out both the dull parts and the most
off-color Groucho lines.The same technique was used for the television
broadcasts, which ran simultaneously with the radio program for several
years.
The
televised You Bet Your Life went the way of most prime time game shows
in 1961, the victim of quiz scandals and dwindling audience interest in
the game show format. But since every episode of You Bet Your Life was
filmed, the show has survived in syndication and in packaged video
compilations. Two brief revivals were mounted in 1980 and 1992—starring
Buddy Hackett and Bill Cosby, respectively—but the show still belongs to
Groucho. More than 100 “lost” episodes were discovered in July 2000,
ready to introduce a new generation of fans to the quick-witted comedy
of the funniest game show (and game show host) of television’s golden
age
71) You Don't Say!
Network(s) NBC Daytime and Primetime
Airdates DAYTIME: April 1, 1963-September 26, 1969
PRIMETIME: January 7-May 12, 1964
Announcer(s) John Harlan
Produced by Ralph Andrews-Bill Yagemann Productions for Desilu
A
nifty word game that had less to do with words and more to do with
other words that they sort of resembled; "You Don't Say!" was Tom's
third network series and first national hit.
72) Give-n-Take
Airing: 10-10:30 a.m., Monday-Friday September 8-October 31; 4:00-4:30 p.m., Monday-Friday November 3-November 26, CBS.
Personnel:
Jim Lange, host; Jane Nelson, hostess, Johnny Jacobs, announcer. A
Carruthers Company/Warner Brothers Production. Taped in Los Angeles.
Description: Um, CBS needed to air something until the hour-long Price Is Right was ready?
Game
Play: Four players competed, seemingly always women, seated around a
large spinner. Each one was awarded a prize at the beginning of the
program. Another one was revealed and Lange would read a question. The
first to ring in correctly was awarded the four blankspaces on the
eight-space spinning board up for grabs, giving that player control of
five spaces (counting her own) The other three spaces belonged to the
other three players. The spinner was then set in motion, and the player
with the correct answer pressed her signaling button to slow the spinner
to a stop. She could then keep the prize or pass it to an opponent. The
objective was to keep as close to $5,000 in prizes as possible without
going over. If a player was over $5,000, she was "frozen," and couldn't
receive any additional prizes. Players were unaware of the actual retail
price of their prizes until the final prize had been awarded -- I
believe four or five in all were spun for, in addition to the original
four prizes awarded. The one closest to $5,000 at game's end was the
winner and kept all the prizes she had accumulated. (The other three
contestants did not keep their prizes.)
73) Winning Streak
Airing: 10:30-11 a.m. Thursday and Friday, January 2 and 3, NBC.
Personnel: Bill Cullen, host; Don Pardo, announcer. A Bob Stewart Production. Taped in New York City.
Description: Obviously short-lived word game.
Game
Play: Two players competed, and appears there were several adjustments
in format. In one version, they faced a board of sixteen letters with a
category attached at the bottom. Contestants then formed a word of two
to ten letters using the letters on the board. They won letters answers
questions posed by Cullen. The answer to a question posed by Cullen
would start with the letter the contestant chose of the 16 letters on
the board. The first contestant to ring in with the correct answer could
keep the letter for the word they had in mind or refuse it; if the
first contestant answered incorrectly, this option went to their
opponent. The first player to form a word in the given category moved on
to the end game.
74) Three for the Money
Airing: 12:30-12:55 p.m. Monday-Friday, September 29-November 28, NBC.
Personnel: Dick Enberg, host; Jack Clark, announcer. A Stefan Hatos-Monty Hall Production. Taped in Los
Angeles.
Description: Rapid-fire Q&A (given the amount of time NBC invested in the show, it had to be).
Game
Play: Two teams competed, with one celebrity guest and two contestants
per team, identfied by wearing red and yellow shirts over their street
clothes. All six players stayed on for the full week. Each team chose
the number of opponents they wanted to challenge trying to identify
answers in three different categories (state capitals, birds, and movie
stars, for example). The team in control of the category decided whether
to have one person on their team challenge one, two, or all three
players on the opposing team, with correct answers worth $100, $200, or
$300 accordingly. If the challenged team got the correct answer first,
they won $100. The identities sought were posed as a series of three
clues. The challenges went back and forth, with the trailing team given a
final chance to catch up. The team with the most cash at the end of the
game was declared the winner, although their scores accumulated over
the course of the week (in other words, the score could be $1,300 to
$900 Yellow team after Monday, $2,200 to $1,900 Red team after Tuesday,
etc.)
75) Split Second
Airing: 12:30-1 p.m. Monday-Friday, January 1-June 30, ABC.
Personnel: Tom Kennedy, host; Jack Clark, announcer. A Stefan Hatos-Monty Hall Production. Taped in Los Angeles.
Description: Breathlessly fast-paced three-contestant Q&A.
Game
Play: Three players competed. Kennedy read a clue leading into a
question with three different parts; contestants then rang in to try to
answer any one of the parts of the question. The first contestant had
their choice of any part of the question they chose; the second had two
choices if the first contestant was right previously or all three if the
first contestant was incorrect; the third contestant, thusly, could
choose from one, two, or all three parts. Correct answers were worth $5
if all three contestants answered correctly, $10 if two contestants
answered correctly, or $25 if only one contestant answered correctly.
The game was played in two rounds, with the round two cash values
jumping to $10, $25, and $50. Later in the run, the first contestant in
each round to be the only one to answer a question correctly of a given
three won an additional merchandise prize.
76) Blockbusters
Hosts: Bill Cullen, Bill Rafferty
One of the last great original games put out by the Goodson-Todman company. Yet another game that makes the Q-and-A format interesting by implenting the "Alphabetics" of revealing the first letter of the answer. The game was fast-paced and visually entertaining. The show had two unique things going for it: 1) the clever hexagon board where no ties are possible; 2) the concept of finding out whether "two heads are better than one." Bill Cullen, as always, does a marvelous job of hosting. Bob Cobert also churns out a great theme song. The Gold Run was a nifty bonus round and the later rule of allowing players to play twenty matches led to some memorable champions and big payoffs.
One of the last great original games put out by the Goodson-Todman company. Yet another game that makes the Q-and-A format interesting by implenting the "Alphabetics" of revealing the first letter of the answer. The game was fast-paced and visually entertaining. The show had two unique things going for it: 1) the clever hexagon board where no ties are possible; 2) the concept of finding out whether "two heads are better than one." Bill Cullen, as always, does a marvelous job of hosting. Bob Cobert also churns out a great theme song. The Gold Run was a nifty bonus round and the later rule of allowing players to play twenty matches led to some memorable champions and big payoffs.
The
short-lived 1987 revival was o.k. featuring a passable hosting
performance by Bill Rafferty and then-high-tech computer graphics.
77) Hollywood Squares
Hosts:
Peter Marshall, John Davidson, Tom Bergeron Next to "Match Game," this
was the best comedy game show. The original helmed by game show great
Peter Marshall is by far the best with classic panelists Rose Marie,
George Gobel, and of course, Paul Lynde providing the funny quips. The
Davidson version was decent, but the current revival with Whoopi as the
center square is one of the few game show revivals that has come close
to matching the feel and fun of the classic version. Tom Bergeron does a
superb job of hosting and has really emerged as one of TV's best new
hosts.
78) Jackpot
Hosts: Geoff Edwards, Mike Darrow
Unique
riddle game show in which sixteen contestants vied for thousands of
dollars in the entire week. Geoff Edwards proved that he could do the
Q-and-A format here. The NBC version was best of the three runs boasting
a dramatic Bob Cobert theme and really big Super Jackpots. While most
of the riddles weren't brain-busters, there were a few cleverly-written
ones especially in the 70s version.
79) Scrabble
Host: Chuck Woolery
This
Reg Grundy show had nothing to do with board game except that they used
the game board, the term "tiles," and the name. Despite this, the
creators of the show came up with a nice twist on hangman. The big hook
for me were the clever clues devised by the writers. Getting a good
grasp of those clues really could buy contestant those important extra
seconds needed to get ahead in the Sprint rounds. Chuck Woolery fit in
perfectly with this show (his second traditional gamer) which seemed
like a natural progression from his "Wheel" days.
80) The Cross-Wits
Two
teams of three players (one studio contestant and two guest
celebrities) played one at a time and tried to guess a crossword from a
clue. Teams scored ten points for each letter on the crossword. Each
crossword was also a clue to the identity of a person, place, or thing.
The first team to solve the master puzzle earned extra points.The
top-scoring team at the end of the day played the "cross fire" round and
they had sixty seconds to guess ten crosswords from clues, for a bonus
prize.
December 15, 1975 - September 1980
Host: Jack Clark
Assistant: Jerri Fiala
Announcers: Jay Stewart, Jerry Bishop, John Harlan
81) Debt
HOST: Wink Martindale
ANNOUNCER: Julie Claire
AIRDATES: June 3rd, 1996 - August 14th, 1998
CHANNEL: Lifetime
PACKAGER: Faded Denim Productions
Debt
was a game show that won a CableACE award for best game show, and was a
show that helped real people get themselves out of debt. Contestants
brought in their debts ranging between $6,000 to $10,000. Here's how it
all worked.Three contestants are shown with their debts, and they are
averagedto the same amount. They are then shown a 5x5 board, each with a
category, ranging from -$50 to -$250. The contestant with the lowest
debt chooses a category with a value, and they are asked a question,
which usually began with "I am...". The contestants would then buzz-in
with a response, starting with, "You are...". If they are right, they
are subtracted from the amount, according to the chosen total. If not,
the amount is added to the debt and the other players get a chance to
answer.
82) Lingo
Lingo
is a game of trying to guess a five letter word in which you are given a
five letter word. Your goal is to try and guess the word that they are
giving. You have five tries. They also give you clues. If there is a
letter in a yellow circle, it is in the word, but in the wrong place. If
it is in a red square, it is in the word in the right place. After
finishing the puzzle, teams try to pull Lingo balls in hopes of
completingalmost a Bingo, or five filled in circles in a row. But they
have to be carefull, because there are red stoppers in which they stop
pulling balls, and the other team has control. Lingo is hosted by the
famed Chuck Woolery. Formerly hosting Love Connection, Greed, Wheel of
Fortune, and more, he then moved to GSN to host Lingo. The judge of
Lingo and also co-host is Shandi Finnessey. Shandi was Miss USA, 2004.
She joined Lingo in 2005, and is still on the show today.
83) Winner Take All
"Winner
Take All` was an American television game show that ran from 1948
through 1952 on CBS. It is notable as the first game show produced by
the Mark Goodson and Bill Todman partnership, who would go on to create
many more. The program first began in 1946, on CBS radio.
The original host of Winner Takes All
was comedian Jimmy Tarbuck, who hosted the show from 1975 until 1986.
For series 13, Geoffrey Wheeler replaced Jimmy Tarbuck as the host and
the show went into a 5 day a week daytime show (twice a week for the
1987 series). Geoffrey also devised the format for Winner Takes All
and was the voiceover reading the questions in the Jimmy Tarbuck era.
The Challenge version (Series 15) was hosted by Bobby Davro with
Yorkshire Television news journalist Gaynor Barnes as the voiceover
reading the questions and was produced by Yorkshire Television for
Challenge.
84) Truth or Consequences
Based
on the parlor games "Forfeits" and "Fine or Superfine," the show was a
combination trivia game and stunt show. Contestants were asked silly
questions and had to answer correctly before "Beulah the Buzzer"
sounded. If they failed to give the "Truth," they had to face the
"Consequences"-- usually a funny and embarrassing stunt. Often
contestants were reunited with long-lost family or friends on the air.
Truth
or Consequences" made its first appearance as a television special on
the very day of commercial television broadcasting (July 1, 1941).
"Truth or Consequences" is the only game show with an entire town named after it. After a request from Ralph Edwards
in 1950, Hot Springs, New Mexico volunteered to be renamed in honor of
the show. In return, the show's 10th anniversary special was taped
there. Every year on the first weekend in May, the "Truth or
Consequences Fiesta" draws thousands of people.
The show started on radio with host Ralph Edwards in 1940. It ran on radio for seventeen years.
The radio version of the show won the Eisenhower award during World War II for selling the most war bonds.
Bob Barker made his television debut as host of " Truth or Consequences." Previously, he was a radio announcer.
85) The Big Payoff
Contestants
were selected from men who mailed in letters explaining why the women
in their lives deserved prizes. The men were asked four questions
(delivered on a silver tray by Question Girl Susan Sayers) in order to
win prizes like a mink coat or a vacation. The show also incorporated a
fashion show narrated by Bess Meyerson.
The Big Payoff Premiered: December, 1951
Hosts: Randy Merriman, Robert Paige, Bert Parks
Substitute Hosts: Bobby Sherwood, Warren Hull, Ralph Paul, Bob Haymes, Jimmy Blaine
Hostess:Bess Myerson , Substitute Hostesses: Hollis Burke,Sydney Smith.
Announcers: Ralph Paul, Mort Laurence, Question Girl: Susan Sayers
Models: Pat Conlon, Nancy Walters, Marion James, Pat Conway, Fran Miller
Singers: Betty Ann Grove, Denise Lor, Judy Lynn
http://www.gameshowfame.com/shows/big_payoff.htm
86) 3rd Degree
A
pair of male celebrities competed against a pair of femal celebrities.
The celebrities had to interview a pair of guests and determine what
their (sometimes bizarre) relationship to each other was. If the guests
could stump the celebs as to their relationship, they won a couple of
thousand dollars.
Three of the original Little Rascals, including Spanky McFarland
The voices behind Fred and Wilma Flintstone
3rd Degree Premiered: September, 1989
Hosts: Peter Marshall (pilot only) Bert Convy 1989-1990
Announcers: Bob Hilton 1973-1990
87) Let's Play Post Office3
Three
contestants were read letters from celebrities one line at a time. They
tried to guess the identity of the letter's author. As more lines of
the letter were revealed, the value of the letter decreased. The game
included a "zip round" where telegraphed messages appeared briefly on
the screen, and they had to guess the identity of the celebrity sender.
Premiered: September 27, 1965 on NBC
Host: Don Morrow
Announcers: Bill Wendell, Wayne Howell
88) Queen for a Day
Four
women were selected from the audience. Their task: to convince everyone
that they are the most pathetic. The audience judged their sob stories
with the applause-o-meter, and awarded the "loser" with her wishes, plus
a crown and roses.
"My
mother was Queen For The Day back in 1957 - I think. The reason I don't
know the exact date as I was around two years old. Her name was
Marietta McNeal. She was a registered nurse in Toledo, Ohio and was
stricken down with polio in 1957. She was sent to Ann Arbor, Michigan
and placed in an 'iron lung.' It was there that someone wrote into the
show and told her story. Jack Baily and Ms. Cagney crowned her in the
hospital. I have an old photo of the two, but it does not show the
actual crowning. She requested an "iron lung" so she could come back
home to Toledo, but I think she only received a washing machine. All of
us (4 children) were taken away, by the State, and placed in an
orphanage soon after. We eventually got back home only to have her die
shortly thereafter. If there ever was someone deserving to be 'Queen For
The Day,' it was this brave and lovely lady." -- Cheryl
Premiered: January 3, 1956
Catch phrase: "Would you like to be queen for a day?"
Hosts: Dick Curtis 1969-1970 ,Jack Bailey 1956-1964, Ben Alexander Steve Dunne
Jack Smith Dennis Day Don DeFore Walter O'Keefe
Announcers:Carl King 1969-1970 Gene Baker John Harlan 1956-1964
89) Come Dine with Me
Five
contestants (four in the primetime version) compete to throw the best
dinner party. They each give a dinner party over the course of a week,
and mark each other out of ten. The host(ess) with the most(est) at the
end of the week wins a thousand pounds.
The
first half of each show follows the preparation for the party, and the
second half is the event itself. There are frequent cutaways to pre- and
post-game interviews with the contestants. It's a surprisingly
entertaining format, with Dave Lamb's voiceover striking just the right
tone, taking the mickey but not to the extent of stitching up the
participants. Let's face it, these people know very well what they're
letting themselves in for, and their follies and foibles are bound to
get an airing - especially if those foibles include inviting a group of
friends round to sing hymns in four-part harmony at the guests. Really -
it happened.
Broadcast Granada London (LWT) for Channel 4, 10 January 2005 to present.
90) Double Your Money
Monday
night quiz, based on Green's popular Radio Luxembourg format.
Contestants were given a free choice from different categories of
questions which were the same for each series but evolved in variety and
number (anything from 42 to 92) over time. For the first correct answer
they won £1, and thereafter the could double their money with further
correct answers up to a maximum of £32. A wrong answer would mean they
lose everything. The most successful contestants came back to play for
the Treasure Trail of up to £1000.
Host Hughie Green
91) Bank On The Stars
The
Bank on the Stars was a game show that aired 1954. The show was aired
on the television station CBS. Jack Paar was the original host until the
games show later moved to NBC and was then hosted by Bill Cullen.
Cullen only hosted the show for a few years, then Jimmy Nelson contined
the hosting duties until the show ended. The premise of the game show
was movie triva. 3 couples were picked out from the studio audience and
we asked a seris of question regarding a classic or current movie of the
time. They were shown a clip of the movie as were asked three two-part
questions regarding the movie. The team that had the most points at the
end would return for the final round called Bank Night Bonus. In this
round the contests were to listen, not watch, a clip and were then again
asked questions. If they answered the questions correctly, they would
win 500 dollars.
92) Born Lucky
A
game show in which contestants selected at random from crowds in
various shopping centers compete against each other in a series of
stunts for a chance to win cash to spend in the mall. The show aired on Lifetime Television
from October 5, 1992 to April 2, 1993, and again on the same network
from July 5 to December 31, 1993. For a brief period in 2000, PAX aired reruns of this series.
Director Bob Loudin , Host Bob Goen , Co-Host Jonathan Coleman , Creator Tony McLaren
Executive Producer Scott A. Stone, Executive Producer David G Stanley , Producer Stephen Brown
93) Dotto
Dotto
was an American television quiz show which aired on CBS from January 6
to August 15, 1958. Although it quickly became the highest-rated daytime
game show on television, its end came when it became the unexpected
first casualty---and ignition---of the quiz show scandals that rocked
American broadcasting as the 1950s closed.Hosted by Jack Narz, who
achieved a popularity equal to that of Hal March on The $64,000
Question, Dotto was based on the children's connect-the-dots game:
contestants answered general-knowledge questions to connect dots that
made a portrait of a famous or historical personage.
Within
the first six months of its run, Dotto became the highest-rated quiz
program of 1958, and on July 1 a weekly nighttime version began on NBC.
One of the nighttime contestants, a young actress and model named Connie
Hines, later became famous as Carol Post on the popular comedy Mister
Ed.
94) Double Talk
Double
Talk was a game show airing on ABC daytime. It was a revival of the
1977 game show Shoot For The Stars.Two teams, each of a celebrity and a
civilian, compete. They face a board of 4 monitors. A team is shown two
synonyms that compose a phrase when translated (example: "sacred/bovine"
would translate into "holy cow"). One team member takes the first half
and the other teammate translates the other half. Doing so scores ten
points. An incorrect translation turns the board to the other team and
is worth five points. A team scoring on all four monitors wins a $1000
bonus. A fifth box, in the middle, is worth double points. Four boards
are played with the team with the highest score the winner.
That
team plays a bonus round in translating as many as 10 incomplete
phrases in 60 seconds as possible. Each phrase is worth $100 with all
ten winning $10,000.
95) Down You Go
Down
You Go is an American television game show originally broadcast on the
DuMont Television Network. The Emmy award-nominated series ran from
1951-1956 as a prime time series hosted by Dr. Bergen Evans. The program
aired in eleven different timeslots during its five year run. It would
also be one of the few series eventually shown on all four major
television networks of the Golden Age of Television ABC, NBC, CBS, and
DuMont.
Down
You Go was similar to "Hangman", with a group of four celebrity
panelists who were asked to guess a word or phrase submitted by a home
viewer. The phrase "down you go" came about when a panelist would be
eliminated from play for making an incorrect guess, which would be
signified by the eliminated panelist pulling a handle to switch their
name to "DOWN YOU GO".
96) Haggis Baggis
The
games show Haggis Baggis was an American based game sow that aired from
1958 until 1959. The primetime host of the show was Jack Linkletter
while Fred Robbins and Dennis James hosted the daytime version of the
show. The premise of the game was to have 2 contestants, almost always
female, to identify a celebrity's face what was concealed in a 5x5 grid.
One contestant is asked to pick a category while the other contestant
is asked to pick a letter. The contestant that has chosen the letter
must name something that begins with the letter and must also fit the
category that was chosen by the other contestant. If she does this
correctly, she will be revealed a portion of the image. If she is wrong
the other contestant will get a free chance to guess. The first
contestant to guess the image correctly gets to move on to the bonus
round. This bonus round consists of a contestant picking between 2
prizes, Haggis or Baggis.
97) Hot Potato
Two
teams of three players, all with something in common (for example,
being dentists, mothers-to-be, etc.), tried to name the most popular
response to a question that had been asked of a group of people. A team
tried to come up with seven of the ten possible answers to win the
round. A team lost control of the question on a wrong guess and the
first team to win two rounds became champions and received $1,000. The
winners could try to earn as much as $5,000 in the bonus round by
answering another series of questions.
January 23, 1984 - June 29, 1984
NBC Daytime Game Show - 115 Episodes
Host: Bill Cullen
Announcer:Charlie O'Donnell
Announcer:Charlie O'Donnell
98) It's Your Bet
It's
Your Bet: This is the remake of the 1965 NBC-TV Game Show "I'LL BET".
"IT'S YOUR BET" features 2 star couples were married, engaged &
dating (family pairs included) will face each other to answer questions
that had been asked by the host. The Questions are General Knowledge,
Personal, Educational, et al are used to bet on the points what they
play for their own total (Starting at 100 Points and bet between 25 and
100 points). The 1st star couple reach 300 points wins the game and play
the "Preference Round" to win prizes for their audience member and each
spouse, fiance/fiancee, dating partner or member of the family pair
will read 1 question and was shown 3 answers on the board that
determined to the spouse (and other martial partners) will predict the
actual answer to one of the loving mates. If their right, The audience
member win prizes or If their wrong, The audience member will lose the
prizes giving the consolation prize of $100.
99) Minute to Win It
Minute
to Win It: In each one-hour episode competitors face 10 challenges that
escalate in level of difficulty using everyday household items. Each
game has a one minute time limit and failure to finish the task on time
results in elimination. At various points throughout the game, the
competitor can walk away with the money earned up to that point - but
it'll take nerves of steel to complete all 10 tasks to win $1 million.
Released: March 14, 2010
Genres: Reality-TV
100) The Apprentice
Reality
show which originally began with would-be moguls braving a simulated
corporate environment as Donald Trump pitted two teams against each
other for the single grand prize of landing a $250,000 a year job with
the Trump organization. The teams of contestants competed to complete
specific assigments and one member of the losing team was fired after
each defeat. Beginning with season 7, the show introduced its celebrity
version, with Donald Trump bringing 16 celebrities to New York City.
Dividing into teams, they compete in business tasks. Each week, the
leader of the winning team takes home tens of thousands of dollars for
their favorite charity while the losing team faces Trump in his
boardroom. In the end, the last celebrity standing is crowned the
Celebrity Apprentice and earns a $250,000 jackpot for their charity of
choice.
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