
This being Thursday, it's time for another edition of Thursday Movie Picks, the blogathon run by Wandering Through the Shelves. This being the last Thursday of the month, it's time for another TV edition, and this time it's a theme that's extremely easy for me: game shows. I was a huge fan of the genre growing up in the late 1970s and 1980s, a time when there were a lot of game shows in daytime and a moderate number of syndicated game shows, most of which had regular people playing for modest prizes, mostly shot live-to-tape unlike now with central casting archetypes, apocalyptic sets (thank you, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?), and numerous stopdowns making tape sessions run long. (I had an acquaintance on a game show board who was a contestant on Who's Still Standing? who had extremely negative things to say about his experience, particularly how they treated one female contestant; unfortunately I can't find a link to his blog post.) At any rate, for me the big difficulty was making certain I hadn't used any of the game shows I picked, having picked game shows for several past TV editions. With that in mind, I picked three shows featuring one of the great hosts of all time, Alex Trebek and his fantastic white afro:
High Rollers (1974-1976, 1978-1980). This show is based on the simple game Shut the Box, a game where you have the numbers 1-9 and roll a pair of dice with the goal of getting rid of all nine numbers. The show added the twist of putting the numbers in three columns and adding prizes awarded to the person who completed a column and won the game. The dice girl on the first version was Ruta Lee, wife of producer Merrill Heatter and remembered by classic film fans as Tyrone Power's friend in Witness for the Prosecution.
Double Dare (1976). Not the game show with kids doing sloppy stunts when they couldn't answer the question and had to take a physical challenge. This is a tough quizzer giving two contestant clues to a person, place or thing. When you thought you knew the mystery answer, you could ring in, and if right, take a dare that your opponent wouldn't know the answer with one, or even two, more clues. The bonus round reversed this, taking Ph.Ds. (this being the era when that implied out-of-touch middle aged white guy) and trying to stump at least one of them after four clues such as "Students at Princeton protested its 1969 cancellation" (the subject being Star Trek in an era before the first movie brought the franchise back to the national cultural consciousness). Hide your eyes when they show the main game subject, and this is a really fun quiz show.
Battlestars (1981-1982, 1983). This game asked celebrities in triangular boxes Hollywood Squares-style questions (Merrill Heatter, who produced this one, also produced Hollywood Squares), with the object being to answer the question correctly when the last point of the triangle around a celebrity's box was selected. Not exactly the best show or original mechanic; Heatter would reuse the Hollywood Squares agree/disagree mechanic for yet another show, All-Star Blitz a few years later. But that one was hosted by Peter Marshall so I didn't want to use it here.
Finally, and unrelated to Alex Trebek, I present Tony Randall's comments on what might be the greatest game show of all time, Pyramid: