The Game Show Forum > The Big Board
Ultimate game show cult favorite
gamed121683:
Have we ever discussed this before? If not, I'll start!
Your mileage may vary, of course, but what do you think is the ultimate game show cult favorite? We're talking a game show that probably wasn't on long (giving it niche status), yet it has a loyal fanbase in game show fandom. We're talking Price Is Right fanbase obsession here. I'll make two nominations:
Trivia Trap: It’s a quirky format (find the WRONG answers, not the right ones?) yet it's a show that has it's share of fans. I remember watching this show with my mom one time and even she was asking herself, "What's the point of choosing the wrong answers?"
Whew!: Some say this show is like a game show fever dream. Its title is that of onomatopoeia, it takes about ten minutes just to explain the rules, a format that's so frantic and yet...it has a dedicated following for a show that ran a little over a year. Oh, and who doesn't love running past 10 plywood cutouts for 25K, huh?
Honorable mention: Split Second: Great format, but I don't know if three years in it's original run is consider short-lived (didn't hurt Press Your Luck). However, you hardly heard about it anymore after it went the off air, even with Monty Hall's revival in the '80s. Yes, GSN has brought the format back with success recently, so it may no longer be as much of a rare gem as it was...say, a decade ago.
There's my choices, what's yours?
BillCullen1:
Here are my favorites
Now You See It - when I first saw that giant set and all that neon, my jaw dropped. 15-year-old me was hooked. The theme song and Johnny O's intro were tops. Jack Narz was perfect as a host. Loved the game even though the scoring was flawed. Getting double points on Line 4, position 12 just seemed so unfair to the other player, IMO. The Chuck Henry version improved the format and scoring. I think this could work today.
Jackpot! - 16 players on all week. I liked the original format that had riddles. I don't care what the damned focus groups think. I thought this was Bob Stewart's second best show, after Pyramid. Geoff Edwards made this fun to watch. As he would say after a correct answer, "Right you are." I saw tapings of this in NYC during '74 and '75. This could work on GSN today.
Double Dare (Trebek) - I've always been a trivia nerd so I always played along when I watched. The game was challenging and the play-along factor was an 11, on a 1 to 10 scale. With the popularity of trivia shows today, I hope that somehow, this show makes a comeback.
So there you go.
TimK2003:
• Press Your Luck has to be on the list.
Much thanks to the Whammy, but it was a game that could be played at home, using the pause feature on your VCR to stop the board.
• Outside of Whew!, my other pick would be The Big Showdown.
Challenging questions, lightning-fast Q&As, strategy and somewhat of a handicap if you are in the lead with the "block" rule. And just seeing how manic the Final Showdown can be. This is one show that needs to come back.
wdm1219inpenna:
I vote for Hit-Man, just a 3 month long NBC daytime game show which gave us Tomarken & Roddy.
It was educational, fun and tested players' comprehension skills, and it's too bad the show didn't last longer.
Winkfan:
Talkabout; for obvious reasons.
Bumper Stumpers; likewise.
Gambit; the dearly-departed Winkster's first real hit show.
And if you'd like to go way back:
Camoflauge (the "find-the-object" one.)
Video Village; the show that put Heatter-Quigley on the TV map
Cordially,
Tammy
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
Go to full version