March 23, 1973. That was the date the rebuses came to an end for a while
After over 3,700 episodes, NBC aired the last episode of Concentration. It went through three regular hosts - Hugh Downs, Bob Clayton and Ed McMahon. The show\'s final rebus was YOU\'VE BEEN MORE THAN KIND, which was a thank you from Norm Blumenthal et al to its fans. As the show ended, Auld Lang Syne was played (it was also played at the end of the last Howdy Doody Show in 1960). The show held the record for the longest run by a daytime game show until The Price Is Right broke the record (and then some) in 1987. In addition, Concentration had two runs on NBC primetime: in 1958 (with co-creator Jack Barry) and 1961 (with Downs after Barry was banished from TV after the scandals).
Concentration would later return in the form of the 1970s syndicated show and the 1987-1991 Alex Trebek-hosted Classic Concentration (plus a 1985 pilot).
Personally, I was hoping that Concentration would return in 2008 for the show\'s 50th anniversary. When that didn\'t happen, I thought that it would be back in 2009 so it could join TPIR and TTTT as the shows that have appeared in new episodes in the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s and 2000s.
With NBC in FIFTH place in primetime, maybe the execs can roll the proverbial dice and bring Concentration back, but with many people unfamiliar with rebuses, will we ever see two contestants trying to solve them again? Or will we see some other type of puzzle in its place?
Brian
I hate to say this, but I think if they ever brought it back, they would jettison the rebuses and make it a competition to match prizes or dollar amounts. Whomever got the most valued prizes or cash after all cards are matched would win.
There is a precedent for it. I believe the unsold 1985 or so pilot matched words instead of rebuses. I could be mistaken.
Matched words instead of prizes, you mean? True. It led to some funny word associations but there was something kind of \"off\" about it. Orson Bean as host didn\'t help.
Concentration debuted when I was about a year-and-a-half old. It remains my favorite game show of all time. The noisy charm of that mechanical board! Great memories.
The farewell episode is available on YouTube, in full, thanks to Hondo20132 ... Here\'s the link to the first part of it.
The farewell episode is available on YouTube, in full,
I hate to say this, but I think if they ever brought it back, they would jettison the rebuses and make it a competition to match prizes or dollar amounts. Whomever got the most valued prizes or cash after all cards are matched would win.
And the mass majority of the time the game will be decided well before the board is matched off, making for an exceptionally anticlimactic finish.
But, hey, I bit, so well done, I guess.
Odd thing is, I don\'t remember much about the original Concentration, but I remember very well watching the Jack Narz version from the beginning. Must have been the time slots - the Narz version was seen at 1 PM in my area, meaning I could catch most of it at lunch before I had to head back to school. I\'m glad the last NBC episode turned up...now...if more of Narz could turn up...
Of course, the following Monday Baffle and $10,000 Pyramid debuted. I remember seeing promos for the debut of Pyramid - some of them featured Jack Klugman and Tony Randall and were quite amusing.
I hate to say this, but I think if they ever brought it back, they would jettison the rebuses and make it a competition to match prizes or dollar amounts. Whomever got the most valued prizes or cash after all cards are matched would win.
And the mass majority of the time the game will be decided well before the board is matched off, making for an exceptionally anticlimactic finish.
But, hey, I bit, so well done, I guess.
See, it would depend on the value of the prizes. You could have more prizes, but if you\'ve got French\'s mustard and your opponent has a flokati rug, the greater value would win.
See, it would depend on the value of the prizes. You could have more prizes, but if you\'ve got French\'s mustard and your opponent has a flokati rug, the greater value would win.
No. If anything you exacerbate the problem by ranging the prizes, especially if your big-ticket item ends up getting matched early on. At best you\'re just rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.
The farewell episode is available on YouTube
And holy moses, could they have been saddled with two more inept contestants for their final game?
See, it would depend on the value of the prizes. You could have more prizes, but if you\'ve got French\'s mustard and your opponent has a flokati rug, the greater value would win.
No. If anything you exacerbate the problem by ranging the prizes, especially if your big-ticket item ends up getting matched early on. At best you\'re just rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.
Well, there\'s always the possibilty of getting a TAKE card, which would change things quickly.
Well, there\'s always the possibilty of getting a TAKE card, which would change things quickly.
...until it goes too. Your idea has an ounce of merit as long as the prizes go off the board in the order you want them to, which isn\'t going to happen the mass majority of the time.
You do realize who you\'re trying to debate with, Chris?
You do realize who you\'re trying to debate with, Chris?
Who\'s debating?
You could jigger it so the winner is the player who makes the last match. Granted, you get a bit of Fire Drill Syndrome, but at least it prevents the foregone conclusions you\'d have from runaway games.
You could jigger it so the winner is the player who makes the last match. Granted, you get a bit of Fire Drill Syndrome, but at least it prevents the foregone conclusions you\'d have from runaway games.
I\'m not sure what you mean by \"Fire Drill Syndrome,\" but it offends me as a comedian for one person to do all of the heavy lifting, get down to the last four squares, be wrong from blind bad luck, and hand the game over as a result. I\'ve already seen Merv Griffin\'s Crosswords and don\'t feel the need to see it again.
And that\'s really the problem with this entire notion: y\'all (and by \"y\'all\" I mostly mean \"Jimmy\") are trying to take the one thing out of Concentration that doesn\'t make the whole game a fairly random exercise, given two players with a couple ounces of intelligence. Now, if you want Concentration to be a fairly random exercise, great, Glub knows there\'s a market for fairly random games, but at least try to do it in a way that isn\'t (in Tim\'s case) unsatisfying, or (in Jimmy\'s case) outright bad TV.
The fire drill was a bit of chaos added to Make the Grade. I loathe use of syndrome as shorthand or metaphor, but it had the possibility to shuffle the game just before the end, just like on MGC.
Oh, the minigame that reassigned podiums, yeah, I vaguely remember that.
Of course, the following Monday Baffle and $10,000 Pyramid debuted. I remember seeing promos for the debut of Pyramid - some of them featured Jack Klugman and Tony Randall and were quite amusing.
To not include a rebus for a player to solve would be like having \"The Price is Right\" without the Showcase Showdown or the Showcases at the end of the show. The rebus was the essential part of this game. It was an awesome added play-along feature, in addition to playing along from home trying to make matches on the board. Watching 30 minutes of people doing nothing more than making matches would lead to a very quick demise. The rebus is absolutely essential.
Matching prizes only worked for the \"Classic\" format from 1987-91 for the bonus game. Still, I would liked to have seen it where rather than have 8 cars, have 1 car to play for, have 8 different money amounts on the board to match in 35 seconds. For each match made, it would reveal 2 parts of a 15 part rebus. To win the car, you would have to solve the bonus round rebus. Obviously, the more matches made in 35 seconds, the more of the puzzle that would be revealed. At the end of 35 seconds, if the player couldn\'t solve the rebus, if I produced the show, I would give them the option to forfeit any bonus cash accumulated during matches made in the bonus game in exchange for revealing one more piece of the 15 square puzzle, and that piece would be the square that hid the one unmatchable money card.
To not include a rebus for a player to solve would be like having \"The Price is Right\" without the Showcase Showdown
Um, not sure how to break this one to you...
Yeah, the big C is, and always will be, my favorite game show. I really don\'t care to see it revived. It was fun a challenge while it lasted. Let sleeping dogs lie.
The folowing Monday after Concentration\'s cancellation, Clayton was heard announcing The $10,000 Ptramid. A friend of mine who used to go see Pyramid told me that Clayton told him G-T offered him the Concentration job, but he turned it down because he did not want to commute or move to Califiornia. So Jack Narz got the job.
I\'ve always wondered what, if any, influence G-T\'s licensing of Concentration may have had upon the end of the original NBC version. Did G-T\'s purchase offer come before or after the show\'s final broadcast? Starting their revival just five months after the end of the first series seems rather quick. Surely there must be a documented story of how the syndicated version came to be.
Check americanradiohistory.com for the back issues of Broadcasting for the timeline, but Jim Victory acquired the rights from NBC to mount a new Concentration in May or June of 73 and hired Goodson-Todman to actually produce the show. Jim Victory had been an employee of the CBS and later the NBC syndication divisions before the Justice Department forced the divestment of said divisions. Concentration was Victory\'s first offering as a syndicator on his own. G-T produced the show, but Victory commissioned the production.
March 23, 1973. That was the date the rebuses came to an end for a while
After over 3,700 episodes, NBC aired the last episode of Concentration. It went through three regular hosts - Hugh Downs, Bob Clayton and Ed McMahon. The show\'s final rebus was YOU\'VE BEEN MORE THAN KIND, which was a thank you from Norm Blumenthal et al to its fans. As the show ended, Auld Lang Syne was played (it was also played at the end of the last Howdy Doody Show in 1960). The show held the record for the longest run by a daytime game show until The Price Is Right broke the record (and then some) in 1987. In addition, Concentration had two runs on NBC primetime: in 1958 (with co-creator Jack Barry) and 1961 (with Downs after Barry was banished from TV after the scandals).
Concentration would later return in the form of the 1970s syndicated show and the 1987-1991 Alex Trebek-hosted Classic Concentration (plus a 1985 pilot).
Personally, I was hoping that Concentration would return in 2008 for the show\'s 50th anniversary. When that didn\'t happen, I thought that it would be back in 2009 so it could join TPIR and TTTT as the shows that have appeared in new episodes in the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s and 2000s.
With NBC in FIFTH place in primetime, maybe the execs can roll the proverbial dice and bring Concentration back, but with many people unfamiliar with rebuses, will we ever see two contestants trying to solve them again? Or will we see some other type of puzzle in its place?
Brian
Concentration almost came back in 2000 but Jeff Zucker and co. picked a third hour of the Today Show
Concentration almost came back in 2000 but Jeff Zucker and co. picked a third hour of the Today Show
I\'m sorry, but what\'s your source for this?
Concentration almost came back in 2000 but Jeff Zucker and co. picked a third hour of the Today Show
I\'m sorry, but what\'s your source for this?
Here\'s a Variety article. However, it only says that Concentration was an \"obvious candidate\", not that it almost came back. Still, I would\'ve loved to have seen it come to fruition...
To not include a rebus for a player to solve would be like having \"The Price is Right\" without the Showcase Showdown or the Showcases at the end of the show. The rebus was the essential part of this game. It was an awesome added play-along feature, in addition to playing along from home trying to make matches on the board. Watching 30 minutes of people doing nothing more than making matches would lead to a very quick demise. The rebus is absolutely essential.
Matching prizes only worked for the \"Classic\" format from 1987-91 for the bonus game. Still, I would liked to have seen it where rather than have 8 cars, have 1 car to play for, have 8 different money amounts on the board to match in 35 seconds. For each match made, it would reveal 2 parts of a 15 part rebus. To win the car, you would have to solve the bonus round rebus. Obviously, the more matches made in 35 seconds, the more of the puzzle that would be revealed. At the end of 35 seconds, if the player couldn\'t solve the rebus, if I produced the show, I would give them the option to forfeit any bonus cash accumulated during matches made in the bonus game in exchange for revealing one more piece of the 15 square puzzle, and that piece would be the square that hid the one unmatchable money card.
One variation on that bonus round that I dreamed up had the 25-part board, with dollar amounts ranging from $100 to $5000, plus a Wild Card. The contestant would have 60 seconds to make as many matches as possible; more matches meant more of the puzzle is shown. Revealing the Wild Card stops the clock; after the \"natural match\" is revealed, the clock restarts on the contestant\'s next pick. After time runs out, the contestant gets 15 seconds to guess what the puzzle says for a new car plus the total cash that was matched. Clearing the board in 60 seconds results in a guaranteed $25,000, but the contestant can still get to solve the puzzle for that new car.