The Game Show Forum
The Game Show Forum => The Big Board => Topic started by: johnnya2k3 on April 14, 2016, 12:53:24 AM
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Until the late '70s, there were nighttime editions of TPIR, Hollywood Squares, LMAD, Name That Tune, and Match Game that aired weekly, primarily as a lead-in to primetime.
However, there have been a few daily syndie game shows in which, due to scheduling commitments with other shows, have aired only on weekends.
One major example is the New TPIR with Doug Davidson; some markets including Fairbanks and Philadelphia opted to air it on weekends as opposed to weeknights. Like I said before, Fairbanks saw it Saturday and Sunday nights at 6:30 on KATN, and I think sister station KIMO in Anchorage (now KYUR) did the same.
And as I said in the uncleared syndie game shows in major markets thread, WXIA here in Atlanta had the $100,000 Name That Tune (Jim Lange) Saturday nights at 7:30 only. My guess is that they showed a winning episode from the week of shows they taped off the satellite and stockpiled all week, though they could've ran them late nights after David Letterman instead. After all, it was WXIA who three years earlier had the "You Asked For It" revival with Rich Little (also by Sandy Frank), which would be crushed by "PM Magazine" on WAGA as well as a brand new show over on WSB: "Entertainment Tonight", which they still air at 7:30 to this day.
Anyway...were there any others like these that never aired weekdays but had to wait till the weekends for?
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Wasn't Let's Ask America on that type of schedule in some of its markets, and Celebrity Name Game as well?
For some reason the only show coming immediately to mind is the short-lived sports quizzer Grandstand and I'm not sure if that was actually a weekly show.
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Wasn't Let's Ask America on that type of schedule in some of its markets, and Celebrity Name Game as well?
Correct on both counts. :)
Not sure how many stations do this, but WDCW has Celebrity Name Game on weekdays AND weekends. One episode each weekday, then one of those five reruns on Saturday.
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(according to Zach Horan)
It was at this point I lost interest in your post.
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Wasn't Let's Ask America on that type of schedule in some of its markets, and Celebrity Name Game as well?
Correct on both counts. :)
Not sure how many stations do this, but WDCW has Celebrity Name Game on weekdays AND weekends. One episode each weekday, then one of those five reruns on Saturday.
Philadelphia's WPHL airs the week's CNG episodes on Thursday and Friday nights at 8/8:30pm and again sometime on the weekend, usually Saturday at 6pm. They pre-empt the MyTV schedule during those relevant hours and air them during the overnight 2am hour instead. It's a very strange scheduling decision.
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It was at this point I lost interest in your post.
johnnya2k3
This was mine.
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Not sure how many stations do this, but WDCW has Celebrity Name Game on weekdays AND weekends. One episode each weekday, then one of those five reruns on Saturday.
WGNT airs two episodes daily, then an hour of episodes on Saturdays. Not sure if the Saturday episodes are reruns from earlier in the week though.
Davidson's TPiR aired on Saturdays in Dallas, I believe on KXAS. I don't think it aired every single week, going off what I remember reading in the TV listings way back when.
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Wasn't Let's Ask America on that type of schedule in some of its markets, and Celebrity Name Game as well?
Correct on both counts. :)
Not sure how many stations do this, but WDCW has Celebrity Name Game on weekdays AND weekends. One episode each weekday, then one of those five reruns on Saturday.
WPIX was doing this but with one episode per weekday and I wanna say two on Saturday.
Apparently they're still doing this since they picked up the double run.
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The weekend duo of episodes are generally the Monday and Tuesday shows from the primary run, but they're re-pitched to stations with an alternate airdate later in the week. It's a separate pitch through Pathfire (the digital distribution service we get Celebrity Name Game through).
For example, this past week:
(Primary/Secondary)
Monday: 1103 / 1042
Tuesday: 1064 / 1032
Wednesday: 1068 / 1172
Thursday: 1140 / 1049
Friday: 1177 / 1161
Weekend 1: 1103
Weekend 2: 1064
(An aside: Celebrity Name Game has been rerunning first season episodes in both runs since the first week of March, and resumes first run episodes next week with five shows, and in fact, by early May three shows produced for the third season will have already aired as well, two in the secondary and one in the primary)
1103 and 1064 are this week's Monday and Tuesday shows in the primary run, so those are the weekend shows provided to stations. That's basically the case weekly.
We broadcast the weekday run from 3-4pm ET on weekdays, while the weekend episodes are used as floating daytime programming through the weekend. Sometimes at 1p, sometimes at 5, sometimes both on the same day, and at others on different days.
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Thanks Chelsea - For an ignoramus like me, that's a fascinating glimpse into your world.
Can you share with us the airdate schedule plans for CNG beyond April? I'm surprised they're airing S3 eps already. Only 100 eps of season 2 have aired so far, and it's already April!
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WPXI in Pittsburgh ran "Pictionary" on weekends only, in floating time slots. Usually not all five episodes. I think they just went in order (e.g., in a weekend with 3 time slots available, they'd show the Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday episodes).
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CNG in New York has been moved more times than any other show than I can remember on its short run. It started out at 7:30, moved to 6:30, then to 9 AM, and apparently the station didn't like it there because now they have it at 4:00 in the afternoon.
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In NYC, Peter Tomarken's Wipeout aired late nights on the weekends on the CBS affiliate in the late 80s.. More recently, the Monopoly Millionaires Club has aired on weekends on WPIX TV.
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In NYC, Peter Tomarken's Wipeout aired late nights on the weekends on the CBS affiliate in the late 80s.. More recently, the Monopoly Millionaires Club has aired on weekends on WPIX TV.
MMC doesn't qualify for this discussion. It was a weekly show everywhere.
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In NYC, Peter Tomarken's Wipeout aired late nights on the weekends on the CBS affiliate in the late 80s...
It was the same in the LA area; Wipeout aired late night on Friday nights/Saturday mornings.
Cordially,
Tammy
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For a brief, but wonderful, period of time I believe WSB in Atlanta aired Kennedy TPIR on Saturday mornings - at 11am no less. As a 7-year old who couldn't watch Price during the week save for holidays, that was a real treat although I couldn't figure out why they were calling it the "Nighttime" Price is Right :)
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In Phoenix, NBC station KPNX aired TNPiR'94 on Sundays at 12:30PM, preempted for sporting events.
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According to Chris Lambert on the old ATGS newsgroup:
WISH in Indianapolis -- while they were still CBS -- had Every Second Counts on Saturday nights only while WTHI in Terre Haute later carried the Tom Kennedy TPIR also on Saturdays (just like WSB).
Had it cleared Atlanta, WSB could've ran Every Second Counts on the weekends only as well, since WAGA and WXIA already had fellow Group W shows "PM Magazine" and "Hour Magazine" respectively.
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Had it cleared Atlanta, WSB (or WAGA, since they were very loyal with Group W) could've ran Every Second Counts on the weekends only as well.
Would they have won one of your coveted "Awards" had they done that?
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WXIA aired Wheel on Saturday Nights during it's first season. Also $100k Pyramid back to back with Wheel. Also, I think WESH in Orlando aired $100k Pyramid only on Saturday nights.
The CBS affiliate in Columbus MS only aired Davidson TNPIR I believe at 5:00
KNBC aired Lange NTT on Saturday nights
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Two I can think of in San Francisco, although I am not certain the first one was a daily (and it wasn't on weekends):
For two years in the 1970s, KPIX ran Jack Narz Concentration only on Wednesday nights at 7:30 (and briefly ran Garry Moore To Tell the Truth, which KBHK had run daily, on Fridays before Name That Tune started).
KRON ran the first few episodes of Trebek Jeopardy! on Saturday nights. I didn't know it was intended to be a daily until Alex said "We'll see you tomorrow" at the end of the first episode.
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I seem to remember WNBC in New York ran Garry Moore's To Tell the Truth for a year on Saturday evenings sometime between 1973 and 1975, probably before Dennis James' The Price Is Right. I'm sure G-T wasn't thrilled by this, but better to have a weekly appearance in the largest market than none at all.