The Game Show Forum
The Game Show Forum => The Big Board => Topic started by: BrandonFG on March 05, 2020, 10:49:19 PM
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It's been a while since we've done one of these...maybe it can become its own thread. I'm thinking we could add new game show sightings as we go along, not stuff noted in the past, i.e. the clip of Jeopardy! in Groundhog Day.
Anyway, last night I started watching the Amazon Prime series Hunters, starring Al Pacino. During an establishing shot, I hear what sounds like a game show playing, and sure enough, the character is watching Las Vegas Gambit. I'm not sure if the episode is on Youtube or within the circuit, so I found it interesting that that was the show used, instead of something more mainstream like an old TPiR or Hollywood Squares. For the record, the couples in question are the Downeys and the Pattons, and there's a question about Marilu Henner. :P Fun fact: IMDb claims that the husband of the Downey duo is controversial talk show host Morton Downey, Jr.
What makes it even more interesting for me is that Hunters is set in summer 1977, three years before this version of Gambit hit the airwaves. Obviously, the producers just needed a generic daytime game show, and the average viewer wouldn't notice. Regardless, I got a kick out of them using Gambit of all shows. The credits give thanks to a company called Clear Rights (https://www.clear-rights.com/), which handles clearances, so I imagine getting an obscure 40-year-old game show would've been easier than going through Fremantle or Sony for one of their properties.
As for the series itself, it's interesting, but with the plot surrounding anti-Semitism, it is quite dark.
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Here's one that's kinda obscure: 1980s Hollywood Squares in Don't Tell Mom The Babysitter's Dead.
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Here's one that's kinda obscure: 1980s Hollywood Squares in Don't Tell Mom The Babysitter's Dead.
(Fast Money duplicate buzz) :)
I'm thinking we could add new game show sightings as we go along, not stuff noted in the past, i.e. the clip of Jeopardy! in Groundhog Day.
There used to be a site that featured a list of clips. I can't remember who ran it..."Fiesta Jon" maybe?
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There used to be a site that featured a list of clips. I can't remember who ran it..."Fiesta Jon" maybe?
Jay Lewis at QWIZX.com was the purveyor of a list of game shows within other media as well as game shows that never were as mentioned in television, movies or books and such.
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I'll never forget the "Exciting trip to Canada!!" offered on a Tom Kennedy episode of TPIR during the tail end of Flight of the Navigator.
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I remember going to a movie as a kid in the early-mid 80s that had the '83 Jeopardy! pilot in a scene. Unfortunately, I don't remember what the movie was. I've run across it a couple of times as an adult, but even then it was a forgettable movie other than having the '83 Jeopardy! pilot in it. The Googles have been no help so far.
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In Stranger Things Eleven's birth mother was watching Feud it's first two seasons. Also, if you watch The Goldbergs there is a lot of game show clips therem. Like All-New Dating Game Wheel, and J! in the Double Dare episode, they showed clips from TNG, J! WOF, and Pyramid. in the first season of Ozark there is a clip of Whammy! also in Boston Legal Leslie Jordan's character watched Hollywood Showdown and Millionaire. (Viera). In Used Cars when the gang talks about interrupting the resident's speech for one of their comnercials they are watching LMAD. Also when they get ready to interrupt the speech, newlywed Game is shown. It is In fact, a clip of the episode with Charlie and Pat Brill.
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Electric Dreams has clips of Love Connection and LMAD.
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In "The Graduate," Dustin Hoffman finds the Robinsons mirthlessly watching "The Newlywed Game" and Peter Falk mocks "The Price Is Right" in "The In-Laws"
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In A Beautiful Day in the Nejghborhood Lloyd's father is watching J! Also, in Lucky Numbers there is a J! Clip, as well.as a clip from $25k Pyramid and John Travolta's character is watching Bob Eubanks' interview with Gary Co!kind on Hour Magazine
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The second episode of Moonlighting, “Gunfight at the So-So Corral” features Bruce Willis watching and playing along with a contemporary episode of Family Feud.
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I remember going to a movie as a kid in the early-mid 80s that had the '83 Jeopardy! pilot in a scene. Unfortunately, I don't remember what the movie was. I've run across it a couple of times as an adult, but even then it was a forgettable movie other than having the '83 Jeopardy! pilot in it. The Googles have been no help so far.
You might be thinking of the NBC made-for-TV movie Special Bulletin (the one in which Charleston, S.C., -- um, that would be spoilers). It's right in the first minute, at 0:42 in this very high-quality copy that I didn't know existed until I just searched:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TqQBk8s0joA
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I remember going to a movie as a kid in the early-mid 80s that had the '83 Jeopardy! pilot in a scene. Unfortunately, I don't remember what the movie was. I've run across it a couple of times as an adult, but even then it was a forgettable movie other than having the '83 Jeopardy! pilot in it. The Googles have been no help so far.
You might be thinking of the NBC made-for-TV movie Special Bulletin (the one in which Charleston, S.C., -- um, that would be spoilers). It's right in the first minute, at 0:42 in this very high-quality copy that I didn't know existed until I just searched:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TqQBk8s0joA
One of my favorite movies from the 80s. NBC caught a lot of nuclear heat when they aired this the first time, when they rebroadcast it , they put disclaimers during every ad saying "this was not real".
And yes, one of the first game shows i created in my mind, at 10 years old, was "Four Squares".
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If you are even a tad bit interested in music from the 50s-70s, I strongly encourage you to see the documentary "The Wrecking Crew", now available on Hulu, etc...
One member of "The Crew" was a guitarist by the name of Tommy Tedesco, who the movie was dedicated to. Long story short, when his music-making career was on the wane, he appeared as a contestant on "The Gong Show" where he performed a song about his once-successful career. They show parts of his appearance.
Tommy and other musicians, were responsible for the music behind many of the artists of the day, appearing in hundreds and hundreds of songs -- many which became big hits.
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If you are even a tad bit interested in music from the 50s-70s, I strongly encourage you to see the documentary "The Wrecking Crew", now available on Hulu, etc...
One member of "The Crew" was a guitarist by the name of Tommy Tedesco, who the movie was dedicated to. Long story short, when his music-making career was on the wane, he appeared as a contestant on "The Gong Show" where he performed a song about his once-successful career. They show parts of his appearance.
Tommy and other musicians, were responsible for the music behind many of the artists of the day, appearing in hundreds and hundreds of songs -- many which became big hits.
IIRC, he was also part of Tommy Oliver's band on Face the Music.
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Episode 4 of the Amazon series "Tales from the Loop" has a scene in which a character is watching "Child's Play" (on a woodgrain console TV with slightly fuzzy reception, no less).
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And then, there was the 1959 movie It Happened to Jane, starring Doris Day, Jack Lemmon, a bald-headed Ernie Kovacs, and a scene with a famous game show panel.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0AUpt5alcg
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And then, there was the 1959 movie It Happened to Jane, starring Doris Day, Jack Lemmon, a bald-headed Ernie Kovacs, and a scene with a famous game show panel.
I think it's worth mentioning that, compared to most of the references on this thread, the I've Got A Secret scene isn't one that the characters just happened to be watching on a television in the background. It's integral to the storyline, and it was shot specifically for the movie.
A fun punch line to this is that Doris Day was supposed to appear on the REAL I've Got A Secret in order to promote this film. They even created a game involving toy trains, since trains were part of the plot for the movie. When Doris couldn't make it, the show's solution was ingenious.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XtnBPiYNmAg
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I remember going to a movie as a kid in the early-mid 80s that had the '83 Jeopardy! pilot in a scene. Unfortunately, I don't remember what the movie was. I've run across it a couple of times as an adult, but even then it was a forgettable movie other than having the '83 Jeopardy! pilot in it. The Googles have been no help so far.
You might be thinking of the NBC made-for-TV movie Special Bulletin (the one in which Charleston, S.C., -- um, that would be spoilers). It's right in the first minute, at 0:42 in this very high-quality copy that I didn't know existed until I just searched:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TqQBk8s0joA
Also, if you look very carefully at the game board, one of the categories is "Air Shuttle Disasters," which suggests someone grabbed a prop from "Airplane II: The Sequel" (which featured a J! spoof with Art Fleming) and inserted it in "Special Bulletin."
Another obscure game show find in a movie -- there was a 2001 film called "Just Visiting" (a remake of a far better French film) about a 12th century French nobleman and his servant being mistakenly launched into modern-day Chicago. Early in the film, the two heroes stumble around a present-day apartment, where they discover a TV set, turn it on, then attack it, thinking it's some kind of monster. The TV was showing, IIRC, the opening of a Dawson Feud.
JD
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Also, if you look very carefully at the game board, one of the categories is "Air Shuttle Disasters," which suggests someone grabbed a prop from "Airplane II: The Sequel" (which featured a J! spoof with Art Fleming) and inserted it in "Special Bulletin."
Good eye. Turns out that's *precisely* where they came up with that prop, all the way down to which clues are revealed and which ones aren't.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083530/mediaviewer/rm847012864 (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083530/mediaviewer/rm847012864)
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Just rewatched Splash on Disney+ (yes, with butts censored by a mermaid hair loincloth and all...now that's just Maclunkey...) I am reminded of the snippet of The (New) $25,000 Pyramid in one scene.
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In "The In-Laws", there's a scene of Peter Falk and a cab driver in a diner and an episode of the Dennis James TPIR is playing on the set and Falk is asking what the show is about and goes, "And they're supposed to guess what all that crap is worth?" Then later he asks, "How long has it been on?" The cabbie answers, "Since 1911."
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I love how half of you have just decided to damn the parameters of the OP and rattle off sightings from old tv shows and movies.
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Here's one that's kinda obscure: 1980s Hollywood Squares in Don't Tell Mom The Babysitter's Dead.
Which had a brief clip of Win, Lose, or Draw (which also ended by the time the film came out) before the babysitter turned the TV off.
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It also has a clip of $25k Pyramid. Walter was my main man!