[quote name=\'TimK2003\' post=\'165326\' date=\'Oct 2 2007, 10:57 AM\']
In the earlier days of game shows (the 70's, the 80's, the 90s,...) what was the original protocol for freshman shows: How far in advance would they initially tape? Did they allow a period of idle time between taping schedules to get public feedback on their work so they can adapt to flaws and/or criticism seen by the public?[/quote]
In the network days of the 70s and 80s, seems to me that everyone had to do four days a month, although there were exceptions if the space was available and they wanted to build up a backlog before going on vacation. In the 70s, there were still the network variety shows and sitcoms originating from the network studios and relatively few talk shows with "dedicated" sets that had to stay up virtually permanently. (According to an NBC tour guide, even Carson's "Tonight" set could be struck quickly to move a game show into Studio 1 for taping.)
Gil Fates makes a comment in his book about "producers with lower budgets and lower standards" taping 10-a-day, but no comment about a compressed schedule. I would guess that by the time cable came around, the combination of tight budgets and cheaper space that allowed for leaving sets up longer went to taping 65 episodes in two-to-three weeks. However, there was no such thing as "double run" back then--if a show was seen more than once a day, the same episode repeated. And TNN's game shows like "Fandango" aired in sequence (since they had returning champions), so they had the opportunity to make tweaks if necessary.