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Author Topic: This Week's Game Show TV Milestone  (Read 2866 times)

AH3RD

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestone
« on: August 24, 2003, 01:23:00 PM »
AUGUST 25, 1958

 

\"The NBC Television Network Presents... (toy piano- and slide whistle-fanfare) Concentration!\"


That famous opening spiel was heard for the very first time when the popular game show based on the children's game, created by Jack Barry, Dan Enright, Robert Noah and Buddy Piper, in which matching like cards is the key, while adding the ever-popular \"rebus\" puzzles to create an endlessly fascinating game of wits, had its debut on NBC Daytime. Concentration went on to become the longest-running daytime game show in NBC history, airing for 15 years and 3,796 shows, through March 23, 1973.

Concentration was emceed by Jack Barry (1958), Hugh Downs (1958-68) and Bob Clayton (1969-73). Many guests hosts appeared between '68 and '69, including Art James, Bill Mazur, and Ed McMahon! Two NBC prime-time series of Concentration were spawned as well: a four-week run in 1958 with Barry (October 30 to November 20), and a five-month full-color run in 1961 with Downs (April 17 to September 18). In 1968, Downs won an Emmy for hosting the daytime Concentration.

Shortly after its debut, Jack Barry and Dan Enright were forced to surrender their rights to this show as a result of The Quiz Show Scandals. At the end of the NBC run, the rights to Concentration switched to Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions, who oversaw both of the later versions of this show: the 1973-79 syndicated edition hosted by Jack Narz (Now You See It), and the 1987-91 NBC Daytime revival, Classic Concentration, emceed by Alex Trebek (Jeopardy!). It remains the only program in Goodson-Todman's entire game show repertoire that was not created by the company.

The videotapes of virtually every segment of the original 1958-73 NBC-produced version of Concentration were unfortunately destroyed or wiped clean for reuse by The Peacock Network (save for a precious few!), but all of the Goodson-Todman-produced episodes remain. NBC still retains the rights to the show, which explains the appalling dearth of repeats of Concentration on Game Show Network.

Afterword: Bob Clayton, the final host, signed a contract with Bob Stewart Productions to be the announcer of the hit game show which premiered on CBS the very Monday following Concentration's demise on NBC: The $10,000 Pyramid! Hugh Downs later became an anchor for ABC News, hosting the TV news magazine 20/20 with Barbara Walters. Ed McMahon became the aide de camp of Johnny Carson for 30 years on his Tonight Show. And, of course, Jack Barry's exile from TV due to The Scandals (aside from brief emceeing duties on Juvenile Jury and The Reel Game) would officially end with the September 4, 1972 CBS Daytime premiere of The Joker's Wild!
« Last Edit: August 24, 2003, 01:25:23 PM by AH3RD »
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Jimmy Owen

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestone
« Reply #1 on: August 24, 2003, 01:42:54 PM »
Wasn't Concentration live for much of the run?  Would there be master tapes to erase?
Let's Make a Deal was the first show to air on Buzzr. 6/1/15 8PM.

ChuckNet

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestone
« Reply #2 on: August 24, 2003, 06:56:04 PM »
Quote
Many guests hosts appeared between '68 and '69, including Art James, Bill Mazur, and Ed McMahon!

McMahon was actually the regular host for 6 mos in 1968, before being replaced by the guy he'd replaced, Bob Clayton.

Chuck Donegan (The Illustrious \"Chuckie Baby\")

rugrats1

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestone
« Reply #3 on: August 24, 2003, 06:57:05 PM »
Quote
Hugh Downs later became an anchor for ABC News, hosting the TV news magazine 20/20 with Barbara Walters.

We shouldn't forget his role on the Today show, which was concurrent to Concentration; he was on Today from 1962 to 1971. And prior to that -- his role as sidekick on Jack Paar (1957-62), which, for the most part, was during his tenure as Concentration host.

Quote
Ed McMahon became the aide de camp of Johnny Carson for 30 years on his Tonight Show.

...in 1962, 6 years before his brief stint on Concentration.


Quote
Wasn't Concentration live for much of the run? Would there be master tapes to erase?

Yes, but there was also kinescopes and videotape for the west coast, and for stations that didn't carry it \"live\" with the network.

Jimmy Owen

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestone
« Reply #4 on: August 25, 2003, 11:41:05 AM »
At the risk of picking nits, \"Concentration\" was not the only show G-T produced that was not created in-house.  In addition, McMahon hosted the show in 1969, shortly after \"Snap Judgment\" ended in March.  Jack Barry returned to network TV in 1969 (admittedly for a short time) to host ABC's \"Generation Gap,\" replacing Dennis Wholey. Finally, I'm not sure if G-T ever had the \"rights\" to the show.  From what I understand (and corrections are welcome) Jim Victory Television held the syndication rights and hired G-T to produce the show for the Narz version.  There was also a distribution credit for Victory on the Trebek version.
« Last Edit: August 25, 2003, 11:46:53 AM by Jimmy Owen »
Let's Make a Deal was the first show to air on Buzzr. 6/1/15 8PM.

uncamark

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestone
« Reply #5 on: August 25, 2003, 02:32:41 PM »
[quote name=\'Jimmy Owen\' date=\'Aug 25 2003, 10:41 AM\']At the risk of picking nits, \"Concentration\" was not the only show G-T produced that was not created in-house.  In addition, McMahon hosted the show in 1969, shortly after \"Snap Judgment\" ended in March.  Jack Barry returned to network TV in 1969 (admittedly for a short time) to host ABC's \"Generation Gap,\" replacing Dennis Wholey. Finally, I'm not sure if G-T ever had the \"rights\" to the show.  From what I understand (and corrections are welcome) Jim Victory Television held the syndication rights and hired G-T to produce the show for the Narz version.  There was also a distribution credit for Victory on the Trebek version.[/quote]
You're correct.

BTW, the new \"Concentration\" slots do not contain a credit to Victory in the copyright block, the first time in 30 years that Victory is not credited--although Steve Ryan is credited and given copyright notice as rebus creator.  (Of course, it being a slot, you don't have to solve the rebus, but they come up anyway to keep in the theme of the slot.)

chris319

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestone
« Reply #6 on: August 26, 2003, 05:52:09 PM »
Quote
\"Concentration\" was not the only show G-T produced that was not created in-house.
I can't think of any besides the HS component of MG/HS Hour.

PeterMarshallFan

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestone
« Reply #7 on: August 26, 2003, 06:51:18 PM »
[quote name=\'chris319\' date=\'Aug 26 2003, 05:52 PM\']
Quote
"Concentration" was not the only show G-T produced that was not created in-house.
I can't think of any besides the HS component of MG/HS Hour. [/quote]
 I don't know about that one.....while the basic tic-tac-toe, agree/disagree format was definitely not his, Goodson did have plenty of his own tweaks in it [The square and game scoring system, the win on default rule, no bluffs]

Jimmy Owen

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestone
« Reply #8 on: August 26, 2003, 09:09:46 PM »
It was the HS portion of MG/HS that I was thinking of.
Let's Make a Deal was the first show to air on Buzzr. 6/1/15 8PM.