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Author Topic: The New Treasure Hunt's 30th Anniversary  (Read 9958 times)

ChuckNet

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The New Treasure Hunt's 30th Anniversary
« Reply #30 on: September 17, 2003, 05:13:10 PM »
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\"Newlywed\" and \"Dating\" were certainly in the most markets. From reading old TVGuides from that time period, very few cities picked up \"Gong\" or \"TH\" reruns.

One nearby station that did air Gong reruns was WTIC (Ch. 61) in Hartford, even airing a \"Gong Show Gala\" marathon sometime in 1985 that they managed to get a 1/2-page ad for in the local edition of TV Guide.

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

Tim L

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The New Treasure Hunt's 30th Anniversary
« Reply #31 on: September 17, 2003, 05:42:22 PM »
[quote name=\'rugrats1\' date=\'Sep 13 2003, 10:44 PM\']
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The Miami PBS station combined with British and Australian TV for a show called "Top of the World" in 1982.

Nifty "2001" style opening, as well, with dramatic electronic music and floating planets behind satellite dishes.

I also recall the opening also featuring exterior shots of the studios the show originated in -- WPBT ch.2 in Miami, the Australian ABC studios in Sydney, and of course, Thames Television (where the main show originated; hence, the Thames "skyline" logo at the start and end).

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They produced one boring dry in the eighties that I can't remember the name

This was probably the one -- the rules are that in the first round, each contestant answers 12 questions worth one point each, each containing 4 questions from the US, Britain and Australia. Round two was 2 minutes of questions based on the subject of the contestant's choice, worth 2 points apiece. Round 3 was questions in world knowledge, worth 3 points if right or -3 points if wrong. The top winner from each country returns later on for their tournament of champions, where the top winner wins a 1924 Rolls Royce.

The host was Eamonn Andrews, who was a famed radio and TV presenter in Ireland and Britain (but an unknown in the US and Australia); he died in 1987. This wasn't the first time he participated in an intercontinental Tv series -- there was also "The Dick Cavett / Eamonn Andrews Satellite Specials", which was co-produced in the 1970s by (W)WOR and Thames. [/quote]
 Eammon Andrews was also host of the British Version of What's My Line and guested on the American version as a panelist several times and substituted for John Charles Daly at least once so he is not entirely unknown in the US.

Tim Lones

tomobrien

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The New Treasure Hunt's 30th Anniversary
« Reply #32 on: September 17, 2003, 06:07:06 PM »
[quote name=\'Matt Ottinger\' date=\'Sep 13 2003, 03:41 PM\']
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Probably the first and only PBS \"game show\",
You're kidding, right?  Little thing called \"Carmen Sandiego\" for starters, not to mention \"Think Twice\" and a couple of 1970s offerings.   [/quote]
Don't forget PBS' \"We Interrupt This Week\" in 1978.  While not a game-game show in the truest sense of the word, it was definitely a celebrity quiz.  And awfully funny, too.