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Author Topic: This Week's Game Show TV Milestones - Part 3  (Read 2429 times)

AH3RD

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestones - Part 3
« on: September 14, 2003, 10:28:24 AM »
Continued From Part 2

            After 6 years, The $25,000 Pyramid aired for the 1,404th and final time on CBS Daytime television on Friday, July 1, 1988. By this time, the show had renewed the format of the opening montage of past winners, one which had been long a staple on Pyramid during the '70s. The final 2 celebrity guests were Robin Riker-Hasley and Charlie Siebert. And, sadly, neither of the civilian contestants reached the top of The Pyramid in this final telecast! This was actually the second cancellation of The $25,000 Pyramid; when CBS first dropped it on New Year's Eve, 1987 (with guests Anne Marie Johnson and Robert Hegyes), after 5 years and 1,339 shows, its replacement, the Bob Goen-hosted Jay Wolpert Production Blackout, left much to be desired. So, by popular demand, The $25,000 Pyramid returned to CBS after 13 weeks, thus making it the only game show in TV history to be replaced by another game and then in return replace that same game!

            Rumor has it that CBS revived The $25,000 Pyramid as only filler while Mark Goodson Productions' revival of Family Feud starring Ray Combs was being groomed for its premiere, which occurred the following Monday, replacing Pyramid. This was the second time that The Feud has replaced the timeslot of a cancelled Pyramid; the first happened in June 1980, after The $20,000 Pyramid completed a 7-year run on ABC.

            The nighttime $100,000 Pyramid stayed humming in syndication for 2 months until calling it 3 years and 545 shows on September 2, 1988, thus bringing down the curtain on the Pyramid chapter for the 1980s.

            Child's Play, which premiered on CBS directly after @ 10:30am EDT,  was a neat Mark Goodson-created game kid's/adult's game played similarly to Pyramid, hosted, ironically, by former Pyramid emcee Bill Cullen! Two contestents, one a champion, face off. In Round 1, three definitions are played, each with a maximum of three children (who were recorded on videotape that was being shown onscreen to the contestents) giving each definition. The first person to guess is the challenger or the player who didn't correctly guess in the final round. Each correct answer is one point.

            Then, a \"Fast Play\" round is played with a kid giving a definition, and a player buzzing in to guess; correct answers are worth 2 points. The player with the most points when time runs out wins the game and $500. The maximum time a player can stay on the game is 5 days straight.

Still Continued...
Aaron Handy III - ah07_1999@yahoo.com

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Ian Wallis

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestones - Part 3
« Reply #1 on: September 15, 2003, 09:22:32 AM »
Quote
The $25,000 Pyramid returned to CBS after 13 weeks, thus making it the only game show in TV history to be replaced by another game and then in return replace that same game!

On a similar note, \"Blankety Blanks\" holds that sort of distinction only in reverse.  When it premiered, it replaced daytime reruns of \"Brady Bunch\".  After 10 weeks the show was cancelled, and replaced by....\"Brady Bunch\".  \"Brady Bunch\" would leave ABC for good in September 1975 when \"Happy Days\" reruns took over that slot.
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zachhoran

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This Week's Game Show TV Milestones - Part 3
« Reply #2 on: September 15, 2003, 09:57:12 AM »
[quote name=\'Ian Wallis\' date=\'Sep 15 2003, 08:22 AM\']

On a similar note, "Blankety Blanks" holds that sort of distinction only in reverse.  When it premiered, it replaced daytime reruns of "Brady Bunch".  After 10 weeks the show was cancelled, and replaced by...."Brady Bunch".  "Brady Bunch" would leave ABC for good in September 1975 when "Happy Days" reruns took over that slot. [/quote]
 I think Time Machine holds a similar distinction, as it replaced and was replaced by reruns of Facts of Life IIRC(which had a more than three year tour of duty on NBC Daytime altogether). When Your Number's Up came and went in that 10AM EST time slot later that year, it was Family Ties reruns that replaced that.