[quote name=\'alfonzos\' post=\'156003\' date=\'Jun 25 2007, 02:25 PM\']
For the record, here is how you play Runaround. There were nine kids. Paul Winchell read a question. The kids were given three possible answers. On the word, "Go," the kids ran to an answer but didn't have to run to the correct answer. When Winchell declared, "Last chance," the kids could change their answers. To see who, if anyone, who standing on the correct answer, Winchell would say, "who's right with the light?," and the correct answer would be illuminated. Those who were wrong would sit in a penalty box. Those who were right got what looked like a foam ball for score keeping purposes and continued to play until only one player, the winner, would remain. The winner would get a prize, eliminated players would be brought back in to play and the game would continue until time ran out. The player with the most foam balls at the end of the half-hour won a prize. Game over.
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The added value was that almost every question had some sort of visual attached to it, even if was nothing more than Paul Winchell joking around with Jerry Mahoney or Knucklehead Smith (his dummies only appeared in certain bits and were not with him for the entire show). I recall the San Diego Zoo's Joan Embry appearing with animals for certain questions.
The other rule worth noting is that if time ran out at the end of the show or in a round and there was a tie (if it looked a tie was never going to be broken, they would call a round over), the tied players would be asked a question with a numerical answer. They wrote their answers on slates and the closest, high or low, to the correct answer was declared the winner of the round or the game.
And a "Runaround" audience screaming (with a missplice letting in a bell SFX) was used as a MacKenzie track on NBC for Kids' Weeks and, for some reason, "The Gong Show," for years.