In response to the following from Jimmy Owen that was posted in this thread on 10-21-2003:
I had suggested on Usenet some years ago that they [Price is Right] have only one showcase, good to see that the idea had merit.
They did have only one showcase on the 1994 half-hour syndicated edition that was hosted by Doug Davidson, and there was a U.K. edition of the show that was hosted by Bruce Forsythe that also had only one showcase. Both were played by only one player (in the U.S. edition, it was the winner of that show's semi-final game; either "The Price
Was Right" or "The Mighty Price-is-Right Wheel"), and the game was essentially a remake of the show's "Range Game."
The contestant would first randomly select a card with a cash amount on it that would range from $3,000 to $10,000 (this was done during the show's last commercial break), and a red transparent card with that span of money on it would be mounted on the "rangefinder." Then, when the show returned from the commercial break, the showcase would be described for the day's winner and then they would start the rangefinder moving up a scale that ranged from $10,000 to $70,000.
As with the "Range Game" that would be played on the CBS network's daytime version of the show, the contestant would press a button to stop the "rangefinder" when he believed it fell over the value of his showcase. Then an arrow would be lit up next to the price scale on the "rangefinder," and if it pointed to any amount that was covered by the red transparent card on the "rangefinder" after the contestant stopped it, the contestant won his or her showcase.
With this game, we might have the interesting possibility of using the semi-final game winner's score from "The Mighty Price-is Right Wheel" to determine the pricing range for the game ($10,000 for $1; $7,000 for 70 cents, etc.)
On another note: I drove all the way up to Dayton, Ohio, to see one of Bob Barker's "Fun and Games" shows when it came to that city in 1982, and, after reading these reviews of Todd Newton's stage version of TPIR, if that show ever comes to Belterra Casino in Indiana, I think I'll be heading there, too, "Players Club" requirements not withstanding.
Michael Brandenburg
(But they probably won't be able to "Range Game" to this version, at least not on consecutive nights of the show -- just ask Bob Barker the reason why they can't have it on consecutive days of the CBS network version of the show!)