[quote name=\'Dsmith\' date=\'Oct 21 2003, 07:44 PM\'] I think gameshows "jumped the shark" after NBC cancelled their last daytime effort; I believe Caesar's Challenge. Then we went through a dead period of gameshows, and when they resurfaced in about 1998; we were left with what we have now. [/quote]
If they've jumped the shark at all, I'd have to agree that the sharp decline of network game shows was its cause - and, in my opinion, this started when networks started to realize that "talk is king". (Group W learned this almost 20 years ago when San Francisco's CBS affiliate had TPIR pre-empted for at least two years because the station, owned by Group W, had to show the "Group W talk show of the moment", and heaven forbid that any of its soap operas get pre-empted because of it. Seen the network morning schedules lately? (Then again, wasn't there a time in the mid-1970s when ABC's national schedule started at 11:30 AM with a Brady Bunch repeat?)
The main reason the loss of network game shows caused the problem: syndicated and cable shows had lower budgets and, as a result, lower prizes. (Case in point: any Wink Martindale episode of High Rollers, with the "one prize per column" rule. On the NBC Trebek version, there could be up to five prizes per column - and at least twice, somebody won 15 prizes in a single game. Also, on the NBC version of JackPot!, jackpots grew a lot faster as all riddle amounts went into the jackpot, even if the riddle was missed.) Sure, Jeopardy and Wheel pay off reasonably big money (how many other shows are there where there's a chance of somebody winning $100,000 on every show (without having to risk $10,000 first)?), but after that, what's left?
-- Don