DECEMBER 20, 1965
The Dating Game, a Chuck Barris Enterprises game show revolving around three young men who vied for a date with a young woman who was hidden from their view, hosted by San Francisco radio personality Jim Lange, debuted on ABC Daytime in black and white (the switch to color would be 2 years later). The woman asked questions especially devised to real the romantic nature of the significant other and later selected the one she was to date. The couple was given either a night on the town or an all-expense-paid trip to some fun locale. The game was also played with one bachelor selecting from among 3 young ladies and with celebrity guests choosing for them; among the many, many stars seen on Dating were Karen Carpenter, Dick Clark, Richard Dawson, Farrah Fawcett, Michael Jackson, Suzanne Sommers, and Arnold Schwarzenegger! For its first season (1965-66), Dating actually employed a live band which played its theme music: The Regents, comprised of Craig Boyd (drums), John Harris (bass) Michael McDonald (lead guitar), Jerry Rosa (keyboards), and Tom Baker (rhythm guitar).
The Dating Game was the first foray into game shows for producer Chuck Barris, a former songwriter (he composed "Palisades Park," a Top 10 hit for Freddy Cannon in 1962). His production firm churned out such memorable favorites as The Newlywed Game (which first appeared on ABC 7 months after Dating's debut), The Family Game, and the ever-irrepressible Gong Show! ABC gave The Dating Game a primetime edition, seen between October 6, 1966 and January 17, 1970 every Saturday night (sometimes leading in for ABC stalemates Let's Make A Deal and The Newlywed Game). Its popularity in the 1960s was big enough to inspire an ice-cream flavor (pink ice cream with diced dates [get it?!] and butter toasted pecans) by Baskin-Robbins!
The ABC daytime version of Dating went to its reward on July 6, 1973, after 8 years and 2,035 shows; a syndicated edition, launched in the fall as The New Dating Game, carried the show for an extra season. It has seen several resurgences on TV (syndicated!) in 1978, 1986, and 1997.
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