GSN did have full access to the Sony-owned shows back when Sony fully owned the network.
[citation needed]. And by citation, I mean something other than \"It\'s something folks always assumed was true.\" I even promoted this one myself once upon a time, but under scrutiny it doesn\'t hold up.
Just looking at what GSN\'s actually aired in the 90s and very early 00s:
- I\'ve got at least a couple of episodes from normal WoF and J! airings from each show\'s first season - after the block logo had already debuted (early \'97?). And both shows\' 1992-93 seasons definitely reran for at least a partial second cycle in \'98 before changing over to other seasons.
- For the first four years GSN had the show (1997-01), only ~250 episodes from the beginning of $25K Pyramid\'s run aired (the first season with a few skips, plus the first few eps of season two). This leasing model appears to be the model the network went with fully during most of the 2000s.
- With rare exception, GSN has almost never run three or seasons of a Sony-owned show consecutively. NG 70s and $100K Pyramid are a couple of rare exceptions, being higher profile and higher rated shows whose total runs clocked out at three seasons.
- Most of the Dark Period substitutions were for shows with fairly limited runs (Hot Potato, Go, Chain Reaction, 80s Treasure Hunt, Break the Bank, etc) or extra runs of shows already on the schedule. Plus Price and FF\'94.
The asking price might have been significantly lower through some sort of corporate sibling sweetheart deal - or else network brass just decided to spent more of the money on Sony series in the past.
There isn\'t one iota of evidence (other than long-held opinion) that I\'m aware of to suggest GSN has ever had outright carte blanche access to the Sony back catalog. People probably just started noticing the situation as the leases got noticeably shorter in content and for longer duration around the turn of the previous decade (right around the time Rich Cronin and Bob Boden came in).