That's probably the worst offender in one of my annoyances: the modern on camera audiences shtick. Having the audience on camera is an integral part of some shows (Price, Let's Make a Deal) and a byproduct of regular directing (Dawson Feud, Press Your Luck), but once Millionaire came on the scene, it seemed every show just had to find a way to get an observing audience on camera far more often than it needed to be. The trend seems to have curbed a bit. Pyramid last summer didn't spend a whole lot of time trying to get the audience in view (unlike the pilots they did a few years back where they sat the audience on both sides of the set).
This will date me: I went to a taping of
The Money Maze (well, my family went too; I was 12 at the time), and Alan Kalter explained they could have just had the audience sit behind the maze out of camera range, but they wanted to convey the excitement of running the maze. Our job: being excited about the running of the maze, but also being silent while doing so, so as not to drown out the person calling out directions. Most of the audience got lots of screen time (we were at the edge of the camera sweep going into commercials, but we did get a family shot at the end of the second show).
When I think of the other side, anything taped at Burbank back in the day seemed to virtually never have the audience on camera, outside of maybe a ticket plug. Did they ever show the audience for such shows a Blockbusters and Sale of the Century?
Going to the 1960s New York-based NBC shows, I don't think we
ever saw audience shots, mostly because those were some tiny studios. Based on the photos I've seen, I'm pretty sure it couldn't have been much more than 150 people.