Good afternoon.
Taking a trip down the YouTube rabbit hole, I started watching a bunch of episodes of the underrated Dick Clark show The Challengers. There were quite a few changes in the one year it was on (more on that later), but there was one reply in one of the episode uploads that took me aback.
In my area (Chicago-NW Indiana), The Challengers aired as a companion show to Jeopardy, the former coming on at 3pm and the latter following at 3:30 pm on WLS 7. However, the commenter said that in his area (which he didn’t specify), the Challengers aired AGAINST Jeopardy, which played a role in its quick demise. For those of you who remember, was this the case? Did it air as a lead-in to Jeopardy, or did it air completely separate from Jeopardy where you live?
Also, was it ever mentioned that Disney had a stake in the show? In an ad from my 1990 TV Guide, there was an ad for the show which had a Disney copyright written on the side. Oddly enough, in the weeks that this show was advertised (it was about six weeks for the Chicago Metro edition), the Disney copyright showed up for that one week, and that was that.
Finally, as is the case with some fledgling shows trying to find its footing (thinking of Play the Percentages and the CBS Joker’s Wild as I type this), the show went through various format changes. As I remember: the immediate downgrade of the Ultimate Challenge Jackpot (from $50,000+$5,000 for each unsuccessful attempt, to $25,000+$1,000 per day until hit - which happened immediately after a win with format 1, to $10,000 daily, to completely gone), and the removal and eventual return of the Challengers Sprint (temporarily replaced with a single $100 tossup) I ask you: which format was the best one? Or, if there’s no clear answer, how would you combine the formats to create one definitive format?
IMO: I would keep the sprint and the main game format as is. The winner would play the Ultimate Challenge for $10,000 (using the multilayered answer style instead of the three questions format, which I thought hurt the flow of the rest of the game when it happened). If the champion made it to his or her fifth and final day, the Ultimate Challenge would be played for a flat $50,000, with content difficulty to match.
Sorry if this ran a little long in the tooth, but besides the questions I posited above, I love to hear your overall thoughts on the show. I appreciate your time. Be safe.
The Inquisitive One