As for the editing issue, the show would need to be edited down to time by now, even if Barker in his prime was hosting. The show is so short on time now there's barely enough time for six games, two big wheel segments, and two showcases.
This is really the failure of broadcast networks in an era where streaming is the real game (and commercial breaks last for just seconds, with skippable ads too). I get that they don't really care insofar as over-the-air broadcasting is a dying medium, and I get that they don't care because, "Money, dear boy" is the answer to everything, but even then, a half-hour program runs these days without commercials, what, 20 minutes? Price is less than 38 minutes now. They couldn't give them 40 minutes to do a decent show?
How many contestants in the Barker era got called up late, played a quickie game, spun first, and only had a few minutes of interaction with Bob compared to people early in the show who had full conversations with him on-air about where they're from, what they do, what their partner's name is, what their dog's name is, their life's hopes and dreams, their social security number, and anything else Bob wanted to talk about with them. I always felt it was a little unfair to those later in the show contestants that they got shafted of the full experience just because the show played Super Ball!!! and Barker wanted to talk to a contestant in Act 2.
True, "hurry-up offences" were a drag on the show, but this could be said about any game show done in the live-to-tape era where speeding up was necessary to make time, though I say this made for better television because it was natural and not engineered. Watching game shows used to be like watching a theatre performance because they were done in as close to real time as they could be, and this just flows so much better to the viewer. We've lost the appreciation for theatre and have over-engineered performing.
If you keep looking at the 'way it's supposed to be' under Barker and Roger; you will continue to not like it.
It's not really about Barker or Roger but the loss of the live sense of the show for how engineered it is now. It's not satisfying to me, the viewer, for every car win to be engineered with the same presentation of, "Go see your car!" (which the contestant can already see from where he is standing) to wave a vanity licence plate frame. It just screams fake, and it is because it's not a natural reaction. Yes, there were contestants naturally excited that they did run over to see their cars after winning. Great, but that reaction was a genuine one, not forced. It's the same on Wheel where contestants have to pick up that half car piece and wave it at the camera at Pat's instruction. Just let the contestants do what comes naturally to them. At the risk of being labelled old-fashioned, this was one of Roger's "commandments" of producing Price and for darn good reason.
I do not get at all the constant hard on some members have in trashing the show and personalities- and other game shows too- because its not hosted by an emcee- something that, TBH, could easily be interpreted for men of a certain age, weight, "look" and race.
To be an emcee, a master of ceremonies, is a lost art nowadays. With the exception of quizzers that play the game straight (e.g., Jeopardy! or anything else like it that's on these days. I don't even know what's on anymore) and make the game the focus, game shows seem to be treated as "comedy machines" driven by "comedic" personalities who use it as a vehicle to drive their jokes. I suppose this can make for entertainment, but I would say not every game show is built to be driven this way, and Price is not one of those games, as I would say the central feature is the contestants and their stardom in their "fifteen minutes of fame" as part of the party to win cash and prizes. An emcee here is supposed to keep the proceeding going and bring the best out of a contestant, making him the star and not himself. A tall order, for sure, but we can name the names of those who did it well over the decades and and art not being touted by most game show hosts today.