…the personalized prizes were a brilliant way to add character depth to a show that would otherwise feel like an assembly line of people screaming BBNWS.
When I want depth of character, I put on HBO. If I turn on Press Your Luck, I want “television’s most competitive game,” as Peter would say. If the players feel like an assembly line, that’s poor selection and/or coaching.
As far as time restraints go, they could trim the first round to two questions or even just one.
I always thought that the CBS Daytime version did a great job at stretching or trimming episodes to fit the 30-minute time slot -- mostly by using built in bumpers going into and coming out of commercials, and the poems.
There were the few occasions when Peter really had to stretch after shorter-than-expected games, reading 3+ poems at the end, and of course there was the Michael Larsen game...
I've always wondered if PYL could ever work back then (or today as a daily show) as a game which straddled matches between episodes, given that back then you still had a few shows that would stop the game mid-stream a d pick up where they left off the next episode.
You could kinda, sorta say it's plausible seeing how they had to straddle Larsen's game over a weekend, which just added more suspense to the match.
I didn't even mind in the earlier days of Pyramid, when excessive tie-breakers led to just one Winners Circle in the show, and 3 WC's on the next show. Although it may suck on a Friday show that a winner did not get to play the WC with the celebrity they won with, as there was a new celebrity duo on the Monday show.