OBGameShows: I wonder if the continued apathy toward this and other less-remembered series will someday lead to the sort of mass-erasure/tape disposal that a lot of great, irreplacible game shows suffered? Those shelves get more and more crowded with each passing season, and something may have to give.
I have a hard time believing that would ever happen. Although there have been a few exceptions to the rule, for the most part all past primetime programming still exists. I don't think they'd ever erase previous primetime shows because they've always been considered "big money". The networks obviously didn't care as much about daytime shows because they've always made less money.
Having said that, I can understand the thought. I'd like to see some of those shorter-run shows on TVLand too - but I guess they're almost in the same position as GSN in staying with the more popular shows. If a station like TVLand won't air them, who will (where have I heard that kind of line before?)
I'm surprised that some of those "more popular" series haven't "burned out" faster though. When you look at shows like "Gilligan's Island" (98 episodes), "I Dream of Jeannie" (139 episodes), "Andy Griffith" (249 episodes) or even "Bewitched" (252 episodes), they repeat a lot quicker than game shows, are heavily edited for syndication and have been run many many times already. It's not that I don't like them, but I've already seen all of them more than once. TVLand does add shows now and then (such as "Green Acres", which just joined their schedule) to keep things fresh, but most of their lineup seems to be the same old same old. Maybe we could use the same complaints about GSN when describing TVLand - although TVLand does at least try (witness the TVLand Kitschen).
When you look at GSN's library, you'd figure it should hold up much better. After all, it would take years for the same episode of a show like "Match Game" to pop up again, rather than just a few months for a sitcom rerun. Even running a short-run game show, the same episodes would pop up about as quickly as syndicated sitcom episodes.
It's too bad, but maybe those older short-lived shows are destined to remain just memories - nobody seems interested in running them (too bad VCRs didn't exist back in the '60s!!)