This evening I attempted for the second time to play a recently acquired copy of the You Don't Say! home game with family members, and a few questions cropped up which weren't specifically addressed in the rules. Having never seen the show, I wasn't able to answer them in any other way, so I thought I'd bring them here and see what y'all can do for me.
First of all, I think YDS! is a really intriguing game, and I understand the basic concept of giving clues to words that sound like parts of the answer rather than clues to the answer itself. I think it was a wise move on the part of MB (or whoever decided to do this) to include things other than names of famous people in the home version because that helps not only to provide variety but also to prevent the game from becoming dated. On the other hand, the other types of items open up questions that would not often have arisen when guessing people's names.
Here are my questions:
1. If the answer were, for example, "Clark Gable", would either of the following clues be legal, or would they be ruled out because they are giving the exact words rather than words that sound similar:
A. "The host of American Bandstand is Dick..." (Yes, I know Ralph Andrews might not like this one nowadays, but is it legal?)
B. "Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote The House of the Seven..."
2. For the answer "Pink Lemonade," would "Red and white together make..." be a legal clue, or would it be ruled illegal on the basis that it was describing the word pink rather than something sounding like it?
3. Similarly, for "Jersey City," would "A large metropolis is called a..." be permitted to obtain "city"? Or would we have to work on it piecemeal, perhaps trying to get our partners to say "sit" and then "tea"?
4. This one, I believe, is obviously illegal, but I'll check just to make sure. For "Philadelphia," saying "A popular brand of cream cheese is..." is definitely out. Right?
Thanks for all your help, gang. This is one of those games that's hard to play solely on the basis of the rules in the box.