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Author Topic: This Week's Game Show Milestones  (Read 1527 times)

AH3RD

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This Week's Game Show Milestones
« on: May 03, 2004, 08:41:37 AM »
MAY 4, 1984


A game show icon is lost.

During a nice, leisurely morning jog in NYC's Central Park, famed host Jack Barry succumbed to a fatal heart attack, at the age of 66. With partner Dan Enright, Barry originated such favorites as Winky Dink And You, Concentration, Tic Tac Dough, and Bullseye. The 1950s Game Show Scandals stemming from programs like Twenty-One made them the most controversial figures of TV history. As a result of The Scandals, Jack Barry was a virtual pariah to the networks until his work on Generation Gap and The Reel Game, and his creation of The Joker's Wild, which originally aired on CBS between 1972 and 1975, restored his status in TV game show culture.

Many closed door meetings on whether what to do about Joker occurred until Bill Cullen was named host following his brief stint on NBC's Hot Potato, another Barry-Enright venture. This would be Cullen's final game.

In fact, The Joker's Wild turned out to be the final game for each one of its emcees, including 1983 interim host Jim Peck.

MAY 6, 1974


The $10,000 Pyramid, created and produced by Bob Stewart and hosted by Dick Clark, returned on ABC @ 4:00pm (Eastern) with celebrity guests Anne Meara and Soupy Sales, after a mere absence of just five weeks following the abrupt demise of the CBS version (to make way for Goodson-Todman's Now You See It).

The ABC version yielded a 6-year hit, spinning off a once-a-week nighttime $25,000 Pyramid version for syndication in the prime-access time slot emceed by Bill Cullen on local stations in September  1974, adding a new feature, "The Big 7", in December 1974, winning Emmies left and right, increasing the top dollar value to $20,000 in January 1976, and airing 1,808 episodes (including the ones on CBS) until June 1980.
« Last Edit: May 03, 2004, 03:47:47 PM by AH3RD »
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Jimmy Owen

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This Week's Game Show Milestones
« Reply #1 on: May 03, 2004, 09:34:52 AM »
"Winky Dink and You" was not a game show. Barry had nothing to do with "The $64,000 Question," and that was not a scandal show. I remember Jack doing some acting jobs in the interim, "Addams Family" and "Batman."  One of the things that helped him turn the corner was that the FCC allowed him to buy a radio station, as if to say "all is forgiven."  As far as "$25,000 Pyramid," I believe that was in the pipeline while the daytime show was still on CBS.  It was pre-sold to the CBS O&Os.
« Last Edit: May 03, 2004, 09:44:27 AM by Jimmy Owen »
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clemon79

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This Week's Game Show Milestones
« Reply #2 on: May 03, 2004, 11:33:22 AM »
[quote name=\'AH3RD\' date=\'May 3 2004, 05:41 AM\'] MAY 4, 1984


A game show icon is lost.
 [/quote]
 Died on my birthday. I'll be damned.
Quote
During a nice, leisurely morning jog in NYC's Central Park,
Be careful with the editorializing. For all you know it was during a particularly furious windsprint when he punched out.
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WorldClassRob

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This Week's Game Show Milestones
« Reply #3 on: May 03, 2004, 03:18:42 PM »
[quote name=\'AH3RD\' date=\'May 3 2004, 07:41 AM\'] MAY 4, 1984


A game show icon is lost.

During a nice, leisurely morning jog in NYC's Central Park, famed host Jack Barry succumbed to a fatal heart attack, at the age of 66. With partner Dan Enright, Barry originated such game show favorites as Winky Dink And You, Concentration, Tic Tac Dough, and Bullseye. The 1950s Game Show Scandals stemming from programs Twenty-One and The $64,000 Question made them the most controversial figures of TV history. As a result of The Scandals, Jack Barry was a virtual pariah to the networks until his work on Generation Gap and The Reel Game, and his creation of The Joker's Wild, which originally aired on CBS between 1972 and 1975, restored his status in TV game show culture.

Many closed door meetings on whether what to do about Joker occurred until Bill Cullen was named host following his brief stint on NBC's Hot Potato, another Barry-Enright venture. This would be Cullen's final game.

In fact, The Joker's Wild turned out to be the final game for each one of its emcees, including 1983 interim host Jim Peck.

MAY 6, 1974


The $10,000 Pyramid, created and produced by Bob Stewart and hosted by Dick Clark, returned on ABC @ 4:00pm (Eastern) with celebrity guests Anne Meara and Soupy Sales, after a mere absence of just five weeks following the abrupt demise of the CBS version (to make way for Goodson-Todman's Now You See It).

The ABC version yielded a 6-year hit, spinning off a once-a-week nighttime $25,000 Pyramid version for syndication in the prime-access time slot emceed by Bill Cullen on local stations in September  1974, adding a new feature, "The Big 7", in December 1974, winning Emmies left and right, increasing the top dollar value to $20,000 in January 1976, and airing 1,808 episodes (including the ones on CBS) until June 1980. [/quote]
 Per the 1985 World Almanac, Los Angeles Times, and other sources, Jack passed away on May 2, 1984, which was 20 years ago yesterday.

As mentioned, Jack suffered a massive heart attack while jogging in New York's Central Park and was rushed to Lenox Hill Hospital, where he was pronounced dead around noon.  Jack and his wife was coming back from Europe where they were visiting one of their children and stopped over in New York for a few days before his intended return to Southern California.

Hot Potato, which eventually became "Celebrity Hot Potato" (like Bullseye two years before) was the last network game show produced by Barry & Enright, and aired on the network that purchased the original Barry & Enright production company following the quiz show scandals... NBC.

A sad day in the game show world indeed.