[quote name=\'Terry K\' date=\'Sep 17 2005, 08:56 PM\'][quote name=\'calliaume\' date=\'Sep 17 2005, 08:29 PM\']Most of those here saw Marshall almost exclusively on the GSN reruns and the episodes circulating on videotape, by which time he had the format down. By the late '70s, he was probably pretty bored, despite his claims to the contrary in the book.
We watched Bergeron's growing pains through the first few years; we never saw Marshall's, because they aren't available to us.
They're probably equally as good, all things considered. As noted, however, Marshall's version was much more tightly directed, so he didn't have to deal with extraneous crap from the stars (if they gave any, they didn't come back - something you can't threaten when the biggest star is the executive producer).
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H2 really showed how good Bergeron was. Watching even the first wek of H2 without Whoopi, she was dragging the show down. The stars on H2 were seemingly funnier and more, well, ready to do the show. Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't Mull on both the Davidson and Marshall versions?
Bergeron on H2 was having more fun with the stars and he REALLY enjoyed the show after Whoopi left (the new bonus round and the fact that the producer was seldom in the squares helped a LOT.
Winkler, as I've said before, put a show on the air that was getting a LOT closer to the Marshall version, and really didn't play off the Whoopi years.
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Mr. Mull
WAS in fact on the Marshall version, b/c on Game Show Week #1, Martin Mull mentioned that it was good to see him back, again. Davidson, I doubt it. Let's not forget that he also starred on Fernwood Tonight when he appeared on the Marshall version.