IIRC, Bob was also the last host to use a hand microphone with trailing cord;
he did this, he said, because there were "dead spots" on the studio floor where
sound wasn't picked up well.
Someone mentioned five different game shows airing in access time in Seattle
in the '70s. That was not peculiar to Seattle; at the time, most stations "checkerboarded"
7:30/6:30 (meaning they carried a different show each night), although some "stripped"
(aired the same show Monday-Friday). In 1973 in Greenville/Spartanburg/Asheville, for
example, WSPA (CBS) stripped "Beat The Clock" (with Gene Wood) and WLOS (ABC) stripped
"To Tell The Truth" at 7:30, while WFBC (now WYFF, NBC) carried "Let's Make A Deal" on
Monday, "Hollywood Squares" on Tuesday and Thursday, "Treasure Hunt" on Wednesday,
and the nighttime "Price" on Friday.
Most stations that checkerboarded tried to mix various types of shows, throwing in nature
shows ("Wild Kingdom" and "Wild Wild World Of Animals"), variety shows ("The Muppet Show"
and "Sha Na Na") and reality-based shows like "Candid Camera." Checkerboarding went out
about 1980; it was far less expensive to program the same show five nights a week and viewers
found it easier to remember one show at 7:30 rather than five.
he did this, he said, because there were "dead spots" on the studio floor where
sound wasn't picked up well.
Someone mentioned five different game shows airing in access time in Seattle
in the '70s. That was not peculiar to Seattle; at the time, most stations "checkerboarded"
7:30/6:30 (meaning they carried a different show each night), although some "stripped"
(aired the same show Monday-Friday). In 1973 in Greenville/Spartanburg/Asheville, for
example, WSPA (CBS) stripped "Beat The Clock" (with Gene Wood) and WLOS (ABC) stripped
"To Tell The Truth" at 7:30, while WFBC (now WYFF, NBC) carried "Let's Make A Deal" on
Monday, "Hollywood Squares" on Tuesday and Thursday, "Treasure Hunt" on Wednesday,
and the nighttime "Price" on Friday.
Most stations that checkerboarded tried to mix various types of shows, throwing in nature
shows ("Wild Kingdom" and "Wild Wild World Of Animals"), variety shows ("The Muppet Show"
and "Sha Na Na") and reality-based shows like "Candid Camera." Checkerboarding went out
about 1980; it was far less expensive to program the same show five nights a week and viewers
found it easier to remember one show at 7:30 rather than five.