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EJ204
Guest
If you're a fan of these 1950s-60s black and white game shows, this week GSN is running them.
What's My Line airs at 2am and I've Got A Secret at 2:30am, ET. Oddly, GSN returns to recent game shows in color from 3-4am, before the infomercials kick in. (Gee, couldn't they have gone 2-4am with black and white shows on this week before Christmas?)
A few years ago, GSN used to run black and white game shows every night at 2am. Not just WML and IGAS but Password, Beat The Clock, To Tell The Truth and even some rarely seen or remembered game shows, such as The Name's The Same with Robert Q. Lewis and Winner Take All with Bill Cullen. That 1952 show is so old that it also was carried on the radio as well as TV. Unfortunately, GSN took all the black and white shows off its schedule a few years ago, although maybe once or twice each year, they'll give us a week of these programs.
By the way, on Christmas Day, GSN is having a marathon to celebrate the 50th anniversary of The Match Game. They're promoting that they will air a "never before seen" pilot program in black and white. That version had only had two celebrities, Orson Bean and Jayne Mansfield, each leading a team of two contestants. But Gene Rayburn was the host back then as well.
What's My Line airs at 2am and I've Got A Secret at 2:30am, ET. Oddly, GSN returns to recent game shows in color from 3-4am, before the infomercials kick in. (Gee, couldn't they have gone 2-4am with black and white shows on this week before Christmas?)
A few years ago, GSN used to run black and white game shows every night at 2am. Not just WML and IGAS but Password, Beat The Clock, To Tell The Truth and even some rarely seen or remembered game shows, such as The Name's The Same with Robert Q. Lewis and Winner Take All with Bill Cullen. That 1952 show is so old that it also was carried on the radio as well as TV. Unfortunately, GSN took all the black and white shows off its schedule a few years ago, although maybe once or twice each year, they'll give us a week of these programs.
By the way, on Christmas Day, GSN is having a marathon to celebrate the 50th anniversary of The Match Game. They're promoting that they will air a "never before seen" pilot program in black and white. That version had only had two celebrities, Orson Bean and Jayne Mansfield, each leading a team of two contestants. But Gene Rayburn was the host back then as well.