This will be a list of game/quiz shows that I think stank up every joint that they were seen in. I hope nobody gets a bright idea about reviving them.
1. You're in the Picture; This lasted exactly one episode in early 1961. Host Jackie Gleason totally trashed the show and the format the following week. If you've never seen any clips, don't feel like you missed anything. Jackie Gleason's rant the next week was more entertaining than this show was.
2. The Better Sex; Debuted in tandem with Family Feud on ABC in 1976. Teams of men competed against teams of women. The co-hosts were Country singer Bill Anderson and Sarah Purcell. It was one step shy of being brutal.
3. Treasure Isle; Another ABC game turkey. Long story short, husband and wife teams competed against each other on an artificial island located at the Colonnades Beach Hotel in Palm Beach, Fla. The host was John Bartholomew Tucker, accompanied by a constant droning off-camera voice named Sage (who the hell was Sage, anyway?), who half the time said "I have NO idea!" This dud ran less than a year in 67-68.
4. Whew!; CBS, 1979-80. Hold on to your horses. I know that there are plenty of people who fondly remember this game show, and believe it or not, I was a fan. So why am I listing it among the worse? Because, this show managed to do a complete turnaround, and went from being one of the best game shows to absolutely one of the worst. The big shark jump came when they added celebrities. The coffin nails all came at once. The show went from very cool to very brutal in no time.
5. That Game Show; Syndicated, mid-90s, exact year(s) disputed on net resources. This show was hosted by twins John and Greg Rice, the 2 foot 10 inch infomercial kings. It was a convoluted twist of You Bet Your Life, where there was more talking than actual game playing. No duck, secret word, or wheel spin, though. NOTE: John Rice passed away in 2005, but real estate infomercials with both he and Greg in them are still running. Check your local UHF station in the middle of the night.
6. The Magnificent Marble Machine; This show ran just short of a full year on NBC starting in July of 1975. While not unwatchable at first, I list it with the worst for the same reason as Whew!: They added celebrities, and as a result, ratings went down while they passed over the shark, and this once promising show died a needlessly early death. This should have been a great show.
7 & 8. The ill-advised revivals of You Bet Your Life; Both were syndicated, first in 1980 with Buddy Hackett as host, then in 1992, with Bill Cosby. A pilot featuring Richard Dawson was made in 1988, but did not get picked up. Rather than go on a schpiel (sp), let's just say that these newer versions of YBYL were the very reason that George Fenneman always said "The one, the only" when he introduced Groucho Marx. In 1992, a programming executive for the CBS Owned & Operated Stations made the decision to drop Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy! from the Company cluster to pick up the Cosby version, and another show, now forgotten. The ABC O&O's have been grateful ever since.
9. The Baby Game; Short-lived ABC game show that ran from Dec. of '67 thru July of 1968. Produced by Bob Stivers Productions, hosted by Richard Hayes. Supposedly the "other side" of The Newlywed Game. Three teams of young married couples with toddlers tried to guess how the spouse would answer questions regarding their infant. Perhaps it would have been better if it had been produced by Chuck Barris. If you blinked, you missed it. If you missed it, you missed nothing.
10. The Fun Factory; NBC, 1976. Hosted by the always affable Bobby Van, I'll save myself the futile effort of trying to write a description of this mish-mash with a burning question that I always had about this show from Day One: What the hell was the point of this show? 33 years later, there is still no answer. What kind of game show ends every episode with the host saying "Let's go give out some suckers!"?
1. You're in the Picture; This lasted exactly one episode in early 1961. Host Jackie Gleason totally trashed the show and the format the following week. If you've never seen any clips, don't feel like you missed anything. Jackie Gleason's rant the next week was more entertaining than this show was.
2. The Better Sex; Debuted in tandem with Family Feud on ABC in 1976. Teams of men competed against teams of women. The co-hosts were Country singer Bill Anderson and Sarah Purcell. It was one step shy of being brutal.
3. Treasure Isle; Another ABC game turkey. Long story short, husband and wife teams competed against each other on an artificial island located at the Colonnades Beach Hotel in Palm Beach, Fla. The host was John Bartholomew Tucker, accompanied by a constant droning off-camera voice named Sage (who the hell was Sage, anyway?), who half the time said "I have NO idea!" This dud ran less than a year in 67-68.
4. Whew!; CBS, 1979-80. Hold on to your horses. I know that there are plenty of people who fondly remember this game show, and believe it or not, I was a fan. So why am I listing it among the worse? Because, this show managed to do a complete turnaround, and went from being one of the best game shows to absolutely one of the worst. The big shark jump came when they added celebrities. The coffin nails all came at once. The show went from very cool to very brutal in no time.
5. That Game Show; Syndicated, mid-90s, exact year(s) disputed on net resources. This show was hosted by twins John and Greg Rice, the 2 foot 10 inch infomercial kings. It was a convoluted twist of You Bet Your Life, where there was more talking than actual game playing. No duck, secret word, or wheel spin, though. NOTE: John Rice passed away in 2005, but real estate infomercials with both he and Greg in them are still running. Check your local UHF station in the middle of the night.
6. The Magnificent Marble Machine; This show ran just short of a full year on NBC starting in July of 1975. While not unwatchable at first, I list it with the worst for the same reason as Whew!: They added celebrities, and as a result, ratings went down while they passed over the shark, and this once promising show died a needlessly early death. This should have been a great show.
7 & 8. The ill-advised revivals of You Bet Your Life; Both were syndicated, first in 1980 with Buddy Hackett as host, then in 1992, with Bill Cosby. A pilot featuring Richard Dawson was made in 1988, but did not get picked up. Rather than go on a schpiel (sp), let's just say that these newer versions of YBYL were the very reason that George Fenneman always said "The one, the only" when he introduced Groucho Marx. In 1992, a programming executive for the CBS Owned & Operated Stations made the decision to drop Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy! from the Company cluster to pick up the Cosby version, and another show, now forgotten. The ABC O&O's have been grateful ever since.
9. The Baby Game; Short-lived ABC game show that ran from Dec. of '67 thru July of 1968. Produced by Bob Stivers Productions, hosted by Richard Hayes. Supposedly the "other side" of The Newlywed Game. Three teams of young married couples with toddlers tried to guess how the spouse would answer questions regarding their infant. Perhaps it would have been better if it had been produced by Chuck Barris. If you blinked, you missed it. If you missed it, you missed nothing.
10. The Fun Factory; NBC, 1976. Hosted by the always affable Bobby Van, I'll save myself the futile effort of trying to write a description of this mish-mash with a burning question that I always had about this show from Day One: What the hell was the point of this show? 33 years later, there is still no answer. What kind of game show ends every episode with the host saying "Let's go give out some suckers!"?