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Match Game



 
 
Match Game (also called The Match Game, Match Game '7"X", and Match Game PM) was an American
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 television
Television

Television is a widely used telecommunication mass-media for transmitting and receiving moving , either monochrome or color, usually accompanied by sound....
 game show
Game show

A game show is a type of television program in which members of the public or celebrity, sometimes as part of a team, play a game which involves answering questions or solving problems for money and/or prizes....
 featuring contestants attempting to match celebrities' answers to fill-in-the-blank questions. It was hosted for most of its time on air by Gene Rayburn
Gene Rayburn

Gene Rayburn was an American radio and television personality. Born Eugene Rubessa in Christopher, Illinois, he was an only child of Croatian immigrants and graduated from Knox College ....
. The most famous versions of the 1970s and 1980s, starting with Match Game '73, were remembered for their bawdy and sometimes rowdy humor and involved contestants trying to match six celebrities.

contestants, including a returning champion, competed.






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Encyclopedia


Match Game (also called The Match Game, Match Game '7"X", and Match Game PM) was an American
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 television
Television

Television is a widely used telecommunication mass-media for transmitting and receiving moving , either monochrome or color, usually accompanied by sound....
 game show
Game show

A game show is a type of television program in which members of the public or celebrity, sometimes as part of a team, play a game which involves answering questions or solving problems for money and/or prizes....
 featuring contestants attempting to match celebrities' answers to fill-in-the-blank questions. It was hosted for most of its time on air by Gene Rayburn
Gene Rayburn

Gene Rayburn was an American radio and television personality. Born Eugene Rubessa in Christopher, Illinois, he was an only child of Croatian immigrants and graduated from Knox College ....
. The most famous versions of the 1970s and 1980s, starting with Match Game '73, were remembered for their bawdy and sometimes rowdy humor and involved contestants trying to match six celebrities.

Game play

Two contestants, including a returning champion, competed. The champion was seated in the upstage (red circle) seat and the opponent was seated in the downstage (green triangle) seat. On Match Game PM and the daily syndicated version, a coin toss was held backstage to determine the positions. The object was to match the answers of as many of the six celebrity panelists as possible on fill-in-the-blank statements.

The main game was played in two rounds. The opponent was given a choice of two statements labeled either "A" or "B". Rayburn then read the statement. While the contestant pondered an answer, the six celebrities wrote their answers on index card
Index card

File:notecard.jpgAn index card is heavy paper stock cut to a standard size. Index cards are often used for recording individual items of information that can then be easily rearranged and filed ....
s. After they finished, the contestant was polled for an answer. Rayburn then asked each celebrity — one at a time, beginning with #1 in the upper left hand corner — to respond.

While early questions were similar to the NBC version (e.g., "Name a type of muffin" and "Every morning, John puts _________ on his cereal"), the questions quickly became more humorous. Comedy writer Dick DeBartolo
Dick DeBartolo

Dick DeBartolo is a longtime writer for Mad . He is occasionally referred to as "Mads Maddest Writer," this being a follow-up to Don Martin's former status as "Mads Maddest Artist." DeBartolo is currently credited as a "Creative Consultant" on the magazine's masthead....
, who had participated in the 1960s Match Game, now contributed broader and saucier questions for host Rayburn. Frequently, the statements were written with bawdy, double entendre
Double entendre

A double entendre is a figure of speech in which a spoken phrase can be understood in either of two ways. In most cases, the first meaning is presumed to be innocent and straightforward, while the second meaning is risqu?, inappropriate, or at least irony, requiring the hearer to have some additional knowledge....
 answers in mind. A classic example: "Did you catch a glimpse of that girl on the corner? She has the world's biggest _________."

Frequently, the audience responded appropriately as Rayburn critiqued the contestant's answer (for the "world's biggest" question, Rayburn might show disdain to an answer such as "fingers" or "bag", and compliment an answer such as "rear end" or "boobs", often also commenting on the audience's approving or disapproving response). The audience usually would groan or boo when a contestant gave a bad answer, whereas they would cheer and applaud in approval of a good answer. There were a handful of potential answers that were prohibited, the most notable being any synonym for genitalia.

Generayburnandcontestants
The contestant earned one point for each celebrity who wrote down the same answer (or reasonably similar as determined by the judges; for example, "rear end" could be matched by "bottom", "behind", "derrière", "fannie", "hiney", etc.) up to a maximum of six points for matching everyone. After play was completed on one contestant's question, Rayburn read the statement on the other card for the opponent and play was identical.

Popular questions featured "Dumb Dora" or her male counterpart, "Dumb Donald". These questions would often begin, "Dumb Dora/Donald is/was so dumb..." or "Dumb Dora/Donald is/was REALLY dumb." To this, the audience would respond en masse, "How dumb IS/WAS he/she?" Then Rayburn would finish the question. Other common subjects of questions were Superman/Lois Lane, King Kong/Fay Wray, panelists on the show (most commonly Brett Somers
Brett Somers

Brett Somers was a Canada-born United States actress, singer, and comedienne. She was best known as a panelist on the 1970s game show, Match Game....
), politicians, and Howard Cosell
Howard Cosell

Howard William Cosell was an American sports journalist....
. Rayburn always played the action for laughs, and he frequently tried to read certain questions in character; for example, he would recite questions involving a made-up character named "Old Man Periwinkle", or "102-year-old Mr. Periwinkle", in a weak, quavering voice (he also did Periwinkle's female counterpart, "Old Mrs. Pervis"). Charles Nelson Reilly
Charles Nelson Reilly

Charles Nelson Reilly was an United States actor, comedian, film director and drama teacher known for his comedic roles in movies, children's television, animated cartoons, and as a panelist on the game show Match Game....
, who admitted in '77 he was Brett Somers
Brett Somers

Brett Somers was a Canada-born United States actress, singer, and comedienne. She was best known as a panelist on the 1970s game show, Match Game....
's rival (as they often argued), one of the regular panelists and one who was often involved with directing Broadway plays, would often make remarks regarding Rayburn's acting such as "I like when you act" and "That was mediocre" when Rayburn did a voice like this; this tended to draw a big laugh from the audiences. At times, questions would deal with the fictitious (and often sleazy) country of "Nerdo Crombezia".

Whichever player was ahead in points after Round 1 always began Round 2. This rule ensured that both players would be able to play two meaningful questions. (Without this rule, a player who had only answered one question could be ahead of another player who had played both their questions, rendering the final question moot.) Only celebrities that a contestant did not match could play this second round. On Match Game PM and the daily syndicated version from 1979–1982, whoever led after a round got to choose a question first in the next round.

The second round questions were generally easier and were usually pun
Pun

A pun, or paronomasia, is a form of word play that deliberately exploits ambiguity between similar-sounding words for humour or rhetorical effect....
s that had a "definitive" answer (for instance, "Did you hear about the new religious group of dentists? They call themselves the Holy _____.", where the definitive answer would be "Molars"), whereas the first round usually had a number of possible answers. This was to help trailing contestants pick up points quickly.

On Match Game PM, a third round was added after Season One as the games proved to be too short to fill the half-hour. Again, the only celebrities who played were those who did not match that contestant in previous rounds.

If the players had the same score at the end of "regulation", the scores were reset to 0-0. On PM (or on the syndicated daytime show if time was running short), a time-saving variant of the tie-breaker was used that reversed the game play. The contestants would write their answers first on a card in secret, then the celebrities were canvassed to give their answers. The first celebrity response to match a contestant's answer gave that contestant the victory; if there were still no match (which was rare), the round was replayed with a new question. On the CBS version, the tie-breaker went on until there was a clear winner. If it came to the sudden-death tie-breaker, only the final question (the one that ultimately broke the tie) was kept and aired.

The CBS daytime version had returning champions and the show "straddled"that was, episodes often began and ended with games in progress.

On the CBS daytime show, champions could stay until defeated or reached the network's limit of $25,000. Originally, that was the maximum earning for any champion, but the rule was later changed so that while champions were still retired after exceeding the $25,000 limit, they got to keep everything up to $35,000. During the six-year run of Match Game on CBS, only one champion retired undefeated.

On the daily 1979-82 syndicated version, two contestants would play two matches against each other, and then both were retired. The show was timed out so that two new contestants appeared each Monday; this was necessary as the tapes of the show were shipped between stations, and weeks could not be aired in any discernible order (a common syndication practice at the time, known as "bicycling"). If a Friday show ran short, audience members sometimes got to play the game; this occurred on only three occasions.

Episodes of Match Game PM were self-contained, with two new contestants each week.

Super-Match

The winner of the game went on to play the Super Match, which consisted of the Audience Match and the Head-To-Head Match segments, for additional money. On the CBS version, the winner of the game won $100.

Audience Match

A two to four word fill-in-the-blank phrase was given, and it was up to the contestant to choose the most common response based on a studio audience survey. After consulting with three celebrities on the panel for help, the contestant chose an answer they liked the best, or chose one of their own that they thought of themselves. The answers were then revealed; the most popular answer in the survey was worth $500, the second-most popular $250, and the third most popular $100. If a contestant failed to match any of the three answers, the bonus round ended. Two Audience Matches were played on Match Game PM. On at least one occasion on Match Game PM, a contestant failed to win any money on either Audience Match; the contestant then got to play a fill-in-the-blank with the entire panel for $100 per match as a consolation prize, or a possible $200 per match when the Star Wheel was instituted. This has rarely occurred.
Rayburnsupermatchgame

Head-To-Head Match

The contestant then had the opportunity to win 10 times what he or she won in the Audience Match (therefore, $5,000, $2,500 or $1,000) by matching another fill-in-the-blank response with a celebrity panelist of his or her choice. In order to win the money, the contestant had to match his or her chosen celebrity's response exactly; this meant that multiple forms of the same word, e.g. singular or plural, were usually accepted whereas synonyms were not. If successful, he/she won the money accumulated in both parts of the round. Thus, a maximum of $5,600 ($100 won for winning the match) could be won on the daytime version ($10,600 when the Star Wheel was instituted). On Match Game PM, a maximum of $11,000 could be won ($21,000 when the Star Wheel was instituted). The latter has occurred at least twice.

Richard Dawson
Richard Dawson

Richard Dawson aka 'The Kissing Bandit' is a United Kingdom-United States actor, comedian, game show panelist and host. He is best known for his role as Bob Crane's British non-commissioned officer, Corporal Peter Newkirk, on the World War II situation comedy Hogan's Heroes, and as the original host of the Family Feud game show from 1...
 was the most frequently-chosen celebrity in the 1970s version. His knack for matching contestants was so great that producers tried to discourage contestants from repeatedly choosing him, even before the introduction of the Star Wheel; a short-lived rule in 1975 stipulated that a returning champion could not choose the same celebrity again for the Head-to-Head Match, but this only lasted six weeks.

The Star Wheel

The "Star Wheel" was introduced in 1978 and was used until the show ended in 1982. Contestants spun the wheel to determine which celebrity they played with in the Head-To-Head Match, and could double their potential winnings if the wheel landed on an area of gold stars under each celebrity's name (later changed to three individual stars per celebrity to increase difficulty, for unexplained reasons). The wheel was added to prevent people from constantly choosing Richard Dawson
Richard Dawson

Richard Dawson aka 'The Kissing Bandit' is a United Kingdom-United States actor, comedian, game show panelist and host. He is best known for his role as Bob Crane's British non-commissioned officer, Corporal Peter Newkirk, on the World War II situation comedy Hogan's Heroes, and as the original host of the Family Feud game show from 1...
although the first time it was used it landed on Richard nonetheless; This caused the rest of the panel to get up and leave, leading fellow star Charles Nelson Reilly
Charles Nelson Reilly

Charles Nelson Reilly was an United States actor, comedian, film director and drama teacher known for his comedic roles in movies, children's television, animated cartoons, and as a panelist on the game show Match Game....
 to refer to it on that episode as "the famed and fixed star wheel". The "Star Wheel" was also used in the 1990 version of the show.

Ticket plugs

Match Game director Marc Breslow used a technique merging two of the celebrities' faces into one image in the background while the address for ticket requests was displayed on screen. These types of ticket plugs first appeared in June of 1975, and again were shown on each daily syndicated episode between 1979 and 1982. Match Game PM did not contain ticket plugs since most of the stations that aired the show were ABC affiliates.

Broadcast history


The Match Game (1962-69, NBC)

08 Jpg
The original version of The Match Game, created by longtime Goodson-Todman staffer Frank Wayne
Frank Wayne

Frank Wayne was an American game show producer and host.Wayne was the first executive producer of the 1972 revival of The Price Is Right from its inception in 1972 until his death in 1988....
, premiered December 31 1962, continuing through September 26 1969 on NBC for 1,760 episodes "In Living Color". The program aired at 4:00 PM Eastern (3:00 Central).

For most of its life, the original series of The Match Game was aired live from New York on NBC during the late afternoons, and was a solid if unspectacular hit for the network at the time. Like its successor, this version was hosted by Gene Rayburn
Gene Rayburn

Gene Rayburn was an American radio and television personality. Born Eugene Rubessa in Christopher, Illinois, he was an only child of Croatian immigrants and graduated from Knox College ....
 and announced by Johnny Olson
Johnny Olson

John Leonard "Johnny" Olson was an United States radio personality and television announcer. His work spanned 32 game shows produced by Mark Goodson and Bill Todman from the late 1950s through the mid 1980s....
. Because it was live, and because Olson split time between New York and Miami
Miami, Florida

Miami is a global city in southeastern Florida, in the United States. Miami is the county seat of Miami-Dade County, Florida, the most populous county in Florida....
 to announce The Jackie Gleason Show
The Jackie Gleason Show

The Jackie Gleason Show was the name given to a series of popular television shows that starred Jackie Gleason, which ran from 1952 to 1970....
 at the same time, one of NBC's New York staff announcers (such as Don Pardo
Don Pardo

Dominick George "Don" Pardo is an United States radio and television announcer. He is noted for his long association with NBC, and in particular with Saturday Night Live, for whom he has been the announcer for all but one of its seasons, and continues today as the program's announcer, several years after his official retirement from NBC....
 or Wayne Howell
Wayne Howell

Wayne Clay Howell Chappelle , known professionally as Wayne Howell, was a voice-over announcer for the NBC television and radio networks from 1947 through 1986....
) would fill in for Olson when he could not attend a broadcast.

Other than the basic premise, the main game of The Match Game bore little resemblance to its more famous descendant. Two three-person teams (one celebrity and two contestants) each attempted to match answers to simple questions (some fill-in-the-blank, and some "Name a..." type). All six players wrote down answers which were then revealed. Two matching answers on a team earned $25 for the team, and if all three answers matched, the team earned $50. The winning team moved on to a bonus round, the "Audience Match", and would guess the answers to a recent audience survey ("We asked 100 women, 'How much money should you spend for a hat?'"). Each teammate would think of an answer they felt was given by the greatest number of people; each correct match was worth $50. Three audience match questions were played for a top possible prize of $450.

Questions on this show were far less risqué than on its 1970's incarnation (although this version became more so in its last two seasons); most were simple open-ended questions, such as "Name a kind of flower" or "What is the first thing you do when you wake up?" This question format would later be used on Family Feud
Family Feud

Family Feud is a U.S. television game show that pits two families against each other in a contest to name the most popular responses to a survey-type question posed to 100 people....
 (a Match Game spin-off
Spin-off (media)

Media spin-off is the process of deriving new radio programs, television programs or video games or even novels from already existing ones. Spin-offs work with varying degrees of success....
), however were also common during the early weeks of the CBS revival in 1973.

On March 27, 1967 the show added a "Telephone Match" game, wherein a home viewer and a studio audience member attempted to match a simple fill-in-the-blank question similar to the 70's Head-to-Head Match. A successful match won a jackpot which started at $500 and increased by $100 per day until won.

The original 1960s version consistently won its time slot on NBC. After the network suddenly canceled its most popular game shows in 1969 in a major daytime programming overhaul, it was replaced with Letters to Laugh-In
Letters to Laugh-In

Letters to Laugh-In was a daytime game show that aired on NBC from September 29 to December 26, 1969. The notable fact about this program was that it was a spin-off of NBC's popular nighttime comedy series at the time, Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In....
 at a time when The Match Game was still doing well in the ratings.

The Match Game finished third among all network daytime game shows for the 1963–64 and 1967-68 seasons (in the latter, behind two other NBC series that would enjoy long runs, Jeopardy!
Jeopardy!

Jeopardy! is a game show featuring trivia in topics such as history, literature, pop culture and science. The show has a decades-long Jeopardy! broadcast history in the United States since its creation by Merv Griffin in the early 1960s....
 and Hollywood Squares
Hollywood Squares

The Hollywood Squares was an United States television comedy and game show in which two contestants play tic-tac-toe to win money and prizes....
), its highest season rating.

Episode status (1962-79)
Only eleven episodes are reported to survive - the Pilot and ten kinescope
Kinescope

Kinescope originally referred to the cathode ray tube used in television receivers, as named by inventor Vladimir Zworykin in 1929. Today it usually means a kinescope film or kinescope recordingkine for short....
 recordings from throughout the run; Other sources report that there are 100 or more kinescope recordings still in existence; as the show was originally broadcast live from New York, most episodes were not recorded for posterity.

Match Game '7x (1973-79, CBS)

In the summer of 1973, Mark Goodson
Mark Goodson

Mark Goodson was a successful United States television producer who specialized in game shows....
 and Bill Todman
Bill Todman

William S. "Bill" Todman was an United States television producer born in New York City....
 resurrected the show as Match Game '73 for CBS
CBS

CBS Broadcasting Inc. is an American radio network and television network. The name is derived from the initials of Columbia Broadcasting System, its former legal name....
, with Rayburn returning as host. The year in the title was updated for the next six years. The gameplay for this version had two solo contestants attempting to match the answers given by a six-celebrity panel. Richard Dawson
Richard Dawson

Richard Dawson aka 'The Kissing Bandit' is a United Kingdom-United States actor, comedian, game show panelist and host. He is best known for his role as Bob Crane's British non-commissioned officer, Corporal Peter Newkirk, on the World War II situation comedy Hogan's Heroes, and as the original host of the Family Feud game show from 1...
 was the first regular panelist. Due to intense coverage of the Watergate
Watergate scandal

The Watergate scandals were a series of United States political scandals during the President of the United States of Richard Nixon that resulted in the indictment of several of Nixon's closest advisors, and ultimately his resignation on August 9, 1974....
 hearings, the network delayed the premiere one week from its slated date of June 25 to July 2. The first week's panelists, in seating order, were Michael Landon
Michael Landon

Michael Landon was an United States actor, writer, television director, and Television producer, who starred in three popular NBC TV series that spanned three decades....
, Vicki Lawrence
Vicki Lawrence

Vicki Lawrence is an Emmy Award-winning American actress, frequent game show panelist of the 1970s and 1980s, comedian, and singer. She is best known for her co-starring role on The Carol Burnett Show, alongside Carol Burnett, from 1967 to 1978, and as the sharp-tongued matriarch, Thelma Harper ....
, Jack Klugman
Jack Klugman

Jacob Joachim "Jack" Klugman is an American television and film actor, known primarily for his roles in sitcoms, movies and television. He is best-known for his role as Tony Randall's sloppy roommate, Oscar Madison, in The Odd Couple shown on American television during the 1970s, and for his starring role in Quincy, M.E., in the 197...
, Jo Ann Pflug
Jo Ann Pflug

Jo Ann Pflug is a former United States motion picture and television actress, who retired in the 1990s.Pflug's first major role was as U.S. Army nurse Lieutenant Dish in 1970 in film MASH ....
, Richard Dawson
Richard Dawson

Richard Dawson aka 'The Kissing Bandit' is a United Kingdom-United States actor, comedian, game show panelist and host. He is best known for his role as Bob Crane's British non-commissioned officer, Corporal Peter Newkirk, on the World War II situation comedy Hogan's Heroes, and as the original host of the Family Feud game show from 1...
 and Anita Gillette
Anita Gillette

Anita Gillette is a Tony Award-nominated United States actress, most notable for her work on Broadway theatre and as a celebrity guest on various game shows....
. Rayburn reassured viewers of the first CBS show that it was their longtime standby, modernized: "This is your old favorite, updated with more action, more money and as you can see, more celebrities."

The first few weeks of the show were somewhat different from the rest of the show's run. At first, some (although not all) of the questions fit into the more bland and perfunctory mold of the previous version (closer to the earlier seasons of the original series than the later ones). In addition, the regular panelists were somewhat different as well, with frequent appearances by people such as Jack Klugman
Jack Klugman

Jacob Joachim "Jack" Klugman is an American television and film actor, known primarily for his roles in sitcoms, movies and television. He is best-known for his role as Tony Randall's sloppy roommate, Oscar Madison, in The Odd Couple shown on American television during the 1970s, and for his starring role in Quincy, M.E., in the 197...
, Arlene Francis
Arlene Francis

Arlene Francis was an United States actress, radio talk show host, and game show panelist. She is known for her long-standing role as a panelist on the television game show What's My Line?, on which she regularly appeared for 25 years, from 1950 through the mid-1970s....
, Bert Convy
Bert Convy

Bernard Whalen "Bert" Convy was an United States game show host and panelist, actor and singer known for his tenure as the host for Tattletales, Password Plus and Super Password, and Win, Lose or Draw ....
 (who would later be selected as a host for the 1990 revival before being diagnosed with a brain tumor that eventually took his life) and Steve Allen
Steve Allen

Steve Allen may refer to:*Steve Allen , American musician, comedian, and writer*Steve Allen , presenter on the London-based talk radio station LBC 97.3...
 (who was host of The Tonight Show
The Tonight Show

The Tonight Show is a long-running American late-night talk show and variety show airing on NBC whose The Tonight Show with Jay Leno has been hosted by Jay Leno since 1992....
 when Rayburn served as announcer).

However, the turning point came with the question "Johnny always put butter on his _____." The (perhaps unintentional) double entendre
Double entendre

A double entendre is a figure of speech in which a spoken phrase can be understood in either of two ways. In most cases, the first meaning is presumed to be innocent and straightforward, while the second meaning is risqu?, inappropriate, or at least irony, requiring the hearer to have some additional knowledge....
 marked a turning point in the questions on the show. (The GSN documentary on the show has writer DeBartolo saying the question was first used in the 1960s version.) Soon, the tone of Rayburn's questions changed notably, leaving behind the staid topics of The Match Game for more risqué, schtick
Schtick

A shtick is a comic theme or gimmick. "Shtick" is derived from the Yiddish word shtik , meaning "piece"; the closely-related German word St?ck has the same meaning....
y and double entendre-laden humor.

Famous celebrity panelists Brett Somers
Brett Somers

Brett Somers was a Canada-born United States actress, singer, and comedienne. She was best known as a panelist on the 1970s game show, Match Game....
 and Charles Nelson Reilly
Charles Nelson Reilly

Charles Nelson Reilly was an United States actor, comedian, film director and drama teacher known for his comedic roles in movies, children's television, animated cartoons, and as a panelist on the game show Match Game....
 began as guest panelists on the program (Somers at the request of Jack Klugman; the two were married at the time and Klugman felt she would make a nice fit on the program). The chemistry between the two prompted Goodson-Todman and CBS to hire them as regular panelists, the positions that Somers would hold until the syndicated version ended in 1982 and Reilly would continue through two revivals until 1991 (with a brief break in 1974-75, when Gary Burghoff
Gary Burghoff

Gary Richard Burghoff is an American actor, best known for playing the character Corporal Radar O'Reilly in the M*A*S*H series and Charlie Brown in the 1967 off-Broadway Musical theater You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown....
, Nipsey Russell
Nipsey Russell

Julius "Nipsey" Russell was an United States comedian, best known today for his appearances as a guest panelist on game shows from the 1960s through the 1990s, especially Match Game, Password , Hollywood Squares, To Tell the Truth and Pyramid ....
, and the equally flamboyant Rip Taylor
Rip Taylor

Rip Taylor is an actor and comedian of television, motion pictures, nightclubs, and theater....
 took his chair). In one episode, Reilly was late for taping and Mark Goodson
Mark Goodson

Mark Goodson was a successful United States television producer who specialized in game shows....
 filled in for him for the first few minutes; in another, announcer Johnny Olson
Johnny Olson

John Leonard "Johnny" Olson was an United States radio personality and television announcer. His work spanned 32 game shows produced by Mark Goodson and Bill Todman from the late 1950s through the mid 1980s....
 did the same.

The CBS/syndicated version was produced by veteran Goodson-Todman producer Ira Skutch. Aside from being involved with the writing of some of the questions, Skutch also acted as on-stage judge. The CBS/syndicated version was directed by Marc Breslow, and Robert Sherman acted as associate producer and head writer.

1977regularsrayburnshot
When CBS revamped Match Game in 1973 with more of a focus on risqué humor, ratings more than doubled in comparison with the NBC incarnation. Within eleven weeks, Match Game '73 was the most watched program on daytime television. By Summer 1974 it grew into an absolute phenomenon with high school students and housewives, scoring remarkable ratings among the 12-34 year old age demographic. The best ratings this version of Match Game saw were in the 1975–76 season when it drew an outstanding 12.5 rating with a 15 share, higher numbers than that of some prime time series; this was due in part to the fact that it had been paired with The Price Is Right, a hit in its own right, during this time. It surpassed records as the most popular daytime program ever with an astounding record of 11 million daily viewers, one that held until the "Luke and Laura" supercouple
Supercouple

A supercouple is a popular or financially wealthy pairing that intrigues and fascinates the public in an intense or even obsessive fashion. The term was coined in the early 1980s when intense public interest in the fictional soap opera couple Luke Spencer and Laura Webber from General Hospital made the pair a popular culture phenomenon....
 storyline gripped viewers on ABC's General Hospital
General Hospital

General Hospital is an United States soap opera broadcast on the American Broadcasting Company television network during the day and on SOAPnet each weeknight....
 some years later.

Every New Year's Eve
New Year's Eve

New Year's Eve is on , the final day of the Gregorian calendar year, and the day before New Year's Day.New Year's Eve is a separate observance from the observance of New Year's Day....
, the two-digit year designation in the Match Game sign was updated to reflect the coming of the new year, resulting in a New Year
New Year

The New Year is an event that happens when a culture celebrates the end of one year and the beginning of the next year. Cultures that measure yearly calendars all have New Year celebrations....
's party between the cast and the audience. This lasted until 1979, before CBS canceled the show.

In 1976, the show's successand celebrity panelist Richard Dawson's popularityprompted Goodson-Todman to develop a new show for ABC entitled Family Feud
Family Feud

Family Feud is a U.S. television game show that pits two families against each other in a contest to name the most popular responses to a survey-type question posed to 100 people....
 with Dawson emceeing. This show became a major hit in its own right, eventually exceeding the parent program. Family Feud
Family Feud

Family Feud is a U.S. television game show that pits two families against each other in a contest to name the most popular responses to a survey-type question posed to 100 people....
 was said to be based on Dawson's expertise on Match Games "Super-Match".

Meanwhile,
Match Game kept its high standing in the ratings despite a short-lived move ahead one half-hour during Summer and Fall 1975. In late 1977, however, CBS made a fatal mistake regarding the show's time slot. Impressed with the ratings boon that resulted when The Price is Right and Match Game were paired in afternoons, CBS soon realized that in the morning slot that Price had left behind, they had a ratings crisis. Thus, CBS decided to move Match Game along with Price back to the morning time slot. However, because much of Match Games audience was composed of students who were in school at that time of day, ratings began to sag and eventually free fall; many of these students did not return. As a result, Family Feud quickly supplanted Match Game as television's highest-rated game show.

CBS "corrected" the time change (in a sense) on December 19, 1977 (in a scheduling shuffle with The Price Is Right and Tattletales
Tattletales

Tattletales was a game show which first aired on the CBS daytime schedule on February 18, 1974. It was hosted by Bert Convy, with several announcers Jack Clark , Gene Wood , Johnny Olson and John Harlan providing the voiceover at various times....
) with a move that did even more damage: Moving Match Game to the 4:00 PM "death slot", a slot that by this time many local stations were pre-empting in favor of local or syndicated programming.

1978 changes and cancellation
In Summer 1978, CBS rebuilt the Match Game set from the original bright orange to a new set with blue and white colors, as well as revamping the logo from the curved letters to a straight-line lettering it would use for the rest of the run. This was mainly for convenience; with a new Match Game set and sign, a whole new sign no longer had to be built each year as had been done previously. Instead an attachment, designating the year, was simply taken off the end of the revamped Match Game '78 sign and replaced with a new one numbered 79 on New Year's Eve 1978 (aired January 2, 1979) became Match Game '79. (An alternate attachment was used for Match Game PM.) The rules were also slightly changed at this time, with the abandonment of the "pick a star" for the Head-to-Head Match and the adoption of the "Star Wheel".

While the show's top prize nearly doubled (partially to counter the high inflation
Inflation

In economics, inflation is a rise in the general price level of goods and services in an economy over a period of time. The term "inflation" once referred to increases in the money supply ; however, economic debates about the relationship between money supply and price levels have led to its primary use today in describing price inflatio...
 of the era) and the new feature allowed more celebrities the chance to participate in the end game, it also eliminated what effectively was Richard Dawson's "spotlight" feature. Dawson, increasingly unhappy with his role on Match Game and more strongly committed to Family Feud
Family Feud

Family Feud is a U.S. television game show that pits two families against each other in a contest to name the most popular responses to a survey-type question posed to 100 people....
 by that time, left the show in Summer 1978, a few short weeks after the revamp. After significant ratings drops in the "death slot" (falling behind Feud, Price and NBC's Wheel of Fortune to fall out of the top three game shows in 1979 for the first time in the CBS run), CBS aired its 1445th and final episode on April 20, 1979 - however the last few weeks of shows were culled together from various taping sessions, leaving several episodes (including two full weeks of shows) unaired.

Episode status (1973-79)
The series is presumed to be intact. The series currently airs on GSN
Game Show Network

GSN is an American cable television and direct broadcast satellite channel dedicated to game shows and casino game shows. The channel was launched on December 1, 1994....
 weekdays at 1:30 PM Eastern during GSN Live
GSN Live

GSN Live is an United States live Interactivity show on Game Show Network that premiered on February 25, 2008 at noon Eastern Time Zone . It lasts six hours in between regular classic GSN programming and features games that viewers can play to win prizes over the phone, highlights from Classic game shows, interviews, behind-the-scenes vie...
 and at 2:30 AM late nights. GSN also aired several episodes from what has been called "Lost Weeks", including the final episode ever recorded in 1979.

Match Game PM (1975-81, syndication)

On September 8, 1975 the first syndicated Match Game, a weekly nighttime series dubbed Match Game PM, premiered on local stations (mainly ABC affiliates such as WABC). The series was produced by Goodson-Todman and distributed by Jim Victory Television, G-T's syndication partner for Concentration
Concentration (game show)

Concentration was a TV game show based on the Concentration of the same name. It aired on and off from 1958-1991, hosted by various hosts and played in various ways....
.

Match Game PM was designed to be self-contained, the first Match Game series to have that distinction. The front game was originally played the same way as the daytime Match Game with two rounds of questions, but beginning in Season Two a third round of questioning was added as too much time would be left between the Super-Match and the end of the show. The maximum score a contestant could achieve remained six points with matched celebrities not playing subsequent questions.

Tiebreakers were conducted differently. Instead of playing two new questions, one "Super-Match"-style question was asked, and instead of the players trying to match the celebrities' answers the players were looking for a celebrity to match their answer. Until Season Four (1978-1979) the three regulars (at the time Somers, Reilly, and Dawson) were used in the tiebreaker, but after Dawson's departure all six celebrities were used.

Match Game PMs Super-Match differed slightly from the daytime series in that two Audience Matches were played. The same scoring rules applied as on the daytime series. The answer values from each of the two Audience Match questions were combined and the player played for ten times that amount in the Head-to-Head Match, with a maximum of $11,000 available. When the Star Wheel was introduced to Match Game PM around the same time the daytime series introduced it, that potential payout grew to $21,000 (depending on whether a contestant spun a double). In the event a player failed to score in both Audience Matches, s/he was given the opportunity to play a "consolation" standard front game question, for $100 per match (up to $600 total); this happened only one time, on a 1976 episode, and the contestant in question managed to win the maximum $600 prize available.

Match Game PM ran until the end of the 1980-1981 TV season, the last two seasons with a reduced affiliate count as many of the markets the show had been airing in were also showing the syndicated series that debuted in September 1979. The show aired 230 episodes before its cancellation, and its six seasons make it the longest running of the four syndicated versions when measured by seasons (the daily series that began in 1979 aired more than twice as many total episodes).

Episode status ("PM")
The series is known to be intact, and has been seen on GSN
Game Show Network

GSN is an American cable television and direct broadcast satellite channel dedicated to game shows and casino game shows. The channel was launched on December 1, 1994....
 at various times.

(The) Match Game (1979-82, syndication)

After the cancellation of Match Game '79 in 1979, there was still enough interest in the series for Goodson-Todman and Jim Victory Television to consider a continuation of the daily series as the weekly program was still airing and had not stopped production. Match Game, now without a year attached to the title and referred to occasionally on air as The Match Game, returned to television five months later on September 10, 1979 and once again airing daily.

In this series, two players played against each other in two games with a Super-Match being played after each game. There were no returning champions and contestants no longer won $100 for winning a game. Outside of that everything else from
Match Game '7x was carried over to the daily syndicated series, including the Star Wheel.

The maximum payout for a contestant was $21,000 (two $500 Audience Matches and two $10,000 Head-To-Head Match wins), the same its syndicated sister series
Match Game PM was offering during this time.

For the first two seasons (1979-81) Bill Daily
Bill Daily

Bill Daily is an United States comedian and comic actor, and a veteran of many television sitcoms....
, Dick Martin
Dick Martin

Dick Martin may refer to:*Dick Martin , American illustrator, particularly associated with the Land of Oz*Dick Martin , co-host of Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In...
, Richard Paul
Richard Paul

Richard Paul was an United States actor.He was born in Los Angeles, California. He was able to imitate most American and many foreign dialects....
, and Bob Barker
Bob Barker

Robert William "Bob" Barker is a former United States television game show Master of Ceremonies. He is best known for hosting CBS' The Price Is Right from 1972 to 2007, making it the longest-running daytime game show in North American television history....
 were among the male semi-regulars who filled Dawson's old spot on the panel. McLean Stevenson
McLean Stevenson

McLean Stevenson , born in Normal, Illinois, was an American actor most recognized for his role as Henry Blake on the TV series M*A*S*H ....
 became a regular for Season Three (1981-82), although he did appear occasionally during Season Two.

Also, the fee plugs which had aired in the middle of the show on the CBS version were featured during the closing credits. The ticket plugs were now shown on every episode. Each ticket plug had two people's faces merged into one image by putting a man's face on a woman's head, putting a mustache on a woman's face, or putting a pair of red lips on a man's face or simply putting two halves of the faces together. The 1990 ABC version used a similar sequence to introduce the stars.

The syndicated
Match Game helped exacerbate the perception of the 4:00 PM time slot being a "death slot" for network programming; within weeks, the show that replaced Match Game in the lineup, the soap opera Love of Life
Love of Life

Love of Life is an United States soap opera which was aired on CBS from September 24, 1951 to February 1, 1980. It was created by Roy Winsor, whose previous creation Search for Tomorrow had premiered three weeks before Love of Life, and who would go on to create The Secret Storm two and a half years later....
, was canceled.

The daytime syndicated show's 525th and final episode aired on September 10, 1982 - exactly three years after its debut.

Episode status (1979-82)
The series is known to be intact; Reruns currently air on GSN
Game Show Network

GSN is an American cable television and direct broadcast satellite channel dedicated to game shows and casino game shows. The channel was launched on December 1, 1994....
 weekdays at 9:00 AM Eastern and weekends at 11:00 AM Eastern.

The Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour (1983-84, NBC)

In 1983, producer Mark Goodson
Mark Goodson

Mark Goodson was a successful United States television producer who specialized in game shows....
 teamed up with Orion Television (who had recently acquired the rights to
Hollywood Squares
Hollywood Squares

The Hollywood Squares was an United States television comedy and game show in which two contestants play tic-tac-toe to win money and prizes....
) and NBC to create The Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour
Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour

The Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour was a United States television game show that combined two long-running game shows of the 1960s and 1970s — Match Game and Hollywood Squares — into an hour-long format....
. Rayburn, after a year as a morning show host in New York, agreed to return as host. However, few of the regular Squares cast appeared on this version. Jon Bauman
Jon Bauman

Jon "Bowzer" Bauman was a member of the band Sha Na Na and a one-time game show host. Bauman's popular Sha Na Na character "Bowzer" was a greaser in a muscle shirt....
 ("
Sha Na Na") served as the lone regular panelist on this version, and the two swapped seats for Hollywood Squares with Bauman serving as host and Rayburn as the lower-left-hand square. Gene Wood
Gene Wood

Eugene Edward Wood was an United States television personality, known primarily for his work as an announcer on various game shows. From the 1960s to the 1990s, he announced many game shows, primarily Mark Goodson?Bill Todman productions such as Family Feud, Card Sharks, Password , and Beat the Clock....
 served as announcer, with Johnny Olson and Rich Jeffries
Rich Jeffries

Rich Jeffries is a former United States television announcer, who announced on the revival of Blockbusters in 1987. He's also a TV coin infomercial announcer....
 substituting.

These rules were roughly the same as those of
Match Game PM with both contestants given three chances apiece to match each panelist once. The major difference was in the tie-breaker. Four possible answers to a Super Match-like statement (example: "_____, New Jersey") were secretly shown to the contestants (examples: "Atlantic City", "Hoboken", "Newark", "Trenton"). They each chose one by number. The host then polled the celebrities for verbal responses. The first panelist to give an answer selected by one of the contestants won the game for that contestant. The winner of the Match Game segment played the returning champion in the Hollywood Squares
Hollywood Squares

The Hollywood Squares was an United States television comedy and game show in which two contestants play tic-tac-toe to win money and prizes....
segment with the eventual winner of Squares playing the Super-Match. The Audience Match featured payoffs of $1,000, $500 and $250, while non-matching players were given $100. For the Head-To-Head Match the contestant picked a celebrity who revealed a hidden number (10, 20 or 30); that number was multiplied by the contestant's Audience Match winnings to determine the grand prize ($30,000 being the top possible amount). Champions remained on the program for up to five days unless defeated.

The Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour ran from October 31, 1983 to July 27, 1984. The MGHS theme is still used today as a car cue on The Price is Right, while the ticket and fee plugs (variations of the main theme) are used for exercise equipment and Showcases.

Episode status (1983-84)
All episodes are presumed to be intact, however due to cross-ownership - CBS Television Distribution
CBS Television Distribution

CBS Television Distribution is a global television distribution company, a merger of CBS Corporation's three television distribution arms CBS Paramount Domestic Television, CBS Paramount International Television, and King World Productions including its home entertainment arm CBS Home Entertainment....
 currently owns the rights to
Hollywood Squares (at the time of MGHS was owned by Orion Television
Orion Pictures

Orion Pictures Corporation was an United States company that produced film from 1978 until 1998. It was formed in 1978 as a joint venture between Warner Bros....
) while Fremantle Media
FremantleMedia

FremantleMedia, Ltd. is the content and production division of RTL Group, Europe's largest TV, radio, and production company. Its world headquarters are located in London, United Kingdom....
 owns
Match Game. Due to this, The Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour has never been rerun on any network.

Match Game (1990-91, ABC)

Image249
In 1989, ABC, who had not carried a daytime game show since
Bargain Hunters
Bargain Hunters

Bargain Hunters was a game show that aired on American Broadcasting Company in the summer of 1987, hosted by Peter Tomarken. The series combined elements of The Price Is Right with home shopping....
in 1987, decided to revive Match Game (commonly called Match Game '90 to distinguish it from the 1979-82 series). The producers including Jonathan Goodson
Jonathan Goodson

Jonathan Goodson is an American television producer who specializes in game shows. He is the son of legendary game show producer Mark Goodson and began his television career in 1973 as chief counsel of Goodson-Todman Productions....
, who took over the show at this time, selected Bert Convy
Bert Convy

Bernard Whalen "Bert" Convy was an United States game show host and panelist, actor and singer known for his tenure as the host for Tattletales, Password Plus and Super Password, and Win, Lose or Draw ....
, a former
Match Game panelist in the early days of the program, as host to make up for the fact that his previous show, Super Password
Password Plus and Super Password

Password Plus and Super Password are American game shows that were revivals of the original CBS and American Broadcasting Company game show Password ....
, had recently been canceled. Convy filmed a full week of pilots for the show, but in April 1990 was diagnosed with what would be a terminal brain tumor and thus could not serve as host as originally planned. Because of this tumor, Convy had died.

Rayburn (who had just finished hosting what would be his last show,
The Movie Masters
The Movie Masters

The Movie Masters was an United States television game show which ran from August 2, 1989 to January 19, 1990. It was the last game show hosted by Gene Rayburn and aired as filler programming on the American Movie Classics Cable television network....
) reportedly expressed an interest in returning to the show, and his name was considered, but producers once again declined. Ross Shafer
Ross Shafer

Ross Shafer is a comedian and television host turned motivational speaker, based in Carlsbad, California. Although he now splits time in Nashville, Tennessee, where his wife Leah has an aspiring singing career....
 would take over. Charles Nelson Reilly
Charles Nelson Reilly

Charles Nelson Reilly was an United States actor, comedian, film director and drama teacher known for his comedic roles in movies, children's television, animated cartoons, and as a panelist on the game show Match Game....
 returned as a regular panelist and Brett Somers
Brett Somers

Brett Somers was a Canada-born United States actress, singer, and comedienne. She was best known as a panelist on the 1970s game show, Match Game....
 served as a guest panelist in several episodes. Vicki Lawrence
Vicki Lawrence

Vicki Lawrence is an Emmy Award-winning American actress, frequent game show panelist of the 1970s and 1980s, comedian, and singer. She is best known for her co-starring role on The Carol Burnett Show, alongside Carol Burnett, from 1967 to 1978, and as the sharp-tongued matriarch, Thelma Harper ....
, Sally Struthers
Sally Struthers

Sally Ann Struthers is a two-time Emmy-winning American actress and spokesperson, known for her roles in sitcoms and television, particularly that of Gloria Stivic, the daughter of Archie and Edith Bunker on All in the Family....
, Brad Garrett
Brad Garrett

Brad Garrett is an Emmy Award-winning United States, actor, voice acting and stand-up comedian. He is well-known for his sitcom roles on Everybody Loves Raymond and Til Death....
 and Ronn Lucas
Ronn Lucas

Ronn Lucas is a ventriloquist and stand-up comedian. He grew up in El Paso, Texas and was graduated from Eastwood High School in 1972. He began his career peroforming at Saint Timothy's Lutheran church located in El Paso, Texas....
 were among the semi-regulars for this version of the show. Gene Wood
Gene Wood

Eugene Edward Wood was an United States television personality, known primarily for his work as an announcer on various game shows. From the 1960s to the 1990s, he announced many game shows, primarily Mark Goodson?Bill Todman productions such as Family Feud, Card Sharks, Password , and Beat the Clock....
 returned as announcer.

This show was up against another Goodson-Todman series,
To Tell the Truth
To Tell the Truth

To Tell the Truth is an United States television game show created by Bob Stewart and produced by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions that has been aired intermittently in various forms since 1956 in television, hosted by various television personalities....
, in the same time slot on NBC. Mark Goodson produced Truth while son Jonathan produced Match Game.

On this version, matches were worth money instead of points. Each match during the two
Match Game rounds was worth $50. All panelists played both questions for each player, whether or not they matched in the first round.

After each round of questions, contestants were given a chance to build their scores further by playing a new round called "Match-Up!" with one panelist of their choice, similar to the Head-To-Head Match rules from 1973-78. This was a rapid-fire series of Super Match-style questions, with two possible answers given; the contestant chose one secretly, and the panelist picked the one s/he felt the contestant picked. This process continued until time expired. The first Match-Up! was played for 30 seconds at $50 per match, while the second lasted 45 seconds for $100 per match. Whoever had the most money at the end of the second Match-Up! round won the game and kept the money; the loser went away with only parting gifts.

The Super-Match was played identically to the 1978–82 version of the round (with a green arrow spinning around the Star Wheel instead of the actual wheel spinning and two red dots on each star's space as "double" spaces). Originally, the payoffs of $500–$250–$100 for the Audience Match were identical to the CBS version's payoff structure; however, unlike the 1970s versions of the show, if the contestant did not match any of the three answers on the board, the contestant got play for $500 ($1,000 in case of a double) in the Super-Match (in the original '70s versions the bonus game would end). After a few weeks, the payoff structure changed to $500–$300–$200 for each Audience Match answer, with the contestant playing for $1,000 ($2,000 in case of a double) if the contestant did not match.

Due to many ABC stations in major markets carrying news at Noon the show got few clearances (the ones it got being mostly in smaller markets without noon newscasts) and was canceled one year after its premiere. A proposed move to another network (rumored to be CBS) for the 1991-92 season had been announced on the Finale but never materialized. It has the distinction of being ABC's last daytime game show to date.

Episode status (1990-91)
All episodes of this version of the show are believed to be intact, along with all five Convy pilots. GSN aired this version as recently as 2004, and
Game Show Moments Gone Bananas
Game Show Moments Gone Bananas

Game Show Moments Gone Bananas was a television series on VH1. The first of five hour-long episodes aired on May 21, 2005 with the last first-run episode airing on June 18....
(which first aired on VH1 and later GSN) aired a clip from a Convy pilot.

Match Game 2 (1996, unsold pilot)

A pilot was shot in September 1996 at KTLA Studios in California for a revised version called Match Game 2 with Charlene Tilton
Charlene Tilton

Charlene L. Tilton is an United States actor.Tilton was born in San Diego, California, California, the daughter of Katherine, a secretary. Notably, Tilton is 4'11" tall....
 (a panelist on the 1979-82 version) as host. "Downtown" Julie Brown, David Chokachi, Gil Gerard, Rondell Sheridan, and Kathleen Kinmont were the panel for this show, which featured gameplay routines unheard of before or since -

  • Instead of the celebrities writing down answers and contestants providing them verbally, MG2 switched the roles around, similar to the tiebreaker in Match Game PM.
  • In the Super-Match, the Head-To-Head Match was thrown out and a "Panel Poll" took its place. In the "Panel Poll", each celebrity was given a choice of three adjectives, and the contestant had to guess who picked what at $100 per match. This was done twice, after which the Audience Match was played.
  • In the Audience Match, instead of having the third, second, and most popular answers worth money, they were worth multiples of the contestant's earnings. The third most popular would double the "Panel Poll" winnings, the second most popular would multiply it by three, and the most popular would multiply it by five for a top prize of only $5,000.)


Many elements of this pilot, such as a change from a six-celebrity panel to a five-celebrity panel, were kept in for a second pilot shot a year later with Michael Burger as host.

Match Game (1998–99, syndication)

Michael Burger
Michael Burger

Michael Burger is currently hosting his favorite show, The Price is Right Live. He has been hosting this television classic in cities around the country....
 ended up as host of this
Match Game (commonly called Match Game '98 to distinguish it from the 1979-82 and 1990-91 versions) while Paul Boland
Paul Boland

Paul Boland is a singer, Impressionist and Three-dimensional space artist who also was a one-time game show announcer for the 1998 revival of Match Game....
 served as announcer. The only personnel connections to previous versions were Vicki Lawrence
Vicki Lawrence

Vicki Lawrence is an Emmy Award-winning American actress, frequent game show panelist of the 1970s and 1980s, comedian, and singer. She is best known for her co-starring role on The Carol Burnett Show, alongside Carol Burnett, from 1967 to 1978, and as the sharp-tongued matriarch, Thelma Harper ....
 (who was a frequent panelist on both the 1973-82 and 1990-91 versions) and Nell Carter
Nell Carter

Nell Carter was an African-United States singer, and film, stage, and television actress....
 (who had appeared on the final week in 1991).

Both Carter and Lawrence were regulars on this version, while Reilly and Somers never appeared; Reilly's chair was filled by Judy Tenuta
Judy Tenuta

Judy Tenuta is an American entertainer, comedienne and accordion....
, while Somers' position was rotated between semi-regulars George Hamilton
George Hamilton

George Hamilton may refer to:...
, John Salley
John Salley

John Thomas "Spider" Salley is a retired United States professional basketball player in the National Basketball Association, actor and talk show host....
, Coolio
Coolio

Artis Leon Ivey, Jr. , better known by the stage name Coolio, is a Grammy Award-winning United States rapper and actor. He rose to fame in 1994 with his debut single Fantastic Voyage, and later in 1995 in music with the hit single Gangsta's Paradise , which appeared on the soundtrack for the film Dangerous Minds....
, and Rondell Sheridan
Rondell Sheridan

Rondell Sheridan is an American comedian and actor, best known for his current six-year portrayal of Victor Baxter, the goofy-yet-smart father of a psychic teenager, in the Disney Channel sitcoms That's So Raven and Cory In the House, along with his starring role in the mid-90s NBC/UPN series Minor Adjustments....
.

This incarnation of
Match Game was played with rules nearly identical to that of the 1973-82 version with a few minor exceptions. The show featured a panel of only five celebrities instead of the usual six. Questions in this version were not labeled A or B, instead titles with puns were a clue as to the content (à la Win Ben Stein's Money
Win Ben Stein's Money

Win Ben Stein's Money was an American television game show that ran from July 28, 1997 to January 31, 2003 on the Comedy Central cable network with unaired episodes and reruns airing until May 8, 2003....
). Each match was worth one point in Round One and two points in Round Two. As on the 1990–91 version, all five panelists played each round regardless of whether they matched a player on the first question.

After two rounds, the highest scorer played the Super-Match, which was played identically to its 1973-78 incarnation, including the $5,000 top prize. If no match was made in the Audience Match portion of the Super-Match, the contestant played for $500 in the Head-To-Head Match.

This version was noted for its sometimes over-the-top risqué humor of the celebrities and contestants. For instance, the prohibition on answers such as genitalia was no longer existent. On many episodes, answers that were deemed inappropriate for daytime TV were edited out with a "cuckoo" dubbed over the audible answer and a "CENSORED" graphic over the answer card and sometimes the person's mouth.

While Burger generally received positive reviews for his hosting, the show was mostly panned. Its humor was seen to have crossed the line from risqué into the out-and-out dirty and so many stations pushed it into the late night slots. Its low budget and lack of returning champions (staples of several modern game shows, most notably
Merv Griffin's Crosswords
Merv Griffin's Crosswords

Merv Griffin's Crosswords is a Television syndication game show based on crosswords. The show was created by its namesake, Merv Griffin. Ty Treadway is the host, and Edd Hall is the announcer....
and Game Show Network
Game Show Network

GSN is an American cable television and direct broadcast satellite channel dedicated to game shows and casino game shows. The channel was launched on December 1, 1994....
's original programs) were also focal points for criticism. This was especially since the last three versions to air all featured returning champions and offered cash prizes well in excess of $10,000 in an era when purchasing power was roughly twice that of 1998.

This version lasted a year and was canceled in 1999.

Episode status (1998-99)
The series is intact, however has not been rerun. Brief clips have been seen on various game-show blooper specials.

Other revivals

Plans were in place in Fall 1985 to re-launch
Match Game as a stand-alone series in conjunction with the revival of The Nighttime Price is Right. Rayburn was once again to serve as host, but producers believed that he was too old and was becoming uncooperative. He went on to host the new version of Break the Bank
Break the Bank (1985)

Break the Bank was a game show that aired for one season in television syndication from September 16, 1985 in television to September 12, 1986....
, but would end up being dismissed after 13 weeks due to production feuds similar to those he had on The Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour. Thus the project was abandoned, and Match Game reruns aired in lieu of new episodes.

(Some sources list 1987 as the date of this possible revival, which would have placed it after Rayburn's firing from
Break the Bank.)

Vanity Fair
Vanity Fair (magazine)

Vanity Fair is an American magazine of culture, fashion, and politics published by Cond? Nast Publications....
and TVgameshows.net a pilot for a remake of Match Game called What the Blank! It was taped for FOX
Fox

A fox is an animal belonging to any one of about 27 species of small to medium-sized Canidae, characterized by possessing a long, narrow snout, and a bushy tail, or brush....
 and hosted by Fred Willard
Fred Willard

Fred Willard is an American comedian and actor known for his improvisational comedy skills. He is best known for his roles in the Christopher Guest mockumentary films This is Spinal Tap, Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show , and A Mighty Wind....
 for air during the Summer 2004 "off" season. It was said that the game was apparently an incorporation of 21st-Century elements into the classic game as well as an added feature that people from along the streets would be able to participate for matching with contestants and celebrities in
Street Smarts
Street Smarts (game show)

Street Smarts was a United States game show that features two in-studio contestants trying to predict the outcome of interviews of people that were found on the street....
-style. FOX abruptly canceled the series before the show made it to air; the status of any episodes produced is unknown.

On June 22, 2006,
Match Game was the sixth of seven classic game shows featured in CBS' month-long Gameshow Marathon hosted by Ricki Lake
Ricki Lake

Ricki Pamela Lake is an United States actress and media personality, best known for her long-running Ricki Lake and starring role as Tracy Turnblad in the original Hairspray ....
 and announced by Rich Fields
Rich Fields

Richard Wayne "Rich" Fields is an United States broadcaster and meteorology, best known for being the announcer of the American television game show The Price Is Right ....
, and the second of two "semi-final" games in the tournament. The contestants were Kathy Najimy
Kathy Najimy

Kathy Ann Najimy is a Lebanese-American actress, known as Olive Massery on the television series Veronica's Closet, Sister Mary Patrick in Sister Act and the voice of Peggy Hill on the animated television series King of the Hill....
 and Lance Bass
Lance Bass

James Lance Bass is an United States Pop music singer, actor, film producer and television producer, and author. He grew up in Mississippi and rose to fame as the Bass singer for the American Pop music boy band 'N Sync....
, while Betty White
Betty White

Betty Marion White is a film and television actress with a career spanning 60 years. White is perhaps best known for her close association with the shows The Golden Girls and The Mary Tyler Moore Show, as well as for her regular appearances on the game shows Password and Match Game....
, George Foreman
George Foreman

George Edward Foreman is an United States two-time World Heavyweight Boxing Champion, Olympic gold medalist, and entrepreneur.He is the oldest man ever to win a major heavyweight title when, at 45, he knocked out 26-year-old Michael Moorer in the 10th round....
, Kathy Griffin
Kathy Griffin

'Kathleen "Kathy" Griffin' is an Emmy Award-winning, Grammy-nominated United Statesn stand-up comedian, actress and media personality. A self-proclaimed "A-list#Ulmer Scale celebrity", Griffin first gained recognition for her supporting role on the NBC sitcom Suddenly Susan, and is now the star of the Bravo reality show Kathy Griffin: M...
, Bruce Vilanch
Bruce Vilanch

Bruce Vilanch is an United States comedy writer who caught the public eye when he became a wisecracking regular on the revamped Hollywood Squares, with Whoopi Goldberg....
, Adam Carolla
Adam Carolla

Adam Carolla is an United States radio personality/television host, comedian, and actor. Carolla achieved fame for several broadcast stints: co-host of the radio show Loveline, from 1995 to 2005 ; co-creator and co-star of the television program The Man Show ; co-creator and performer on the television program Crank Yankers ....
, and Adrianne Curry
Adrianne Curry

Adrianne Marie Curry is an United States model, who first became famous as the America's Next Top Model, Cycle 1 of the reality television series America's Next Top Model....
 sat on the panel. White retained her normal sixth-seat position and was the only one from the original series to appear for this segment of
Gameshow Marathon. Lake used the same signature long-thin Sony
Sony

is a multinational corporation list of conglomerates corporation headquartered in Minato, Tokyo, Japan, and one of the world's largest media conglomerates with revenue exceeding US$99.1 billion ....
 ECM-51 telescoping microphone Rayburn used during the CBS version, and the set was rebuilt to be almost an exact match of that used from 1973-78 (Betty commented during the show that "they even got the carpet right"). Najimy won the game, scoring five matches to Bass' three. The format was that of
Match Game PM, except that in the Super-Match the Head-To-Head Match was played for 50 times the amount won in the two Audience Matches.

In 2008, TBS
TBS (TV network)

TBS is an United States cable television TV network owned by media mogul Ted Turner that shows sports and a variety of programming, with a focus on comedy....
 ordered a Pilot for a revival of
Match Game, which was filmed in June of that year at CBS Television City on an exact replica of the 1970s stage (likely the same one used on Gameshow Marathon). Andrew Daly
Andrew Daly

Andrew "Andy" Daly is an American actor, writer, and comedian who is best known for his character Dick Pepperfield in the 2008 film Semi-Pro starring Will Ferrell, and for his multiple appearances on Lewis Black's Root of All Evil....
 hosted with Norm MacDonald
Norm MacDonald

Norman Gene "Norm" MacDonald is a Canadian comedian, actor and professional Poker player of Scotland heritage. He is known for his biting sarcasm, quick wit, distinct muttering and slurred delivery, and his three years anchoring Saturday Night Live's Weekend Update....
 and Sarah Silverman
Sarah Silverman

Sarah Kate Silverman is an American comedian, writer, singer, guitarist and actress. Although usually credited as Sarah Silverman, she is sometimes credited by her nickname, Big S. Her satire comedy addresses social taboos and controversy topics such as racism, sexism, and religion....
 as regular panelists. This version of
Match Game was to be part of a new initiative of TBS late night television
Late night television

Late night television is the block of television programming airing after 10:00 12-hour clock and usually through 2:00 12-hour clock. Traditionally, this type of programming airs after the late local news and features a particular genre of programming that falls somewhere between a variety show and a talk show....
 programming, but as of January 2009 the program has not aired or gone into production, nor is there any mention of the show from TBS. Should it go into production and begin airing on or before December 31, 2009, it will make
Match Game one of only a handful of shows to air first-run episodes in five consecutive decades.

Series legacy

The program's simple "fill in the blank" question format has spawned numerous imitators, and radio shows across the United States have used the format for call-in contests.

Among television series and films that have paid homage to
Match Game include fellow Goodson-Todman series The Price is Right (in a 2007 Showcase
The Showcase (The Price Is Right)

The Showcase is the major prize round featured at the end of every episode of the game show The Price Is Right .The two prize packages each typically involve three prizes or prize packages usually connected by a common theme or a story....
 and also some of host Drew Carey
Drew Carey

Drew Allison Carey is an United States comedian, actor, and game show host. After serving in the United States Marine Corps and making a name for himself in stand-up comedy, Carey eventually gained popularity starring on his own Situation comedy, The Drew Carey Show, and serving as host on the U.S....
's Season 37 entrances through Door #2),
Family Guy
Family Guy

Family Guy is an animated cartoon Television in the United States Situation comedy created by Seth MacFarlane that airs on Fox Broadcasting Company and regularly on other television networks in syndication....
(twice), Private Parts (with Howard Stern
Howard Stern

Howard Allan Stern is an American radio presenter and media personality, best known for hosting The Howard Stern Show, currently an uncensored talk radio show that airs on Howard 100 on SIRIUS XM Radio....
 as Rayburn and Robin Quivers
Robin Quivers

Robin Ophelia Quivers is an American talk show host and Howard Stern long-time primary co-host on his morning The Howard Stern Show. She is known for her smooth, professional voice as well as her laugh....
 as Somers),
Mystery Science Theatre 3000, Craig Kilborn
Craig Kilborn

Craig Kilborn is an United States comedian and former talk show host. He was the original host of The Daily Show, a former anchor on ESPN's SportsCenter, and Tom Snyder's successor on CBS' The Late Late Show ....
's
The Daily Show
The Daily Show

The Daily Show is an United States news satire television program airing each Monday through Thursday on Comedy Central in the United States....
and Late Late Show (in his "Five Questions" segment), The Simpsons
The Simpsons

The Simpsons is an Television in the United States animated cartoon Situation comedy created by Matt Groening for the Fox Broadcasting Company....
, and Saturday Night Live
Saturday Night Live

Saturday Night Live is a weekly late-night 90-minute American sketch comedy/variety show filmed in New York City. It made its debut on October 11, 1975....
(most recently on May 10, 2008 as a game show titled "It's A Match", using a different arrangement of the 1973-82 theme).

Today, the 1973–1982 incarnation is shown in reruns daily on Game Show Network
Game Show Network

GSN is an American cable television and direct broadcast satellite channel dedicated to game shows and casino game shows. The channel was launched on December 1, 1994....
 and is the network's "Greatest Game Show of All Time"
50 Greatest Game Shows of All Time (GSN)

The 50 Greatest Game Shows of All-Time was a series on Game Show Network airing from July 18 to August 31, 2006 on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays at 10 PM North American Eastern Time Zone....
. Virtually all episodes of this version are still extant, although some reportedly are not shown due to celebrities' refusals of clearances. On November 26 2006, GSN broadcast an hour-long documentary on
Match Game titled The Real Match Game Story: Behind The Blank featuring rarely-seen footage of the 1960s version, many odd or memorable moments from the main 1973-82 series, and interviews with Rayburn, Somers, Dawson, DeBartolo, producer Ira Skutch, and others involved in the show's production.

Presently, Richard Dawson is the only surviving regular personality from the 1970s version of the show; announcer Johnny Olson died in 1985, host Gene Rayburn died in 1999, and regular panelists Brett Somers and Charles Nelson Reilly both died within 3 1/2 months of each other in 2007. Most of the semi-regulars, however, are still alive.

Music

Match Game has had several theme songs throughout its 35+ years.

1962-1969

From 1962-1967, an instrumental version of Bert Kaempfert
Bert Kaempfert

Bert Kaempfert was a Germany orchestra leader and songwriter. He made easy listening and jazz-oriented records, and wrote the music for a number of well-known songs, such as "Strangers in the Night" and "Spanish Eyes"....
's
A Swingin' Safari
A Swingin' Safari

A Swingin' Safari is an instrumental composed by Bert Kaempfert in 1962. It was recorded by Kaempfert on Polydor Records and released in the United States on Decca Records....
was used as the theme. From 1967-1969, a new theme composed by Score Productions
Score Productions

Score Productions is an United States of America musical production company specializing in background music and themes for television series. Started in 1963 by producer Robert A....
 was adopted.

1973-1982

With the launch of
Match Game '73 Goodson-Todman once again turned to Score Productions for a music package. A new theme was composed with a memorable "funk" guitar intro that grew to become one of the most famous game show themes of the 1970s. There are also alternate versions of the themeone shorter and one with bongos. The 1970s music package also contained the show's "think cues" (i.e., cues used when the panel wrote down their answers) as well as two separate Head-to-Head Match cues, the ticket plug/consolation prize cue, and a separate "burlesque
Burlesque

Burlesque is a humorous theatrical entertainment involving parody and sometimes grotesque exaggeration. Prior to Burlesque becoming associated with striptease, it was a form of Parody music in which an opera or piece of classical theatre is adapted in a broad, often risqu? style very different from that for which it was originally known....
" music cue. The 1973 theme is currently heard on
The MJ Morning Show
The MJ Morning Show

"The MJ Morning Show" is a morning radio show that broadcasts out of WFLZ in Tampa, Florida and also in other cities such as St. Louis, Missouri, Jacksonville, Florida, Melbourne, Florida, and Ft....
.

In keeping with the zany atmosphere, the music supervisors would also use other notable musical works to add to humorous situations. Among the non-Score Productions music heard on occasion were the "burlesque" music ("The Stripper
The Stripper

"The Stripper" is an instrumental composed by David Rose and recorded in 1962. It evinces a jazz influence with especially prominent trombone lines, and evokes the feel of music used to accompany striptease artists....
"), "There's No Business Like Show Business", "When the Saints Go Marching In", "Alexander's Ragtime Band
Alexander's Ragtime Band

"Alexander's Ragtime Band" is the name of a song by Irving Berlin. It was his first major hit, in 1911. There is some evidence, although inconclusive, that Irving Berlin borrowed the melody from a draft composition submitted by Scott Joplin that had been submitted to a publisher....
", "Stars and Stripes Forever", and the Bee Gees
Bee Gees

The Bee Gees were a singing trio of brothers ? Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb, and Maurice Gibb. They were born on the Isle of Man to England parents, lived in Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester, England, United Kingdom and during their childhood years moved to Brisbane, Australia, where they began their musical careers....
' "Stayin' Alive
Stayin' Alive

"Stayin' Alive" is a song by the Bee Gees, released as a Single in 1977. It was their second hit off of the album Saturday Night Fever . "Stayin' Alive" is one of The Bee Gees' most popular and recognizable songs, in part because it was played in the opening scene of the popular disco film Saturday Night Fever....
". "Auld Lang Syne
Auld Lang Syne

"Auld Lang Syne" is a Scotland poem written by Robert Burns in 1788 and set to the tune of a traditional folk song . It is well known in many English-speaking countries and is often sung to celebrate the start of the new year at the stroke of midnight on New Year's Day....
" was played on every New Year's Eve show until the series first ended in 1979.

1983-1984

The music for the
Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour was composed by Edd Kalehoff
Edd Kalehoff

Edward Woodley "Edd" Kalehoff is a music composer who specializes in compositions for television....
. None of the music used from the 1970s version was used in this revival. The main theme song and several of its cue variations are still used on
The Price is Right; the main theme was also used on the 1986-1989 revival of Card Sharks
Card Sharks

Card Sharks was an United States television game show created by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions. Although various changes were made to the game's format throughout its run, the core format remained the same....
as a car prize cue.

1990-1991

For the 1990 revival, Score Productions re-orchestrated the 1970s theme with more modern instruments. The think cues were also re-done, but stayed the same throughout, while one "Super Match" cue was penned. A new, simple opening cue was composed, but was not used as a think cue.

1998-1999

The 1998 revival again used music from Score Productions, but this theme was more of a spoof of the 1970s theme than a re-recording. However, the music paid tribute to the 1970s version by having a re-recording of the "funk" guitar think cue in its opening and the original serving as the show's first think theme.

Foreign versions


United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....

In the UK,
Match Game was known as Blankety Blank
Blankety Blank

Blankety Blank is a United Kingdom comedy game show based on the late-1970s Australian game show Blankety Blanks .The British version ran from 18 January, 1979 to 12 March, 1990 with 218 episodes on the BBC, hosted first by Terry Wogan and then by Les Dawson....
and was presented by Terry Wogan
Terry Wogan

Sir Michael Terence Wogan, Order of the British Empire Deputy Lieutenant more commonly known as Terry Wogan, is a veteran Irish people radio and television broadcaster, who has worked for the BBC in the United Kingdom for most of his career....
, Les Dawson
Les Dawson

Les Dawson was a popular England comedian, known for his deadpan style and curmudgeonly persona, and famous for mother-in-law joke and wife....
, and Lily Savage.

Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....

Several versions were made in Australia. The original 1960's
The Match Game was imitated, with the same name, and hosted by Michael McCarthy.

The second, more commonly-known version was
Blankety Blanks
Blankety Blanks

Blankety Blanks was a popular Australian game show hosted by Graham Kennedy on Network Ten. It ran from 1977 - 1978 and was based on the American game show Match Game....
and based upon the 1970s version, running from 1977-1978. It was presented by Graham Kennedy
Graham Kennedy

Graham Cyril Kennedy, Order of Australia was an Australian radio, television and film performer, often called "Gra Gra" and "The King" of Australian television....
 and became a ratings hit for the 0-10 Network
Network Ten

Network Ten, or Channel Ten, is one of Australia's three major commercial Television broadcasting in Australia. Owned-and-operated stations can be found in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth, Western Australia, while affiliates extend the network to cover most of the country....
. Like many Australian game shows during the 1970s-1990s (mostly those done by Reg Grundy
Reg Grundy

Reg Grundy, Order of Australia, Order of the British Empire is one of the most successful Australian entrepreneurs, and media and television moguls of his generation....
) this version was remarkably similar to the American show right down to the set, "spinning box" opening, and "Get ready to match the stars!" tagline. The signature music from the American version was not used, however a similar-sounding theme was used.

A later version appeared on the Nine Network
Nine Network

The Nine Network, or Channel Nine, is an Australian Television broadcasting in Australia based in Willoughby, New South Wales, a suburb on the North Shore of Sydney....
 in 1985 hosted by Daryl Somers
Daryl Somers

Daryl Paul Somers Order of Australia , sometimes referred to as Dazza or Dags, is an Australian television personality. The son of a dairy farmer and a cabaret singer, Somers rose to national fame as the host of the long-running comedy-variety program Hey Hey It's Saturday....
, and again in 1996 hosted by Shane Bourne
Shane Bourne

Shane Bourne is an Australian stand-up comedy comedian and actor.Bourne was a well-known comedic face throughout the 1980s, with roles on the Australian version of Are You Being Served? and Hey Hey It's Saturday....
.

(This show is not to be confused with an unrelated American show by the same name
Blankety Blanks (US game show)

Blankety Blanks was an United States game show that aired on American Broadcasting Company from April 21 to June 27, 1975 hosted by Bill Cullen....
, which aired on ABC and was hosted by Bill Cullen
Bill Cullen

William Lawrence Francis "Bill" Cullen was an United States radio and television personality whose career spanned five decades. He was best known for television game shows, where he hosted multiple series and served as a panelist for over twenty years combined on I've Got a Secret and To Tell the Truth....
 in 1975.)

The Netherlands

The Netherlands also had its own version during the mid-1980s with the same title as the UK version.

Germany
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....

Match Game had a 150-episode run as Punkt, Punkt, Punkt (Dot, Dot, Dotan allusion to an ellipsis
Ellipsis

Ellipsis in printing and writing refers to a mark or series of marks that usually indicate an intentional omission of a word or a phrase from the original text....
) in the early 1990s on satellite and cable network Sat.1
Sat.1

Sat.1 is a privately owned German television broadcasting station. Sat.1 was the first privately owned television broadcasting station and started one day before RTL Television....
. The show was hosted by Mike Krüger.

Mexico
Mexico

The United Mexican States , commonly known as Mexico , is a federalism constitutionalism republic in North America. It is bordered on the north by the United States; on the south and west by the Pacific Ocean; on the southeast by Guatemala, Belize, and the Caribbean Sea; and on the east by the Gulf of Mexico....

The game was called
Espacio en Blanco (Blank Space) and was hosted by Mauricio Barcelata. The show had a 40-episode run in 2006.

Turkey
Turkey

Turkey , known officially as the Republic of Turkey , is a Eurasian country that stretches across the Anatolian peninsula in southwest Asia and Thrace in the Balkans region of Southern Europe....

The game was called
Sansini Dene and aired in the early 1990s on Show TV
Show TV

Show TV is a nation-wide television channel in Turkey owned by ?ukurova Holding. The channel was established by the Turkish businessmen Erol Aksoy and Haldun Simavi on March 1, 1992....
. The show was hosted by Mehmet Ali Erbil
Mehmet Ali Erbil

Mehmet Ali Erbil is a Turkish people comedian, actor and talk show host....
.

External links