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Baffle (game show) Battle of the Network Stars; Beat the Clock; Bedtime Stories (game show) The Better Sex; The Big Showdown; Blank Check (game show) Blankety Blanks (American game show) Bowling for Dollars; Break the Bank (1976 game show)
Hold That Camera (1950; changed from a game show to a variety series shortly into the run) Hold That Note (1957) Hole in the Wall (2008–2009, 2010–2012) Holey Moley (2019–present) Hollywood Calling (1949–1950) Hollywood Connection (1977–1978; pilot taped in 1975) The Hollywood Game (1992; began as a 1991 pilot hosted by Peter Allen)
Truth or Consequences was an American game show originally hosted on NBC radio by Ralph Edwards (1940–57) and later on television by Edwards (1950–54), Jack Bailey (1954–56), Bob Barker (1956–75), Steve Dunne (1957–58), Bob Hilton (1977–78) and Larry Anderson (1987–88). [3] The television show ran on CBS, NBC and also in ...
This is a list of game show hosts. A game show host is a profession involving the hosting of game shows. Game shows usually range from a half hour to an hour long and involve a prize. Foreign-language shows that are part of franchises may be referred by their franchise name.
The Wizard of Odds is an American television game show hosted by Alex Trebek that aired on NBC from July 17,1973, to June 28, 1974, in which people from the studio audience vied in a number of rounds, primarily games revolving around statistical questions. [2]
Two pilots aired in 1968–1969 3 The Bold Ones: The New Doctors: September 14, 1969: May 4, 1973: 4 The Bold Ones: The Protectors: September 28, 1969: March 8, 1970: Pilot aired February 22, 1969: 1 The Bold Ones: The Senator: September 13, 1970: February 28, 1971: Pilot aired March 21, 1970: 1 Then Came Bronson: September 17, 1969: April 1 ...
Celebrity Sweepstakes is an American television game show that aired on NBC's daytime schedule from April 1, 1974, to October 1, 1976. The show also had two separate weekly syndicated runs from September 9, 1974, to September 1975 and again from September 20, 1976, to May 23, 1977. Jim McKrell hosted the show.
Only one other NBC game show afterward, the Stewart-packaged Shoot for the Stars (which was also hosted by Edwards), was taped in New York. In fact, the only other NBC daytime show to tape at Rockefeller Center for the remainder of the 1970s was the serial The Doctors. (Another World and Somerset recorded at off-site studios in Brooklyn.)