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Four three-letter words are shown to the teams, each word is the starting point for a word chain. One team chooses a starting word, and the host reads a clue to another word (which may be a proper noun or abbreviation); the player must change one letter in the starting word to make the correct word (e.g., CAT to CUT).
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 (2019–2022) 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)
For game shows, use (game show), for talk shows, use (talk show), and for all other programs use (TV program) or (TV programme) according to common usage in reliable sources. Examples: Password (game show) – Password is considered to be the primary topic, so the game show is disambiguated.
The contestants choose one of ten letters and are asked a question whose answer starts with that letter. Each correct answer scores one point. The contestant with the higher score after five questions takes/retains the championship and advances to the final round; ties are broken in the champion's favour.
One-Minute Quick-Fire Round: Always played as the final round to determine the day's winner. One contestant from each team took part; playing separately, each was given 60 seconds to answer as many questions as possible. The contestant on the trailing team went first. Teams could remain on the show for a maximum of five days before retiring ...
100% is a British television game show that was shown in the United Kingdom every weekday at 5.30pm from 31 March 1997, the day after the inception of its host television station Channel 5, until 24 December 2001, running for over 1,000 editions. Each show ran for 30 minutes with one commercial break.
Scrabble is an American television game show based upon the board game Scrabble. Contestants competed in a series of rounds to fill in words within a crossword puzzle for cash. Muriel Green of Exposure Unlimited developed the idea for a television game show based upon the board game concept.
The Next Line is a Canadian television game show.Produced by Blair Murdoch, it was filmed at the studios of U.TV in Vancouver, British Columbia. [1] Hosted by Kevin Frank, with Kathy Morse (later the mayor of Maple Ridge from 2002 to 2005) as the announcer, it centered on viewing classic movie clips, music and quotes that were cut off at a point and then determining which of a panel of ...