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Brain Games (2019–2022, had previously been an educational series with no game show elements from 2011 to 2016) Brains and Brawn (1958) Break the Bank (1945–1957) Break the Bank (1976–1977) Break the Bank (1985–1986) Broadway to Hollywood (1949–1954; also called Headline Clues and Broadway to Hollywood Headline Clues) Broke Ass Game ...
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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)
Take a Chance (American game show) Take It or Leave It (radio show) The Talent Shop; Think Fast (1949 game show) Tic-Tac-Dough; Time Will Tell (game show) To Tell the Truth; Truth or Consequences; Twenty Questions (American game show) Twenty-One (game show)
For two shows in July 1965, the nighttime version experimented with a "championship match" format, in which the winners of games 1 and 2 would return to compete against each other in the final game. Also in 1965, the show adopted an annual "Tournament of Champions" where contestants on the daytime version who won both their games were invited ...
Game Show Countdown: Top 10 Hosts: 2007: Game Show Flashback: 2014: Game Show Greatest Moments: 2007: Game Show Hall of Fame: Who Wants to Be a Millionaire: 2007: Games Across America: 2004–05: Gameworld: 1997–98: Get a Clue: 2020–21: 2021 Grand Slam: 2007: GSN Daily Draw : 2019: GSN Live: 2008–11: GSN Radio (online only at GSN.com ...
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.
1938 radio quiz show Whiz Kids on WHN Radio in New York. Game shows began to appear on radio and television in the late 1930s. The first television game show, Spelling Bee, as well as the first radio game show, Information Please, were both broadcast in 1938; the first major success in the game show genre was Dr. I.Q., a radio quiz show that began in 1939.