Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-50 of 7,447
- Contestants compete for prizes and cash, including cars and vacations, in games that test their knowledge of consumer goods pricing.
- Hosted by Jim Perry, were contestants are asked questions about how 100 people answered a poll question then played a card game where they tried to guess whether the next card drawn from a deck in a sequence would be higher or lower.
- A one-man-band tin toy tries to escape a destructive baby.
- Two families compete by trying to outguess the opponents about survey results.
- Contestants vie for cash prizes in this competition of word puzzles and charades.
- Revival of the classic NBC game show in which two contestants, one a returning champion, faced a computer-generated board of 25 numbered squares.
- Updated version of the 1974-1978 CBS game show, where celebrities and their spouses answered questions about each other and won money for the audience.
- Two families, each composed of five members, compete against each other to guess the answers with the results of a survey of one hundred people. Hosted by Ray Combs.
- Afternoon game show which combined elements of two classic game shows "Match Game" and "Hollywood Squares" into one.
- A group of celebrities would be given a sentence with a missing word, which they would then have to fill in. The contestants would then give their own answer and scored points according to how many celebrity gave the same answer.
- Second revised version of the classic Mark Goodson game show, where celebrity-contestant teams conveyed passwords using one-word clues.
- Two contestants attempt to correctly guess words based on definitions given by children ages five to nine.
- Fourth version of the verenable game show, where a celebrity panel must decide who, among three possible contestants, is the actual person associated with a story.
- As with previous incarnations, three people all claim to be one central subject who has a unique story. The panelists' job is to find out which one of the three people is the real person and who is lying.
- Two teams of three members each compete to select answers to trivia questions in a variety of games.
- Game show where celebs and contestants fill in missing words in sentences. Points awarded when contestants match celebs' answers.
- Gameshow personalities recall contestant & host bloopers as well as other funny moments from their television shows.
- The Revival of "NOW YOU SEE IT" in 1989 as follows... 2 Contestants played for "Round 1" as The Board is computerized than the regular flashy board in 1974-1975 played for 100 Points and deduct 15 seconds for every point to 25 points and as time runs out... The Points doubled into 200 Points all through 50 points and the 1st contestant scores 1000 Points wins and became the challenger. As the Challenger to play the Championship Round to face the Champion and the toss-up question is used for $200-The 1st Board, $300-The 2nd Board, $400-The 3rd Board, $500-The 4th Board & $600-The 5th & Last Board and the contestant will find 6 words on each & every board in 20 seconds. As time runs out for the Challenger or the Champion will find 1 word on the board and the Challenger or the Champion collects $1000 wins and plays the "Solo Round." The "Solo Round" for the Champion to find 10 words in 60 Seconds (1 Minute). The Champion find the solution to the clue and passing it can return the favor of the previous clue. Each word found is worth $100. 10 Words found on the board wins $5000 otherwise $5000 will be added when its lost the game. Champions must compete before defeated.
- Updated version of the classic NBC and CBS daytime game show, where two contestants compete to win cash and prizes by deciding whether the next card (in their own block of five) is higher or lower.
- A game show based on charades. Very much like the more popular show Body Language. 2 teams consisting of 2 celebrities and a contestant act out clues to words without speaking.
- Contestants and celebrities try to come up with the same clue when two words are combined.
- In this game show, the answer to each question is a name, title, or phrase, and the three contestants are presented with three sets of initials for each question. A contestant must buzz in and select the correct set of initials representing the answer and then provide the full answer corresponding to those initials.
- An updated version of the popular early-80's game show of the same name. While the original used pairs of family members as contestants, this version used a simpler, one- on-one format. Presented with a grid of hexagons, each with a letter printed on it, one contestant had to make a horizontal line of five hexes, while his opponent tried to make a vertical line of four. For each chosen hex, a general knowledge question was asked, the answer to which began with the letter printed on the hex. Whoever gave the correct answer to the question got control of the hex and could choose the next hex to be used.