Scattergories (game show)
Scattergories is an American game show on NBC daytime hosted by Dick Clark, with Charlie Tuna as announcer, that aired from January 18 to June 11, 1993.[1] The show, which was adapted from the Milton Bradley board game of the same name, was produced by Reg Grundy Productions and was the second to last American game show to be produced by the company.
Scattergories | |
---|---|
Genre | Game show |
Presented by | Dick Clark |
Narrated by | Charlie Tuna |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 105 |
Production | |
Running time | 25 minutes |
Production company | Reg Grundy Productions |
Distributor | Fremantle |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | January 18 – June 11, 1993 |
Main game
Two teams of four players competed in a battle of the sexes manner (four men vs. four women). The show was based on the board game of the same name and featured a panel of five celebrities. However, the difference was that instead of being live in studio, each celebrity's participation was videotaped in advance; the celebrities also recorded introductions for Clark and dialogues leading into and out of commercial breaks.
Gameplay
The team in control was given 15 seconds to name up to six items that fit a particular category and started with a specific letter of the alphabet. The team scored a point each time the team gave an acceptable word. However, no player could give two consecutive answers, and no word could be used as part of more than two answers.
After the list was complete or time ran out, the other team could challenge any word they believed to be unacceptable. If challenged, a panel of five jurors voted whether or not the word was acceptable, with the majority vote ruling. If the word was unacceptable, the controlling team lost a point; otherwise the controlling team received an additional point. Later in the run, some members of the panel were former contestants on the show.
Originally, Clark read the category and then the letter in play for the round and members of each team attempted to buzz-in and provide a word that fit both criteria. The team who won the toss-up scored a point and played the remainder of that half of the round. This was later changed to having the challengers play the first category and letter.
Once the first part of their round was done, the team in control was given a chance to earn up to four additional points with the celebrity panel. One at a time the team chose a member of the panel and that celebrity's response was played back to the team. If the celebrity gave an answer that was not on the team's list, they received one point. If the team chose a celebrity that gave an answer matching any of the team's answers, a point was taken away.
In the second round, the above point values were doubled and whoever was ahead at the end of the round won the game and $500.
If both teams were tied at the end of round two, a toss-up similar to the one used to determine control at the beginning of the episode was played. The first team member to buzz-in and give an answer ruled valid by the judges won the game for their team.
Teams remained on the show until they were defeated or won five consecutive matches.
Bonus round
For the bonus game, one final category was played. This time, each of the five celebrities was assigned a random letter and had to give an answer that started with their letter.
After the winning team was given the category, going in order from left to right they had to give two answers for each celebrity and both answers had to start with the celebrity's assigned letter. The team was given twenty-five seconds to do this.
After the time expired, the judges went over the team's words and if any words were disallowed, the celebrity attached to those words was taken out of play. Celebrities were also taken out of play if the team failed to come up with the necessary two words.
Once the judges were done, the team was shown each of the celebrities' responses that they had unlocked. If a celebrity gave an answer that was not one of the two given by the team, they captured that celebrity. If the team managed to capture three celebrities, they won a cash jackpot that started at $4,000 and increased by $1,000 each day it went unclaimed. If they were unsuccessful, they earned $100 for each celebrity that they unlocked.
Originally, the winning team picked one of five cards, each containing the name of a different celebrity. The team won the jackpot if they had captured the celebrity whose name was on the card, or all five celebrities were captured. If they were unsuccessful, they won $200 for each captured celebrity.
Broadcast history
Scattergories and a revival of Grundy's earlier hit Scrabble joined the NBC lineup on the same day. NBC was looking to replace the soap opera Santa Barbara, which had been airing since 1984 but had recently suffered a dive in ratings thanks in part to stations becoming more prone to moving their schedules around to open the 3:00 pm slot Santa Barbara occupied for other programming such as talk shows. NBC agreed to give that time slot back to the affiliates once Santa Barbara ended; NBC was the first of the major American broadcast networks to do this; ABC gave the slot back in 2012, while CBS affiliates and some ABC affiliates are allowed flexibility as to where they choose to air programming.
In exchange, NBC reclaimed the noon hour as a network time slot and chose to place both of its new game shows there. Scattergories aired at 12:30 pm, following Scrabble, for its entire run. However, many affiliates of the three major networks had for years chosen to preempt any network programming that they aired in the noon hour, instead airing local newscasts or syndicated programming. Scattergories was no exception, as not all of NBC's affiliates cleared the show. In markets that did, the series was up against Loving on ABC and the top-rated The Young and the Restless on CBS and did not perform well against either soap opera.
NBC decided to end Scattergories after twenty weeks; the show's last episode aired on June 11, 1993. It was replaced by Caesars Challenge, which aired until January 14, 1994, and it ended up being the last new network game show on daytime television. CBS's The Price is Right was the only daytime game show on network television from January 17, 1994 to October 5, 2009, when the current version of Let's Make a Deal premiered on CBS.
References
- Hyatt, Wesley (1997). The Encyclopedia of Daytime Television. Watson-Guptill Publications. p. 377. ISBN 978-0823083152. Retrieved 22 March 2020.