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Blind Date (American game show)

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In this version, the six men (initially local servicemen) sat on one side of a wall, and the three women sat on the other side. Two men each would have about two minutes to explain by telephone their best points to one woman. After they both had their turn, the woman chose the date she found more
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In this version, two men (college students or servicemen) were seated on one side of a wall and telephoned one of the women sitting on the other side. They attempted to talk her into accepting a date with one of them. On the basis of voice and specially prepared questions, she chose the most
333:. The men, who were typically either servicemen or college students, were known as the "Hunters" and tried to win a date with the women, known as the "Hunted," for an expense-paid date on the town, which included an invitation to a popular local 344:, $ 5 in pocket money, and a chaperoned ride home. The losers received a friendly kiss from Francis, $ 15 in cash, and tickets to a popular local theater production as consolation prizes. And the women were each paid $ 50 for their appearances. 799: 390:, Cliff Gill and Vera Thomson as a between-movie entertainment feature. Seeing its success, Floyd peddled the idea around to other markets, eventually selling it to NBC radio where it first aired July 8, 1943, hosted by 905: 397:
The radio show grew into a television show. This version originally aired on ABC from May 5, 1949, to September 20, 1951, moved to NBC from June 7 to July 15, 1952, then ran on DuMont (originally as
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In 1953, the television format was changed to viewers writing to the show, and asking about a date with a type of person, or to go on a date to a special event.
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does not seem very real." He explained that the show had a "forced and contrived nature", with the participants appearing to have been rehearsed.
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impressive one of the two for her affections. Those two people became a couple. This process continued until three couples were formed.
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At the end of the show, the audience determined which couple would receive the romantic night on the town by means of applause.
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One episode with Francis from 1950 is held among collectors, while the August 25, 1953, show with Murray is held by the
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Six men vied for dates with three unseen women by having conversations with them, in a show similar to the future
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Winners received a night on the town, which on the premiere episode included a nightclub invitation to the
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interesting, with the winners escorted through swinging doors to meet their blind dates.
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was the host of the ABC and NBC versions, and had hosted the radio version since 1943.
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became host when the show moved to DuMont, but was replaced after the third show by
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The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows - 1946-Present
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The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946–Present
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The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television
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List of programs broadcast by the DuMont Television Network
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American dating and relationship reality television series
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List of surviving DuMont Television Network broadcasts
529:(9 ed.). Random House Publishing. p. 154. 582: 580: 554: 552: 245: 224: 219: 211: 206: 198: 185: 161: 153: 141: 134: 57:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 726: 370:started on the stage of the Hollywood Theatre in 886:DuMont Television Network original programming 803:. Random House Publishing Group. p. 154. 493:On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio 560:"Maxwell Takes "Blind Date" As "Hot" Fill-In" 8: 891:American English-language television shows 662:(4 ed.). Penguin Books. p. 936. 523:Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle (24 June 2009). 131: 881:Black-and-white American television shows 695:(3 ed.). Penguin Books. p. 95. 485: 483: 481: 479: 117:Learn how and when to remove this message 896:American Broadcasting Company game shows 856:1953 American television series endings 720: 718: 651: 649: 475: 851:1949 American television series debuts 7: 66:"Blind Date" American game show 55:adding citations to reliable sources 129:1949 American TV series or program 25: 31: 42:needs additional citations for 642:. Dakota Homestead Publishers. 612:Kochler, Joseph (1943-07-17). 1: 861:1940s American radio programs 640:Joe Floyd: A Helluva Salesman 779:, Fourth edition (New York: 725:Gould, Jack (May 29, 1949). 283:) is an American television 18:Blind Date (1950s game show) 299:after many years on radio. 922: 797:; Marsh, Earle F. (2009). 306: 876:American radio game shows 871:1950s American game shows 866:1940s American game shows 836:DuMont historical website 309:Blind Date (radio series) 189:Walter Herlihy (1949-50) 638:Karolevitz, Bob (1990). 763:Temple University Press 614:""Blind Date" (review)" 594:. 1944-10-21. p. 4 566:. 1943-07-10. p. 4 490:Dunning, John (1998). 425:Paley Center for Media 689:McNeil, Alex (1991). 656:McNeil, Alex (1996). 181:(June–September 1953) 51:improve this article 733:The New York Times 442:The New York Times 431:Critical reception 318:Television version 259:September 15, 1953 757:David Weinstein, 536:978-0-345-49773-4 503:978-0-19-507678-3 363:Broadcast history 270: 269: 199:Country of origin 127: 126: 119: 101: 16:(Redirected from 913: 814: 777:Total Television 745: 744: 742: 740: 730: 722: 713: 712: 710: 709: 692:Total Television 686: 680: 679: 677: 676: 659:Total Television 653: 644: 643: 635: 629: 628: 626: 625: 609: 603: 602: 600: 599: 584: 575: 574: 572: 571: 556: 547: 546: 544: 543: 520: 514: 513: 511: 510: 487: 266: 264: 256: 254: 220:Original release 157:Bernard Schubert 132: 122: 115: 111: 108: 102: 100: 59: 35: 27: 21: 921: 920: 916: 915: 914: 912: 911: 910: 841: 840: 821: 811: 793: 761:(Philadelphia: 754: 749: 748: 738: 736: 724: 723: 716: 707: 705: 703: 688: 687: 683: 674: 672: 670: 655: 654: 647: 637: 636: 632: 623: 621: 611: 610: 606: 597: 595: 586: 585: 578: 569: 567: 558: 557: 550: 541: 539: 537: 522: 521: 517: 508: 506: 504: 489: 488: 477: 472: 455: 433: 421: 399:Your Big Moment 386:was created by 384:G.I. 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Index

Blind Date (1950s game show)

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"Blind Date" American game show
news
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JSTOR
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Arlene Francis
Melvyn Douglas
Jan Murray
Rex Marshall
ABC
NBC
DuMont
game show
ABC
NBC
DuMont
Blind Date (radio series)
The Dating Game
nightclub
Stork Club
Sioux Falls
South Dakota
Joe Floyd

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