603:, and the partner would stand outside the booth in front of a rack, on which letters representing the answer were placed. These letters were out of view of the partner in the booth. When signaled by Enberg, that player would take three letters from the answer and place them on a board behind him or her where the partner in the booth could see them. The first letter of the answer had to be used, but the first three letters could not, nor could letters that appeared the same (e.g., if the answer is "Boston Red Sox", B-O-S could not be used even if the S from "Sox" was used, although B-S-O was allowed). A player who did so was penalized, with 15 seconds being added to their elapsed time. The player with the letters would then make gestures, similar to
382:
individual game board. A musical tone every few seconds served as a signal to add another letter. If the guessing player guessed the name after the time signal sounded, the team was still charged for the letter that should have been used. Each team took a turn at the same puzzle, with the team using fewer letters winning the game. A tie was considered a win for the contestant and the challengers. Prizes were awarded to the contestant for every game won by the challengers. A prize "for just being on the show", in the words of Kenny
Williams, was always included, so that even if the challengers lost every game, the contestant would not leave empty-handed.
260:
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challengers used fewer letters than the home team, $ 50. If all ten words were guessed correctly in 60 seconds, in addition to winning $ 250/$ 500 the contestant also won a car; otherwise, the dollar amount won was redeemed for merchandise from the
Spiegel Catalog. This bonus round proved to be extremely challenging; very few automobiles were won.
381:
These two teams played a word game in which a player seated in an isolation booth attempted to guess a famous name, title, or phrase posed by their teammate who displayed letters as clues (one at a time, starting with three letters, with one of them being the first letter in the subject) on their own
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There were two versions of the bonus round. In both versions, the contestant had 30 seconds to guess words based on three-letter clues given by Enberg, such as "GDN" for "garden". In the celebrity-contestant version, the contestant played up to five words, and each correct answer was worth $ 50 plus
385:
Each show featured a three-game "PDQ Special" match, with special prizes awarded to the contestant if the challengers won two out of three games. Another format had the teams score points according to the difference between how many letters used by both teams (a tie was considered a draw and nobody
394:
A bonus round was played by the contestant toward the end of the show in which they had to identify ten words. The contestant was shown only three letters for each word (for example, BTR for "betray"), and had only five seconds allotted for each word. Each correct guess was worth $ 25 or, if the
618:
Four rounds were played (six in earlier weeks) and at halftime, either the contestants changed partners or, in the all-star version, each team's partners switched positions. The team with the lowest total elapsed time won the game, and the "civilian" contestant went on to the bonus round. On
610:
Every few seconds a bell would ring and the player would add a letter from the rack to the board. The partner in the booth would shout out answers until the correct one was guessed, at which time the clock stopped, or the time limit of 60 seconds was reached.
635:
In the all-star version, there were nine words. The contestant won a prize based on how many correct answers were given, with the prize for eight always being a new car. The reward for getting all nine was not only the car, but also a trip and $ 5,000.
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The process would be repeated for the other team, using the same answer; the player in the other team's booth could not hear the show's audio when the first team was playing. The team that solved an answer the quickest won a prize.
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The contestants consisted of three celebrities and one civilian. Two celebrities were paired as the "Home Team"; the third celebrity and the civilian contestant made up the opposing team, which was known as "The
Challengers".
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scored) with the first team to reach 10 points winning the game. The civilian contestant won $ 100 multiplied by the difference between the winning and losing scores.
207:. Both shows' objective was for contestant/celebrity teams to guess a given word or phrase in the shortest amount of time with the fewest letters given as possible.
973:
735:) and a replacement of civilian contestants with an all-celebrity format some months earlier, all worked to bring the year-old game to a halt on March 29, with
565:, and broadcast weekday mornings on NBC. The format was altered again later in 1973, this time with all the players being celebrities, with a title change to
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357:) and the existence of an episode taped October 3, 1968, with James as host has effectively debunked the claim. Further, Cullen was at the time based in
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as celebrity players. The pilot likely originated from James's personal archives, where he kept tapes of every show he hosted; it is available on the
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to 12:30 p.m. (11:30 a.m. Central). In this slot, it had to shave off five minutes for a newscast anchored by
819:(which purchased the Heatter-Quigley library in the late-1960s), owns the rights to the show and any future revivals.
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three seconds toward a sixth, much harder, word. If the sixth word was guessed correctly, the contestant won a car.
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led the 15-year-old game to its end, trotted that show off to afternoons and placed its new word-association game
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replaced James later in the show's run; however, only one source has ever stated this (Alex McNeill's
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was a revival that aired on NBC from March 26, 1973, to March 29, 1974, without a specific sponsor.
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from 1973 (March 28, April 5, and April 13) are held in the UCLA Film & Television
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player, in the original version, pairs of celebrities in the second) to guess a word or short
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format (minus the original sponsor) was revived and altered somewhat, re-christened as
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The 1964 pilot and episode #826 (taped
October 3, 1968) of PDQ are held by the
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on NBC's daytime schedule at 10:30 a.m. (9:30 Central) on March 26, 1973.
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The object of the revival was for a team of two players (a contestant and a
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and, lacking a copyright notice, is believed to be in the public domain.
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http://www.radicalsoftware.org/volume2nr2/pdf/VOLUME2NR2_art03.pdf
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in less time than the opposing team. One player would sit in an
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In June 2014, a clip of the April 10, 1973, episode, featuring
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filling in on at least one occasion in James' absence before
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took the honor, dubious to some, of replacing the venerable
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but syndicated in markets where NBC did not own a station.
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719:This cut, along with its competition (CBS'
288:. Unsourced material may be challenged and
989:American English-language television shows
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22:
1009:Television series by Four Star Television
765:. The 1968 episode features Stubby Kaye,
308:Learn how and when to remove this message
979:1969 American television series endings
828:
349:For many years, rumors circulated that
974:1965 American television series debuts
749:and ended its CBS run the same day as
229:was named after its original sponsor,
7:
286:adding citations to reliable sources
1004:Television series by MGM Television
894:UCLA Film & Television Archive
841:UCLA Film & Television Archive
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698:But NBC daytime programming head
815:, as a successor-in-interest to
763:UCLA Film and Television Archive
708:, and on January 7, 1974, moved
681:got the better of things in the
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994:First-run syndicated game shows
925:from the original on 2021-12-19
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82:
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1:
670:at 10:30/9:30 that same day.
915:"Baffle – Episode #12 Clips"
716:before the top of the hour.
328:was the original host, with
579:returned as announcer, and
420:Heatter-Quigley Productions
223:owned-and-operated stations
205:Heatter-Quigley Productions
110:Heatter-Quigley Productions
37:Heatter-Quigley Productions
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161:Baffle and All-Star Baffle
15:
984:1960s American game shows
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158:
673:Generally speaking, the
890:"Baffle search results"
745:fell in the ratings to
342:was the announcer, and
583:was musical director.
738:Celebrity Sweepstakes
837:"PDQ search results"
743:The $ 10,000 Pyramid
667:The $ 10,000 Pyramid
346:provided the music.
282:improve this section
215:Four Star Television
18:PDQ (disambiguation)
16:For other uses, see
921:. Wink Martindale.
722:Search for Tomorrow
695:, fought heartily.
801:, was uploaded to
780:Three episodes of
661:The Price Is Right
142:September 26, 1969
106:Production company
790:Hollywood Squares
692:Hollywood Squares
640:Broadcast history
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795:Peter Marshall
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577:Kenny Williams
575:was the host,
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338:moved to ABC.
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927:. Retrieved
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844:. Retrieved
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771:Arte Johnson
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481:Running time
426:Presented by
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326:Dennis James
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280:Please help
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98:Running time
47:Dennis James
43:Presented by
26:
685:, although
627:Bonus round
581:Mort Garson
573:Dick Enberg
468:of episodes
436:Narrated by
430:Dick Enberg
351:Bill Cullen
203:created by
85:of episodes
53:Narrated by
968:Categories
823:References
799:Rose Marie
675:Dick Clark
521:1974-03-29
511:1973-03-26
476:Production
457:of seasons
416:Created by
390:Bonus game
344:Arlo Hults
330:Monty Hall
201:game shows
198:television
146:1969-09-26
136:1965-09-06
124:Syndicated
93:Production
74:of seasons
33:Created by
809:channel.
793:regulars
747:Jeopardy!
705:Jeopardy!
700:Lin Bolen
593:celebrity
537:(1965–69)
373:Game play
367:Hollywood
321:Personnel
298:July 2012
269:does not
250:(1965–69)
235:drink mix
164:(1973–74)
923:Archived
817:Filmways
683:Nielsens
677:-hosted
658:, whose
605:charades
361:, while
195:American
959:on IMDb
951:on IMDb
919:Youtube
807:YouTube
679:Pyramid
529:Related
519: (
515: –
509: (
504:Release
494:Network
290:removed
275:sources
154:Related
144: (
140: –
134: (
129:Release
121:Network
957:Baffle
929:5 June
899:5 June
846:5 June
782:Baffle
751:Baffle
710:Baffle
687:Baffle
597:phrase
562:Baffle
400:Baffle
241:Baffle
190:Baffle
587:Rules
931:2014
901:2014
848:2014
797:and
769:and
725:and
273:any
271:cite
211:PDQ,
193:are
187:and
88:826+
949:PDQ
873:PDQ
805:'s
729:'s
727:ABC
656:CBS
646:PDQ
557:PDQ
535:PDQ
498:NBC
471:265
466:No.
455:No.
363:PDQ
284:by
248:PDQ
227:PDQ
219:NBC
184:PDQ
83:No.
72:No.
27:PDQ
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