Pass the Buck (game show)
| Pass the Buck | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Game show |
| Created by | Bob Stewart |
| Directed by | Mike Gargiulo |
| Presented by | Bill Cullen |
| Narrated by | Bob Clayton |
| Country of origin | |
| No. of episodes | 65 |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) | Bob Stewart |
| Producer(s) | Sande Stewart |
| Location(s) | Ed Sullivan Theater, New York City |
| Running time | 30 minutes |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | CBS |
| Original run | April 3, 1978 – June 30, 1978 |
Pass the Buck is a game show that aired on CBS television's daytime lineup from April 3 to June 30, 1978. The series was hosted by Bill Cullen and was created by Bob Stewart. Bob Clayton was the announcer.
Contents |
[edit] Gameplay
Four contestants compete to give a list of items that fit into a specific category announced at the beginning of each round. The bank for each game starts at $100. The order of contestants giving answers progresses from left to right and $25 is added to the bank for each correct item.
If at any point an item is repeated or the judges deem a response incorrect, the next contestant in line can eliminate the contestant before him/her by giving an acceptable response. If that contestant also fails to give an acceptable response, the third contestant can eliminate the previous two in the same manner. The fourth contestant can eliminate all three of his/her opponents if they each successively give incorrect responses. However, if all the contestants give incorrect responses, that question is thrown out and play resumes with a new question. A new round begins with a new category after one or more contestants are eliminated from the game.
Play continues until one player is left, with that last player winning the bank and going onto the Fast Bucks bonus round.
[edit] Fast Bucks
The Fast Bucks round is played on a triangular board with four different levels: one box on the top level, two on the second, three on the third, and four on the bottom.
The winning player begins on the bottom level and is given a category with more defined answers (e.g., people from Happy Days, U.S. States). The winner's job is to reveal as many of the four hidden answers on the bottom level as possible in 15 seconds.
If the contestant reveals at least one answer on a level, he/she moves up to the next level. The process is the same for the remaining levels. If at any time the player does not reveal any answers on any level when time expires, the bonus round ends and the player receives $100 for each revealed answer on the board. However, if the player reveals all answers on one level or at least one answer on each of the four levels, he/she wins $5,000.
The same four players stay on the show until one of them wins the $5,000, at which point the other three players leave the show (but keep any money won up to that point). The $5,000 winner faces three new challengers.
[edit] Broadcast history
CBS tried to make amends with packager Stewart for prematurely canceling his The $10,000 Pyramid four years earlier (with the top prize having increased to $20,000 on the ABC version since then) by taking Pass the Buck to replace Goodson-Todman's Tattletales.[citation needed]
The original (unaired) pilots of Pass The Buck were videotaped at the CBS Broadcast Center on West 57th Street in Manhattan during the weekend of May 7–8, 1977; its tapes were then placed on the network's shelves for almost a year until it finally decided to put the show on the daytime schedule.[citation needed]
At the start of its run, Pass The Buck looked to easily dominate Sanford and Son reruns on NBC (the program had already ended in primetime) at 10:00 AM (9:00 Central) and become a stable companion to The Price Is Right, the original version of which Cullen had finished hosting almost 13 years earlier.
However, NBC sprang a surprise three weeks later in the form of its first Goodson-Todman game since 1969, Card Sharks, whose winsome host Jim Perry and thrilling gameplay rendered Pass The Buck tame to many viewers by comparison. Card Sharks doomed Stewart's high hopes when Pass The Buck was canceled and simply ended after 13 weeks on June 30.
In what transpired as a trial run for its eventual syndicated success, Tic-Tac-Dough replaced it the next Monday, but ran only two months; the syndicated version continued until 1986.
[edit] Taping location
The show videotaped during its brief run at the Ed Sullivan Theater in New York City, now the home of The Late Show with David Letterman. It was the last CBS game show taped in New York City until Who Wants To Be a Millionaire debuted in 1999.
[edit] Episode status
The series is believed to be intact.[citation needed] Game Show Network aired episodes of the series between October 11, 1997 and April 18, 1998.