[On March 30, 1964, the legendary game show Jeopardy debuted. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that classic and a handful of other game show histories! Add your thoughts, obviously in the form of a question, in comments!]
On
AmericanStudies contexts for three generations of defining, deal-making game
shows.
1)
The Price is Right (1956): There’s
no way to talk about The Price is Right
(the original version—starting in 1972 it was rebooted as The New Price is Right which remains
on the air to this day) without connecting it to the late 1950s quiz show
scandals about which I wrote on Tuesday. Partly because the stakes were
significantly lower on Price than on
those contemporary game shows, and partly (and relatedly) because the
contestants seemed much more like ordinary people than the ostensibly
super-smart quiz show contestants, Price not
only survived the surge in cancellations that plagued the game show genre
during and after those scandals, but really thrived as a contrast to those
shows. To this day daytime
game shows tend to feature more “everyday” contestants and tones compared
to the heightened drama of prime-time shows, and that trend is closely tied to
this prominent early example.
2)
Let’s Make a Deal (1963): The
blossoming popularity of The Price is
Right in the early 1960s was bound to produce competitors, and one of the
first and most successful was Let’s Make
a Deal. Deal was pretty similar
to Price, and the two (in their respective
rebooted forms) have really endured as the two most successful daytime game
shows. But in my experience with them, I would say that (at least in its first
1960s iteration) Deal leaned even a
bit more fully into a contestant pool that paralleled one of its principal intended
audiences: traditional, stay-at-home housewives. Just look at the June Cleaver
pearls on the first contestant in the 1963 debut episode hyperlinked above! Daytime
TV has always been closely tied
to images (and certainly also realities, but I would say even more images)
of that community, and we can see them reflected in a daytime game show like
this one.
3)
Deal
or No Deal (2005): Deal or No Deal
wasn’t the first primetime deal-making game show, but I would argue it was and
remains one of the most popular, especially in its early years. Interestingly,
a great deal of Deal (or No Deal) closely mimicked daytime
shows like (Let’s Make a) Deal, as
illustrated most succinctly by the bevy of
attractive and seductively-dressed women
supporting the male host. But while (Let’s
Make a) Deal often featured one such female co-host at a time, Deal (or No Deal) featured twenty, and
that was kind of the whole deal with this primetime show: very similar to the
daytime ones, but with everything turned up to 11. Partly that’s just the
difference between daytime and primetime TV, but I would say it also reflects
the early 21st century’s increasing sense of the need for individual
entertainment options to stand out amidst an ever-more-crowded cultural landscape.
But one thing I know—as long as there are TVs, somewhere one will be showing a
deal-making game show.
Last game
show histories tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Other game shows you’d highlight?
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