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The Code is a British television game show that aired on BBC One from 18 April 2016 to 21 April 2017. It is hosted by Matt Allwright and Lesley-Anne Brewis. An individual contestant, or a team of two or three people, attempts to unlock a safe containing a cash prize by answering a series of questions that steadily increase in difficulty.
Take It All (game show) Take It or Leave It (radio show) That's My Jam; Three for the Money; Three on a Match (game show) Tic-Tac-Dough; Time Machine (game show) To Say the Least; To Tell the Truth; Treasure Hunt (American game show) Truth or Consequences; Twenty Questions (American game show) Twenty-One (game show) Two for the Money (game show)
Hold That Camera (1950; changed from a game show to a variety series shortly into the run) Hold That Note (1957) Hole in the Wall (2008–2009, 2010–2012) Holey Moley (2019–2022) Hollywood Calling (1949–1950) Hollywood Connection (1977–1978; pilot taped in 1975) The Hollywood Game (1992; began as a 1991 pilot hosted by Peter Allen)
Cheap Cheap Cheap is a British television game show produced by Hat Trick Productions for Channel 4, presented and created by Noel Edmonds.Billed as "a game show that thinks it's a sitcom", the show takes place in a fictional general store and centres on a game show, hosted by the store owner (Edmonds).
The Press Your Luck scandal was contestant Michael Larson's 1984 record-breaking win of $110,237 (equivalent to $323,296 in 2023) on the American game show Press Your Luck. An Ohio man with a penchant for get-rich-quick schemes , Larson studied the game show and discovered that its ostensibly randomized game board was actually only five ...
I Can See Your Voice is an American television mystery music game show series based on the South Korean program of the same title.It features the guest artist and contestant(s) attempting to eliminate bad singers from the group assisted by clues and celebrity panel, ending with the last remaining mystery singer through a duet performance by one of the guest artists.
Panel shows are particularly popular in the United Kingdom, where they have found continued success since the BBC adapted its first radio panel shows from classic parlor games. [3] Perhaps the earliest UK panel show is the BBC radio adaptation of Twenty Questions, which debuted on 28 February 1947.
For two shows in July 1965, the nighttime version experimented with a "championship match" format, in which the winners of games 1 and 2 would return to compete against each other in the final game. Also in 1965, the show adopted an annual "Tournament of Champions" where contestants on the daytime version who won both their games were invited ...