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All-Star Blitz is an American game show that aired on ABC from April 8 to December 20, 1985, with reruns airing on the USA Network from March 31 to December 26, 1986. [2] Peter Marshall was the host and John Harlan was the announcer for the series, which was produced by Merrill Heatter Productions, in association with Peter Marshall Enterprises.
In the News aired at the end of CBS' Saturday morning shows except Muppet Babies and CBS Storybreak; CBS would also move the Pacific Time Zone schedule feed for its Saturday Morning lineup from its 8 AM-2 PM (Eastern Time) pattern to the 7 AM-1 PM (Central Time) pattern. Also, the shows past 1PM were removed in January.
All About Faces (1971–1972) All About the Opposite Sex (1990) All-Star Blitz (1985) All Star Secrets (1979) Almost Anything Goes (1975–1976; page links to British version, which mentions the American one in detail) All-Star Anything Goes (1977–1978) The Almost Impossible Gameshow (2016) Alumni Fun (1963–1966) The Amazing American (1940)
As it stands now, the MLB All-Star Game is headed down an unpredictable path. Mostly out from underneath the baggage of the so-called Steroid Era, the league has struggled to market its brightest ...
All My Children: One Life to Live: General Hospital: The Edge of Night: Local/syndicated programming ABC World News Tonight with Peter Jennings: October Trivia Trap: Family Feud: Ryan's Hope: Loving: Winter Local/syndicated programming Spring All-Star Blitz: Summer Angie: All-Star Blitz: CBS: CBS Early Morning News: The CBS Morning News: Local ...
All-Star Blitz (1985) Baby Game (1968) Bargain Hunters (1987; replaced by Home in 1988) Beat the Clock (1958–1961) The Better Sex (1977–1978) The Big Showdown (1974–1975) Blankety Blanks (1975) Break the Bank (1976) Bruce Forsyth's Hot Streak (1986) Camouflage (1961–1962) Chance for Romance (1958) The Dating Game (1965–1973) Double ...
Quigley died on November 27, 1989. Heatter continued solo and produced new game shows, such as Battlestars, All-Star Blitz, Bargain Hunters, and the 1980s version of High Rollers. On September 28, 1998, Heatter leased the worldwide rights to his solo-developed game shows to King World for a limited time. [4] That option has now expired.
For his film debut in “Blitz,” Elliott Heffernan had a tall order. He had to perform in perilous scenes that found his character running through WWII battlefields as bombs dropped, leaping ...