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Play Your Hunch was an American game show first hosted by Merv Griffin from 1958 to 1962 and then hosted by Gene Rayburn and finally by Robert Q. Lewis until 1963. [1] The announcers for the show were, respectively, Johnny Olson, Wayne Howell and Roger Tuttle. In 2001, Play Your Hunch was ranked #43 on TV Guide's "50 Greatest Game Shows of All ...
The Newlywed Game (Eubanks and Kroeger) Now You See It (Narz) Number Please; Password (Ludden) Password Plus (Ludden and Kennedy) Play Your Hunch; The Price Is Right (Cullen) Richard Simmons' Dream Maker; Say When!! Showoffs; Split Personality (1959 game show) Split Second (Hall) Strike It Rich; Super Password; Talk About; Trivia Trap
[6]: 372 Olson also was the announcer for Play Your Hunch. [7]: 288-289 Olson was host of Homemaker's Jamboree, an audience-participation game show that debuted on WJZ-TV on October 5, 1952. [8] Beginning in 1960, Olson announced the CBS prime-time panel game To Tell the Truth.
Pick Your Face: Nine Network: 1999–2003 Play Your Cards Right: Seven Network: 1984–1985 Play Your Hunch: Nine Network: 1962–1964 Playcards: Network 10: 1969 Pointless: Network 10: 2018–2019 Pot Luck: Network 10: 1987 Pot of Gold: Network 10: 1975–1978 The Pressure Pak Show: Seven Network: 1957–1958 The Price Is Right (1957–1963 ...
Griffin gained attention when Tonight Show host Jack Paar accidentally walked onto the set of Play Your Hunch during a live broadcast. Griffin persuaded Paar to stay for a spontaneous interview. At the time, both shows shared Studio 6B at Rockefeller Center, with Play Your Hunch airing live in the morning and The Tonight Show taping later in ...
This category is for television programming, notably game shows, created by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions, later Mark Goodson Productions. See also: Category:Television series by Jonathan Goodson Productions
His YouTube channel "Paint", an account gifted to him by his brother, [6] was created on December 27, 2005, and has over 4.63 million subscribers as of May 2023. Cozart's career in video started in middle school as a way to avoid writing papers, offering to make videos instead, and he continued this through high school.
In 1952, he settled into his most enduring game-show role as host of ABC's The Name's the Same. [5] The show featured a celebrity panel trying to guess the identities of contestants who had famous names: Napoleon Bonaparte, Marilyn Monroe, Virginia Beach, etc. On a few occasions, contestants appeared on the show bearing the name Robert Q. Lewis.