Jackpot: Difference between revisions

m (cleanup categories)
(→‎Game Show Tropes in use:: -> gameshowtropes)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 8:
After a decent three-year run, followed by a one-year hiatus, the show moved to daily syndication with Geoff returning as host; the show ran just over a half-season, and ended when the production company went bankrupt.
----
{{gameshowtropes}}
=== [[Game Show]] Tropes in use: ===
* [[Bonus Round]]: The Super Jackpot.
* [[Bonus Space]]: Double Dollars and Bonus Prize were on all versions. Instant Target Match appeared only during the syndicated run...which, considering that run's budget problems, probably wasn't the best idea.
Line 19:
* [[Progressive Jackpot]]: The entire premise; build a jackpot by answering riddles, then solve another to win it.
----
{{tropelist}}
=== This show provides examples of: ===
* [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]]: As blooper king Kermit Schaefer recalls in one of his books...
{{quote| '''Contestant:''' First you make a sale and you open my drawer. What am I?<br />
'''Expert:''' A hooker!<br />
'''Contestant:''' A "''cash register,''" you louse! }}
* [[Grand Finale]]: The 1975 finale wasn't all that grand, partly due to the format change and partly due to an Expert not being able to pick the Jackpot Question in the second-to-last game when the gallery was whittled down to two. A male Expert then won the final Jackpot of $500 (rather than go for the Super Jackpot of $3,800), after which Geoff did a speech telling viewers to come back the following Monday for a new game helmed by Dick Enberg (''3 For The Money'' ran just eight weeks); Geoff then congratulated the big winners of the week (the biggest was a lady named Diana who won $4,475) before signing off. The last person heard on this version was Tom Snyder, doing a voiceover to promote the night's 90-minute episode of ''The Tomorrow Show'' with [[Jerry Lewis]].