The Shows
(alpha sort | update sort)

$64,000 Question (2000)
ABC Carnival '74
Across the Board
Baloney
Bamboozle
Be What You Want
Beat The Genius
Beat The Odds (1962)
Beat The Odds (1975)
Bedtime Stories
Big Spenders
Blank Check
Body Language
Body Talk
Bullseye
Call My Bluff
Card Sharks (1996)
Casino
Caught in the Act
Celebrity Billiards
Celebrity Doubletalk
Celebrity Secrets
Celebrity Sweepstakes
Chain Letter (1964)
The Challengers (1974)
Change Partners
Child's Play
Combination Lock (1996)
Comedy Club
Concentration (1985)
The Confidence Game
Cop Out
Countdown (1974)
Countdown (1990)
Crossword
Decisions, Decisions
Dollar a Second
Duel in the Daytime
Fast Friends
$50,000 a Minute
Finish Line (1975)
Finish Line (1990)
Get Rich Quick
Going, Going, Gone!
Head of the Class
High Rollers
Hollywood Squares (1965)
Hollywood Squares (1985)
Hot Numbers
Hot Potato
House to House
How Do You Like Your Eggs?
Jackpot (1984)
Jeopardy (1977)
Jokers Wild
Jumble
Key Witness
Keynotes (1986)
King of the Hill
Let's Make a Deal (1963)
Let's Make a Deal (1990)
M'ama Non M'ama
Match Game (1962)
Match Game (1973)
Match Game (1990)
Match Game (1996)
MatchGame (2008)
Mindreaders
Missing Links
Monday Night QB
Money in the Blank
Money Words
Moneymaze
Monopoly (1987)
Nothing But the Truth
Now You See It (1986)
Oddball
100%
PDQ
Party Line
People On TV
Play For Keeps
Play Your Hunch
Pot O' Gold
Pressure Point
Pyramid (1996)
Pyramid (1997)
A Question of Scruples
Quick as a Flash
Razzle Dazzle
Riddlers
Run For The Money
Says Who?
Scrabble (1990)
Second Guessers
Second Honeymoon
Sharaize
Shoot for the Stars
Shoot the Works
Shopping Spree
Show Me
Showoffs
Simon Says
Smart Alecks
Smart Money
Spellbinders
Spin-Off
Split Decision
Star Cluster
Star Play
Strictly Confidential
TKO
Talking Pictures (1968)
Talking Pictures (1976)
Tell It to Groucho
Temptation (1981)
$10,000 Sweep
The Better Sex
The Big Money
The Big Payoff
The Buck Stops Here
The Choice Is Yours
The Couples Race
The Fashion Show
The Honeymoon Game
The Love Experts
The Plot Thickens
The Price Is Right (1972)
The Waiting Game
Three of a Kind
Tic Tac Dough
Tie-Up
Top Secret
Twenty One (1982)
Twenty Questions
Twisters
Up and Over
We've Got Your Number
What Do You Want?
What's On Your Mind
Wheel of Fortune
Whew!
Whodunit
Whose Baby
Wipeout
Word Grabbers
Write Your Own Ticket
You Bet Your Life (1988)
You Bet Your Life (1991)
You're Putting Me On

The Links

Show a Random Pilot
Show Unreviewed Pilots
Bob Stewart Flow Chart

Dollar a Second


Producer: Chuck Barris
Host: Bob Eubanks
Announcer: Johnny Jacobs
Taping Info: 1981, most likely at KCET-Los Angeles
Made it to Air: This version didn't, but this pilot was a remake of the Jan Murray version that aired on DuMont, NBC and ABC on a weekly prime-time basis between 1953-1957.
Availability: This pilot has aired on GSN and is on the trading circuit.

In the early 50s, a show aired on French Television called Cent Francs a La Seconde. This show was then imported to the United States as Dollar a Second and was hosted by Jan Murray. I have not seen either the French show or the American show from the 50s, but if either of them was anything like this pilot, they were clearly the worst show on television ever.

Apparently running out of ideas, Chuck Barris tried several revivals in the 70s and early 80s. Another Jan Murray show, Treasure Hunt, proved to be a moderate success, if getting profiled on 60 Minutes is considered a success. A remake of the 60s drawing game Camouflage was an absolute disaster, exiting the syndication market after just 13 weeks. So, Bob Eubanks was dusted off from his Newlywed Game experience and his own recent All-Star Secrets to helm this game. To keep the recycling going, the theme for this episode was eventually used on the 80's version of Treasure Hunt.

The game is a simple stunt show, but full of the humiliation not expected on TV for at least 20 years. The first contestant was dressed in a loose track suit and was expected to jog in place while answering questions. Another contestant was forced to wear a boy's outfit from the early 1900s. Each contestant would earn a "dollar a second" as long as they remained in the game. The player would generally answer questions with some sort of stunt, such as hitting their feet together for the correct answer of how many legs a particular animal has.

Answering a question incorrectly forced a player to "pay the penalty", which varied from getting doused with water or trying to build a pie before it fell from a conveyor belt. Additionally, there was an "outside event", when completed, would cause the contestant to forfeit their money and leave the game. The first outside event was a player at a slot machine and was considered completed if they player won the jackpot (which she did, forcing the poor guy in the Buster Brown suit to lose). The other outside event was a run scoring in a baseball game, specifically a 8-5 San Francisco victory over the New York Mets from June 18, 1980 with John "The [convicted on two] Count[s, one each of assault and criminal trespass]" Montefusco getting the win. (boxscore information courtesy Retrosheet, criminal information courtesy The United States Court of Appeals, District of New Jersey, 01-3276).

This was painful to watch and was a sad commentary if people would be willing to humiliate themselves on television for a mere $500. Of course, I have been proved wrong, since the contestants on Fear Factor tended to do much worse. Additionally, the pilot alludes to the fact that this would be a daily show, since there was a "can you come back tomorrow" question. I don't know how they would have come up with new humiliations day after day, although Jerry Springer has been on for over a decade, so I should really stop trying to underestimate the shame of the American populace.


It's Dollar a Second!

Here's Bob with the first contestant.

Here's the first outside event, somebody playing a slot machine.

Our first contestant must pay the penalty, which is being groped by a production assistant dressed as a robot.

Do you have any shame?

Here's the other outside event, which I am proudly using without the express written consent of Major League Baseball.


This pilot has been viewed 13392 times since October 6, 2008 and was last modified on Dec 12, 2009 14:46 ET
Feedback? Contact me at usgs-pilot at the usgameshows dot net domain