Misplaced Pages

The Big Game (American game show)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article is about the television game show that aired in 1958. For other uses, see Big Game. 1958 American TV series or program
The Big Game
GenreGame show
Directed byBill Bennington
Dick Weinberg
Presented byTom Kennedy
Narrated byWendell Niles
Johnny Jacobs
Country of originUnited States
Production
ProducerJackson Stanley
Production locationsNBC Studio 4, Burbank, CA
Running timeapprox. 22-26 minutes
Original release
NetworkNBC
ReleaseJune 13 (1958-06-13) –
September 19, 1958 (1958-09-19)

The Big Game is a game show created by Jackson Stanley Productions, which ran on NBC in prime time from June 13 to September 19, 1958. It was hosted by Tom Kennedy, marking his first national hosting gig. Wendell Niles was the original announcer, later replaced by Johnny Jacobs.

Game play

The game is based on the classic game of Battleship, but with an African safari theme.

Two contestants, or "hunters", competed. Each hunter was given a 5-by-5-square "jungle grid" in which to hide three magnetic "animals": a 2-square-long hippo, a 3-square-long tiger and a 4-square-long alligator. Unlike a traditional Battleship game, animals can be placed on the grid diagonally as well as vertically or horizontally. Each contestant's jungle grid is hidden from view of their opponent.

The host asks various general knowledge questions (most dealing with song titles or spelling), each worth between 3 and 6 "shots" to be taken on the opponent's jungle grid. Hitting all the squares an animal occupied (regardless of size) "knocked out" the animal, earning money for the player. The first "knock out" was worth $100; the second earned an additional $400; and the third earned a further $1500 and the win. The winner received the $2,000 for knocking out all 3 animals, minus the money that the loser earned for knocking out any of the winner's animals. The winner then stays on to face a new opponent.

References

  1. David Schwartz, Fred Wostbrock and Steve Ryan, The Encyclopedia of TV Game $hows, 3rd ed., Checkmark Books, 1999, pp. 19.

External links

Categories: