Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Play the Percentages

 Play the Percentages
type
TVTItem
 Play the Percentages
label
Play the Percentages
 Play the Percentages
page
PlayThePercentages
 Play the Percentages
comment
Short-lived Game Show created by Jack Barry/Dan Enright and hosted by Geoff Edwards which ran from January 7 to September 12, 1980.The original format pitted two married couples against each other. They were asked a general-knowledge question which had been asked of 100 people, and each team offered a guess as to how many people they think got it right. Whoever was closer got points equivalent to however many indeed got it right, and could challenge for the remainder (e.g., if 40% of the people in the survey got it right, the next question would offer 60 points) if they answered the question correctly themselves. Alternatively, they could force the opposition to give an answer. Play continued until one team reached 300 points. If anyone guessed a percentage on the nose, they won the game right then and there.Partway through the show's run, the maingame was completely overhauled and basically became a clone of 21. Here, two solo contestants were pitted against each other and asked questions in three different categories, one of which was always "Pot Luck". Question values ranged from 10 to 90 (that being the percentage of the survey that got the answer wrong), with a goal of 250. Initially, only Pot Luck questions were jump-ins, but this was later changed so that all three categories were jump-ins.As per B&E custom, five wins awarded a new car.
 Play the Percentages
fetched
2023-10-24T05:00:40Z
 Play the Percentages
parsed
2023-10-24T05:00:40Z
 Play the Percentages
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Play the Percentages / int_18d15922
type
Title Drop
 Play the Percentages / int_18d15922
comment
Title Drop: Geoff would begin each round by saying "Let's play the percentages."
 Play the Percentages / int_18d15922
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_18d15922
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_18d15922
 Play the Percentages / int_1c79ae8c
type
Those Two Guys
 Play the Percentages / int_1c79ae8c
comment
Those Two Guys: Geoff and Judge Von Erik.
 Play the Percentages / int_1c79ae8c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_1c79ae8c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_1c79ae8c
 Play the Percentages / int_26589ace
type
Show the Folks at Home
 Play the Percentages / int_26589ace
comment
Show the Folks at Home: The answer was occasionally displayed at the bottom of the screen during the first format.
 Play the Percentages / int_26589ace
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_26589ace
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_26589ace
 Play the Percentages / int_47696b0
type
Progressive Jackpot
 Play the Percentages / int_47696b0
comment
Progressive Jackpot: Originally began at $25,000, then reduced to $10,000. Both iterations added $1,000 per day until won. This was dropped when the "solo players" format began.
 Play the Percentages / int_47696b0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_47696b0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_47696b0
 Play the Percentages / int_5fcb3c79
type
Golden Snitch
 Play the Percentages / int_5fcb3c79
comment
Golden Snitch: Guessing the percentage on the nose was an automatic win during the first week. Later on, the jackpot was moved from the Bonus Round to the main game, where anyone who guessed an exact percentage won it and the game.
 Play the Percentages / int_5fcb3c79
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_5fcb3c79
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_5fcb3c79
 Play the Percentages / int_68d43ebc
type
Game Show Host
 Play the Percentages / int_68d43ebc
comment
Game Show Host: Geoff Edwards, best known for Treasure Hunt.
 Play the Percentages / int_68d43ebc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_68d43ebc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_68d43ebc
 Play the Percentages / int_735d5041
type
Rules Spiel
 Play the Percentages / int_735d5041
comment
Rules Spiel: Perhaps a necessity, due to the frequent changes.
 Play the Percentages / int_735d5041
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_735d5041
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_735d5041
 Play the Percentages / int_7d7a7d0f
type
Opening Narration
 Play the Percentages / int_7d7a7d0f
comment
Opening Narration: Two versions.
 Play the Percentages / int_7d7a7d0f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_7d7a7d0f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_7d7a7d0f
 Play the Percentages / int_95496a1d
type
The Announcer
 Play the Percentages / int_95496a1d
comment
The Announcer: Jay Stewart, best known for Let's Make a Deal. He was replaced by Bob Hilton.
 Play the Percentages / int_95496a1d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_95496a1d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_95496a1d
 Play the Percentages / int_9edfdf1f
type
Studio Audience
 Play the Percentages / int_9edfdf1f
comment
Studio Audience
 Play the Percentages / int_9edfdf1f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_9edfdf1f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_9edfdf1f
 Play the Percentages / int_a6cda066
type
Rule of Three
 Play the Percentages / int_a6cda066
comment
Version 1: Involved choosing a target number and then another series of general-knowledge questions with three answers. One was not given by anyone in the survey, one was the most popular, and one just got some points. Each point was worth $10, choosing the 0% answer ended the round, and getting to 100 won $2,500. If any answer was worth the target number, the couple won a progressive jackpot. When the jackpot moved to the main game, the endgame added a further step; if the answer that had some points but wasn't the top answer was chosen, the couple had to pick the top answer to continue.
 Play the Percentages / int_a6cda066
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_a6cda066
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_a6cda066
 Play the Percentages / int_ae3d6438
type
Deadpan Snarker
 Play the Percentages / int_ae3d6438
comment
Deadpan Snarker / The Ghost: Judge Von Erik. His face was finally shown on the finale, and was revealed to have a beard.
 Play the Percentages / int_ae3d6438
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_ae3d6438
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_ae3d6438
 Play the Percentages / int_b89ed08a
type
Obvious Rule Patch
 Play the Percentages / int_b89ed08a
comment
Obvious Rule Patch: Every single change.
 Play the Percentages / int_b89ed08a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_b89ed08a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_b89ed08a
 Play the Percentages / int_c3943bf3
type
Pilot
 Play the Percentages / int_c3943bf3
comment
Pilot: Taped November 2, 1979. Info here.
 Play the Percentages / int_c3943bf3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_c3943bf3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_c3943bf3
 Play the Percentages / int_d3435454
type
Bonus Round
 Play the Percentages / int_d3435454
comment
Bonus Round: Version 1: Involved choosing a target number and then another series of general-knowledge questions with three answers. One was not given by anyone in the survey, one was the most popular, and one just got some points. Each point was worth $10, choosing the 0% answer ended the round, and getting to 100 won $2,500. If any answer was worth the target number, the couple won a progressive jackpot. When the jackpot moved to the main game, the endgame added a further step; if the answer that had some points but wasn't the top answer was chosen, the couple had to pick the top answer to continue. Version 2: Six survey answers, five of which totaled up to 100%. Picking the five answers that made this total (again at $10/point) won $2,500 (later changed to the standard $1,000 and a prize package).
 Play the Percentages / int_d3435454
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_d3435454
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_d3435454
 Play the Percentages / int_e4ba33fc
type
Disaster Dominoes
 Play the Percentages / int_e4ba33fc
comment
Disaster Dominoes: The bonus round display breaking after the first week and B&E being too lazy to fix it ended up turning into an overhaul of the entire show.
 Play the Percentages / int_e4ba33fc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_e4ba33fc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_e4ba33fc
 Play the Percentages / int_f2877d9e
type
IncrediblyLamePun
 Play the Percentages / int_f2877d9e
comment
Incredibly Lame Pun: One question had the answer of "metronome", to which Geoff said he always thought a metronome was a "short little guy with a beard that lived under the subway in Paris".
 Play the Percentages / int_f2877d9e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_f2877d9e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_f2877d9e
 Play the Percentages / int_name
type
ItemName
 Play the Percentages / int_name
comment
 Play the Percentages / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Play the Percentages / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Play the Percentages / int_name
 Play the Percentages / int_name
itemName
Play the Percentages

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Game Show / int_acb839a3
 Play the Percentages
hasFeature
Progressive Jackpot / int_acb839a3