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Pyramid

 Pyramid
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TVTItem
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Pyramid
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For the page about pyramidal buildings, see Build Like an Egyptian."Describe for your partner these things associated with Pyramid. These are things associated with Pyramid. Ready? Go."Pyramid is a game show format that began on March 26, 1973 as The $10,000 Pyramid. It was created by Bob Stewart, also the mind behind Password. Unlike Password, however, the Pyramid franchise was largely produced by Stewart himself (with assistance from son Sande in the 1980s). It has a format similar to Password in that a contestant is trying to describe a word to a celebrity partner, but instead of being a one-word clue, the contestant has to give several clues to a set number of words (usually seven) within a time limit, and using virtually any form of verbal clue-giving. Whoever got more points in six rounds moved on to the Bonus Round, called the "Winner's Circle", in which the game was essentially reversed. In the Winner's Circle, the clue giver is shown six categories, and has to give a list of objects that fit each category.The show lasted in several forms in every year from 1973 to 1988, generally increasing the dollar amount in the title with each new version. What started as $10,000 became $20,000, $25,000, $50,000, and even $100,000 over time. Dick Clark hosted most of the 1973–88 versions, except for the original $25,000 version which was hosted from 1974-79 by Bill Cullen. A $100,000 revival was syndicated in 1991 with John Davidson as host. What's currently Sony Pictures Television acquired Stewart's company shortly afterwards, and after failed pilots during the 1996-2000 period (one of which, Pyramid Rocks, had a rock music theme), the show returned from 2002 to 2004 as just Pyramid, with Donny Osmond as host. (For this reason, it's more commonly known as Donnymid.) This new version introduced several rule changes that many fans of the show disliked, lax writing and judging, often-clueless celebrities, and a hyperactive host.Two $1,000,000 pilots were taped in New York in 2009 (one with Tim Vincent as host, the other with Dean Cain) for CBS; they passed it up for a revival of Let's Make a Deal. They tried to pitch it again in 2010, but lost out again, this time in favor of The Talk, a mother-oriented talk show fronted by (among others) Big Brother host Julie Chen.note Chen is also the wife of CBS executive Les Moonves, leading to suggestions that nepotism was the cause Three more pilots, now back to $25,000 (with a $500,000 tournament planned) and with Andy Richter as host, were taped for TBS on June 22 and 23, 2010.After having been trapped in Development Hell for eight years, GSN finally raised the curtain on a new edition, now simply titled The Pyramid, on September 3, 2012, with Mike Richards (not Kramer, but the executive producer of The Price Is Right and future executive producer of Jeopardy!) as host. This version (much like the $1,000,000 pilots) served as a back-to-basics refresh after the massive changes with Donnymid, and included a unique way of determining the Winner's Circle prize (see below). The series lasted only 40 episodes before being cancelled due to low ratings.A revival of the $100,000 format premiered on ABC on June 26, 2016, hosted by Michael Strahan, offering top prizes of $50,000 and $100,000 in the Winner's Circle. Due to his commitments to Good Morning America, the show returned not only to ABC, but also to New York, having taped there from 1973 until 1982note (with the exception of a brief stint in the 70s at Television City) and for the 2009 CBS pilots. The revival is part of ABC's "Sunday Fun and Games" block alongside the returning Celebrity Family Feud and an also-NY-based reboot of Match Game hosted by Alec Baldwin; all three shows, plus the revival of To Tell the Truth, have been renewed by ABC for summer 2017 (also joined by a revival of The Gong Show).In 2022, the series relocated back to Los Angeles, though Strahan continues to host. (Strahan also works on the "NFL on Fox" during football season in Los Angeles).Not to be confused with the 1988 documentary of the same name.
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DBTropes
 Pyramid / int_1ba17583
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The Ghost
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The Ghost: The judge, who would occasionally respond to Dick's (or occasionally the contestant's) questions with a bell or buzzer for "yes" or "no", respectively. Most commonly, said questions would be after-the-fact suggestions ("Would x have been an acceptable clue?") or the host asking if the correct answer came before the time's-up buzzer (even on Donnymid). Other times, the dings and buzzes were for the sake of being funny, such as Tony Randall getting a buzzer for "Millions of people do want to know [where I'm touring next]" or Lynn Herring getting a bell for asking "Can I come back next week?" This, after Dick Cavett suggested that the Winner's Circle start at the top and work down to the lower three squares and Clark said that it's always had to be bottom to top: Interestingly, the Dick Clark-era judge did appear on stage once in 1983.
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Pyramid / int_1ba17583
 Pyramid / int_1bdbbbae
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The Klutz
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The Klutz: Dick Clark, as professional as he was, had his moments, in particular when he transposed the numbers of new cars offered on the program multiple times (calling one a 1958 model, instead of 1985, for example). Once while closing the show, Dick Clark got tongue tied while describing the total winnings for the contestants. To play into it, he continued babbling incoherently all the way through his traditional sign off.
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Pyramid / int_1bdbbbae
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SignOffCatchPhrase
 Pyramid / int_1e992e27
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At least once, Mike Richards used Dick Clark's Sign Off Catch Phrase to end an episode of The Pyramid (Clark had died earlier in the year).
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Pyramid / int_1e992e27
 Pyramid / int_224c9aef
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Laugh Track
 Pyramid / int_224c9aef
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Laugh Track: The Clark, Cullen and Davidson versions used an applause track whenever a contestant correctly guessed a category in the Winner's Circle. Donnymid used a common stock sound effect of a cheering crowd for sweetening.
 Pyramid / int_224c9aef
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Pyramid / int_224c9aef
 Pyramid / int_26ac510e
type
Mythology Gag
 Pyramid / int_26ac510e
comment
Mythology Gag: Previews of the $100,000 Tournament episodes of Donnymid referred to the show as The $100,000 Pyramid. At least once, Mike Richards used Dick Clark's Sign Off Catch Phrase to end an episode of The Pyramid (Clark had died earlier in the year). Early promos for ABC $100,000 referred to it as The New $100,000 Pyramid; this was what the John Davidson version was called. Season 2 of ABC $100,000 brought back the past winners montage in the intro (albeit far shorter).
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Pyramid / int_26ac510e
 Pyramid / int_26d1f65f
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Verbal Tic
 Pyramid / int_26d1f65f
comment
Verbal Tic: Many contestants, especially in the front game, throw in lots of ands and ums before giving clues to the next word. One contestant on New $25,000 was the giver for the Winner's Circle, and she constantly said, "And this is..." before giving a list, probably mixing up the gameplay of the two rounds.
 Pyramid / int_26d1f65f
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Pyramid / int_26d1f65f
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Hurricane of Puns
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Hurricane of Puns: The main-game category titles had lots of them, though moreso on Donnymid ("Going to Israel? Tel Aviv I said hi.").
 Pyramid / int_2937826d
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Pyramid / int_2937826d
 Pyramid / int_2d4a6d8c
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Sophisticated as Hell
 Pyramid / int_2d4a6d8c
comment
Sophisticated as Hell: Dick, quite often. A few celebrity guests took the game seriously but loved to ham it up between rounds... especially Tony Randall:
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Pyramid / int_2d4a6d8c
 Pyramid / int_2e5e04c0
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Must Make Amends
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Must Make Amends: On many occasions, the judge would overturn a ruling after the fact. One of the first known examples comes from June 1973: Richard Deacon is faced with "Things You Wrap" in the Winner's Circle, and the judge decides not to accept the contestant's responses of "Things You Unwrap" or "Things You Put Wrapping Paper On". After the commercial break, the judge overturns the ruling and has Richard play a new box in the same amount of time he had left when "Things You Wrap" was first revealed. He successfully conveys the new category, "Things at a Party", and his contestant wins the $10,000.
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Pyramid / int_2e5e04c0
 Pyramid / int_33ca811a
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Game-Breaking Bug
 Pyramid / int_33ca811a
comment
Game-Breaking Bug: In the event of a tie, the teams originally played extra rounds until one outscored the other. One game had three tiebreaker rounds because the teams kept getting 7/7 in the tiebreakers at the very last second. Finally, the tiebreaker was changed so that whichever team got its seven words faster won. Still, New $25,000 once got a double tiebreaker due to both teams getting their seventh tiebreaker word on the buzzer. On one episode of New $25,000 from 1984, the first game had three tiebreakers due to the first two both ending after only six words. Cue a ton of editing in the opening segment; the third tiebreaker being played in the same segment as the first Winner's Circle; and a mad dash to finish the rest of the game (made worse by the second half also requiring a tiebreaker round). The punchline? Because they were both 21/21 games, the same contestant got two Dodge Omnis out of the deal!
 Pyramid / int_33ca811a
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Pyramid / int_33ca811a
 Pyramid / int_38c493f1
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End-of-Series Awareness
 Pyramid / int_38c493f1
comment
End-of-Series Awareness: The last Winner's Circle box on the last episode of $20,000 was "Things That Come to an End". Bill Cullen gave the clue "This show".
 Pyramid / int_38c493f1
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Celebrity Edition
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comment
Celebrity Edition: In the later seasons of the CBS $25,000 version of the show, all celebrity teams would compete during special weeks for charity.
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Pyramid / int_3a4f1e40
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Unintentionally Unwinnable
 Pyramid / int_3ac5110b
comment
Unintentionally Unwinnable: Clue-givers can accidentally render the Winner's Circle unwinnable with an illegal clue (although they can still rack up money from individual subjects), but the subjects themselves have on occasion fallen into this trope. One example in 1985 had the final Winner's Circle subject written as "You Pay Interest On It", only for the judges to immediately invalidate the first clue of "a loan". During the commercial break, the judges reviewed it and decided that virtually any clue given would've violated the spirit of the illegal-wording rule. After an apology from Dick Clark, they restarted Winner's Circle with the time remaining when the contestant reached the final subject and with a new topic ("Things That Have A Pattern"); happily, the contestant won after the first clue.
 Pyramid / int_3ac5110b
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Pyramid / int_3ac5110b
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Schizo Tech
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comment
Schizo Tech: ABC $100,000 has an interesting case: trilons are back, but now use flatscreen monitors instead of slides. Similarly, the 1991 $100,000 had the front-game trilons replaced with monitors early on, and the 2009 pilots had pure trilons again.
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Pyramid / int_3c5ae1a1
 Pyramid / int_405f6f52
type
Recycled Soundtrack
 Pyramid / int_405f6f52
comment
Recycled Soundtrack: The "plonk" timer in the Winner's Circle was also heard on Go and Sale of the Century, despite the latter being owned by Reg Grundy.
 Pyramid / int_405f6f52
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Pyramid / int_405f6f52
 Pyramid / int_40cc0c7e
type
Bittersweet Ending
 Pyramid / int_40cc0c7e
comment
Bittersweet Ending: Donnymid, if both of the day's contestants won $10,000. Yes, you each won $10,000, but you both failed to get into the Tournament and nobody comes back tomorrow!
 Pyramid / int_40cc0c7e
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 Pyramid / int_47696b0
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Progressive Jackpot
 Pyramid / int_47696b0
comment
Progressive Jackpot: $20,000 had a rather odd form of this, which was arguably a major design flaw in the prize structure. The first attempt at the Winner's Circle was for $10,000; a second attempt by the same player was worth $15,000, and a third (or later) attempt was for $20,000. (Kind of a weird example, since players were retired on a Winner's Circle win, so the only way to win the full $20,000 was to lose the Circle at least twice.) The Pyramid based your jackpot on how many perfect 7s you had in the game ($10,000 base, another $5,000 for each perfect 7. Get the maximum 21 points, and you're playing for $25,000.)
 Pyramid / int_47696b0
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Pyramid / int_47696b0
 Pyramid / int_49d59be9
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Scenery Porn
 Pyramid / int_49d59be9
comment
Scenery Porn: The ABC $100,000 set is very cool and slick looking. Monitors are now integrated into the desks for the words and score counters, the backdrop is mainly made of glass panels with small neon pyramid shapes within, and the monitor trilons (see below). The walls and panels color change with each part, and when the Winner's Circle begins, everything turns red and black (including the space around the Winner's Circle boxes, now a video wall) and a set of spotlights swirl around onto the Circle before dimming.
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Pop-Cultural Osmosis Failure
 Pyramid / int_4ae4e6e1
comment
Popcultural Osmosis Failure: This episode has LeVar Burton giving "smoothie" for "Things that blend", which confused both the contestant and Dick as neither of them knew what a smoothie was.
 Pyramid / int_4ae4e6e1
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*Bleep*-dammit!
 Pyramid / int_4c70b4a9
comment
*Bleep*-dammit!: Subverted. Vicki Lawrence said "asshole" twice on the 80s versions, and the entire word was censored on both instances.
 Pyramid / int_4c70b4a9
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Pyramid / int_4c70b4a9
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Downer Ending
 Pyramid / int_4e3d253b
comment
Downer Ending: Countless times, a team has thought they won the big money in the Winner's Circle, only for the judge to overturn it during the celebration or after a commercial break. In this example from $25,000, Howard Morton gave "An incoming plane" for "Things that arrive." After a break, Dick hauled out the dictionary and pointed out that, since "incoming" and "arriving" are listed as synonyms, the win had to be overturned. Other times, the receiving contestant gave the correct answer to the last box on the buzzer — the ruling in such a case is that if the "essence" of the answer came before the buzzer, it's a win. It resulted in a win on "Things made of flannel" in one episode, but didn't pan out on "Things with a strap" or "Things made of aluminum" (which had the bonus of them even playing back the tape to demonstrate). Subverted during one John Davidson-era tournament. Hillary Bailey Smith thought she won $100,000 for her contestant when she guessed "Things That Stick"... but since they were looking for "Things That Stick Out", she wasn't credited with the win. However, that same contestant later made it back to the Winner's Circle where she won $100,000 with Barry Jenner giving the clues. ABC $100,000 Pyramid, July 24, 2016. The Winner's Circle round was not going so well, and Natasha Lyonne (this version had the contestant give the clues) was struggling throughout the whole round. When they went back to "Things You Hit", things went from okay to bad to worse with these clues: A Baseball, A Person, Your Wife. That last clue had the whole audience turn against the player, the first time in Pyramid history this has happened. Not helping his case was how he tried to justify that clue.
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Pyramid / int_4e3d253b
 Pyramid / int_4f4372e9
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Early-Installment Weirdness
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comment
Early-Installment Weirdness: Typically of the genre, whenever a new format comes up, the gameplay's going to be a little rocky at first. Some early rounds had entire phrases instead of one- or two-word answers. There were also eight words per round, later cut down to seven. Once the players became more familiar with the format, 7/7 rounds became increasingly common; by $100,000, it was rare not to see a 7/7. However, in recent incarnations, the level of play has slipped backwards as teams rarely got 7/7 (6/6 for Donnymid, although that could be attributed to only having 20 seconds). Judging in the Winner's Circle wasn't as strict at first. Some prepositional phrases slipped by, as did hand gestures. One team even got credit for saying "Things You Iron" when the box said "Things You Press", which certainly wouldn't have gotten by in the mid-1980s. For the first few weeks (the "keep your eye on this spot" intro), there was a "flat" that would raise and expose the Winner's Circle board at the top of the show as the theme music kicked in. It was removed by mid-June as they often had difficulty raising it on cue, and replaced shortly after that with the familiar "montage of past winners" open. During the first year or so, the lights dimmed during the Winner's Circle round, something that wouldn't return until the Television City era. It took a while to figure out how to signal a Winner's Circle win. On the earliest $10,000 episodes, the camera pulled back from the Circle to show the flashing $10,000 sign. During early episodes of the ABC run (and early Cullen $25,000 episodes), there were brief cuts to a close-up of the flashing sign. After the grand prize was increased to $20,000, they began to use a flashing on-screen graphic of the amount won. This remained the standard for the rest of the classic era. In Season 1 of the Strahan version, an additional, but unplanned game was taped on the fly, meaning that there was one extra game than the season allotted. Said game later aired as part of Season 2, after which many aesthetic changes had been implemented. The leftover game stuck out like a sore thumb with its darker lighting and the lack of a visible clock in the Winner's Circle.
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Do Well, But Not Perfect
 Pyramid / int_5049f19d
comment
$20,000 had a rather odd form of this, which was arguably a major design flaw in the prize structure. The first attempt at the Winner's Circle was for $10,000; a second attempt by the same player was worth $15,000, and a third (or later) attempt was for $20,000. (Kind of a weird example, since players were retired on a Winner's Circle win, so the only way to win the full $20,000 was to lose the Circle at least twice.)
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GuessTheVerb
 Pyramid / int_51645dbe
comment
Guess The Verb: The sixth category in the Winners' Circle usually ends up being this (and sometimes the fifth one as well).
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Bookends
 Pyramid / int_53224e46
comment
Bookends: The first male celebrity on The $20,000 Pyramid (January 19-23, 1976) was Bill Cullen. The last male celebrity on that version of the show (June 23-27, 1980) was... Bill Cullen.
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Moon Logic Puzzle
 Pyramid / int_558ae6f6
comment
Moon Logic Puzzle: Present in the fifth episode from 1973. "Famous Last Words" was Exactly What It Says on the Tin. It started out easily enough with "Amen", "That's all folks", and "You're out", but once it got to "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn", "My kingdom for a horse", "From sea to shining sea" (the latter two of which were immediately skipped) and "shall not perish from this earth"...let's just say answers longer than two words rarely showed up afterward. A $20,000 Winner's Circle (week of December 11, 1978) had quite a few near-impossible boxes, particularly "People Who Use A Baton". The $20,000 Grand Finale lampshaded how difficult Winner's Circle categories could be in an effort "to save money". One such category was "Oil Companies in Bankruptcy". Subverted on $100,000 with the really tough box "Things That Are Enshrined"; given the clue "hall of fame books", Nathan Cook (the celebrity; they swapped positions) ended up getting it right for $100,000 with less than 10 seconds to spare. It helps that Keefe Ferrandini (the clue-giver) quickly corrected herself, as "Hall of Fame" would have been deemed illegal.note (A "Hall of Fame" is itself a shrine, not something that is enshrined. On another show, the clue giver gave "Law Library" for "Reference Books," which was not buzzed immediately. Dick explained that the judge gave that clue giver one chance to append the clue with "materials" or something similar before zapping it.) The funny thing is that Nathan Cook gave that exact same clue on an earlier episode. The Donnymid Winner's Circle was the biggest example, being full of absolutely arcane boxes such as "Why Your Soufflé Falls", "What Regis' Coffee Cup Might Say", "What Tom Cruise's Dentist Might Say", "Things on a Cave Wall", and "Colors in the Olympic Rings". Keep in mind that you're allowed to give only a list of items on each box (unless it's "What x Might Say" or "Why You x", where nearly any word except x is allowed).
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Tiebreaker Round
 Pyramid / int_5900e30d
comment
Tiebreaker Round: Ties are broken by playing a round of words, with the team who created the tie getting a choice between two letters, which would be found at the beginning of each word in the tiebreaker round. As mentioned above, this got an Obvious Rule Patch. In the 2012 version, each team got 30 seconds, and kept going until the time was up. Whichever team got the higher score in the 30 seconds won. In the 2016 version, if there was a tie, the winner was determined by the total time the team got to the tying score. The first time it came around, the winning team won by 0.5 seconds.
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Pyramid / int_5900e30d
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Nintendo Hard
 Pyramid / int_62259825
comment
Nintendo Hard: The final two boxes in the Winner's Circle of $100,000 tournaments during the 80s could be very, very tough. They made you earn that 100 grand.
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Guest Host
 Pyramid / int_632f6b5b
comment
Guest Announcer: There were quite a lot of them. Alan Kalter, Fred Foy, John Causier, Dick Heatherton, Ed Jordan, and Scott Vincent all filled in for Bob Clayton. Kalter also filled in for Steve O'Brien. Rod Roddy, Johnny Gilbert, Jerry Bishop, and Charlie Tuna all filled in for Jack Clark. Fill-ins for Gilbert included Charlie O'Donnell, Bob Hilton, and Dean Goss; Goss and Henry Polic II filled in for Gilbert on New $100,000.
 Pyramid / int_632f6b5b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_632f6b5b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_632f6b5b
 Pyramid / int_68d43ebc
type
Game Show Host
 Pyramid / int_68d43ebc
comment
Game Show Host: Dick Clark, most prominently. Bill Cullen, John Davidson, Donny Osmond, Mike Richards, and Michael Strahan have all hosted versions. Mark L. Walberg, Chuck Woolery, Bil Dwyer, Tim Vincent, Dean Cain, and Andy Richter all hosted unsold pilots.
 Pyramid / int_68d43ebc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_68d43ebc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_68d43ebc
 Pyramid / int_6af237f8
type
Think Music
 Pyramid / int_6af237f8
comment
Think Music: The "plonk" timer in the Winner's Circle, in the loosest sense of the word. Played more straight with the Osmond era, which used actual music in the Winner's Circle. The 2009 pilot, The Pyramid, and the ABC $100,000 all have actual think music for the front game, but revert to the "plonk" for the Winner's Circle. The ABC $100,000 Pyramid added a subtle bass bed to the plonk timer for the Winner's Circle.
 Pyramid / int_6af237f8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_6af237f8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_6af237f8
 Pyramid / int_6b35bdff
type
Serious Business
 Pyramid / int_6b35bdff
comment
Serious Business: The Dick Clark era had some witty banter and small talk, sure, but when Dick asked for silence and the lights went down (especially during tournaments), you knew what it was. The tight bursts of applause (which weren't even solicited), the pained "Oh, I'm so sorry" after a loss; Dick even told them to "hurry over" to the Circle sometimes. His whole demeanor, even in the main game, says "This is a game, but barely."
 Pyramid / int_6b35bdff
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_6b35bdff
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_6b35bdff
 Pyramid / int_7360806f
type
In-Series Nickname
 Pyramid / int_7360806f
comment
In-Series Nickname: According to frequent player Dick Cavett, the stage crew nicknamed the top Bonus Round category "The Money Saving Box" as it contained the hardest topic.
 Pyramid / int_7360806f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_7360806f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_7360806f
 Pyramid / int_794cff5
type
Transatlantic Equivalent
 Pyramid / int_794cff5
comment
Transatlantic Equivalent: The United Kingdom's The Pyramid Game. Subverted with the most recent version, as it was presented by Donny Osmond. There's also versions in France and Quebec (both in French, naturally), as well as a German version (Die Pyramide).
 Pyramid / int_794cff5
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Pyramid / int_794cff5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_794cff5
 Pyramid / int_7d7a7d0f
type
Opening Narration
 Pyramid / int_7d7a7d0f
comment
Opening Narration: 1973: "Keep your eye on this spot. You are about to see one celebrity and one contestant step into this circle for the chance to win $10,000 in less than a minute. Ladies and gentlemen, this is The $10,000 Pyramid! (divider behind Winner's Circle raises to reveal large pyramid) Today's special guests are [female guest] and [male guest]! And here is your host, Dick Clark!" 1973-80 (daytime, following a montage of previous winners): "This is The $10,000/$20,000 Pyramid! Today's special guests are [female guest] and [male guest]! And here is your host, Dick Clark!"note (The 1973 episodes from Television City, with Jack Clark announcing, use "Your host is Dick Clark!" Beginning in 1977 the word "now" was added to the last sentence, but reverted to the Television City version by late 1979 or early 1980.) 1974-79 (nighttime, following the montage): "This is The $25,000 Pyramid! Today's special guests are [female guest] and [male guest]! And here is your host, Bill Cullen!" 1981: "This is The $50,000 Pyramid! Today's special guests are [female guest] and [male guest]! Your host is Dick Clark!"note (A different intro was used for Tournaments.) 1982-88 (from 1983 onward, following the montage): "From Television City in Hollywood, this is The (New) $25,000 Pyramid! Today's special guests are [female guest] and [male guest]! Your host is Dick Clark!"note (Johnny Gilbert used "And (now) here is your host...", while Dean Goss used "Your host — Dick Clark!" $100,000 episodes used a slightly different narration and no clip montage.) 1991: "This is the Winner's Circle. This is where someone is guaranteed to win $100,000! From Television City in Hollywood, this is The $100,000 Pyramid! Today's special guests are [female guest] and [male guest]! And now here is your host, John Davidson!"note (Much like $50,000, there were three intros: this one, one when there were three people in the Tournament queue, and one used for the Tournaments themselves.) 1999: "This is Pyramid Rocks! Today's special guests are Saturday Night Live alumnus/comedienne Ellen Cleghorne, and from MTV/World Championship Wrestling, radio and TV personality Riki Rachtman! And here's your host, Bil Dwyer!" 2002-04: "[Guest] and [other guest], today on Pyramid! And now here's the host of Pyramid, Donny Osmond!" 2012: "From Studio City in Hollywood, this is The Pyramid! Today's special guests are [guest] and [other guest]! And now, here's your host, Mike Richards!" 2016-2021: "From the ABC Studios in New York, this is The $100,000 Pyramid! Tonight's celebrity guests are [guest] and [other guest]! And now, here's your host, Michael Strahan!" 2022-: "From Hollywood, this is The $100,000 Pyramid! Tonight's celebrity guests are [guest] and [other guest]! And now, here's your host, Michael Strahan!"
 Pyramid / int_7d7a7d0f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_7d7a7d0f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_7d7a7d0f
 Pyramid / int_7e83e211
type
Suspiciously Similar Song
 Pyramid / int_7e83e211
comment
Suspiciously Similar Song: The second Theme Tune (1982-91) invoked this. Although large pieces of it sound like the 1973-81 theme "Tuning Up", said original theme was a piece of stock music composed by Bob Cobert and arranged by Ken Aldin, while the replacement was Bob Cobert's own composition and arrangement. They allegedly cut the sheet music into segments of two bars each, then turned each segment upside-down.
 Pyramid / int_7e83e211
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_7e83e211
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_7e83e211
 Pyramid / int_7efe2c19
type
Portmanteau
 Pyramid / int_7efe2c19
comment
Portmanteau: On many episodes, the show was copyrighted to "BASADA". BASADA represented the first two letters of the names of Pyramid creator Bob Stewart's three sons: Barry, Sande, and Dave.
 Pyramid / int_7efe2c19
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_7efe2c19
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_7efe2c19
 Pyramid / int_823c6e3e
type
Large Ham
 Pyramid / int_823c6e3e
comment
Large Ham: Donny Osmond and (to a lesser degree) John Davidson.
 Pyramid / int_823c6e3e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_823c6e3e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_823c6e3e
 Pyramid / int_83ea0763
type
Rouge Angles of Satin
 Pyramid / int_83ea0763
comment
Rouge Angles of Satin: On one episode of New $25,000, a Winner's Circle box read "Anthing with a collar". Dick even pointed out the blooper and awarded the misspelled slide to the contestant. The same misspelling was used during the week of October 11, 1982, although it was not noticed.
 Pyramid / int_83ea0763
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_83ea0763
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_83ea0763
 Pyramid / int_8409a385
type
Exactly What It Says on the Tin
 Pyramid / int_8409a385
comment
Present in the fifth episode from 1973. "Famous Last Words" was Exactly What It Says on the Tin. It started out easily enough with "Amen", "That's all folks", and "You're out", but once it got to "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn", "My kingdom for a horse", "From sea to shining sea" (the latter two of which were immediately skipped) and "shall not perish from this earth"...let's just say answers longer than two words rarely showed up afterward.
 Pyramid / int_8409a385
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_8409a385
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_8409a385
 Pyramid / int_85e7c12f
type
Puppy-Dog Eyes
 Pyramid / int_85e7c12f
comment
Puppy-Dog Eyes: Dick Clark had quite the Puppy Dog look after the crew had accidentally "broken the Pyramid."
 Pyramid / int_85e7c12f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_85e7c12f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_85e7c12f
 Pyramid / int_8a6b9333
type
Blinking Lights of Victory
 Pyramid / int_8a6b9333
comment
Blinking Lights of Victory: Classic Era: If a player won the The Winner's Circle, lights inside the dollar amounts on the pyramid board blink, and the lights around the board form a chasing pattern. For $100,000 tournament wins, the trilons holding the categories and dollar amounts move around. Modern Era: If a player won the The Winner's Circle, lights on the walls and arches blink, with a digital Confetti Drop on the category board.
 Pyramid / int_8a6b9333
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_8a6b9333
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_8a6b9333
 Pyramid / int_8e0430ab
type
Non-Standard Game Over
 Pyramid / int_8e0430ab
comment
Non Standard Game Over: Some games could be lost as early as the fifth or even the fourth category if one team had enough trouble scoring points (again, unless one of the remaining boxes was the 7-11 or Mystery 7, in which case it would be played anyway for a chance at the corresponding bonus). Giving an illegal clue on at least one category in the Winner's Circle but getting the rest before time runs out. It's over but since you got buzzed on one category, you don't win the large bonus.
 Pyramid / int_8e0430ab
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_8e0430ab
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_8e0430ab
 Pyramid / int_92dfffae
type
Retraux
 Pyramid / int_92dfffae
comment
Retraux: Several of the recent revival attempts have had modernized versions of the 80s set, format and look, most notably The Pyramid; the current ABC version refined that version's look and amped it up.
 Pyramid / int_92dfffae
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_92dfffae
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_92dfffae
 Pyramid / int_931ef4f1
type
Complacent Gaming Syndrome
 Pyramid / int_931ef4f1
comment
Complacent Gaming Syndrome:invoked Both 7-11 and Mystery 7 underwent some changes following their introductions due to contestants invoking this: Mystery 7 was originally its own category (always in the bottom-right slot, using the same font as the others), but teams almost always chose it first. On October 31, 1983, it was given its own unique logo, and on April 23, 1984 it was changed to being a "behind-the-category" bonus (like the 7-11). 7-11 (debuted April 11, 1983) originally had two options — try for all seven words and $1,100, or "play it safe" for $50 per word. Not many people took the latter, and the option was dropped on January 21, 1985; the choice returned, giving $500 per word, in the 2009 pilots.
 Pyramid / int_931ef4f1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_931ef4f1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_931ef4f1
 Pyramid / int_95496a1d
type
The Announcer
 Pyramid / int_95496a1d
comment
The Announcer: Bob Clayton announced from 1973 until his 1979 death. A rotation of sub-announcers followed until Steve O'Brien took over in 1980; Alan Kalter replaced him midway through $50,000, and also voiced the 2009 $1,000,000 pilots. Jack Clark succeeded him in 1982, and Johnny Gilbert in 1985 until the end of the Davidson version. John Cramer announced the Osmond version, JD Roberto handled The Pyramid, and Brad Abelle announces the current $100,000 revival. Both Clark and Gilbert had large numbers of substitutes.
 Pyramid / int_95496a1d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_95496a1d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_95496a1d
 Pyramid / int_970ccfec
type
Big "YES!"
 Pyramid / int_970ccfec
comment
Big "YES!": Dick Clark sometimes let one out to announce Winner's Circle wins on $10,000.
 Pyramid / int_970ccfec
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_970ccfec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_970ccfec
 Pyramid / int_9918518b
type
Press X to Die
 Pyramid / int_9918518b
comment
Press X to Die: Giving the word itself as a cluenote or part of the word (including its first letter), or stating that it rhymes with another word, unless either was already dictated by the category; usually indicated by Dick saying "You may/may not use ____ in your clues" automatically disqualified it; this would be signified by a "cuckoo" sound (or a "burble" on Donnymid). As on Password, this has been hard to do for some players due to the word being right in front of them. In one August 2018 instance, a contestant, playing with Andy Richter and for $100,000, had "Pizza Chains (Restaurants)" as her second subject and immediately gave "Pizza Hut" as her first clue, ending her attempt at $100K after just ten secondsnote She also got buzzed two subjects later with the clue "LEDs" for "Types Of Light Bulbs"; the "L" in "LED" stands for "light". If a civilian contestant got a bad celebrity partner and had them give the clues, and the celebrity partner messed up at any point in giving clues, the contestant would be disqualified from winning the top amount. No replacement categories were played if time was left on the clock. This also prevented some contestants as being crowned champion of the day and returning to the next show.
 Pyramid / int_9918518b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_9918518b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_9918518b
 Pyramid / int_9c8701b5
type
A Day in the Limelight
 Pyramid / int_9c8701b5
comment
A Day in the Limelight: Dick Clark was a celebrity partner on the Cullen and Osmond versions. He had a perfect record on the Cullen version; he won every main game and Winner's Circle.note According to director Mike Gargiulo, he was effectively banned from the Cullen version after his second appearance. The show often repeated Winner's Circle categories, and Clark knew the perfect clues for each one; therefore, being partnered with him was considered an unfair advantage. Several other people have played as both a civilian and a celebrity.
 Pyramid / int_9c8701b5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_9c8701b5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_9c8701b5
 Pyramid / int_9dab0a6e
type
Continuity Nod
 Pyramid / int_9dab0a6e
comment
Continuity Nod: Surprisingly, the intro to the 2001 $100,000 PC game is the original $10,000 intro ("Keep your eye on this spot...", minus the flat). Keep in mind this was 2001, when hardly anyone outside of die-hard game show fans were even aware of this intro, and the whereabouts of that period of $10,000's run were still unknown.
 Pyramid / int_9dab0a6e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_9dab0a6e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_9dab0a6e
 Pyramid / int_9f6fb586
type
Leitmotif
 Pyramid / int_9f6fb586
comment
Leitmotif: Believe it or not, the "plonk" timer sound in the Winner's Circle is considered part of the music package, composed by Bob Cobert. Justified, in that the host always asks for silence before the Winner's Circle begins, and the "plonk" is the only background sound constantly heard.
 Pyramid / int_9f6fb586
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_9f6fb586
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_9f6fb586
 Pyramid / int_a10d8339
type
The Show Must Go On
 Pyramid / int_a10d8339
comment
The Show Must Go On: On the Dick Clark and John Davidson ''$100,000" version of the show, the tournament would be played for as long as it took to find a winner. Sometimes that would only be one day, other times it could go on for weeks. If a contestant won the Winner's Circle in the first half of a tournament episode, the other two contestants would play the second half of the episode for a chance at an additional $10,000 in the Winner's Circle.
 Pyramid / int_a10d8339
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_a10d8339
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_a10d8339
 Pyramid / int_a62b49ea
type
That One Level
 Pyramid / int_a62b49ea
comment
That One Level:invoked Recurring celebrity guests grew to hate categories that involved naming people, especially if the full name was required. This hatred later became a Running Gag, and was lampshaded in the category "I Hope It's Not Names", which led to the list of "Things a Pyramid contestant might think about." Nipsey Russell would do a limerick about it after getting hung out to dry with a name category:
 Pyramid / int_a62b49ea
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_a62b49ea
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_a62b49ea
 Pyramid / int_a65288e2
type
Ascended Extra
 Pyramid / int_a65288e2
comment
Ascended Extra: Kathy Najimy first appeared on New $25,000 in 1985 as a civilian contestant; she then appeared as a celebrity partner in the 1997 Chuck Woolery pilots (with the 6-celebrity setup), Donnymid, one of the 2009 $1,000,000 pilots, and most recently ABC $100,000.
 Pyramid / int_a65288e2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_a65288e2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_a65288e2
 Pyramid / int_a783166f
type
StockSoundEffect
 Pyramid / int_a783166f
comment
Donnymid used a common stock sound effect of a cheering crowd for sweetening.
 Pyramid / int_a783166f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_a783166f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_a783166f
 Pyramid / int_ae3d6438
type
Deadpan Snarker
 Pyramid / int_ae3d6438
comment
Deadpan Snarker: Dick Clark was quite the snarker when things went awry.
 Pyramid / int_ae3d6438
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_ae3d6438
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_ae3d6438
 Pyramid / int_b1dde8fd
type
Loophole Abuse
 Pyramid / int_b1dde8fd
comment
Loophole Abuse: In one Winner's Circle, Adrienne Barbeau tried to flicker her eyelashes while giving a clue for "Things That Flicker", causing Dick to chuckle and say, "You dirty dog." This caused an awkward situation when both Dick and Adrienne swore they heard the contestant say "flicker"; when they came back from commercial, it was revealed that he said "flutter", and that even if he had said "flicker" they wouldn't have accepted it because physical clues aren't allowednote (with the exception of nodding to indicate that the receiver is close to the right answer). In the front game, it has always been legal to give a clue for a homophone of the word, or for a portion of the word. Many contestants have exploited either when stuck.
 Pyramid / int_b1dde8fd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_b1dde8fd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_b1dde8fd
 Pyramid / int_b1fbb55b
type
Game Show Winnings Cap
 Pyramid / int_b1fbb55b
comment
Game Show Winnings Cap: It depended on the dollar amount in the title. No, seriously. On $10,000 and $20,000, you were retired immediately upon victory in the Winner's Circle. On New $25,000, champions could stay for five days or until they surpassed CBS' winnings cap of $25,000 (later $50,000, then $75,000). The first two versions of $100,000 had a five-day limit; the current version has no returning champions. $50,000, Cullen $25,000, Donnymid, and The Pyramid had no returning champions.
 Pyramid / int_b1fbb55b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_b1fbb55b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_b1fbb55b
 Pyramid / int_b53077b3
type
Take That!
 Pyramid / int_b53077b3
comment
Take That!: Dick sometimes did this to Vicki Lawrence: "Describe for your partner these things that people try to avoid. Vicki Lawrence is one of them." The 1980 Grand Finale featured an "impossible" Winner's Circle with such categories as "Used Car Dealers You Can Trust", "Hit Shows on NBC-TV"note (a jab at Fred Silverman, who had cancelled $10,000 Pyramid when he worked at CBS, and was now infamously driving NBC into the ground), "Things Kissinger Did Not Foul Up", "Famous Japanese Rabbis", "Oil Companies in Bankruptcy", and "Famous Italian TV Directors". On a later $50,000 episode: "Describe for your partner these things that make life difficult. Things that make life difficult. First answer is Tony Randall."
 Pyramid / int_b53077b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_b53077b3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_b53077b3
 Pyramid / int_b53d88da
type
Double Unlock
 Pyramid / int_b53d88da
comment
Double Unlock: Getting into the $100,000 Tournament on Donnymid. Contestants had to win both Winner's Circle rounds to get a spot in the Tournament — if the first Winner's Circle was lost, or each contestant won the main game, the chance was forfeit. This, the Moon Logic Puzzles, the idiotic judging, and the lack of returning champs all meant that some players had absolutely zero chance of getting into the Tournament. Then, to actually win the $100,000, you again had to be victorious in both Winner's Circle rounds in a single episode (paying out at $25,000/$75,000). If nobody did so by the end of the Tournament (which spanned just three shows), the person who won the most in the Winner's Circle during the "week" had their total winnings augmented to $100,000.
 Pyramid / int_b53d88da
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_b53d88da
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_b53d88da
 Pyramid / int_b89ed08a
type
Obvious Rule Patch
 Pyramid / int_b89ed08a
comment
Ties are broken by playing a round of words, with the team who created the tie getting a choice between two letters, which would be found at the beginning of each word in the tiebreaker round. As mentioned above, this got an Obvious Rule Patch.
 Pyramid / int_b89ed08a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_b89ed08a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_b89ed08a
 Pyramid / int_ba0b808e
type
Tantrum Throwing
 Pyramid / int_ba0b808e
comment
Tantrum Throwing: William Shatner's chair-throwing incident on a 1977 episode.
 Pyramid / int_ba0b808e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_ba0b808e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_ba0b808e
 Pyramid / int_bc74ef27
type
Berserk Button
 Pyramid / int_bc74ef27
comment
Berserk Button: Happens with some frequency to varying degrees to various celebrities (often when they almost make it or give an illegal clue), but the greatest Button-hitter has to be William Shatner (his example is listed on the show's Funny Moments tab).
 Pyramid / int_bc74ef27
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_bc74ef27
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_bc74ef27
 Pyramid / int_bda474d2
type
Last Note Nightmare
 Pyramid / int_bda474d2
comment
Last Note Nightmare: The in-game music cues on Donnymid ended with a whoosh followed by a synth hit to denote time expiring. This combo was also used if a main game round or a Winner's Circle ended early due to an illegal clue.
 Pyramid / int_bda474d2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Pyramid / int_bda474d2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Pyramid / int_bda474d2
 Pyramid / int_be9d4a56
type
Home Game
 Pyramid / int_be9d4a56
comment
Home Game: Eight versions were published by Milton Bradley from 1974-81. The third edition was originally published as $10,000 but quickly redone as $20,000, while the final one was based on $50,000...although the Winner's Circle wasn't actually replicated in these games. A version based on New $25,000 was released by Cardinal in 1986. Despite getting the Winner's Circle right, the game board awkwardly refers to it as The $25,000/$100,000 Pyramid. Video games were released for Commodore 64 in 1987 ($100,000) and on PC in 2001 (also $100,000). A DVD game, also called $100,000, was released in 2006. The $1,000,000 Pyramid was released by developer Ludia/Ubisoft in early 2011 for Wii and PC...but despite its logo being in the 1982–91 style, the game itself uses Donnymid's set and rules. Facebook has a $100,000-themed game, complete with a Suspiciously Similar Song of the theme music. There are three categories in the main game, with six clues for each category (similar to Donnymid) and a new bonus space, the "Big Six" (a cross between "Big 7" and "Super Six", above), behind one of the three categories. There are also now three subjects in the Winner's Circle and, as on the show pre-1996, only the "essence" is required to correctly claim them.
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Pyramid / int_be9d4a56
 Pyramid / int_c75df49a
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Shout-Out
 Pyramid / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: "Shows hosted by Dick Clark" was a Winner's Circle subject at least twice (once on $25,000, and again on Donnymid).
 Pyramid / int_c75df49a
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Pyramid / int_c75df49a
 Pyramid / int_c77e69fc
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Confetti Drop
 Pyramid / int_c77e69fc
comment
Modern Era: If a player won the The Winner's Circle, lights on the walls and arches blink, with a digital Confetti Drop on the category board.
 Pyramid / int_c77e69fc
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Pyramid / int_c77e69fc
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Every Episode Ending
 Pyramid / int_d076824c
comment
Every Episode Ending: During his run on the program, Dick would always end each episode with his trademark Sign Off Catch Phrase, "For now, Dick Clark... So long." When $10,000 and $20,000 aired on ABC, Clark would add "Join me tomorrow for the Bandstand..." before the phrase on Friday shows, as ABC was also the home of his hit series American Bandstand. On one episode, celebrity contestant Dick Cavett asked the host just as he was about to deliver his sign off, "Who are you for now?" which at first just slightly confused him, and then, as he attempted to go forward (the show was ending after all), completely broke him up as the Brick Joke hit him.
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Pyramid / int_d076824c
 Pyramid / int_d3435454
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Bonus Round
 Pyramid / int_d3435454
comment
Bonus Round: The Winner's Circle, present in all versions: 60 seconds to convey six categories to your teammate, giving only a list.
 Pyramid / int_d3435454
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Pyramid / int_d3435454
 Pyramid / int_d35193cc
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Bonus Space
 Pyramid / int_d35193cc
comment
Bonus Space: The first bonus space was "Big 7", debuting on December 23, 1974 and offering the contestant a bonus if they got seven points in that round. The bonus was worth $500 on the daytime show, $1,000 for Season 2 of the Cullen version, and a new car in the final Cullen season. On Junior Partner Pyramid, each team had a "Bonus 7" that they could apply to any category in the game of their choice, with a $500 bonus if they got all 7 words in that category. Seasons 3-4 of the Cullen version replaced Big 7 with the similar "Big Money Card", which awarded a random amount from $1,000-$5,000. For Season 4, the highest amount was decreased to $4,000. On the Cullen version, getting a perfect score of 21 awarded $2,100. $20,000 also offered a 21-related bonus (the only daytime version to do so); originally it was $1,000, but by 1980 it was a color TV. The most recognizable pair on the 80s versions were "7-11" ($1,100 bonus for guessing all seven words correctly) and "Mystery 7" (the theme of the category is not revealed until after the fact, and guessing all seven correctly awards a prize). The 21-21 Tiebreaker, which awarded a car (quickly changed to $5,000) for whichever team broke the tie. In 1991, Tuesdays and Thursdays saw Mystery 7 move to Game 1 and 7-11 get replaced by "Double Trouble 1 & 2" (45 seconds to guess seven two-word phrases). On April 15, 7-11 was completely ousted in favor of "Gamble for a Grand/Gamble for a Trip" (the team could opt to take five seconds off the clock and win $1,000 or a trip, respectively, if all seven words were correctly guessed). From October 22 onward, Gamble replaced Mystery 7 on Tuesdays and Thursdays. "Super Six", used only on Donnymid, which was a combination of 7-11 and Mystery 7 (played for a prize, but the category was given before it was played). Donny's Pyramid Game, this version's Transatlantic Equivalent, actually used the Mystery 7.) The 2009 pilots returned to 7-11/Mystery 7, with the former now awarding $11,000. The 2010 pilots used the third and fourth categories of each maingame as the bonuses, with a prize awarded for getting all seven. GSN's The Pyramid threw out the behind-the-category bonuses in exchange for a bonus $500 if all seven words out of seven were correctly guessed. It also added $5,000 to the potential big jackpot in the Winner's Circle, which started at $10,000. The ABC $100,000 revival also features no behind-the-category bonuses for the first round, but uses the Mystery 7 for the second.
 Pyramid / int_d35193cc
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Pyramid / int_d35193cc
 Pyramid / int_d9cf40fa
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Screw This, I'm Outta Here
 Pyramid / int_d9cf40fa
comment
Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Vicki Lawrence did this after a particularly bad round in which she spent nearly the entire 30 seconds failing to get "whiskers".
 Pyramid / int_d9cf40fa
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1.0
 Pyramid / int_d9cf40fa
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Pyramid / int_d9cf40fa
 Pyramid / int_db212ca9
type
Did I Just Say That Out Loud?
 Pyramid / int_db212ca9
comment
Did I Just Say That Out Loud?: Dynasty's Leann Hunley's partner gave her the clue "You lift" for the answer "Your spirits." While she did get the correct answer, her first guess was "your skirts." Afterwards, she could barely face the camera and could only say, "Not that I would." Dick, ever the professional, said, "Moving on."
 Pyramid / int_db212ca9
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1.0
 Pyramid / int_db212ca9
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1.0
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Pyramid / int_db212ca9
 Pyramid / int_db8fe19a
type
Network Sideswipe
 Pyramid / int_db8fe19a
comment
Network Sideswipe: On the final telecast of The $20,000 Pyramid, a series of joke subjects were presented on the Pyramid board if, in Dick Clark's words, the show wanted to save a little money. One of them was "Hit Shows on NBC-TV."
 Pyramid / int_db8fe19a
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Pyramid / int_db8fe19a
 Pyramid / int_de999021
type
Rage Quit
 Pyramid / int_de999021
comment
Rage Quit: In a notorious incident, William Shatner screamed and threw his chair out of the Winner's Circle after accidentally giving an illegal clue on the last box, "Things That Are Blessed".
 Pyramid / int_de999021
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Pyramid / int_de999021
 Pyramid / int_e4e86215
type
Fake Difficulty
 Pyramid / int_e4e86215
comment
The Donnymid Winner's Circle was the biggest example, being full of absolutely arcane boxes such as "Why Your Soufflé Falls", "What Regis' Coffee Cup Might Say", "What Tom Cruise's Dentist Might Say", "Things on a Cave Wall", and "Colors in the Olympic Rings". Keep in mind that you're allowed to give only a list of items on each box (unless it's "What x Might Say" or "Why You x", where nearly any word except x is allowed).
 Pyramid / int_e4e86215
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Pyramid / int_e4e86215
 Pyramid / int_e54a8010
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Let's Just See What WOULD Have Happened
 Pyramid / int_e54a8010
comment
Let's Just See What WOULD Have Happened: Dick often came out and tried to give clues on missed Winner's Circle boxes. Quite often, he gave the perfect clue due to having plenty of time to think about it and hindsight regarding what clues didn't work, leaving the actual celebrity dumbfounded (and, in the case of Vicki Lawrence, visibly pissed). Just about every other host has followed suit except for Osmond, who preferred to sprint onstage and scream "OH! OH! OH! OH! OH! OH!" before prompting the audience to shout out the missed box. On an episode of $20,000, Debralee Scott and her partner had a disastrous Winner's Circle where they got only the second box right and didn't get past the fourth. After time ran out, Dick gave her more time to play the (rather tough) first box "Things on a Hat" to see if the contestant would get it eventually. In this game from 1983, Harry Anderson breezed through the first five boxes of the Winner's Circle, but instantly got buzzed on the last box with nearly 30 seconds to spare. As a consolation, Dick let him play the box anyway.
 Pyramid / int_e54a8010
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Pyramid / int_e54a8010
 Pyramid / int_eac3ee70
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April Fools' Day
 Pyramid / int_eac3ee70
comment
April Fools' Day: On a $10,000-era April Fools' show, William Shatner was faced with the impossible Winner's Circle subject "Things That Taste Like Lima Beans". Dick Clark later framed the category slide and displayed it in his office. At the start of the second game on April 1, 1983, the categories were loaded in backwards!
 Pyramid / int_eac3ee70
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Pyramid / int_eac3ee70
 Pyramid / int_f15c2859
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NO INDOOR VOICE
 Pyramid / int_f15c2859
comment
No Indoor Voice: Donny, particularly if someone lost the Winner's Circle.
 Pyramid / int_f15c2859
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Pyramid / int_f15c2859
 Pyramid / int_f9f2c33
type
Running Gag
 Pyramid / int_f9f2c33
comment
Running Gag: An unintentional one- during the early days of $100,000, the audience would be so excited whenever someone won the grand prize during the tournament, they would rush out and swamp the set, they would be hugging and congratulating the contestant, mugging for the camera, often to the point where Dick would have to push his way through to find the winner. This eventually died down, though. Jokes involving Dick Clark's trouble with adding Winner's Circle scores are among the show's most well-known gags, especially during the '80s. Dick Clark's banter with the judge. In one episode, he brought her out to introduce her to the audience. Dick Clark's back rubs with female contestants who make it to the Winner's Circle.
 Pyramid / int_f9f2c33
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Pyramid / int_f9f2c33
 Pyramid / int_fe0330fb
type
Brick Joke
 Pyramid / int_fe0330fb
comment
On one episode, celebrity contestant Dick Cavett asked the host just as he was about to deliver his sign off, "Who are you for now?" which at first just slightly confused him, and then, as he attempted to go forward (the show was ending after all), completely broke him up as the Brick Joke hit him.
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Pyramid / int_fe0330fb
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ItemName
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Pyramid

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

 Pyramid
hasFeature
Blinking Lights of Victory / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Bonus Round / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Bonus Space / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Breather Level / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Censored for Comedy / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Complacent Gaming Syndrome / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Cry Laughing / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Do Well, But Not Perfect / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Down to the Last Play / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Episode Code Number / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Every Episode Ending / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Facepalm / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Game-Breaking Bug / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Game Show / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Game Show Host / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Game Show Winnings Cap / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Go to Your Room! / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Hey, It's That Sound! / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Hurricane of Puns / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Let's Just See What WOULD Have Happened / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Moon Logic Puzzle / int_142d9a49
 NancyCartwright
seeAlso
Pyramid
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Network Sideswipe / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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No Budget / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Non-Standard Game Over / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Outlived Its Creator / int_142d9a49
 Password
seeAlso
Pyramid
 Pyramid
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Pilot / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Previously on… / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Progressive Jackpot / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Race Against the Clock / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Rage Quit / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Recycled Soundtrack / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Retired Game Show Element / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Revival / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Rule of Seven / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Saved from Development Hell / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Selective Enforcement / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Series of the 1970s / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Signing-Off Catchphrase / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Tantrum Throwing / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Tears of Joy / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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The New Adventures / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Tiebreaker Round / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
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Un-Canceled / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
hasFeature
No Problem with Licensed Games / Sugar Wiki / int_142d9a49
 Pyramid
hasFeature
Tearful Smile / int_142d9a49