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Split Second (game show)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Split Second
Logo for the 2023 revival
GenreGame show
Created by
Directed by
  • Kip Walton (1972–75)
  • Henry Pasila (1986–87)
  • Rob George (2023–)
Presented by
Narrated by
Theme music composer
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons
  • 3 (ABC)
  • 1 (Syndication)
  • 3 (Game Show Network)
No. of episodes
  • 1,025 (ABC)
  • 130 (Syndication)
  • 165 (Game Show Network)
Production
Executive producers
  • Stefan Hatos (1972–87)
  • Monty Hall (1972–87)
  • Michael Binkow (2023–)
  • Nancy Glass (2023–)
  • Marcus Lemonis (2023–)
  • Sharon Hall (2023–)
  • John Michael Higgins (2023–)
Producers
  • Stu Billett (1972–73)
  • Bob Synes (1973–75)
  • Alan Gilbert (1986–87)
  • Frank Bluestein (1986–87)
Production locations
  • The Prospect Studios
  • Hollywood, California (1972–75)
  • CHCH Studios
  • Hamilton, Ontario (1986–87)
  • Lakeshore Studio
  • Toronto, Ontario (1987)
Running time22–26 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkABC
ReleaseMarch 20, 1972 (1972-03-20) –
June 27, 1975 (1975-06-27)
NetworkSyndication
ReleaseDecember 15, 1986 (1986-12-15) –
May 29, 1987 (1987-05-29)
NetworkGame Show Network
ReleaseApril 17, 2023 (2023-04-17) –
present

Split Second is an American game show that was created by Monty Hall and Stefan Hatos and produced by their production company, Stefan Hatos-Monty Hall Productions.[1] Three contestants compete to answer three-part trivia questions to win cash.

There were two editions of Split Second produced by Hatos and Hall. The first was a daytime series produced for ABC that premiered on March 20, 1972, and ran until June 27, 1975, and was recorded at ABC Television Center in Hollywood. Tom Kennedy was the host for the original ABC version, with Jack Clark serving as announcer.[2]

The second version was produced for syndication in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, at CHCH-TV's studios; this series premiered December 15, 1986, and was a co-production of Hatos-Hall and distributors Concept Equity Funding Limited and Viacom Enterprises.[3] Canadian television stations CHCH-TV, CFAC-TV, and CITV-TV assisted in the production of the syndicated series as well, but were not credited on American airings.[4] The revival series featured Monty Hall as host with Sandy Hoyt as announcer and aired until the end of the 1986–87 season with reruns airing until September 11, 1987.

In February 2023, it was announced that the show would be revived by Game Show Network, with John Michael Higgins as host, and premiered on April 17, 2023.[5][6]

Gameplay

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Main game

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On each version, three contestants compete to answer.

Each question the host asks has three possible correct answers. Some questions took a form such as "Name the three films for which Katharine Hepburn won the Oscar for Best Actress." For most questions, three words, names, or phrases were displayed on a board which acted as clues, and the question took a form such as "Pick a word from the board and give its plural." For the ABC version, approximately once each episode there was also a "Memory Buster," in which the host gave a list of items and asked which three of them were common to each other.

Contestants ring in by pushing a button on their lecterns. The first person to ring in is permitted to provide any one of the three answers. The second-fastest provides one of the remaining answers, and finally, the slowest player got whatever was left, by default. In the '70s version, the clues on the board were revealed first and contestants could buzz in before the question was completed, whereas later versions allow contestants to buzz in only after the clues are revealed.

Each player receives money, or points on the 2023 version, for correct answers. The value of each answer was determined by the number of people supplying a correct response, and there was no penalty for a miss. Some questions were open-ended, meaning that if a contestant gave an incorrect answer, the next contestant could answer that same question. If the question was this/that, then once it was answered, it was out of play. In the 2023 revival, once a question is answered, it is out-of-play, regardless.

Payoff table for Split Second main game
Players
correct
Round one Round two
ABC Syndicated GSN ABC Syndicated GSN
3 $5 $10 25 pts. $10 $20 50 pts.
2 $10 $25 50 pts. $25 $50 100 pts.
1 $25 $50 100 pts. $50 $100 200 pts.

For example, if two players gave a correct answer in round one of the ABC version, each player received $10.

During the latter half of the ABC version, the first person to be the only contestant to respond correctly to a question during the first two rounds also won a bonus prize, his or hers to keep regardless of the game's outcome.

Countdown Round

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The Countdown Round serves as the final round and determines the winner. No money is awarded for correct answers in this round. Instead, a correct answer enables a player to keep control of the question and answer any parts that are still available. An incorrect answer passes control to the next player who has buzzed in.

Each player is required to give a set number of answers in order to win the game. The leader entering the Countdown Round has the lowest number, with the second-place player needing one more answer than the leader and the third-place player two. In the event of a tie, the tied players have to give the same number of answers. In the original series, the leader needed three answers to win (which could be accomplished in one question), the second-place player four, and the third place-player five. These numbers all increased by one when the syndicated series debuted, with four being the lowest number and six the highest. On the GSN version, the leader needs four answers to win, the second-place player six, and the third-place player eight. In the event of a tie for first place, the tied players have to give five answers, whereas a tie for second place requires six.

The first player to count down to zero wins the game regardless of their total score and moves on to the bonus round. In previous versions, all three players kept their accumulated money. The champion wins $1,000 on the GSN version.

Bonus Round

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1970s

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Every new champion was given a choice of five car keys, which corresponded with five cars that were displayed on stage. The champion chose a car to attempt to start with the key, and if he/she was successful the car was won and the champion retired. If the car did not start, it was taken out of play and the champion tried the same key in another car if he/she returned the next day. If after four consecutive tries, the key did not start a car, if the champion won the next game he/she received a choice of any of the cars on stage.[7]

In addition to the car, a retiring champion received a cash bonus. The bonus started at $1,000 and increased by $500 for each unsuccessful bonus round (originally $200 to start with $200 more for each unsuccessful bonus round), resetting only when a champion won a car.

1980s

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The bonus round on the 1980s Split Second gave champions the opportunity to win a car by choosing from five video screens.

Initially, one of the screens hid the word "CAR," while the other four each hid a $1,000 cash prize. The champion selected one screen and won whatever was behind it. Finding the car immediately retired the champion; if the $1,000 appeared, that screen would be eliminated from play in any subsequent bonus rounds played by him/her. A new champion always played the round with all five screens. Any champion who won five consecutive games automatically received the car and retired undefeated.

Later in the run, the bonus round was changed, offering a car and a smaller prize hidden behind three and two screens respectively. The champion chose three screens, winning the car and retiring if it was behind all of them. If the prize appeared behind any screen, they could accept it with a cash bonus and retire or return to play another game. The bonus was $1,000 after the first game, $2,000 after the second, and $3,000 after the third. After a champion's fourth victory, four "CAR" screens were used. If they failed to win the car, they could accept the prize and $4,000 cash and retire, or return for a fifth and final game, automatically winning the car and retiring after five victories.

2023

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The bonus round on the 2023 Split Second is a timed variation of the main game, in which the champion must answer seven questions within 60 seconds. Each question features two parts, with the contestant choosing one to answer (e.g. given two camera-related abbreviations, choose one and define it). If he/she gives an incorrect response, a new question is asked. The champion wins an additional $10,000 for giving seven correct answers before time runs out.

Broadcast history

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ABC: 1972–1975

[edit]
Former logo, used from 1972 to 1975

Split Second occupied only one timeslot during its three-year run, 12:30 p.m. (11:30 a.m., Central), against the traditional CBS favorite Search for Tomorrow and NBC's The Who, What, or Where Game. It displaced Password, which moved ahead a half-hour. Although never able to surmount Search, Split Second kept a large number of affiliates on the network at that hour (preemptions, mostly for local newscasts, had plagued ABC for years). Within two years, NBC replaced 3W's with a succession of short-lived games.

Split Second's 1972 entry completed ABC's most successful block of daytime game shows, which included Password, The Newlywed Game, The Dating Game, and Let's Make a Deal, a lineup which lasted for nearly two years.

However, the decline of its lead-in, Password, began to adversely affect the Nielsens of Split Second, and it was one of four game shows ABC cancelled between June 27 and July 4, 1975. After a week of 60-minute episodes of the soap opera All My Children, Split Second was succeeded by another soap, Ryan's Hope. All My Children did return to a full hour from late April 1977, continuing for the rest of its ABC run.

The winning contestant on the final episode lost the bonus game but was awarded the car anyway since he would have no opportunity to try again on a future show; the final $1,000 cash jackpot was split between the two runner-up contestants.

Syndication: 1986–1987

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In early 1986, Monty Hall had expressed his intentions to retire from hosting game shows altogether. He had been hosting a revival of Let’s Make a Deal in syndication since 1984, and he planned on stepping down from the series and launching a daily human interest program distributed by Worldvision Enterprises called For the People, where Hall would use connections he had made over various philanthropic ventures over the course of his life to offer assistance to viewers. The idea was for Hall to hand Let’s Make a Deal over to another host (likely the show’s announcer Dean Goss, as Hall allowed him to preside over several deals during the year) and start For the People in the fall. Both programs were presented in January 1986 at the annual NATPE convention. However, not enough stations showed interest in either Hall’s creation or a third season of Let’s Make a Deal.[8] Hall and Hatos decided to revive their other hit from the 1970s and developed a new edition of Split Second, this time with Hall hosting, for a midseason premiere in December 1986.

Although the show aired simultaneously in the United States and Canada upon its premiere, many more Canadian markets carried Split Second than their American counterparts. However, it was carried in at least one major American market, New York. With the reappearance of episodes on Canada's GameTV, there have emerged some notable production differences for episodes aired in Canada:

  • As the show returns from its first two commercial breaks, some trivia questions are displayed on the screen for the viewers. On the American airings, three questions were shown. The Canadian airings usually only displayed one question, with announcer Sandy Hoyt filling the time with fee plugs.
  • On the American airings, the bonus round is played immediately as the show comes back from its final commercial break. On the Canadian airings, a series of promotional consideration plugs are read before the round begins.
  • In the closing credits, Canadian airings credit Hatos-Hall, Concept Equity Funding Limited, the Canadian stations involved in the production of the series, and distributor Viacom (now part of CBS Media Ventures). The Canadian entities do not receive credit on American airings; only Hatos-Hall and Viacom receive billing.

Episode status

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The UCLA Film and Television Archive holds 15 episodes spanning the entire run, beginning at episode #39 (May 11, 1972) and ending with the finale.[9]

The syndicated version is completely intact, and is currently distributed by Fremantle under license from Marcus/Glass Productions, and reran on The Family Channel from August 30, 1993,[10] to March 4, 1994,[11] and January 2[12] to September 29, 1995,[13] as part of its afternoon game show block. As of July 2019, GameTV is airing reruns.[14] The music package for this version was added to the Television Production Music Museum in 2017, joining the 1972 package.

The 1986 series returned to American television in September 2019 when Buzzr, a digital television network owned by Fremantle, began airing it weekday mornings.[15]

International versions

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Australia

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The show ran in Australia from 1972 to 1973 on Nine Network, hosted by Ken James and later by Jimmy Hannan, and produced by Reg Grundy.[16]

United Kingdom

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The show ran in the United Kingdom from 1987 to 1988 in the STV region of ITV, hosted by Paul Coia.[17]

Non-US versions of Split Second
Country Name Host Network Date premiered
 Australia Split Second Ken James
Jimmy Hannan
Nine Network 1972–1973
 United Kingdom Split Second Paul Coia STV 1987–1988

References

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  1. ^ Hyatt, Wesley (1997). The Encyclopedia of Daytime Television. Watson-Guptill Publications. p. 408. ISBN 978-0823083152. Retrieved 22 March 2020.
  2. ^ Split Second episode 1, aired December 15, 1986. Game TV rerun shows a closing sequence different from American series reruns, including an indication of CHCH's facilities being used for taping.
  3. ^ Split Second episode 1, aired December 15, 1986. Game TV rerun shows closing sequence different from American series reruns.
  4. ^ Split Second episode 20, aired January 2, 1987.
  5. ^ Game Show Network [@GameShowNetwork] (February 27, 2023). "Big news - huge! The classic trivia show Split Second is coming to Game Show Network this spring, hosted by the always wonderful @Real_JMHiggins! We've got lots more info coming so stay tuned!" (Tweet). Retrieved February 27, 2023 – via Twitter.
  6. ^ Game Show Network [@GameShowNetwork] (March 24, 2023). "The first seasons of #SplitSecond and #AmericaSays. Who's been watching since the beginning?..." (Tweet). Retrieved March 24, 2023 – via Twitter.
  7. ^ Split Second episode aired May 8, 1975.
  8. ^ "Monty Hall's Charity Dream is Put on Hold". Los Angeles Times. 13 June 1986.
  9. ^ "UCLA Library Catalog - Titles". Search results for "split second". UCLA Library.
  10. ^ The Intelligencer. August 30, 1993.
  11. ^ The Intelligencer. March 4, 1994.
  12. ^ The Intelligencer. January 2, 1995.
  13. ^ The Intelligencer. September 29, 1995.
  14. ^ "GameTV Split Second Broadcast Schedule". Igametv.com. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  15. ^ @TVMoJoe (12 September 2019). "BREAKING BUZZR NEWS, PART ONE:The Monty Hall-hosted 1980s reboot of ABC's 70s gameshow SPLIT SECOND is coming to…" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  16. ^ "Split Second". IMDb.com. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  17. ^ "Split Second (1)". UKGameshows.com. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
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