Hollywood Connection

The Hollywood Connection
Genre Game show
Directed by Richard S. Kline
Presented by Jim Lange
Narrated by Johnny Gilbert (1977)
Jay Stewart (1977-1978)
Country of origin  United States
Production
Producer(s) Ron Greenberg
Running time approx. 22 minutes
Production company(s) Jack Barry-Dan Enright Productions
Golden West Broadcasters
Distributor Colbert Television Sales
Sony Pictures Television
Release
Original network Syndicated (daily)
Original release September 5, 1977 – March 3, 1978

The Hollywood Connection is an American game show that ran in syndication from September 5, 1977 to March 3, 1978. Jim Lange hosted the series, while Jay Stewart (Johnny Gilbert in earlier episodes) announced. The series was produced by Barry & Enright Productions in association with Golden West Broadcasters.

Premise

Two contestants faced a panel of six celebrities in game of answering questions about the stars themselves, a concept similar in format to Match Game. As in Match Game, the contestants' goal is to match the stars' answers in order to score points; this is classified as "making a connection".

Main game

Round 1

The player who won the coin toss choose which row of celebrities (either the top or bottom) to play with. Lange then read a question to the celebrities with two possible answers, after which the stars wrote down their response. When finished, the player in control chose one of the answers that they think the star would say (unlike Match Game, the contestant gave an answer for each individual panelist rather than the entire panel). Each time the player made a connection they earned 1 point. After the first player is done, their opponent does the same thing with the other row of three celebrities.

Round 2

Played in the same manner as Round One, except the player who didn't start the last round went first in this round. That player chose to either play with the male stars or the female stars. Each question had three choices and each connection was worth 2 points.

Round 3

In Round Three, either the player who was behind or, in case of a tie, whoever didn't go first last round, went first. Each question still had three choices and each connection was worth 3 points. Whoever scored more points at the end of the game won, receives some prizes, and played the bonus round. If, however, a tie remained, sudden death was played to determine the champion.

Bonus round

Format #1 (first week only)

The celebrities and the champion were shown a picture of a famous person, place or thing, then the celebrities wrote down a word or phrase associated with the picture. The champion wrote down three answers of their own and placed them next to the values of $300, $200 and $100, with the answer marked at $300 the one the contestant thought the panel will most-likely write down.

The champion called on the stars one-by-one and tried to match what they've written. Each time the panelist's answer matches one of the champion's, the champion wins the money attached to that answer. After all the stars have shown their answers, if the champion reaches at least $1,000, they won $2,000 and a trip.

Format #2

The champion still wrote down three key words as above, except each connection was worth $250 instead of the original scoring format. Three connections won the champion $750 and a trip. After winning the trip, the champion earned a chance to make two more connections; each one doubled the contestant's money, meaning that the first one doubled to $1,500, and one more doubled to the maximum amount of $3,000.

If at any time the champion was unable to make a connection, the bonus round ended and the money was lost (although the trip was not in jeopardy). The champion had the option before each double round to stop and take the money already won, as well as the trip.

Music

Episode status

All episodes seem to exist. The series has been rerun on GSN.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, May 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.