![]() ABC Carnival '74 Across the Board Baloney Bamboozle Be What You Want Beat The Genius Beat The Odds (1962) Beat The Odds (1975) Bedtime Stories The Better Sex The Big Money The Big Payoff Big Spenders Blank Check Body Language Body Talk The Buck Stops Here Bullseye Call My Bluff Card Sharks (1996) Casino Caught in the Act Celebrity Billiards Celebrity Doubletalk Celebrity Secrets Celebrity Sweepstakes Chain Letter (1964) The Challengers (1974) Change Partners Child's Play The Choice Is Yours Combination Lock (1996) Comedy Club Concentration (1985) The Confidence Game Cop Out Countdown (1974) Countdown (1990) The Couples Race Crossword Decisions, Decisions Dollar a Second Duel in the Daytime The Fashion Show Fast Friends $50,000 a Minute Finish Line (1975) Finish Line (1990) Get Rich Quick Going, Going, Gone! Head of the Class High Rollers Hollywood Squares (1965) Hollywood Squares (1985) The Honeymoon Game Hot Numbers Hot Potato House to House How Do You Like Your Eggs? Jackpot (1984) Jeopardy (1977) Jokers Wild Jumble Key Witness Keynotes (1986) King of the Hill Let's Make a Deal (1963) Let's Make a Deal (1990) The Love Experts M'ama Non M'ama Match Game (1962) Match Game (1973) Match Game (1990) Match Game (1996) MatchGame (2008) Mindreaders Missing Links Monday Night QB Money Words Money in the Blank Moneymaze Monopoly (1987) Nothing But the Truth Now You See It (1986) Oddball 100% PDQ Party Line People On TV Play For Keeps Play Your Hunch The Plot Thickens Pot O' Gold Pressure Point The Price Is Right (1972) Pyramid (1996) Pyramid (1997) A Question of Scruples Quick as a Flash Razzle Dazzle Riddlers Run For The Money Says Who? Scrabble (1990) Second Guessers Second Honeymoon Sharaize Shoot for the Stars Shoot the Works Shopping Spree Show Me Showoffs Simon Says $64,000 Question (2000) Smart Alecks Smart Money Spellbinders Spin-Off Split Decision Star Cluster Star Play Strictly Confidential TKO Talking Pictures (1968) Talking Pictures (1976) Tell It to Groucho Temptation (1981) $10,000 Sweep Three of a Kind Tic Tac Dough Tie-Up Top Secret Twenty One (1982) Twenty Questions Twisters Up and Over The Waiting Game We've Got Your Number What Do You Want? What's On Your Mind Wheel of Fortune Whew! Whodunit Whose Baby Wipeout Word Grabbers Write Your Own Ticket You Bet Your Life (1988) You Bet Your Life (1991) You're Putting Me On Show a Random Pilot Show Unreviewed Pilots Bob Stewart Flow Chart | The New Price is RightProducer: Goodson-Todman Host: Dennis James Taping Info: 1972 Made it to Air: In 1972, The New Price Is Right debuted simultaneously on CBS daytime on September 4, 1972 (replacing reruns of The Beverly Hillbillies) and syndicated once-a-week prime-time on September 11, 1972. The syndicated version lasted until 1979. There have been two attempts to revive the show in five-a-week syndication, one lasting one year in 1985 and one lasting 19 weeks in 1994. Occasional prime-time specials have also aired in both 1986 and from 2001 onward. Other Pilots: The New Price Is Right never made a pilot. Availability: Shokus Video #845, "Lost Game Show Pilots" This isn't a pilot, it's a 10 minute pitch film. Well, I think it's a pitch film. In the beginning, Mark Goodson comes on and explains an exciting new show that's coming on "your station" for the fall, but at the end he didn't sound like it was a certainty. As mentioned above, this was clearly for the syndicated version, as Viacom (mispronounced by Goodson) was mentioned and the focal point of the pitch was Dennis James. At no point was Bob Barker or the daytime version even mentioned. After the brief introductory spiel by Goodson (reading off a script instead of cue cards), out comes Dennis James. Dennis then hosts two pricing games, neither of which resembled a pricing game that was ever on the show. The first one involved receiving the price of a high ticket item and another number, it was the player's job to figure out which of the four listed prizes would make the price of that plus the high ticket number equal that other number. Goodson lost that one. The second pricing game was sort of like The Golden Road, except one of the digits from the previous price didn't carry over. It was sort of a Soul Train scramble involving two, three and a four-digit item. Then strangely, a clip is shown of Dennis sub-hosting Let's Make a Deal. There must have been an incredible amount of professional courtesy between Goodson-Todman, Hatos-Hall and Dennis James to allow a clip from a competitor's product to be used in a pitch film. Also, Goodson mentioned that contestants row would have only three contestants instead of four. Obviously, in the meticulous run-through atmosphere of the Mark Goodson game show lab, things change.
This pilot has been viewed 16869 times since October 6, 2008 and was last modified on Dec 12, 2009 14:46 ET |