Hollywood's Talking | |
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Logo from the first episode of Hollywood's Talking.
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Created by | Jack Barry |
Presented by | Geoff Edwards |
Narrated by | Johnny Jacobs |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 65 |
Production | |
Location(s) |
CBS Television City Hollywood, California |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company(s) | Jack Barry Productions |
Distributor | Sony Pictures Television |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | March 26 – June 22, 1973 |
Hollywood's Talking is an American game show based on the 1960s quizzer, Everybody's Talking, and produced by Jack Barry. It ran on CBS for three months in 1973, debuting on March 26 (alongside The $10,000 Pyramid and The Young and the Restless) and ending on June 22 to make room for a new version of Match Game.
It was hosted by Geoff Edwards, with Johnny Jacobs announcing. The series was the first national game show hosted by Edwards.
The program aired at 3:30 p.m./2:30 Central time, opposite ABC's One Life to Live (then still a 30-minute show) and NBC's Return to Peyton Place.
Edwards once said that while hosting this series, he had a tenuous working relationship with Jack Barry. It was not until 1980 that Edwards would host another Barry & Enright game, Play the Percentages.
In this game, three contestants viewed videos of celebrities, all of them talking about different subjects, and the contestants had to buzz-in and identify what subject they were talking about. Correct answers won money for the players according to how long the video was played, while incorrect answers disqualified a contestant from answering for the remainder of that round. The value of each round started at $150, and decreased by $50 for every 1/3 of videotape it took to take a guess. The first player to reach $200 or more won the game, with all players keeping their money.
The winner played "Short Subjects", in which 15-second videotapes of celebrities were shown one by one. Unlike the main game, there was no penalty for an incorrect answer, and contestants could buzz-in and answer as much as they wanted on each clip. Each correct answer won the same amount of money won in the main game, and solving five subjects won an extra $1,000.