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In the Blitz
Bonanza round, the champion was given one final puzzle to solve. Initially, the champion was told how many words the puzzle contained, but this would change in favor of revealing the information to the home audience and panel only. In order to reveal the puzzle pieces, the champion spun
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was played to a time limit. If time was called during a puzzle, the contestant in control was given the option of whether or not to guess the puzzle. Choosing not to guess ended the game, and the solution to the puzzle was revealed. Guessing incorrectly gave the option to the opponent. Regardless of
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The champion spun the wheel four times. If fewer than four spaces were uncovered after the last spin, the champion was given the option to leave the board as it was or give up the prize package he/she had won in the main game in exchange for one more spin. After taking or declining this fifth spin,
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The object for the contestants was to light the stars around the monitors. To begin play, the home audience was shown how many words were in the puzzle and a certain number of stars (originally two, later four) were lit at random. The contestant in control, usually the challenger, chose a celebrity
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Once all four stars around a monitor were lit, the part of the puzzle it was concealing required a correct agree/disagree choice from one of the contestants to reveal and the celebrity underneath the star would remain in play until one was given. Once the puzzle piece was uncovered, the contestant
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The first contestant to solve two puzzles won the match and a prize package, and went on to play the Blitz
Bonanza. Rather than featuring models, celebrity guests often modeled and demonstrated prizes while being described by the announcer, which would be preceded by a message on the game board
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Two contestants, one usually a returning champion, competed to uncover and solve hidden word puzzles with the help of a four-celebrity panel. The puzzles, which varied in length from two to six words, were concealed behind a grid of six monitors above the panel, and a star was positioned at the
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The jackpot had a starting value of $ 10,000. Initially, it increased by $ 5,000 for each time the Blitz
Bonanza was not won and was capped at a maximum value of $ 25,000. Later, the cap was reduced to $ 20,000 and the increase for every unsuccessful attempt was reduced to $ 2,500.
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corner of each monitor. There were 12 stars in all, arranged in four columns of three with one column above each celebrity's seat. Each monitor contained all or part of only one word, and the last word on the top row did not continue onto the bottom one.
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and a position (top, middle, bottom). The star in that position was lit, and
Marshall then asked a question to the chosen celebrity. The contestant either had to correctly agree or disagree with the given answer, in much the same manner as
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the champion was given 10 seconds to study the puzzle and each celebrity secretly wrote down a guess. The champion won a cash jackpot for solving the puzzle, or $ 250 per celebrity who had the correct answer in case of a miss.
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a large wheel that controlled a randomizer light on the board. If the light stopped on a covered space, it was revealed; if it stopped on a revealed space, that spin was wasted.
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Play continued on a puzzle until one player solved it or all six monitors were uncovered, with the player who uncovered the last monitor winning the game by default.
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was a celebrity panel show where contestants had to correctly determine whether the celebrities were giving a correct answer or bluffing. Like
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the decision and its outcome, play resumed on the next episode with either a new puzzle or the Blitz
Bonanza as dictated by the rules.
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that revealed it was given a chance to guess the puzzle or continue playing as an incorrect guess passed control to his/her opponent.
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Champions remained on the show until they were defeated in the main game or had played the Blitz
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moved up a half-hour to the 11:30 AM EST slot formerly occupied by
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Productions, in association with Peter
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from April 8 to
December 20, 1985, with reruns airing on the
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was the announcer for the series, which was produced by
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Schwartz, David; Ryan, Steve; Wostbrock, Fred (1999).
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405:. However, now competing against the second half of
354:originally aired on ABC at 11:00 AM EST, replacing
537:American Broadcasting Company original programming
557:Television series by Heatter-Quigley Productions
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443:(3 ed.). Facts on File, Inc. pp. 2–3.
475:. Watson-Guptill Publications. p. 19.
562:American English-language television shows
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505:final episode, aired December 20, 1985.
547:1985 American television series debuts
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472:The Encyclopedia of Daytime Television
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419:ended its run on December 20, 1985.
415:on NBC, ratings did not improve and
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244:from March 31 to December 26, 1986.
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315:monitors describing the prize(s).
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389:In June 1985, two months after
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397:was cancelled, and
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369:The Price Is Right
347:Broadcast history
295:Hollywood Squares
277:Hollywood Squares
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395:Family Feud
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357:Trivia Trap
301:Battlestars
271:before it,
268:Battlestars
250:John Harlan
242:USA Network
87:of episodes
70:John Harlan
66:Narrated by
51:Jerome Shaw
48:Directed by
531:Categories
423:References
184:1985-12-20
174:1985-04-08
95:Production
38:Created by
283:Main game
234:game show
488:22 March
412:Scrabble
130:25 mins.
100:Producer
522:on IMDb
192:Related
182: (
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170:April 8
167:Release
157:Network
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407:Price
490:2020
477:ISBN
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403:Feud
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238:ABC
161:ABC
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