Quiz Kings-
Seeing the Games and Meeting the Hosts of a Generation
Unless you grew up in Hollywood or New York City, you may have thought about one day meeting a movie or television star.
I certainly did, and while it took a few decades to realize that aspiration, I look back on that time with a smile.
As a preschool aged kid, I would play with building blocks. I did not make buildings with these wooden blocks; I made game show sets.
Throughout elementary school, I would occasionally walk home for lunch. That was allowed back in those days when many moms stayed home.
Mom would have a lunch ready for me, and I was permitted to watch whatever game show happened to be on our family black and white set.
Concentration was my favorite, but occasionally, I might see something new debut during my late morning lunch break.
The very first Jeopardy! with host Art Fleming debuted on March 30, 1964, and I saw it right there in my family living room.
Fast forward some forty-plus years where my wife and I are in the audience of Jeopardy! with host Alex Trebek. For a kid who built game show sets with his toy blocks, this was real progress.
Keeping connected to the genre over the decades was made easy with a collection of home versions of popular game shows.
I have about thirty of these games. I have not played with them in years, but they have been with me throughout my adult life.
In 2007, I attended a conference for game show fans in Hollywood. As I wrote in 9 From 99, Experiences in California’s Central Valley, the Game Show Congress was honoring host icon Wink Martindale and the man who created many of the favorite game shows from the fifties through the eighties: Bob Stewart.
The ceremonies were sprinkled with a wide array of television stars that appeared as celebrity players on many of Bob Stewart’s shows.
Among the stars we met that day were Betty White, Florence Henderson (The Brady Bunch), Teresa Ganzel (Tea Time Lady on Johnny Carson’s Tonight Show), and Barbara Feldon (Get Smart!).
The stars loved the attention by attendees to the luncheon honoring Bob Stewart and Wink Martindale.
They posed with anyone asking for a photo, were generous with their insight into their careers, and provided all of us with positive experiences as fans of game shows.
As great as meeting these celebrities was, it was exceeded by the opportunity to talk and take pictures of some of the game show hosts and announcers from the past several decades.
I have photos with me standing next to current Jeopardy announcer Johnny Gilbert, the late Saturday Night Live announcer Don Pardo, the late host Tom Kennedy from You Don’t Say!, and the former Price is Right announcer Rich Fields.
The afternoon remains a highlight of my life as a game show fan. It was repeated two years later in what would become the final Game Show Congress.
That year, the host of Jackpot! Geoff Edwards and the late Allen Ludden were honored.
Moving to California in the early 2000s gave me the opportunity to see and do things I could only dream about growing up in upstate New York.
Meeting the stars of the daytime game shows that entertained me as a child has been a highlight of living here in California.
Seeing that these stars were decent people who appreciated their fans was the icing on the cake.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His book Dreaming Big is available at Lulu.com.
Two of his books Can Do Californians and California Back Roads, are available for purchase from the Merced Courthouse Museum Gift Shop.
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