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The New Price Is Right (1994)

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The New Price Is Right was a short lived nighttime version of the hit American game show The Price Is Right, which aired from September 12, 1994 to January 1995 in syndication. Doug Davidson, one of the stars of the soap opera The Young and the Restless, hosted the show with Burton Richardson as the announcer. The show had its own set of prize models -- Julie Lynn Cialini, Ferrari Farris, and Lisa Stahl.

The show was produced by Mark Goodson Productions and was distributed by Paramount Domestic Television.

This version is not to be confused with the daytime show, which used the name The New Price Is Right for its first several months on the air.

Format

The New Price Is Right differed greatly from its sister show in several ways. The first and most obvious way was how contestants were chosen. Instead of being called down to Contestants' Row, which this version of the program did not use, the contestants were called from the audience and came right up on stage to play the pricing games.

The second was the prize budget for the show, which rose to fairly high levels.

Only three pricing games were played per episode, followed by a Showcase Showdown and a one-player version of the Showcase (the only incarnation so far to ever use such a Showcase round). Some of the pricing games were played differently than they were on the daytime show. A few examples:

Three pricing games were played per episode; each taping lasted for three shows, so a single audience would still produce a total of nine contestants (which equaled the total number seen on the daytime show).

Showcase Showdown

Unlike the other half hour Price Is Rights before it, The New Price Is Right had a Showcase Showdown. Two different versions were used:

The Price WAS Right: The Showcase Showdown used on most of the episodes. The three contestants were placed at three podiums at the front of the audience (a quasi-Contestants' Row) and were shown an old TV commercial. After the ad was shown, the players would bid on what they thought the product being advertised had cost at the time the commercial had originally aired. The person who was closest without going over won and advanced to the Showcase. To aid the contestants, host Davidson would give a clue stating how much a different item would have cost in that time period.

The Big Wheel: Played mostly the same way as on the daytime show, except that the contestants spun in order from highest to lowest winnings instead of the other way around. Getting a total of $1.00 in one spin or a combination of two spins earned a contestant $1,000 and a bonus spin; in the bonus spin, he would win $5,000 more if the wheel landed on a green section and $10,000 more if it landed on $1.00. A spin that did not go all the way around would not count and would have to be redone; redos were not permitted on bonus spins. The contestant whose total in one spin or a combination of two spins was nearest to $1.00 without going over won and advanced to the Showcase.

The producers had originally intended to use The Price WAS Right on every episode, but when the time came to start taping, the staff hadn't been able to research enough commercials for that to happen; therefore, on about 20% of the shows, the Big Wheel had to be used instead.

The Showcase

With only one person playing the Showcase, the pricing game Range Game was modified for the New Price is Right showcases. A new prop was built with a $60,000 scale ($10,000 to $70,000); during the show's final commercial break, the winner of the Showcase Showdown chose rangefinder length at random from somewhere between $4,000 and $10,000.

A showcase was then presented; once it was finished, the rangefinder was started up the scale, with the contestant pulling a lever when he thought it was covering the showcase value. If he was correct, he won the Showcase.

Notes and Trivia

 


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