Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

CBS Television Quiz

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
5.6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
5.6
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
60
51
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Genre
  
Game show

Developed by
  
Gil Fates

No. of episodes
  
47

Final episode date
  
25 May 1942

Number of episodes
  
47

5.6/10
TV

Created by
  
Gil Fates

Country of origin
  
United States

First episode date
  
2 July 1941

Presented by
  
Gil Fates

Program creator
  
Gil Fates

Location(s)
  
New York City, New York

Executive producers
  
Gil Fates, Worthington Miner

Similar
  
Game show, The Spike Jones Show, Fractured Flickers, Frontier Doctor, The Adventures of Sir Lan

CBS Television Quiz was the first live television game show ever to be broadcast regularly, running from July 2, 1941, to May 25, 1942, on the CBS television station in New York, WCBW Channel 2 (the forerunner of WCBS-TV). It was an in-house production and broadcast in black and white. The host was Gil Fates, with Frances Buss as scorekeeper.

Contents

Game play

Not much is known about the format of CBS Television Quiz, however it has been noted for giving contestants the answers and requiring the questions, predating Jeopardy! As Merv Griffin was a teenager in San Francisco at the time, it is unlikely he was aware of it, although his future wife Julann may have seen it. According to Griffin, she had originally suggested the "answer-and-question" idea to him.

Broadcast history

Televised game shows prior to the debut of CBS Television Quiz were "test episodes" for experimental purposes; one of these was Truth or Consequences (NBC Radio, July 1, 1941), while a show called Spelling Bee was broadcast (BBC, 1938). Quiz was the first regularly scheduled quiz program, but not the first to be sponsored, and aired on Wednesdays at 8:30 PM EST.

On October 2 the series moved to Thursdays, and on January 8 the show was reduced to 55 minutes for the network to present a five-minute news summary at 9:25 PM. Quiz moved to Mondays on February 2 and was now preceded by a civilian-defense program (later an American Red Cross program), which along with the news summary required the show itself to decrease to 50 minutes. The Red Cross program ended on March 30, allowing Quiz to re-expand to 55 minutes.

The series ended after 47 episodes on May 25, 1942, following a mandate two weeks earlier by the War Production Board to cease building television stations. Most of the shows then airing on both WCBW and WNBT, including Quiz, were removed in favor of war-related programming.

Fates would later produce and/or direct many Goodson-Todman game shows on the network (most notably What's My Line?), while Buss (later Frances Buss Buch) became CBS' first female director.

Episode status

CBS Television Quiz was aired live, prior to the adoption of kinescopes for recording programs and long before videotape. The show does not have any extant audio recordings or photographs, making it one of the few game shows to be completely lost.

References

CBS Television Quiz Wikipedia