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It's Your Bet

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Created by
  
Ralph Andrews

No. of seasons
  
4

Original network
  
Syndicated

Final episode date
  
September 1973

Program creator
  
Ralph Andrews

6.2/10
TV

Country of origin
  
United States

Running time
  
30 minutes

First episode date
  
29 September 1969

Number of seasons
  
4

Genre
  
Game show

It's Your Bet ctvabizUSGameShowItsYourBettitlejpg

Distributor
  
Metromedia, NBC Television Sales, National Telefilm Associates, SFM Entertainment

Presented by
  
Hal March (1969), Dick Gautier (1970–1971), Tom Kennedy (1971–1972), Lyle Waggoner (1972–1973)

Similar
  
Game show, I'll Bet, You Don't Say!, Liar's Club, Wordplay

It s your bet syndicated game show opening credits


It's Your Bet is an American game show which aired in syndication (mostly NBC owned-and-operated stations) from 1969 to 1973. The series was a revised version of the NBC game I'll Bet, which aired for six months in 1965. Both I'll Bet and It's Your Bet were produced by Ralph Andrews.

Contents

Hosts

During its four-year run, It's Your Bet had four hosts. Hal March hosted for the first few months. When health problems forced him to step down in late 1969 (he died in January 1970), actor Dick Gautier took over and hosted through the end of the 1970–1971 season.

Tom Kennedy moderated for the following year (1971–1972), followed by Lyle Waggoner, then an actor specializing in comedies and a regular repertory-company participant on The Carol Burnett Show, for its final season. Kennedy had previously guest-hosted for March for a week which included Waggoner and his wife as guests.

Front game

The two celebrity couples played for members of the studio audience. One player on the team bet 25, 50, 75, or 100 points (always these increments and never more) on his/her spouse's ability to answer a question. A question was telephoned in secret to the betting player by the host; to ensure seclusion from the other player a motorized wall rose between the two players while the player was on the phone with the host, ensuring the question was not known to the spouse until after the bet had been placed.

(Although the show had a betting theme, both sides began with a score of zero rather than a bankroll of any sort, and bet points rather than dollars.)

In addition, the betting player had to bet whether his/her spouse could answer the question correctly ("CAN") or not ("CAN'T"). Bets were recorded on toteboards in the desk where the couples sat, with a special rotating trilon indicating "CAN" or "CAN'T." The questions were either general knowledge or based on the couple's personal/public lives.

If the player correctly guessed whether his/her spouse would or would not answer correctly, the team would score the wagered points; otherwise, the wagered points would be awarded to the opposing team. The first team to reach 300 points won the game and advanced to the "Preference Round."

Preference Round

In the "Preference Round," the object was for each member of the team to guess how his/her spouse would answer a question. The host posed a question and three possible answers; each time the couple agreed on the response, the team won another prize for their designated audience member.

Episode status

One March episode and two Kennedy episodes (including an episode where he sub-hosted for March) are known to exist. A Waggoner episode taped June 1, 1972 is held at the UCLA Film and Television Archive.

A clip of a Kennedy episode, in which an infamous prank was played on him by the crew and celebrity guest Burt Reynolds, was seen on NBC's Most Outrageous Game Show Moments series.

References

It's Your Bet Wikipedia