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It Could Be You

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Narrated by
  
Running time
  
30 Minutes

First episode date
  
4 June 1956

Presented by
  
Executive producer
  
Ralph Edwards

4.7/10
TV

Country of origin
  
United States

Original network
  
Final episode date
  
30 December 1961

Genre
  
Game show

It Could Be You httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

No. of seasons
  
6 (daytime)1 (primetime)

Original release
  
June 4, 1956 – December 29, 1961

Similar
  
Game show, Truth or Consequences, The Big Payoff, Strike It Rich, Who Do You Trust?

It could be you opening credits nbc game show


It Could Be You was a television game show produced by Ralph Edwards Productions in the late 1950s in the United States, broadcast daily in the weekday daytime schedule for five years 1956-61, and weekly in the evening on-and-off over three years 1958-61. Bill Leyden was the host, and Wendell Niles was the announcer.

Contents

It could be you hilarious american tv show 1950 s


Details

It Could Be You used a variation of the format made famous in another popular show of the time, Queen for a Day, where a woman who had gone through many hardships in her life was selected and awarded prizes. However, It Could Be You, though still awarding prizes, focused most often on a woman's more embarrassing moments — for example: being seen by a neighbor while getting out of a bathtub, or engaging in a romantic interlude with a boyfriend while parked next to a bus full of tourists. Sometimes, the contestant had to perform a stunt or activity to claim the prize. The title of the series was part of the show, in that the woman called to the stage was from a studio audience which had been told ... "It Could Be You".

Prizes were often more humorous than useful — a woman who complained about moving from city to city so much that she could never get used to her new bathtub received a bathtub on wheels. At times, though, the producers of the show were much more sensitive, bringing about reunions of relatives long thought dead, or re-uniting families torn apart by the Iron Curtain.

Guest celebrities would sometimes appear to aid the host. Among those appearing were:

  • Lex Barker
  • Annette Funicello
  • Steve McQueen
  • NBC broadcast both a daily weekday daytime version (1956 through 1961), and a weekly primetime evening version that appeared on various days at various times over the summer of 1958, within the 1958-59 and 1959-60 television seasons, and over the summer of 1961. The show was filmed in Studio 1 of the NBC Studios in Burbank, California.

    The producer of the show was Stefan Hatos, best known for his later collaboration with Monty Hall on the famous 1960s and 1970s TV game show Let's Make A Deal.

    Daytime schedule

    The daily daytime version of the show premiered June 4, 1956 on the NBC daytime schedule in the 12:30–1 PM (EST) timeslot, and continued every weekday at that time through December 30, 1961.

    Prime time schedule

    The primetime evening version of the show was also broadcast by NBC.

    Summer 1958

    The weekly evening version of the show premiered July 2, 1958, in the 10:30–11 PM (EST) timeslot on Wednesday nights, where it continued until September 1958.

    1958-59 Season

    The weekly evening show began again in November 1958 in a new timeslot, 8:30–9 PM (EST) on Thursday nights, and continued there until the end of March 1959. The evening show was not broadcast in the summer of 1959.

    1959-60 Season

    In September 1959, the weekly evening show appeared in another new timeslot, 10:30–11 PM (EST) on Saturday nights, until January 1960. The evening show was not broadcast in the summer of 1960.

    1960-61 Season

    The evening show did not appear within the 1960–61 season.

    Summer 1961

    The evening show began again June 1961 in a fourth timeslot, 10–10:30 PM (EST) on Wednesday nights. The last prime time show was broadcast September 27, 1961.

    Critical reception

    Although the viewing public enjoyed the show and appreciated host Bill Leyden's quick wit, critics of daytime television found fault with what they called the patronizing and condescending behavior the host had toward the women brought on stage.

    References

    It Could Be You Wikipedia