Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Shuffle (game show)

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Narrated by
  
Randy West

Original network
  
The Family Channel

Final episode date
  
10 June 1994

Program creator
  
Wink Martindale

Country of origin
  
United States

First episode date
  
7 March 1994

Presented by
  
Wink Martindale

Genre
  
Game show

Created by
  
Wink Martindale Bill Hillier

Original release
  
March 7 – June 10, 1994

Similar
  
Game show, Boggle, Bumper Stumpers, Headline Chasers, High Rollers

Karen levein on shuffle the interactive game


Shuffle is an American game show that aired on The Family Channel. It ran from March 7 to June 10, 1994. Wink Martindale hosted, and Randy West announced.

Contents

Wink Martindale and Bill Hillier created and produced four "interactive" games for the Family Channel, with Wink hosting every one of them. Besides Shuffle, the other three were Trivial Pursuit, Boggle, and Jumble.

Shuffle premiered on the same day as Boggle. The two shows were quite similar; besides their similar formats, they shared the same theme song, sound effects, and set. (After Boggle finished taping, the set was re-decorated to make Shuffle's set). Shuffle was the less successful of the two, being replaced with Jumble after 14 weeks.

Shuffle 1994 part 1


Gameplay

Four players competed, each with a telephone keypad built into their podium. A shuffled list with four items is given, and a question relating to the list is asked, usually in the vein of "Who is the oldest?", "Which one of these came first?", or "Which is the most popular?". The players had 10 seconds to punch in their answer (either 1, 2, 3, or 4) on their keypad. They would win points depending on how quickly they answered correctly, starting at 1,000 points and counting down as the seconds ticked on. After the right answer is revealed, they have 5 seconds to find the item ordered second. The contestants would again win points for a right answer, starting at 500 and ticking down for each passing second. After this, Wink would mention which items were ordered third and fourth, and a new list would be played.

Three lists are played this way, and the player with the lowest score at the end of three lists would be eliminated.

In the second round, the three remaining players had their scores reset to zero. Three more lists would be played, and the lowest scoring player would be eliminated.

For the third and final round, the scores were reset to zero again, and the two remaining contestants played three more lists. The contestant with the highest score at the end won two prizes, one of which was always a trip. The runner-up won a smaller prize.

Interactive component

After each round with the studio players, home viewers could call a special 1-900 number and for $4.98, play a game of "Interactive Shuffle". The game was played exactly like a round of the studio game. Home viewers would answer by using their touch-tone telephone, and the one with the highest score would receive a small prize and the right to enter a weekly playoff. The playoff would be played exactly as before, and the ultimate winner would receive a trip.

References

Shuffle (game show) Wikipedia