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{{Short description|American television series}}
{{distinguish2|the daytime [[The Price Is Right (U.S. game show)|The Price Is Right]], which used the name ''The New Price Is Right'' for its first 199 episodes}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{more citations needed|date=April 2009}}
{{original research|date=November 2011}}
}}
{{Infobox television
| image =
| runtime = 22 minutes
| creator = [[Bob Stewart (television)|Bob Stewart]]
| developer = [[Jonathan Goodson]]
| music = [[Edd Kalehoff]]
| location = [[Television City|Television City Studios]]
| company = [[Fremantle (company)|Mark Goodson Productions]]
| presenter = [[Doug Davidson]]
| narrated = [[Burton Richardson]]
| country = United States
| language = English
| network = [[Broadcast syndication|Syndicated]]
| first_aired = {{start date|1994|9|12}}
| last_aired = {{end date|1995|1|27}}
| num_episodes = 80
| related = ''[[The Price Is Right (American game show)|The Price Is Right]]''
}}
'''''The New Price Is Right''''' is a syndicated edition of the American game show ''[[The Price Is Right (American game show)|The Price Is Right]]'' which premiered on September 12, 1994, and ran until January 27, 1995. This was the third thirty-minute syndicated edition, following a weekly series that ran from 1972 until 1980 and a daily series that ran for one season between 1985 and 1986.


==Personnel==
[[Image:Tnpirlogo.jpg|200px|thumb|The opening title to 1994's ''The New Price Is Right''.]]
'''''The New Price Is Right''''' was a nighttime version of the American game show ''[[The Price Is Right]]'', which aired from [[September 12]], [[1994 in television|1994]] to January [[1995 in television|1995]] in syndication. [[Doug Davidson]] 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]].
[[Doug Davidson]],<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hart |first1=Marla |title=Soaps Veteran Tries His Luck As A Game Show Host |url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1994-09-08-9409080162-story.html |website=Chicago Tribune |date=8 September 1994 |access-date=8 June 2021}}</ref> who was already well-known for his role as Paul Williams on the CBS [[soap opera]] ''[[The Young and the Restless]]'', hosted this syndicated series. [[Burton Richardson (television announcer)|Burton Richardson]], who had previously served as the announcer for ''[[The Arsenio Hall Show]]'', was the announcer. [[Julie Lynn Cialini]], Ferrari Farris, and [[Lisa Stahl]] were the three prize models.


Several then-current and former production personnel from the CBS network version of ''The Price Is Right'' also served roles on this version, with daytime series producer Kathy Greco assuming the executive producer’s seat.
The show was produced by [[Mark Goodson Productions]] and was distributed by what is now [[CBS Television Distribution]].

''The New Price Is Right'' was a production of [[Fremantle (company)|Mark Goodson Productions]], and was distributed by [[CBS Television Distribution|Paramount Domestic Television]]. The program, like the daytime series, was taped at [[Television City]] in Los Angeles, California.


==Format==
==Format==
''The New Price Is Right'', unlike its syndicated predecessors, was not a carbon copy of the daytime series. Significant changes were made to the show format.
''The New Price Is Right'' differed greatly from its sister show in several ways. On the whole, the entire concept, which had not been radically updated since the 1970s, was given a massive update in an attempt to appeal to a younger generation. Doug Davidson was at the time a popular actor on [[The Young and the Restless]], and Burton Richardson had made his mark as the announcer for [[The Arsenio Hall Show]].


===Contestants===
Among the most
One of the most significant format changes for ''The New Price Is Right'' was the elimination of the long-standing [[The Price Is Right (American game show)#One Bid|One Bid]] game, which determines who comes onstage to play a pricing game. Instead, when an audience member was called to "come on down", that contestant was immediately brought onstage to play a pricing game. A total of three pricing games were played in one program.
*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. To make up for this change, three episodes were taped with each audience, so that each audience would still produce a total of nine contestants (which equaled the total number seen on the daytime show since 1975).


===Aesthetic and other changes===
*The second was the prize budget for the show, which rose to fairly high levels. Cars not from General Motors, Ford Motor Company, or Chrysler Corporation would appear as prizes, a practice prohibited from the daytime show by producer [[Roger Dobkowitz]] since 1991. Daytime show associate producer [[Kathy Greco]] was in charge of this syndicated version.
In keeping with a more modern theme, the set featured a black stage floor, darker lighting, muted colors such as silver, purple and gold, and a giant wall of video screens.


[[Edd Kalehoff]] created an entirely new set of music cues for the series.<ref>[http://tvpmm.com/vault/gameshows.html Vault Inventory-Game Shows], Television Production Music Museum (www.tvpmm.com). Accessed January 27, 2012.</ref>{{Better source needed|date=June 2021}} The ''Price Is Right'' theme was re-recorded with a faster tempo and a jazzier sound featuring a saxophone lead as opposed to synthesizers. While the show did not last long, some of Kalehoff’s cues were later used on the daytime series in the years that followed.
*Only three pricing games were played per episode, just like the daytime show when it was a half-hour long, 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:
**'''[[Plinko]]:''' While the top prize remained the same, the value of the outermost slots on the board was increased from $100 to $2,500. Also, the small prize pricing was changed to a higher/lower pricing format, since the game frequently used items with three-digit prices. Finally, on the first playing only, an alternate pattern was used for the game board: $2,500-$1,000-$0-$5,000-$0-$5,000-$0-$1,000-$2,500. The highest amount won was $16,500.
**'''[[Clock Game]]:''' The game became digitized, with no prop on stage for it, and the contestant was provided with a $1,000 range to guess the price in for the prize. The game frequently used prizes with four-digit prices, and on some occasions, a third prize was awarded as a bonus for winning.
**'''[[Make Your Mark|Barker's Marker$]]:''' The name was changed to "Make Your Mark" the single time it was played on this version of the show, as [[Bob Barker]] was not the host of this version. This name for the game was adopted on the daytime show 13 years later, when [[Drew Carey]] took over the hosting duties for Season 36.
**'''[[Magic Number (pricing game)|Magic #]]:''' Davidson coined his own grammar for this game, calling the lever a "leever" and the game board a "geezmo." The setup was also different: The game used, for the price reveal, a refurbished Double Prices board with the price tags on top and bottom, and the Magic # superimposed in the middle.
**'''[[Hole in One (pricing game)|Hole in One]]''' and '''[[Grand Game]]:''' Instead of using grocery items, these games were played with small prizes; they were also the ''only'' games played where the daytime version used grocery items.
**'''[[Cliff Hangers]]:''' The mountain climber was given the name Hans Gudegast, the birth name of Davidson's ''Young & Restless'' costar [[Eric Braeden]]. The "Hans" name has since been frequently used on the daytime show in Season 36.
**'''[[Safe Crackers]]:''' As in the daytime show, two prizes were shown, but the smaller prize (the one whose price matched the combination of the safe) was placed outside the safe. The daytime show's current think music for this game was initially used in this syndicated incarnation of the show. (During the time this incarnation was in production, the daytime show was using the think music initially used in the 1985-86 syndicated version with Tom Kennedy.)
**'''[[Golden Road]]:''' Played the same, except that it began with a small prize or a fishbowl of cash.
**'''[[3 Strikes (pricing game)|3 Strikes]]:''' The first number was given for free. Also, that number could repeat in the price of the car.
**'''[[Any Number]], [[Money Game]], [[One Away]]:''' These games used the same car reveal as [[Lucky $even]], with the car being pushed out onto the stage instead of being behind one of the Big Doors.
**'''[[Range Game]]:''' This game was not featured in the regular rotation; instead, it was used for the Showcase. ''(See below for information.)''


Like the previous syndicated editions, ''The New Price Is Right'' had a significantly larger prize budget. Expensive foreign cars were regularly featured. Games that used grocery items on the daytime version featured merchandise prizes on this version. Higher valued prizes were offered in cases of games that already used these types of prizes.
In keeping up with modern times, ''The New Price Is Right'' did not use the traditional losing horns that its predecessors did. Instead, a faint "groan" on an electric guitar was heard, along with several sound effects of glass breaking.


===Pricing game rule changes===
==Showcase Showdown==
{{main|Showcase Showdown (The Price Is Right)}}
{{see also|List of The Price Is Right pricing games}}


* '''Barker's Markers:''' The name was changed to "Make Your Mark" the single time it was played on this version of the show. This name was adopted on the daytime show in 2008 when [[Drew Carey]] became the host.
Unlike the other half hour ''Price Is Right''s before it, ''The New Price Is Right'' had a Showcase Showdown. Two different versions were used:
* '''Clock Game:''' Instead of using the prop from the daytime series, the game positioned the contestant in front of the video wall where the prices were displayed for the studio audience. A digital clock was used to keep time. The contestant was provided a $1,000 range in which to guess the price of each prize. The game frequently used prizes with four-digit prices. On some occasions a third prize was awarded as a bonus for winning (a rule change later adopted on the daytime version in 2009).
* '''Hole in One:''' Instead of revealing prices after the contestant placed all six items, the price for each item was revealed after it was chosen and only placed in line if it was more expensive than the one before.
* '''Plinko:''' While the top prize remained the same at $5,000 per chip for a potential total of $25,000, two configurations of slots were utilized, one of which featured two $2,500 slots in place of the $100 slots. In order to earn chips, a higher/lower guessing format was used due to the merchandise items’ values exceeding $100.
* '''Punch a Bunch:''' During some episodes, Davidson pulled the slip out of the hole as soon as it was punched. The contestant then decided to keep the money or punch another hole. On the daytime show, the slips are not revealed until the contestant has made all of his or her initial punches.
* '''Superball:''' Instead of waiting until guessing all three small prizes before rolling the balls, the contestant rolled after each correct guess.
* '''3 Strikes:''' The first number was lit at the beginning of the game and the number could repeat elsewhere in the price. Four chips representing the remaining numbers in the price were then placed into the bag with three strike chips.


==Showcase Showdown==
'''The Price WAS Right:''' This was the Showcase Showdown that was used on most of the episodes. Effectively the same as [[One Bid]], the most important difference was that the contestants from the three pricing games "bid" on an old item (which they did not get to win or keep) as revealed in an original commercial for the item instead of an actual prize. The three contestants were placed in 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.
Another of the many changes made for ''The New Price Is Right'' was the introduction of the Showcase Showdown, which had not been part of the previous syndicated productions. With the change came, in addition to having only one contestant play for the Showcase, a new Showcase Showdown game based on the One Bid round on the daytime series.


The new game was known as “The Price ''Was'' Right”. The three contestants who were called down stood behind a set of lecterns at the [[Apron stage|apron]] of the stage, and a vintage television commercial played on a large onstage video screen. They would then offer a guess as to how much the item advertised cost in the year the commercial aired, and the closest bidder without going over won the chance to play for the Showcase.
'''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 New Price Is Right'' also employed the daytime series’ Big Wheel for the Showcase Showdown in several episodes recorded early in the show’s brief run. An exception was the highest winner spun first. The rules otherwise remained unchanged. The contestant closest to $1.00 without going over advanced, with a spin-off played in case of a tie. Any contestant that hit $1.00 exactly won $1,000 and a chance at either $5,000 or $10,000 with a bonus spin.
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, apparently anticipating only a thirteen-week run. Therefore, on the remaining three weeks of episodes, the Big Wheel had to be used instead.


==The Showcase==
==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.
Instead of making a bid as on the daytime series, the contestant played a reworked version of a preexisting pricing game, [[List of The Price Is Right pricing games#Range Game|Range Game]]. The Showcase featured a wider range with a starting value of $10,000 that increased in $1,000 increments to a top value of $70,000. The contestant selected the range at random during the commercial break leading into the Showcase, which varied in value 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.

==Running Gags and Jokes==
Despite the show's very short run (it lasted only 16 weeks), ''The New Price Is Right'' had its own share of running gags. Examples include:

*Hole-in-One (or Two) - When a contestant did not sink the ball into the hole on the first putt, Doug would feel sorry for the contestant, wandering aimlessly around the stage until he "accidentally" bumped into the lever to change the "ONE" into "OR TWO" on the game's sign.

*Make Your Mark - Doug would give the contestant $100 to keep or give up to start the game, only to have producer Phil Rossi come out on stage to remind Doug to give the contestant $500.

*Magic Number - As before, Doug would refer to the prop as a "geezmo" and the lever as a "leever". He would also refer to the game as "Magic Pound Sign" on occasion.

*Showcase Showdown (Big Wheel) - When a contestant was ready for the bonus spin, Doug would appear "clueless" as to whether the wheel should be set to the 5¢ space or the $1 space to start.

*Plinko - When a disc got stuck, like [[Bob Barker|Bob]] (and presently [[Drew Carey|Drew]]), Doug would also use the Plinko Stick. However, he would just bang the stick against the game prop to make the disc fall down instead of merely moving the chip with the stick.

*Cliff Hangers - Davidson, as mentioned before, referred to the mountain climber as [[Eric Braeden|Hans Gudegast]]. When the game was lost, after the commercial, Doug would joke and say that Hans was being rushed to the [[hospital]].

*Showcase - As with the daytime show, there were very funny running gags in the showcases. One now-famous-among-game show fans showcase involved Burton announcing the prizes (which included a [[Sanyo]] TV, [[Sega Genesis]], and ''[[Nigel Mansell's Indy Car Challenge]]'' to start with) with an "echo" effect, to which Doug questions Burton as to why it was appropriate for him to use an echo, then Burton responds with saying "A CAR!" three times for three cars to appear (a [[Ford Escort]], [[Pontiac Grand Am]], and [[Mitsubishi 3000GT]]). This was referred to as "the showcase that has an echo-echo-echo...!". Unfortunately, the contestant did not manage to win the showcase, losing by a wide margin (his $6,000 range did not include the ARP of $56,752 [he set it between $41,000-$47,000]).


Following presentation of the showcase, the contestant’s range selection was revealed and the rangefinder began moving up the game board. In order to stop it, the contestant pulled a lever, and if the value of the Showcase was within the covered range, the contestant won the Showcase in addition to any cash or prizes won during his/her pricing game.
==Set==
The show's set differed drastically from that of the daytime show. The Big Doors had diamond patterns (not to be confused with the 2007 pattern), gold logos (similar to the 1986 CBS primetime specials), and marbled doorframes with no lights; the Turntable was replaced with a large video wall; and the floor was covered with a shiny, black surface (that same floor would later be used for ''[[Hollywood Squares]]'' ([[Hollywood Squares#1998-2004|1998]]), and is currently used for the Drew Carey version of ''[[The Price Is Right $1,000,000 Spectacular]]'').


==Broadcast information==
==Pilot==
At the NATPE convention in January 1994, Paramount pushed ''The New Price Is Right'' as a viable option for stations for their fringe and access periods. By the time NATPE concluded, the show had been sold in 78 markets and was one of the two more popular new entries at the convention, with the other being what would eventually become Warner Bros.’ entertainment news program ''[[Extra (American TV program)|Extra]]''.<ref name=":0">''Broadcasting & Cable'' issue dated January 31, 1994. “ENT gains ground”, pg. 7.</ref>{{Better source needed|date=June 2021}}
The pilot for the series was hosted by [[KTLA]] news personality [[Mark Kriski]], with [[Bob Hilton]] doing the announcing. Shots of the set from this episode, which used the colored spolights from the '86 Specials around the Big Doors and a repainted Range Game board for the Showcase, can be seen in the opening sequence on early episodes.


In the New York City market, the show was bought by [[WWOR-TV|WWOR]] for its early afternoon fringe period. There, it was paired with the returning ''[[Family Feud]]'' and aired at 4:00&nbsp;p.m. Eastern, one of the more competitive in its market. Meanwhile, in Los Angeles, ''The New Price Is Right'' was sold to [[KNBC]], which purchased both it and ''Extra'' to air in its Prime Time Access hour in place of Paramount's ''[[Entertainment Tonight]]'' and ''[[Hard Copy (TV program)|Hard Copy]]''; KNBC gave ''TNPIR'' the 7:30&nbsp;p.m. Pacific time that ''Hard Copy'' had previously held.<ref name=":1">''Broadcasting & Cable'' issue dated December 19, 1994. “Paramount drops ‘Price', pg. 18.</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=King|first=Susan|date=1994-09-11|title=Preview '94 : Frontier Doves and Hawks : SYNDICATED FARE INCLUDES MORE CELEB-HOSTED TALK SHOWS|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-09-11-tv-37035-story.html|access-date=2022-09-26|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|language=en-US}}</ref>
==Theme song==
While this show's theme song was virtually the same as that of the daytime show, it was done in a smooth jazz arrangement. The theme song would carry over to [[Bruce Forsyth]]'s ''[[The Price Is Right (UK)|Bruce's Price Is Right]]'' in the UK (as well as ''El Precio Justo'' in Spain and ''O Preço Certo Em Euros'' in Portugal). The "come on down" cue was also heard on ''Bruce's Price Is Right'', ''El Precio Justo'', and ''O Preço Certo Em Euros'', as well as Finland's ''Mitä Maksaa'', even though the latter show's version used a different main theme song.


Despite the willingness of station managers to buy the show, Paramount Domestic Television President Steve Goldman expressed doubt that things would work out as well as the company hoped, since the timeslots they were aiming for were highly competitive. As per their two largest affiliates’ examples, ''The New Price Is Right'' would be facing off against ''[[The Oprah Winfrey Show]]'', then television’s most popular syndicated talk show, in New York and against the highest-rated game show in syndication, ''[[Wheel of Fortune (American game show)|Wheel of Fortune]]'', in Los Angeles.<ref name=":0" />{{Better source needed|date=June 2021}}
==After ''The New Price Is Right''==
*The Big Door panels from Davidson's show were repainted 18 months after the end of its run, when the original panels began to wear out on the daytime show. These panels were used through the end of season 35, when the daytime show's set was overhauled with the current door panels.
*Doug Davidson was given an audition to replace daytime host [[Bob Barker]] upon Barker's 2007 retirement, but nothing came of it and he was not considered after the audition.
*Burton Richardson would announce several episodes of the daytime show when [[Rod Roddy]] (the daytime show's regular announcer at the time) became ill, and after Roddy died in 2003, he stayed in the announcing rotation, which included eventual replacement [[Rich Fields]]. Richardson is the current announcer on another Goodson-Todman/FremantleMedia game show, ''[[Family Feud]]''. Richardson also was announcer of the Christmas 2006 episode (Barker's last Christmas show) when Fields was ill.
*The Safe Crackers think music from Davidson's show has been used on the daytime version since late April 1995.
*The black floor was used for [[Hollywood Squares]], which aired from 1998-2004, and taped at Studio 33, and is also used for the 2008 CBS primetime series of ''Price.''
*Many of the show's other music cues have been used on the daytime version since early in Season 25.
*This version of ''The Price Is Right'' is one of two versions that has not aired in reruns anywhere since its original run. Rebroadcast rights to ''The New Price Is Right'' are held separately from the regular series, by [[CBS Television Distribution]]. (The other is the 1970s syndicated [[Dennis James]] version. Bob Barker, despite having no involvement in the 1970s series until 1977, is said to have banned it because of animal rights issues.)
*To date, it is the last version of ''The Price Is Right'' to air in syndication. However, it is not the last nighttime version of the show, as primetime specials in 1996 and from 2002 onward have aired on CBS, all following roughly the same rules as the daytime version with more expensive prizes.


Goldman’s doubts proved correct, as ''The New Price Is Right'' did indeed struggle to find an audience. In December 1994, both WWOR and KNBC announced that they would cease carrying the program. In the case of KNBC, their ratings dropped by half from where they had been the previous year at 7:30. WWOR, which was airing ''The New Price Is Right'' in tandem with the returning ''Family Feud'', decided to replace the struggling game shows with their popular morning talk show, ''[[The Richard Bey Show]]'', as it was scheduled to make a move to nationwide syndication in January 1995.<ref name=":1" /><ref>{{Cite web|last=Benson|first=Jim|date=1993-06-25|title=KCBS lands Par's 'ET,' 'Hard Copy'|url=https://variety.com/1993/tv/news/kcbs-lands-par-s-et-hard-copy-108181/|access-date=2022-09-26|work=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|language=en-US}}</ref> Shortly after this, on December 15, 1994, Paramount announced that they were cancelling ''The New Price Is Right'' and ceasing production in January 1995. The eightieth and final first-run episode aired on January 26, 1995, with Paramount continuing to offer reruns to stations that wanted them until the end of the season.<ref name=":1" />{{Better source needed|date=June 2021}}
{{The Price is Right}}


==References==
{{DEFAULTSORT:New Price Is Right (1994), The}}
{{reflist}}
{{The Price Is Right}}


[[Category:The Price is Right]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:New Price Is Right, The}}
[[Category:Goodson-Todman game shows]]
[[Category:1990s American game shows]]
[[Category:Television series by CBS Paramount Television]]
[[Category:1994 American television series debuts]]
[[Category:Television series by FremantleMedia]]
[[Category:1995 American television series endings]]
[[Category:First-run syndicated television programs]]
[[Category:American English-language television shows]]
[[Category:1994 television series debuts]]
[[Category:First-run syndicated television programs in the United States]]
[[Category:1990s American television series]]
[[Category:Television series by Fremantle (company)]]
[[Category:Television series by CBS Studios]]
[[Category:The Price Is Right]]

Latest revision as of 16:22, 4 February 2024

The New Price Is Right
Created byBob Stewart
Developed byJonathan Goodson
Presented byDoug Davidson
Narrated byBurton Richardson
Music byEdd Kalehoff
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes80
Production
Production locationTelevision City Studios
Running time22 minutes
Production companyMark Goodson Productions
Original release
NetworkSyndicated
ReleaseSeptember 12, 1994 (1994-09-12) –
January 27, 1995 (1995-01-27)
Related
The Price Is Right

The New Price Is Right is a syndicated edition of the American game show The Price Is Right which premiered on September 12, 1994, and ran until January 27, 1995. This was the third thirty-minute syndicated edition, following a weekly series that ran from 1972 until 1980 and a daily series that ran for one season between 1985 and 1986.

Personnel[edit]

Doug Davidson,[1] who was already well-known for his role as Paul Williams on the CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless, hosted this syndicated series. Burton Richardson, who had previously served as the announcer for The Arsenio Hall Show, was the announcer. Julie Lynn Cialini, Ferrari Farris, and Lisa Stahl were the three prize models.

Several then-current and former production personnel from the CBS network version of The Price Is Right also served roles on this version, with daytime series producer Kathy Greco assuming the executive producer’s seat.

The New Price Is Right was a production of Mark Goodson Productions, and was distributed by Paramount Domestic Television. The program, like the daytime series, was taped at Television City in Los Angeles, California.

Format[edit]

The New Price Is Right, unlike its syndicated predecessors, was not a carbon copy of the daytime series. Significant changes were made to the show format.

Contestants[edit]

One of the most significant format changes for The New Price Is Right was the elimination of the long-standing One Bid game, which determines who comes onstage to play a pricing game. Instead, when an audience member was called to "come on down", that contestant was immediately brought onstage to play a pricing game. A total of three pricing games were played in one program.

Aesthetic and other changes[edit]

In keeping with a more modern theme, the set featured a black stage floor, darker lighting, muted colors such as silver, purple and gold, and a giant wall of video screens.

Edd Kalehoff created an entirely new set of music cues for the series.[2][better source needed] The Price Is Right theme was re-recorded with a faster tempo and a jazzier sound featuring a saxophone lead as opposed to synthesizers. While the show did not last long, some of Kalehoff’s cues were later used on the daytime series in the years that followed.

Like the previous syndicated editions, The New Price Is Right had a significantly larger prize budget. Expensive foreign cars were regularly featured. Games that used grocery items on the daytime version featured merchandise prizes on this version. Higher valued prizes were offered in cases of games that already used these types of prizes.

Pricing game rule changes[edit]

  • Barker's Markers: The name was changed to "Make Your Mark" the single time it was played on this version of the show. This name was adopted on the daytime show in 2008 when Drew Carey became the host.
  • Clock Game: Instead of using the prop from the daytime series, the game positioned the contestant in front of the video wall where the prices were displayed for the studio audience. A digital clock was used to keep time. The contestant was provided a $1,000 range in which to guess the price of each prize. The game frequently used prizes with four-digit prices. On some occasions a third prize was awarded as a bonus for winning (a rule change later adopted on the daytime version in 2009).
  • Hole in One: Instead of revealing prices after the contestant placed all six items, the price for each item was revealed after it was chosen and only placed in line if it was more expensive than the one before.
  • Plinko: While the top prize remained the same at $5,000 per chip for a potential total of $25,000, two configurations of slots were utilized, one of which featured two $2,500 slots in place of the $100 slots. In order to earn chips, a higher/lower guessing format was used due to the merchandise items’ values exceeding $100.
  • Punch a Bunch: During some episodes, Davidson pulled the slip out of the hole as soon as it was punched. The contestant then decided to keep the money or punch another hole. On the daytime show, the slips are not revealed until the contestant has made all of his or her initial punches.
  • Superball: Instead of waiting until guessing all three small prizes before rolling the balls, the contestant rolled after each correct guess.
  • 3 Strikes: The first number was lit at the beginning of the game and the number could repeat elsewhere in the price. Four chips representing the remaining numbers in the price were then placed into the bag with three strike chips.

Showcase Showdown[edit]

Another of the many changes made for The New Price Is Right was the introduction of the Showcase Showdown, which had not been part of the previous syndicated productions. With the change came, in addition to having only one contestant play for the Showcase, a new Showcase Showdown game based on the One Bid round on the daytime series.

The new game was known as “The Price Was Right”. The three contestants who were called down stood behind a set of lecterns at the apron of the stage, and a vintage television commercial played on a large onstage video screen. They would then offer a guess as to how much the item advertised cost in the year the commercial aired, and the closest bidder without going over won the chance to play for the Showcase.

The New Price Is Right also employed the daytime series’ Big Wheel for the Showcase Showdown in several episodes recorded early in the show’s brief run. An exception was the highest winner spun first. The rules otherwise remained unchanged. The contestant closest to $1.00 without going over advanced, with a spin-off played in case of a tie. Any contestant that hit $1.00 exactly won $1,000 and a chance at either $5,000 or $10,000 with a bonus spin.

The Showcase[edit]

Instead of making a bid as on the daytime series, the contestant played a reworked version of a preexisting pricing game, Range Game. The Showcase featured a wider range with a starting value of $10,000 that increased in $1,000 increments to a top value of $70,000. The contestant selected the range at random during the commercial break leading into the Showcase, which varied in value between $4,000 and $10,000.

Following presentation of the showcase, the contestant’s range selection was revealed and the rangefinder began moving up the game board. In order to stop it, the contestant pulled a lever, and if the value of the Showcase was within the covered range, the contestant won the Showcase in addition to any cash or prizes won during his/her pricing game.

Broadcast information[edit]

At the NATPE convention in January 1994, Paramount pushed The New Price Is Right as a viable option for stations for their fringe and access periods. By the time NATPE concluded, the show had been sold in 78 markets and was one of the two more popular new entries at the convention, with the other being what would eventually become Warner Bros.’ entertainment news program Extra.[3][better source needed]

In the New York City market, the show was bought by WWOR for its early afternoon fringe period. There, it was paired with the returning Family Feud and aired at 4:00 p.m. Eastern, one of the more competitive in its market. Meanwhile, in Los Angeles, The New Price Is Right was sold to KNBC, which purchased both it and Extra to air in its Prime Time Access hour in place of Paramount's Entertainment Tonight and Hard Copy; KNBC gave TNPIR the 7:30 p.m. Pacific time that Hard Copy had previously held.[4][5]

Despite the willingness of station managers to buy the show, Paramount Domestic Television President Steve Goldman expressed doubt that things would work out as well as the company hoped, since the timeslots they were aiming for were highly competitive. As per their two largest affiliates’ examples, The New Price Is Right would be facing off against The Oprah Winfrey Show, then television’s most popular syndicated talk show, in New York and against the highest-rated game show in syndication, Wheel of Fortune, in Los Angeles.[3][better source needed]

Goldman’s doubts proved correct, as The New Price Is Right did indeed struggle to find an audience. In December 1994, both WWOR and KNBC announced that they would cease carrying the program. In the case of KNBC, their ratings dropped by half from where they had been the previous year at 7:30. WWOR, which was airing The New Price Is Right in tandem with the returning Family Feud, decided to replace the struggling game shows with their popular morning talk show, The Richard Bey Show, as it was scheduled to make a move to nationwide syndication in January 1995.[4][6] Shortly after this, on December 15, 1994, Paramount announced that they were cancelling The New Price Is Right and ceasing production in January 1995. The eightieth and final first-run episode aired on January 26, 1995, with Paramount continuing to offer reruns to stations that wanted them until the end of the season.[4][better source needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hart, Marla (8 September 1994). "Soaps Veteran Tries His Luck As A Game Show Host". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  2. ^ Vault Inventory-Game Shows, Television Production Music Museum (www.tvpmm.com). Accessed January 27, 2012.
  3. ^ a b Broadcasting & Cable issue dated January 31, 1994. “ENT gains ground”, pg. 7.
  4. ^ a b c Broadcasting & Cable issue dated December 19, 1994. “Paramount drops ‘Price', pg. 18.
  5. ^ King, Susan (1994-09-11). "Preview '94 : Frontier Doves and Hawks : SYNDICATED FARE INCLUDES MORE CELEB-HOSTED TALK SHOWS". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2022-09-26.
  6. ^ Benson, Jim (1993-06-25). "KCBS lands Par's 'ET,' 'Hard Copy'". Variety. Retrieved 2022-09-26.