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Card Sharks is an American television game show . It was created by Chester Feldman for Mark Goodson - Bill Todman Productions. Contestants attempt to predict the outcome of survey questions to gain control of a row of oversized playing cards , then determine whether the next card drawn is higher or lower. The title Card Sharks is a play on the term " card sharp ", a person skilled at card games.

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74-405: The concept has been made into a series four separate times since its debut in 1978, and it also appeared as part of CBS's Gameshow Marathon . The show originally ran on NBC from 1978 to 1981 with Jim Perry hosting. The show returned and ran from 1986 to 1989 on CBS with Bob Eubanks as host, accompanied by a syndication production with Bill Rafferty . Gene Wood was the announcer in both

148-501: A single-elimination format until an ultimate winner is found. Both the UK and US versions featured celebrity contestants. The US version was produced by FremantleMedia North America and Granada America and was hosted by Ricki Lake and announced by Rich Fields , who also served as the announcer of The Price Is Right . In the US, the series only aired for a single season, while in the UK

222-522: A "push". Initially, contestants could only change their base card on the bottom level of the board, at the start of the round. This was later altered to allow the contestant to change the base card on each new line of cards if they so desired. During the 1986–89 version, three extra cards (known as "spare cards") were positioned to the left of the Money Cards board. These cards could be used initially any time to change an undesired card, even to change

296-451: A Deal (the only show which had not previously aired on CBS at that time), Beat the Clock , Press Your Luck , Card Sharks , Match Game , and Family Feud to progress in the tournament. The series used replicas of each show's original set, or in the case of The Price Is Right , actual props from the series currently airing. Each installment began with a narration of the format of

370-422: A best-of-three match. During the first season, the number of cards per row was ten. The Money Cards round was played using a single line of seven cards. The player was staked with $ 10,000, presented as five chips worth $ 1,000 each and one worth $ 5,000, and the first card was turned over to start the game. One card was able to be changed before any turn in this round. The player's wager was added to his/her total for

444-414: A board with a range from zero to ten. If the contestant made a correct prediction, they won the car. If their guess was off by one, the contestant won another $ 500. The daytime series had no limit on how many cars a champion could win, but the syndicated series did. Initially, winning a car meant the champion retired, but after several weeks the show began allowing champions to continue playing after winning

518-431: A car in addition to the other prizes earned by the winning celebrity. The game board for Press Your Luck had top amounts of $ 3,000, $ 4,000 and $ 5,000 + One Spin in round one, and those values doubled in round two. The winning celebrity's cash and prizes went to a home viewer. Contestants playing Card Sharks received $ 1,000 for winning round one and $ 2,000 for round two. Instead of using the tiebreaker round featured on

592-568: A car. A limit was then placed on how many cars could win before retiring, with the limit eventually being set at two. The changes coincided with a changing in cars being offered; the round started out by offering high-end General Motors cars such as Cadillacs and Corvettes, later changing to mid-priced offerings like Chevrolet Camaros and Pontiac Fire Birds, and then finally to various offerings from American Motors through its Renault and Jeep brands. The original Card Sharks aired on NBC from April 24, 1978 to October 23, 1981, hosted by Jim Perry ; it

666-525: A chance to play from his or her base card, without the opportunity to exchange first. Either contestant can also elect to "freeze" their position if they are unsure of the next card. This prevents the opponent from playing and resets the contestant's base card to the frozen card, and whatever cards that were turned in that instance are not discarded. If neither contestant has guessed all the cards in his or her row correctly, or if one has frozen his or her position, play continues with another toss-up question, with

740-437: A correct guess, and subtracted for an incorrect one. In season one, the player lost the wager if a card of the same rank was turned up; in season two, this situation was counted as a "push," with no money won or lost. The player had to bet a multiple of $ 1,000 on every card except the last; at this point, he/she could either end the game and keep all winnings or bet at least half the total as a multiple of $ 500. For this final turn,

814-563: A correct prediction each time, the maximum payout was stated to be $ 28,800 on the original 1970s series, $ 32,000 on both 1980s series, $ 51,800 on the 2001 series, and $ 640,000 on the 2019 series. As of 2021, the only contestant that has successfully achieved this feat is Norma Brown, who won $ 28,800 in 1978. On the NBC version, a champion was allowed a maximum of seven wins. On the CBS series, champions were retired either by reaching five wins or surpassing

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888-455: A new car following the Money Cards round. The car round made its debut on the syndicated series shortly after its debut, with the daytime series adopting the round in October 1986. Three jokers were shuffled into the Money Cards deck. If a joker was uncovered, it was replaced with the next card from the top of the deck, and the contestant was given an additional chance to win a car. To ensure

962-433: A new vehicle in addition to any money and prizes won earlier. The same car was featured for an entire week of five shows. During the special weeks when children played, the top prize was a trip to Hawaii and the children were given two jokers to start. In July 1988, the bonus changed to feature an audience poll question similar to those used in the main game. The contestant was read the question and registered their guess on

1036-399: A numerical answer to the question, similar to a survey, but often much higher numerals that had to be posted as a Chyron on the screen instead of being on the contestant's podium. The opponent, as usual, must guess higher or lower than the answer. Exact guesses won a $ 500 bonus for the contestant. The 1986–87 syndicated version introduced prize cards that were shuffled into the deck. If a card

1110-461: A question was higher or lower than five, and a card taken from the blue deck was used for the actual answer. In Match Game , two contestants each tried to match the celebrities as on the original series. The winner after Round 3 moved on to the Super Match for a chance to win up to $ 50,000 for a home viewer. Two audience matches were played with $ 500, $ 250, and $ 100 as the possible payouts, and

1184-404: A random draw was held backstage to determine who had initial control, with the option to pass or play after seeing the first card. A single row of seven cards was used, and a mistake by one contestant gave control to the other. Both contestants were given two "Clip Chips" at the start of the match, which could be used to allow the one in control to change the last exposed card by correctly predicting

1258-585: A scheduling shuffle necessitated by the debut of The David Letterman Show on June 23, 1980, Card Sharks moved to noon/11:00 am, a timeslot where it first faced The $ 20,000 Pyramid , which was in its last week of its run, and then from June 30 on, the top-rated game show in daytime, Family Feud on ABC; the first half of The Young and the Restless in certain markets on CBS; and preemptions on local affiliates due to many stations electing to air local newscasts, talk shows, or other syndicated programming in

1332-481: A second season aired in 2007, this time entitled Vernon Kay's Gameshow Marathon and hosted by Vernon Kay . This program was recorded at Stage 46, CBS Television City in Los Angeles, CA, USA. The seven-part game show tournament featured celebrity contestants Lance Bass , Paige Davis , Tim Meadows , Kathy Najimy , Leslie Nielsen , and Brande Roderick . The six played The Price Is Right , Let's Make

1406-437: A specific manner. Their opponent is then asked whether he or she thinks the actual number is higher or lower than the previous contestant's response. The actual number is then revealed, and if the opponent is correct, they play their cards first; otherwise, the contestant to whom the question was posed plays first. The contestant who wins the question is shown the first card in their row of seven (five from 1978 to 1989 and ten in

1480-410: A tournament format. Two of the celebrities played a stunt as a team with a time limit of 60 seconds. The other two celebrities played the same stunt, trying to beat the first team's time. The two celebrities on the winning team then faced off in another stunt. The winner of the second stunt played one final stunt alone and if it was completed successfully within the 60 second time limit, a home viewer wins

1554-525: A viewer watching at home. Let's Make a Deal was played exactly as it was during the Monty Hall era in which the celebrities and some actual audience members taking part in the deals and they were wearing costumes, and it ended with the Big Deal, worth over $ 87,000. The celebrity who won the most advanced to Finalists' Row and their prizes were awarded to a home viewer. Beat the Clock was played in

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1628-405: Is staked with a dollar amount before the round begins and wagers money on each card prior to calling higher or lower. Prior to 2001, the player was staked with $ 200 prior to the round; the 2001 revival raised this to $ 700. The 2019 revival has the contestant wager with the $ 10,000 he or she received for winning the main game. After calling the first three cards, the last card in the row was moved to

1702-491: Is to complete a row of cards by correctly predicting whether the next is higher or lower in value, similarly to Acey Deucey . Contestants alternately respond to questions to gain control of the cards. In all versions from 1978 to 1989, the returning champion was usually selected to go first; if there were two new contestants, a backstage coin toss determined the player who sits in the champion's position. The 2019 revival instead has both contestants cut their decks onstage and show

1776-614: The Let's Make a Deal episode in a Zonk and in the Big Deal prize. For The Price Is Right , the top prize for Plinko was $ 100,000 and featured the same layout as seen in prime time episodes with a $ 20,000 slot in the center. Three games were played on the episode, and the two highest-scoring contestants in the Showcase Showdown advanced to the Showcase. The winning showcase (and any prizes won by that celebrity previously) went to

1850-699: The Big Three television networks . On April 8, 2019, TVLine reported that actor Joel McHale would host the new revival series. The series premiered on June 12, 2019. On November 20, 2019, the series was renewed for a second season. From March 13, 2020 to July 3, 2020, the show suspended production as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States . This resulted in the season two premiere being delayed to October 18, 2020. The series later resumed its second season on June 23, 2021. On April 1, 2022, it

1924-476: The Gameshow Marathon episode, matches were best two-out-of-three, with the third game being played with three cards per contestant and a maximum of three high-low questions. Each game win was worth $ 100. The 2019 revival removes the "best two-out-of-three" aspect, with only one game now being played per match; whoever wins the game now receives $ 10,000 to use as a starting stake in the Money Cards. In

1998-492: The 1970s and 1980s. Another syndicated production aired in 2001 with Pat Bullard as host and Gary Kroeger as announcer. A revival hosted by Joel McHale aired on ABC from June 2019 to July 2021. Each production has featured various assistants to handle the playing cards. Reruns of the show aired on Game Show Network from the channel's start in 1994 until 2018. Reruns currently air on Buzzr . Two contestants are assigned separate oversized decks of 52 playing cards , which

2072-408: The 1980–1981 season, a $ 500 bonus was awarded to any contestant who provided the exact number of people responding to a specific question, a rule that was modified in the 1986–89 version. In the final few months of 1981, if a contestant was able to complete their row of five cards successfully without freezing or guessing wrong once, he or she won a $ 500 bonus. These bonuses were guaranteed regardless of

2146-510: The 2001 series theme. A revived version of the original theme was used for the ABC revival. Ann Pennington , Janice Baker, Lois Areno , Kristin Bjorklund, Melinda Hunter, and Markie Post all served as models on NBC. Lacey Pemberton and Suzanna Williams were the models on the concurrent CBS and syndication runs in the 1980s, and Tami Roman was the model in 2001. Jerry Wolf and Alexis Gaube were

2220-520: The 4–4–3 format by December 1986. Also, contestants only won the prizes claimed for winning the match, or $ 100 if no prize cards were found during gameplay. In 1988, the tie-breaker round changed to a single sudden death question. The controlling contestant was shown both base cards before being given the option to play the cards (and change their base card if desired) or pass to the opponent (who had to play without changing). As before, if either contestant guessed incorrectly, their opponent automatically won

2294-468: The Century on NBC in the time slot; Sale of the Century was moved to 10:00 am that year. Blockbusters (with the then-host of the syndicated Card Sharks , Bill Rafferty) and then Alex Trebek's Classic Concentration followed as competition for Card Sharks . This version ended its run on March 31, 1989, and was replaced by a short-lived version of Now You See It . The new host of the CBS version

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2368-430: The Money Cards. Losing contestants in either the matches or the Big Deal kept any money they had won. For the Money Cards round, six cards were dealt out in three rows: three on the bottom row, two in the middle, one on the top. The contestant's $ 2,100 was divided into three equal stakes of $ 700, one of which was added to their total upon starting each row. Only the initial card on each row could be changed. The minimum bet

2442-471: The NBC and CBS/1986 syndicated versions, a complete round with five cards and four questions was played as round three for $ 3,000. The contestant who won the most money won the game. The Money Cards offered a top prize of $ 144,000. $ 1,000 was given at the start of that round, and another $ 1,000 was given on the second level. Minimum bets were $ 50 on each card until the Big Bet, where a bet equal to at least half

2516-638: The U.S., Brazil, Chile, and Greece) were mostly produced by Reg Grundy . Gameshow Marathon (American game show) Gameshow Marathon (stylized as Game$ how Marathon ) is an American television program which aired on CBS from May 31 to June 29, 2006. It is based on the United Kingdom series Ant & Dec's Gameshow Marathon which aired on ITV in 2005. It also aired in Canada on CTV . The show features contestants competing in some of television's most historically popular game shows , in

2590-494: The contestant had a chance to multiply the total won from the audience matches by 50 by matching one celebrity in the Head-to-Head match. The finale featured Family Feud , with teams competing to score 300 points first. The points doubled in round four and tripled in round five and beyond. In Fast Money, the first contestant had 20 seconds to answer the questions and the other received 25 seconds. A home viewer won $ 50,000 if

2664-409: The contestant had one opportunity at winning the car, they were given one free joker at the onset of the Money Cards. Following the Money Cards, a row of seven new cards were shown to the contestant, behind one of which was the word "Car". Using the joker(s) from the Money Cards, the contestant designated the cards of their choice. If one of the cards selected revealed the word "Car", the contestant won

2738-441: The contestant was required to wager at least half of the money earned thus far. If a contestant lost all the money banked and busted on the first row, the last card called was moved to the first position on the second row and the contestant received another $ 200 to wager with the final four cards. If the contestant busted after moving to the second row, the round ended. If a contestant wagered their entire bank on each card and made

2812-413: The contestants themselves cut before each game (offscreen prior to 2019), and are dealt the first several cards for their row. The champion (or champion-designate if there were two new contestants) played the red cards on top, while the challenger played the blue cards on the bottom. Each contestant's row of cards had a bracket atop it with their name on it, which was used to mark their "base cards". The goal

2886-427: The current score must be wagered. Like the 1986 version of the show, the contestant could change one card per line by choosing one of three spare cards, doubles resulted in pushes. Like the 1986 version of the show, a car game was added, however, it did not resemble either version used during that period. In this car game, the contestant had to correctly determine whether the number of cheerleaders that answered "yes" to

2960-480: The dealers during the 2019-2021 series. Following that show's cancellation, Wolf departed Hollywood while Gaube became the newest model on The Price Is Right in 2022. The most significant difference in gameplay for foreign formats of Card Sharks was the use of married couples instead of individual contestants (except the U.S., Brazilian, Chilean, Greek, and Portuguese versions, which only featured individual contestants). All global versions of Card Sharks (except

3034-423: The fifth and sixth games ( Card Sharks and Match Game ). The winners of those two games then proceeded to the "championship game", Family Feud . For the finals, each celebrity assembled a five-person team of family and friends to play Family Feud , with the charity of the winning "family" receiving $ 100,000. Brande Roderick was the showcase winner on the episode featuring The Price Is Right . Lance Bass became

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3108-409: The first of four seats in "Finalists' Row". The remaining contestants after each game was played then participated in the next game (five for Let's Make a Deal , four for Beat the Clock , three for Press Your Luck ) to win one of the remaining seats. After the fourth game, the remaining two contestants were eliminated. The four contestants in "Finalists' Row" were then paired in a competition to play

3182-410: The first position in the second row, and the contestant received an additional $ 200 to wager with the next three cards. The last card in the third row was moved to the first position in the top row, and the contestant made a wager for the final card. The minimum bet for each card was $ 50 ($ 100 in the 2001 revival), except for the final card, the "Big Bet" (renamed "Major Wager" for the 2001 revival), where

3256-542: The first season of the 2019 revival) and can either keep it or replace it with the next card off the top of their individual deck, which he or she is then required to play. The contestant then guesses whether the next card in the row is higher or lower and continues to do so as long as he or she guesses correctly. If the next card is the same rank as the previous, or if the contestant makes an incorrect guess, that contestant loses control, and whatever cards they have played are discarded and replaced. The opposing contestant then has

3330-405: The last card, players must bet at least $ 1,000 on each card. Players who reach the last card without busting are given the option to "cash out" and quit with their current winnings rather than play the final card. If they elect to play, they must gamble at least half their bank on the last card. The maximum possible payout is $ 640,000. Duplicate cards were originally counted as incorrect guesses, in

3404-407: The last question of the round, that question is played as "sudden death.". The winner of the sudden death question can either play their cards—and change their base card if they desired—or pass to their opponent, who has to play without the option to change the base card. If either contestant guesses incorrectly, their opponent automatically wins the game. In all versions from 1978 to 1989, as well as

3478-635: The markets that kept it, with re-runs airing until September 11 of that year. Plans were to replace Card Sharks with the return of the Match Game with original host Gene Rayburn , but these plans never came to fruition. The Pat Bullard-hosted 2001 series debuted on September 17, 2001 (though as it launched the week after the September 11 attacks , was subject to pre-emption by several stations for news coverage) and aired new episodes until December 14, 2001. Four weeks of re-runs aired following that, and

3552-403: The match. The 2019 version added percentage questions in addition to the traditional survey questions; otherwise, gameplay remains the same. There are no cash bonuses offered for an exact guess. The winner of the main game plays the Money Cards bonus game. The original board consisted of a series of eight cards dealt out on three levels; the 2001 revival changed this to seven cards. The champion

3626-458: The network’s winnings limit. Starting in 2019, the player's winnings are represented in oversized $ 500, $ 1,000, $ 5,000, $ 10,000, and $ 25,000 chips. The board is now a single row of seven cards, with no additional money given halfway through. Players are given the chance to change any one card during the round. Players are required to physically place chips equal to their bet on a table in front of them on sections labeled "HIGHER" or "LOWER". Prior to

3700-578: The next semifinalist from Let's Make a Deal , and Paige Davis won the Beat the Clock installment. Kathy Najimy won the last semifinal slot on Press Your Luck , and Tim Meadows and Leslie Nielsen were eliminated at the end of that episode. Roderick defeated Davis in Card Sharks , and Najimy defeated Bass in Match Game . Najimy and her family then beat Roderick and her family on Family Feud to capture

3774-483: The noon hour. Card Sharks remained in the noon/11:00 slot until its final episode aired on October 23, 1981. The CBS version of Card Sharks debuted at 10:30/9:30 am January 6, 1986, as a replacement for Body Language , and stayed in that timeslot for its entire run; Press Your Luck relocated to the latter show's old 4:00/3:00 pm slot to make room for Card Sharks . Until January 1987, Card Sharks faced off against its original host Jim Perry's game show Sale of

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3848-411: The odds of being exact were much higher (1:10 compared to 1:100), the exact guess bonus for this type of question was reduced to $ 100, and the group of ten shared a $ 100 bonus. The same poll group was used for a week's worth of episodes. The other change was to add general knowledge trivia questions into the game beginning in October 1986. Known as "educated guess questions," the contestant in control gives

3922-437: The opposing contestant providing the initial numerical guess. In all versions from 1978 to 1989, as well as the Gameshow Marathon episode, the first two games consisted of a maximum of four questions each, and the third tie-breaker game contained a maximum of three questions; since 2019, only one game is played per match, with a maximum of five survey questions. If the contestants still have not cleared their row of cards prior to

3996-515: The outcome of a pre-recorded video segment. Each game was worth $ 500 and could be won either by a correct guess on the last card, or by default if the opponent missed it. If the contestants tied at one game each, the deciding game was played using three cards. The winners of the two matches competed against one another in one seven-card game referred to as the "Big Deal," and could use any Clip Chips they still had. The winner received an additional $ 1,100, bringing their total up to $ 2,100, and advanced to

4070-410: The outcome of the overall match, meaning a contestant keeps the cash bonus regardless of winning or losing. The 1986–89 version added two new varieties of questions in addition to the traditional survey questions. The traditional surveys could also be conducted with a group of ten in the studio audience who shared a characteristic (e.g., ten single women, ten security guards, ten people over 80). Because

4144-451: The particular show featured on that episode coupled with montages of clips from each program's history. The Press Your Luck episode was dedicated in memory to its host Peter Tomarken , who died in a plane crash shortly before Gameshow Marathon premiered. The format of each individual show was largely unchanged. All six celebrity contestants participated in the first game, The Price Is Right . The Showcase winner from this episode claimed

4218-557: The player was allowed to trade in a $ 1,000 chip for two $ 500 chips so that he/she could bet exactly half the total if desired. The round ended immediately if the player went broke. The maximum potential payout was $ 640,000. Gene Wood was the primary announcer on both the original and 1980s Card Sharks , with Charlie O'Donnell and Bob Hilton serving as occasional substitutes. Jack Narz , Jay Stewart , and Johnny Olson also served as substitutes for NBC, and Johnny Gilbert and Rod Roddy also served as substitutes for CBS. Gary Kroeger

4292-431: The resulting bottom card; the contestant with the higher card goes first. Similarly to another Goodson-Todman game show, Family Feud , survey questions are posed to groups of 100 people, all of whom are typically in a common demographic group. (For example, "We asked 100 teachers, 'Has a student ever given you an apple?' How many said they have?"). Contestants are asked to predict how many of those 100 people responded in

4366-409: The rules were fixed and were made easier with the contestant simply having to say whether the number of people who did do what they were asked (e.g., "We asked these cheerleaders, 'Have you ever dated someone from a rival school?' How many of these 10 cheerleaders said they had dated someone from a rival school?") was a number higher or lower than 5. A card from the blue deck was shown lying face down and

4440-433: The same card multiple times, but during the run were later amended to allow only one change per line at any point in the line. The additional amount awarded for moving to the second line increased from $ 200 to $ 400. This changed the maximum potential payout to $ 32,000. Players can change exactly one card, anywhere on the line, in the 2019 version. Beginning in the fall of 1986, champions were also given an opportunity to win

4514-408: The same manner as in the main game. Starting on October 20, 1980, a duplicate in the Money Cards rounds was regarded as a "push"; the contestant did not lose their wager, and moved to the next card. The "push" rule remained intact until late in the 2001 revival's run. In the first season of the 2019 revival, a duplicate card was treated as an incorrect guess; in the second season, it was again treated as

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4588-540: The series was cancelled altogether on January 11, 2002. In most of its markets the 2001 Card Sharks was either paired with or aired on the same station as one or both of the Pearson Television -produced shows that were airing at the time, To Tell the Truth or Family Feud . For this version, two best-of-three matches were played per episode, each with two new contestants. No questions were asked; instead,

4662-436: The series, with pre-production on new hour-long episodes of Card Sharks and Press Your Luck being underway and taping slated to begin sometime in the spring. Scott St. John (a producer on Match Game ) served as an executive producer. Airing on ABC makes Card Sharks one of only a handful of shows (joining To Tell the Truth , The Price Is Right , and Match Game ) to have at one point or another aired on all three of

4736-486: The top prize. The Match Game installment also featured Adam Carolla , Adrianne Curry , George Foreman , Kathy Griffin , Bruce Vilanch , and Betty White (in her traditional seat) as the panel. The six also appeared as audience members during the Price is Right episode (but did not play). The " Barker's Beauties " from The Price Is Right also played a role in some of the installments. Gilbert Gottfried appeared on

4810-438: The tournament. The contestants were Brande Roderick and Paige Davis . The set was modeled after the original 1978–81 production. In the Money Cards, the winner earned $ 1,000 for each row, for a possible $ 144,000. Roderick won $ 6,000 in the bonus round. In the car game, unlike the 1986–89 version, the game was changed where 10 people were polled (cheerleaders in this episode) were called up for another poll question. This time,

4884-476: The two contestants in Fast Money were able to reach or exceed 200 points. The home viewer contest allowed viewers to win the cash and prizes won by the celebrity. It consisted of the showing of a classic clip pertaining to that day's show, with a corresponding question that had three multiple choice answers. A winner was selected from those entries that had the correct answer, and the prizes were delivered to

4958-526: Was Bob Eubanks ; the host of the British adaptation, Bruce Forsyth , was at one point being considered for the job as well, after having a short-lived game show in the US on ABC, Bruce Forsyth's Hot Streak (Forsyth would eventually host Play Your Cards Right , the British adaptation of the series). Patrick Wayne was also considered for the job. The syndicated series debuted on September 8, 1986, replacing The Nighttime Price Is Right . Bill Rafferty

5032-412: Was $ 100 for every card except the one on the top row (the "Major Wager") which required the contestant to risk at least half their total. A contestant could win up to $ 51,800 in this round. On June 15, 2006, Card Sharks was the fifth of seven classic game shows featured in CBS's month-long Gameshow Marathon hosted by Ricki Lake and announced by Rich Fields as it was one of the "semifinal rounds" in

5106-412: Was brought out with the numerical value of the people who said "yes". The card was then revealed after the contestant's guess was made and if the value matched the contestant's guess, then the car was won. Roderick won $ 10,000 along with a BMW M Roadster (worth $ 40,445) for a grand total of $ 50,445 for the home viewer. On March 13, 2019, Vulture reported that ABC was partnering with Fremantle to reboot

5180-489: Was host of this version. For the first half of the season, this syndicated Card Sharks series had fairly decent clearances, but this changed due to the show's ratings struggles in an overcrowded syndicated game show market. At the midseason point, the syndicated Card Sharks disappeared from quite a few of its markets, while many stations that continued to air it moved it to very undesirable late-night and early morning timeslots. The series continued to air until June 5, 1987, in

5254-418: Was reported that the series was cancelled. The 2019 version featured similar rules as the 1978–81 and 1986–89 iterations, with two new players competing in the main game and no returning champions. A separate row of seven cards was dealt for each player, and a maximum of five questions were asked, with the fifth (if necessary) played under sudden-death rules. The winner was decided by a single victory instead of

5328-431: Was revealed, that contestant was credited with the prize and claimed it if he or she won the game. The next card from the top of the contestant's deck replaced the prize card, and the contestant continued playing. At this time, the maximum number of questions per game was changed to a 4–3–2 format. Shortly thereafter, game #1 was also changed to a three question maximum, moving to a 3–3–2 format. However, all games reverted to

5402-562: Was the announcer in 2001, and Rich Fields was the announcer of the Gameshow Marathon episode. Donna Jay Fulks served as announcer during the 2019-2021 series. The theme for the NBC version was previously used on the Goodson-Todman series Double Dare with host Alex Trebek that aired in 1976 on CBS. Edd Kalehoff wrote that theme through Score Productions , and the theme for the 1980s version of Card Sharks through his own production company. Alan Ett and Scott Liggett composed

5476-514: Was the first new Goodson-Todman game show to debut on NBC since the end of the original Match Game in September 1969. From its debut until June 20, 1980, Card Sharks aired at 10:00 am ( ET )/9:00 am ( CT / MT / PT ). The series was one of the few respectably-rated programs (daytime or otherwise) on NBC under Fred Silverman 's tenure as network president, which at the time was struggling to gain ratings in both daytime and prime-time. After

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