Caesars Challenge

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Caesars Challenge

Part of the opening to the game which served as the shows title card.
Genre Game show
Created by Michael Dubelko
Rick Rosner
Presented by Ahmad Rashād
Starring Dan Doherty
Chad Brown
Zach Ruby
Narrated by Steve Day
Theme music composer Stormy Sacks
Country of origin United States
No. of episodes 155
Production
Executive producer(s) Rick Rosner
Producer(s) Harry Friedman
Location(s) Caesars Palace, Las Vegas
Running time approx. 26 Minutes
Broadcast
Original channel NBC
Original run June 14, 1993 (1993-06-14) – January 14, 1994 (1994-01-14)

Caesars Challenge is an American game show that aired on NBC from June 14, 1993 to January 14, 1994. Ahmad Rashad hosted the show and Dan Doherty, dressed as a gladiator, served as the show's assistant. Chad Brown and Zach Ruby also served as assistants early in the show. Steve Day announced the program, which was taped at Caesars Palace in Paradise, Nevada. Caesars Challenge, produced by Rosner Television and Stephen J. Cannell Productions, is the last daytime game show to air on NBC.

Gameplay

Three contestants competed, and three rounds were played. The object in each round was to solve a jumbled word displayed on a 9-screen slot machine on stage. Seven-letter words were used in round one, eight-letter words in round two and nine-letter words in round three.

Each new word fit into a category that was originally revealed to everyone, but later only revealed to home viewers. Rashad asked the players a toss-up question with three choices based on the category, and a player who buzzed in with the correct answer won money and the right to choose a letter to be placed into the word. Correct answers paid off at $100 in the first round, $200 in the second round, and $300 in the third round. If two of the three players failed to answer any question correctly, the money and letter choice were awarded to the third player by default.

After the player's selected letter was placed, he or she was given five seconds to try to guess the word. Doing so won the player additional money based on how many of the letters were not placed; otherwise, play continued until the word was correctly guessed. The first two rounds were played with two words apiece, and the third round was played with as many words as possible played until time ran out.

During the time when the category was only revealed to the home audience, Rashad announced the category of the word to the contestants after the word had been correctly guessed.

In round one, each word was seven letters in length, and the contestant who solved the word received $100 per each unplaced letter. Round two featured eight-letter words, and the unplaced letters were worth $200 each. Round three's words were all nine letters in length and the value for unplaced letters increased to $300.

One of the nine screens in each word was designated the "Lucky Slot", signified by a red border surrounding the screen. If a player placed a letter in the Lucky Slot and solved the puzzle immediately after, he or she won an instant cash jackpot that was added to their score along with the money the player earned from unplaced letters. The Lucky Slot started each day at $500, increased by that amount for each word it wasn't won, and reset to $500 once it was claimed.

If a word was in play when time was called in the third round, signified by the sound of a car horn, the Lucky Slot was taken out of play and the remaining unplaced letters were placed one at a time until someone guessed the word and earned the remaining money left from the unplaced letters. Buzzing in and answering incorrectly during this time locked a player out of the rest of the round.

The player with the most money at the end of the game won, kept his or her money, and advanced to the bonus round. Originally, the winner shopped for prizes with their winnings; later, he or she were given a prize package equal to their winnings. The other players left with parting gifts, including dinner for two and tickets to a headliner show at the Circus Maximus showroom at Caesars Palace. In the case of a tie, another speed-up round was played between the tied players.

Bonus round

Caesars Challenge employed two different bonus rounds. The prize in both formats was a car.

Format #1

The first bonus game format featured a giant bingo cage with 200 lettered balls inside it. To start the round, the cage rotated and the balls came out one at a time.

The process continued until a dictionary-certified nine-letter word could be formed from the letters, at which point a gong sounded, the cage stopped rotating, and Caesar announced, "Caesar says stop!" The nine letters were then displayed on the slot machine screens in the order that they rolled down the ramp. The champion was allowed to place one letter into its proper place, then was given 10 seconds to guess the word. If the champion did so, he or she won the car and retired. Otherwise, he or she returned on the next program, and for each subsequent win and trip to the bonus game, placed an additional letter.

Format #2

The second bonus format was introduced on November 22, 1993, and continued for the remainder of the run. The champion faced a computer-generated board with five scrambled words with each word having one more letter in it than the one before. The first word contained five letters, and each one that followed had one additional letter up to nine for the fifth word.

Each of the five words had its letters automatically placed one at a time each second, and the champion had 30 seconds to unscramble them all. Each time they successfully unscrambled a word, he or she advanced to the next word. Unscrambling all five words within 30 seconds won the car. If unsuccessful, he or she returned on the next program. If the champion made three consecutive bonus rounds and failed to win the car, he or she retired undefeated with whatever they had won in the main game.

Audience game

During the closing credits of every show, Rashad and Doherty went into the studio audience and gave audience members an opportunity to unscramble five-letter words. Correctly guessing the word won a handful of casino tokens and gold foil-covered chocolate medallions from a bowl held by Doherty.

Israeli version

An Israeli version of the show under the name of Kasino Olami ("Global Casino") was hosted by Michal Zoharetz and has aired on Reshet.

Broadcast History

Caesars Challenge aired at 12:30 PM EST replacing Scattergories. The program preceded Days of our Lives. Caesars Challenge suffered against the first half hour of CBS's The Young and the Restless. Some NBC stations preempted the program with local news broadcasts which often aired the entire noon hour. Caesars Challenge was NBC's last game show to air in daytime.[1]

Reruns aired on the USA Network from June 27 to November 4, 1994.[2][3]

References

  1. "Program Listings". TV Guide. 9 January–15 January 1994. 
  2. "Program Listings". TV Guide. 25 June–1 July 1994. 
  3. "Program Listings". TV Guide. 29 October–4 November 1994. 

External links

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