Treasure Mall

Treasure Mall
Genre Game show
Created by Ellen Levy
Directed by Rob Fielder
Presented by Hal Sparks
Narrated by Ed MacKay
Theme music composer Andrew Dimitroff
Country of origin  United States
No. of episodes 13
Production
Executive producer(s) Haim Saban
Robert Unkel
Peter R. Berlin
Rob Fielder
Producer(s) Peter R. Berlin
Location(s) Chris Craft TV
Los Angeles, CA
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Syndicated (weekly)
Original run June 11 – September 3, 1988

Treasure Mall is a kids game show which aired in weekly syndication from June 11 to September 3, 1988. Future Queer as Folk star and comedian Hal Sparks was the host, with Ed MacKay announcing.

It was commonly paired with the kids game show Slime Time, also in syndication. The two shows debuted and were cancelled on the same dates.

Gameplay

Two teams, each consisting of one boy and one girl, competed. In round 1, teams heard survey questions with three possible answers. (For example: We asked sixth graders what they would do if they saw a bug on their friends shoulder. Would they brush it off, tell their friend, or wait and see what happens?) Each teammate locked in what they believed was the most popular answer. A right answer won a point for their team (if both teammates agreed and were correct, they score two points). The first team to reach 5 points or more won the right to enter a store in the Treasure Mall. If there was a tie on 5 or more, the round continued until one team had the lead outright.

Every store in the mall had a theme; Toy Store, Fashion Boutique, etc. The stores were divided into four distinct sections, with 4 coins hidden in each section; each teammate searched two areas, taking alternating turns to do so. One teammate had 25 seconds to search the first section for coins, dropping them into a bucket Sparks was holding. The coins had to go into the bucket for them to count. When time ran out (indicated by a bell), the clock reset to 25 and the other teammate began the next section immediately. After the final buzzer, the coins were counted up. The team won a prize package depending on how well they did; the more coins they collected, the better the package. Two valuable prizes were won if a team managed to find all 16 coins.

Round 2 was played exactly the same way, except that the team won the right to enter a different store. The team who had more coins at the end of this round (or the team who won both rounds) won the game and advanced to the bonus round.

Bonus Round

In the bonus round, a series of gift boxes sat center stage in front of a large golden treasure chest. Inside the gift boxes were keys, and the team had 30 seconds to go through the boxes and collect as many keys as they could. The keys had to go into the bucket Sparks was holding in order to count.

After time ran out, Sparks tried each key out in the treasure chest. If one of the keys opened the chest, the team won a large prize package. If none of them did, the team still won a $50 gift certificate for each key they found.

Cancellation

On September 3, 1988, Treasure Mall was cancelled for good after only four months on the air. The show did not attract enough viewers and so the production company pulled the plug on the show.

External links

References

Schwartz, David; Ryan, Steve; Wostbrock, Fred (1999). The Encyclopedia of TV Game Shows (3rd Ed.). New York: Checkmark Books. ISBN 0-8160-3847-3