Finders Keepers (U.S. game show)

Finders Keepers

Intro title for Finders Keepers.
Created by Geoffrey Darby
Bonni Grossberg
Michael Klinghoffer
Neil Krupnick
Dee LaDuke
Presented by Wesley Eure (Nickelodeon)
Larry Toffler (Syndication)
Theme music composer Edd Kalehoff
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 3
No. of episodes 195 (Nickelodeon: 130; syndication: 65)[1]
Production
Location(s) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (first two seasons)
Los Angeles, California (syndication)
Running time 30 minutes (including commercials)
Distributor 20th Television
CBS Television Distribution
Release
Original network Nickelodeon (1987–88)
Syndicated (1988–89)
Original release November 2, 1987 (1987-11-02) – March 10, 1989 (1989-03-10)

Finders Keepers is a children's game show that debuted on Nickelodeon in 1987 and later aired in first-run syndication starting in 1988. The show featured two teams of two children attempting to find hidden objects in different rooms of a house.

The Nickelodeon version premiered on November 2, 1987 and was hosted by Wesley Eure. Following this version's cancellation, Larry Toffler hosted a syndicated version that premiered on September 12, 1988.

Main game

The main game was played in two rounds, each with two halves. The first half of each round involved finding hidden pictures in a complex drawing, and the second half involved ransacking rooms in a large house built on-stage.

Hidden Pictures round

In the first half of each round, the object for the teams was to find hidden pictures drawn into a larger picture based on clues given by the host. On the Nickelodeon series the picture was displayed on a telestrator and the team used a light pen to circle the object. On the syndicated series the picture was displayed on the game board with plastic laminate stickers similar to Colorforms representing the objects, and the team had to run to the board and stick a laminate to the picture to show where the hidden object was.

Each correct item located earned $25 for the team and an opportunity to search one of four rooms in the house for that round. During the first half of the Nickelodeon series the players chose the rooms they wanted to search, but this was later changed so that each hidden object found awarded the opportunity to search a specific room.

Each picture had a maximum of six objects hidden within it. In the first half of the Nickelodeon series, an incorrect answer meant a room would go unclaimed. For the subsequent episodes and syndicated series, the round was played until all four rooms were claimed or all six clues were played.

Searching the house

The house consisted of eight rooms that could be whimsical versions of traditional rooms in a typical home (e.g., a living room, a bathroom, a den or a kitchen), or complete fantasy rooms, such as "Sherlock's Study," "Ali-Baba's bathroom", a sewer (which contained a pool of water), Tarzan's tree house, a pastry shop, or "Frankenstein's laboratory."

In each room, the host read a clue describing an object hidden within that room. The team had 30 seconds to find the object, and were given one chance to show it to the host once found. Each room in this round was worth $50, which went to the team if they found the object in the room. If the team either failed to find the correct object or showed an incorrect one to the host, the opposing team won the money.

Rooms were frequently set up with distractions to hinder the teams' searches, such as ping-pong balls falling onto them from cabinets or the ceiling, sprays of water or confetti, and (in later episodes) entire shelves collapsing.

Round two

Two teams playing the hidden picture round on the syndicated series (note the laminate stickers on the boards)

The process repeated with a second hidden pictures round and set of rooms to search. The dollar values increased to $75 for finding a correct hidden picture and $100 for successfully finding a hidden object in a room.

One of the rooms in round two was the "Instant Prize Room". If the team found the hidden object in the Instant Prize Room (which was never revealed until a team entered it), they won a bonus prize in addition to the $100 for finding the hidden object. If they failed, the opponents won only the money and the prize went unclaimed.

The team with the most money at the end of this round won the game and advanced to the Room to Room Romp. Both teams kept all money earned.

Tiebreaker

In the event that both teams were tied at the end of the second round, they returned to the play area for a brief Hidden Pictures round. The first team to find two objects won the game and moved on to the Room to Room Romp.

Room-to-Room Romp

In the Room-to-Room Romp, the winning team had 90 seconds to find a hidden object in each of six rooms, in a sequence given to them before the round began. All six objects had tags attached, with each of the first five tags directing them to the next room and giving a clue for the object hidden there.

The team won a prize for each object found, increasing in value to a grand prize for getting all six within the time limit.

Broadcast history

The original version premiered on Nickelodeon on November 2, 1987 with Wesley Eure as host and Harvey as the announcer. Harvey was later replaced by Bob Lorman and then by Joe Conklin. New episodes continued to air on Nickelodeon until July 29, 1988.

A first-run syndicated version, distributed by Fox Television Stations and Viacom, premiered on September 12, 1988 and was hosted by Larry Toffler with Harry Stevens announcing. The syndicated series ended its run on March 10, 1989, and began airing in repeats on Nickelodeon the following Monday (March 13), which continued until June 30, 1990. Nickelodeon GAS re-aired the series from 1999 until 2006.

A Brazilian version of Finders Keepers,called "Bobeou Dançou" aired by Rede Globo from July to December 1989. This version was hosted by Brazilian star Xuxa .

A British version of Finders Keepers aired on the CITV block of ITV from 1991 to 1996, followed by a brief revival in 2006. The first five series of this version was presented by Neil Buchanan, who was joined in the last series by Diane Youdale. Jeff Brazier presented the revival.

Production information

The music for Finders Keepers was written by Edd Kalehoff. The music package was updated when the show went into syndication.

The first two seasons of Finders Keepers was taped at WHYY-TV in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (as was Double Dare). The syndicated version was taped at Hollywood Center Studios in Los Angeles, California for the first season, before moving to the Fox Television Center for the second season. The sets of the Nickelodeon and syndicated versions differed slightly. The set of the Nickelodeon version consisted of a mock exterior of a house that included a door through which Eure entered at the beginning of the show. Prior to searching the house, the set would break away to reveal the house and rooms the teams would be searching. On the syndicated version, the play area and house shared the same set, with the house built stage left and the play area stage right.

Converse was a major sponsor of the show during its run, and every contestant and stage crew member (including the host) wore a pair of the company's shoes.

References

  1. Shister, Gail (October 13, 1987). "Nickelodeon finds home in Philadelphia". Ocala Star-Banner. Retrieved July 2, 2013.
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