{{infobox television | show name | Family Feud | image | caption The current Family Feud logo. | format Game show | runtime approx. 22 minutes:ABC (1976–1985)CBS (1988–1992)Syndicated (1977–1994, 1999–present)approx. 44 minutes:ABC Specials (1978–1984)CBS (1992–1993)Syndicated (1994–1995) | location The Prospect StudiosHollywood, California (1976–1985)CBS Television CityHollywood, California (1988–1995; 1999-2000)NBC StudiosBurbank, California (2000–2003)Sunset Bronson StudiosHollywood, California (2003–2010)Universal StudiosOrlando, Florida (2010–2011)Atlanta Civic CenterAtlanta Georgia (2011-present) | creator Mark GoodsonBill Todman | director Paul Alter (1976–1990)Marc Breslow (1990)Andrew Felsher (1990–1995)Bruce Gowers (1999)Lenn Goodside (1999–2002)Ken Fuchs (2002–present) | presenter Richard Dawson (1976–1985, 1994–1995)Ray Combs (1988–1994)Louie Anderson (1999–2002)Richard Karn (2002–2006)John O'Hurley (2006–2010)Steve Harvey (2010–present) | narrated Gene Wood (1976–1995)Burton Richardson (1999–2010)Joey Fatone (2010–present) | composer Score Productions (1976–1985, 1988–1994, 2002–2003, 2008–present)Edd Kalehoff (1994–1995)John Lewis Parker (1999–2008) | company Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions (1976–1982)Mark Goodson Productions (1982–2002)The Family Company (1976–1985)The New Family Company (1988–1994)Mark Goodson Productions, L.P. (1994–1995)Pearson Television (1999–2002)Feudin' Productions (1999–2010)FremantleMedia (2002–present)Wanderlust Productions (2010–present) | distributor Viacom Enterprises (1977–1985)LBS Communications (1988–1991)All American Television (1991–1995)Pearson Television (1999–2002)Tribune Entertainment (2002–2007)20th Television (2007–present, ad sales only)Debmar-Mercury (2007–present) | country United States | network ABC (1976–1985)CBS (1988–1993)Syndicated (1977–1985, 1988–1995, 1999–present) | first_aired – (ABC Daytime)September 19, 1977 – May 17, 1985 (Daily Syndication) – March 26, 1993 (CBS Daytime)September 19, 1988 – (Syndication) | last_aired present (Syndication) | num_seasons ABC: 9CBS: 5Syndicated (1977–1985): 8Syndicated (1988–1995): 7Syndicated (1999–present): 12 | num_episodes ABC: 2,311Syndicated (1977–1985): 976ABC Specials: 17CBS: unknownSyndicated (1988–1995): unknownSyndicated (1999–present): 1,300+ }} |
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The original version premiered on ABC and was hosted by Richard Dawson from 1976 until it was cancelled in 1985, by which point it had been popular on both the network and in syndication. The series was revived by CBS in 1988 with Ray Combs hosting it until its cancellation in 1993 and its accompanying syndicated series until 1994, when he was replaced by Dawson for one season. The series was activated again in 1999 and continues to air with the twelfth season, which began on September 13, 2010. During that time, it has been hosted by Louie Anderson, Richard Karn, John O'Hurley and Steve Harvey, who became the host at the start of the 2010–2011 season.
Examples of questions might be "Name a famous George", "Tell me a popular family vacation spot", "Name something you do at school", or "Give me a slang name for policemen".
The participants are not asked questions about what is true; instead, they are asked questions about what other people think is true. As such, a perfectly logical answer may be considered incorrect because it failed to make the survey (e.g.: for the question about Georges, George Jones was a popular country singer, but if his name was not given by at least two people it is considered incorrect).
Starting with the next family member in line, each gets a chance to give one answer. Family members may not confer with one another while in control of the board. The family gets a "strike" if a player gives an answer that is not on the board or fails to respond. There is no time limit, but the host has the discretion to impose a three-second count if time is short or the contestant appears to be stalling. Three strikes cause the family to relinquish control of the board, giving the other family one chance to steal the points in the bank by correctly guessing one of the remaining answers. However, if the family is able to reveal all the answers on the board before accumulating three strikes, they win the round and their opponents are not given the chance to steal.
In all versions except the 1988–1994 version, before attempting to steal the round, the entire family could confer before the answer was given. In the 1988–1994 and 2008 primetime versions, each family member gave his or her opinion one at a time. The team captain could then either select one of those four or give his or her own. If the family guesses a remaining answer correctly, they receive the points accumulated by the other family. From 1992–1995 and 1999–2003, the revealed answer's value was also added to the winning team's score.
After determining who takes the bank for a round, any remaining answers are then revealed. Per tradition, the audience yells each unrevealed answer in a choral response.
The Bullseye round first appeared on Family Feud Challenge where it was played in both halves of the hour-long show. In the first half, each family began with $2,500 as their starting bankroll and the five questions were worth in order: $500/$1,000/$1,500/$2,000/$2,500. The highest bank a family could play for was $10,000. In the second half hour, as well as on the syndicated series when the round was introduced, all of these values were doubled, with the starting bankroll at $5,000. The questions were worth $1,000/$2,000/$3,000/$4,000/$5,000 and the highest potential bank was doubled to $20,000. Number one answers were seen on a specially constructed prop that was lowered from the ceiling every time the round began and raised back up every time the round ended. Each family's bankroll was seen displayed on their podium.
The Bullseye round was revised as the "Bankroll" round for Dawson's return, and was played twice on each episode as the syndicated series was expanded to sixty minutes. Instead of each family member going up to answer a question, only one person on each team was required and the two contestants participated in all three questions. The starting bankroll in the first half was $2,500 and the question values were changed to $500/$1,500/$2,500, for a possible bank total of $7,000. These figures were doubled for the second half to $1,000/$3,000/$5,000; making the highest potential bank $14,000.
The round was eliminated for Family Feud's later revival in 1999, but was revived in September 2009, for the final O'Hurley season. The starting bankroll was $15,000, with five questions in values from $1,000 to $5,000 in $1,000 increments. This version only lasted one season.
From!!width=7%|To!!width=5%|Goal!!width=10%|Round 1!!width=10%|Round 2!!width=10%|Round 3!!width=10%|Round 4!!width=10%|Round 5!!width=10%|Round 6+ | |||||
From!!width=7%|To!!width=5%|Goal!!width=10%|Round 1!!width=10%|Round 2!!width=10%|Round 3!!width=10%|Round 4!!width=10%|Round 5!!width=10%|Round 6+ | ||||||
1From 1999–2003, the family in the lead after Round 4 automatically won the game regardless of their score, though the majority of the winning families of that period still reached 300 points. Also, in Round 4, the family in control was only allowed one strike. This sometimes created an unusual situation in which a family could give an incorrect answer and still win if there were not enough points in the bank for the other family to win by a successful steal.
2The Sudden Death round, played similarly to the Bullseye round, uses only the number one answer from a new survey worth triple points. Additional questions are played until the team reaches the 300 point goal, or from 1999–2003, until the tie is broken.
Once all the points for the first player are tallied, the second family member comes back on stage with the first contestant's answers covered and is given 25 seconds (20 seconds before 1994) to answer the same five questions. If the second player gives the same answer as the first player on a question, a double buzzer will sound and the host will ask for another response, usually by saying "try again."
If one or both family members accumulate a total of 200 points or more, the family wins the top prize. If both family members score a total of less than 200 points, each point awards the family $5. Until 1992, the bonus for winning Fast Money was $5,000 on all daytime versions and $10,000 on all syndicated versions. From 1992–1995 and 2009–2010, the top prize was the amount accumulated in the Bullseye/Bankroll round (see above). The top prize reverted to $10,000 from 1999–2001 but was raised to $20,000 in 2001, an increase requested by host Louie Anderson because of inflation. The top prize remained at that level until 2009, at which point the Bullseye round was reinstated with a potential top prize of $30,000. The top prize reverted to $20,000 and the Bullseye round was removed at the beginning of the 2010–2011 season. Since 2009, five-time champion families also receive a new car.
On the Gameshow Marathon episode in 2006, the top prize was increased to $50,000 for a home viewer. On Celebrity Family Feud, the jackpot was $50,000 to the winners' charity. If the goal was not reached, the $5/point rule was discarded and $25,000 was awarded to the charity instead.
Family Feud premiered on ABC's daytime lineup on July 12, 1976 at 1:30 PM Eastern, with Dawson as host and Gene Wood as announcer. Although it was not an immediate hit, ABC moved the series to 11:30 AM on April 25, 1977, where the series became a ratings winner and eventually surpassed the series it was spun off from, Match Game, to become the #1 game show in daytime.
A nighttime syndicated version of Family Feud debuted on local stations (many of them affiliated with NBC, including the network's owned and operated stations) on September 19, 1977. As was the custom with many other syndicated game shows at the time, the nighttime Family Feud aired as a weekly series. In January 1979, midway through its second season, the syndicated version began airing twice weekly due to its popularity. The show continued to be such a solid hit that it expanded again to become a daily series, and Family Feud became the first game show to air ten episodes per week when the syndicated version's fourth season debuted in September 1980.
Family Feud moved to 12:00 Noon on June 30, 1980 after The $20,000 Pyramid was cancelled, while reruns of The Love Boat filled the 11:00 AM hour. While most series that aired in the time slot on various networks usually saw some large ratings drop, often due in part to local affiliates opting to air newscasts or more profitable syndicated programming, Family Feud's ratings remained consistent and for the next few years remained at or near the top in the daytime.
However, in early 1984, the series' ratings began to decrease. In October, ABC moved the show back to its original 11:30 AM time slot, with the new Goodson show, Trivia Trap, as its lead-in. The popularity of another Goodson game show, The Price Is Right (airing opposite Family Feud on CBS), and the weak performance of Trivia Trap as the show's lead-in, contributed to its decrease in ratings. The syndicated series was suffering through its own ratings trouble, as Wheel of Fortune quickly surpassed Family Feud in popularity upon its September 19, 1983 debut and Jeopardy!, which premiered on September 10, 1984, became the second-most popular syndicated game show. Eventually, both editions of Family Feud were canceled. The syndicated series left the air on May 17, 1985 and ABC canceled the daytime series on June 14. The final daytime Family Feud featured an emotional farewell from Dawson, which was cut from the episode's original airing but has been shown in reruns since then.
The syndicated Family Feud continued to air reruns until September 13, 1985. The show's distributor, Viacom Enterprises, created a "best-of" rerun package of Family Feud, which was sold to certain stations for the 1985–1986 season.
The daytime Family Feud aired at 10:00 AM until January 11, 1991. The following Monday, after Wheel of Fortune was moved back to NBC, Family Feud moved into Wheel's 10:30 AM time slot to make room for a talk show hosted by Barbara DeAngelis.
One year later, the Bullseye round was added on both series. The round premiered on the daytime version on June 29, 1992, coinciding with an expansion to a full hour and a renaming to Family Feud Challenge. The change in the format resulted in three families competing on each episode. Two families competed in the first half hour for the right to play the returning champions in the second half. Family Feud Challenge aired on CBS until September 10, 1993, with its final new episode airing on March 26.
On September 14, 1992 the Bullseye round was added to the syndicated series, which took on the name The New Family Feud. The series' sixth season debuted on September 13, 1993 with three weeks of shows taped at Opryland USA, the first and only time that Family Feud had filmed on location. Production continued at CBS Television City after that, and the final episode of the season aired on May 27, 1994. Toward the end of taping for the season, Combs was dismissed from the series due to declining ratings.
A set similar to that used during taping at Opryland USA was redesigned and rebuilt to serve as the set at Television City. Instead of the traditional three-paneled game board, a scaled back version of the Ferranti-Packard Fast Money board was used to display answers for the entire game, as it had been at Opryland. However, the board was not shown outside of Fast Money and a superimposed, computer-generated board appeared over the Fast Money board for broadcast.
The team size was reduced to four for this season, and the name sliders removing the scenery that they hid, a staple of Family Feud since its debut in 1976, were also removed. Instead, each family was introduced in a caricature drawing with each family member's head superimposed on one of the figures in the picture. The Bullseye round was reworked to accommodate this, becoming known as the Bankroll round. In this round, one player from each side played for the entire round and three questions were asked. A maximum of $7,000 was available in the first half of the show and doubled to $14,000 in the second half. During Fast Money, the first contestant received 20 seconds to answer the five questions and the second contestant received 25 seconds.
For the first few weeks of episodes in the new hour-long format, two new families competed in the first half hour. The winning family played a family from Dawson's first run as host of Family Feud. This later changed to the format used for Family Feud Challenge, where the two families competed to meet the returning champions in the second half of the show. Despite an initial rise in the ratings, the momentum could not be sustained and Dawson did not last beyond the one season as host. The final episode aired on May 26, 1995, and reruns continued until September 8.
Beginning with the 2003–2004 season, production moved to Tribune Studios in Hollywood, California and the goal of 300 points was reinstated. However, for all rounds worth triple points, Karn would not read the question again after the face-off. In addition, the Combs-era theme was replaced by the retooled theme and remained unchanged for the rest of Karn's run. At the end of the seventh season, Karn left the show. Pieces from the set were later sold on eBay.
In O'Hurley's final season, which ran from September 7, 2009 to May 28, 2010, the Bullseye round was reintroduced with families' banks beginning at $15,000, and a total jackpot of $30,000 available. Families who retired as five-day champions also won a car as a bonus prize.
After Harvey began hosting, ratings increased by as much as 40% from O'Hurley's last season as host. Clips from Harvey's version of the show were officially released on YouTube.
On May 7, 2011, announced via the show's official Twitter page, the show moved taping locations for the 2011–2012 season to the Atlanta Civic Center, where Harvey lives and hosts his radio show.
Previous staff members include Howard Felsher, the show's original producer before being an executive producer in the 1980s version, who was also a Goodson-Todman staffer since the 1960s, and Cathy Hughart Dawson, the show's original associate producer, who then became producer. Georgia Purcell assumed the associate producer role later in the series. Chester Feldman, who was a creative consultant for Goodson-Todman in the 1970s, was the show's executive producer in the 1980s version.
During the Dawson and Combs versions, Gene Wood was the announcer, with periodic fill-ins from Johnny Gilbert, Charlie O'Donnell, Art James and Rod Roddy. Burton Richardson was the announcer for all episodes of the current version from 1999–2010, except for the Gameshow Marathon finale episode, which was announced by Rich Fields in 2006. Joey Fatone has been the new announcer since the beginning of the twelfth season.
The show's copyright holder was called "The Family Company" from 1976–1985, "The New Family Company" from 1988–1994, "Mark Goodson Productions, L.P." from 1994–1995 and "Feudin' Productions" from 1999–2010. Currently, Family Feud's copyright holder is called "Wanderlust Productions". Since 2002, the show has been produced by RTL Group subsidiary FremantleMedia North America, as a successor to Mark Goodson Productions.
Viacom Enterprises, currently known as CBS Television Distribution, distributed the syndicated version from 1977–1985.
From 1988 until 1995 and again from 1999 until 2002, FremantleMedia (previously under the names LBS Communications, All-American Television, and Pearson Television) distributed Family Feud. In March 2001, Tribune Entertainment was awarded syndication duties, when FremantleMedia chose to focus on producing rather than distribution. Tribune's participation in the series ended in the spring of 2007, when they dismantled their television distribution arm. That fall, Lionsgate-owned Debmar-Mercury assumed distribution and 20th Television assumed ad sales.
The 1988–1995 version featured returning champions, as has the current version since 2002. From 1988–1993 and again since 2002, the limit has been five appearances. From 1988–1992, a Tournament of Champions format was used (see below), but in the syndicated version, there was no returning champion limit. Since the 2009–2010 season, families who retire undefeated also win a new car.
The main game rules applied, but if a family reached 200 points in Fast Money, $5,000 went into a jackpot that started at $25,000 and went up to potentially $55,000 on the CBS version. Likewise, on the syndicated version, the jackpot started at $50,000 and went up $10,000 for each time Fast Money was won, up to a possible $110,000. If the score was less than 200, nothing was added to the jackpot, as the $5 a point rule was discarded for the tournament. Each semifinal was the best-of-three games, with the first family in each one to win two games advancing to the finals, which was also a best-of-three match. There was no Fast Money round played during the finals. The scoring was similar to the 1984–1985 season (single-single-single-single-double-triple) or the regular CBS/Syndicated version from late 1989–1990 (single-single-single-double-triple) in the finals, with the first family to reach $400 winning the game instead of $300. The first family to win two out of three games won everything in the jackpot in addition to what they won in the regular game. No Fast Money was played.
No additional tournaments were conducted on the syndicated version after the second season. The CBS version continued conducting them, but in mid-1990, tournaments were held every month, with the top four money-winning families of the previous month returning. The main game point goals for winning a semifinal and a final game were the same, but the match format was changed from the best-of-three to a one-game match for both the semifinals and the finals. Thus, the potential maximum was lowered to $35,000.
This version, however, did not do tournaments on an occasional basis until May 2005. Again, eight families were brought back, but this time, they consisted of either families who previously lost their first game for the tournament that was held in May 2005 and May 2006, or previously winning families, but not necessarily focusing on the higher winning families of the past for the tournament held in February 2006. The differences at this point for the tournaments were that the jackpot started with nothing, except for the February 2006 Tournament of Champions, which began at $10,000. Losses in Fast Money did not add anything to the jackpot, as in the 1988–1994 version and the championship game was played to 400 points. Trips were sometimes awarded to the jackpot-winning family, including Hawaii during the February 2006 tournament and Mexico during the May 2006 tournament. Again, no Fast Money was played in the finals.
The winning family of the Big Money Tournament from the 2007–2008 season won a $60,000 jackpot out of a possible $120,000. In the 2008–2009 season, the winning family won $80,000.
In the first half of the special, two teams played until one reached $200 or more. That team went on to play Fast Money for $5,000 and competed in the finals against the team that won in the second half, which was played the same way. The two winning teams then faced each other in a one-question showdown, with the team that won the pot going on to play Fast Money for an additional $10,000.
Originally, only the cast members of ABC series competed in the All-Star Specials, but when high ratings made it apparent that continuing to do so would soon exhaust the network's stable of celebrities, an agreement was reached with CBS, NBC and the production companies and stars of series from all three networks began appearing in the fall of 1979, similar to ABC's Battle of the Network Stars concept. At the time, networks did not own their own programming and had to rely on programming from the studios, who dealt with all three networks and often, the battles were between shows from two different networks, even if it was the same production company. Among the series represented were:
Underlying themes to the series' casts were occasionally featured, such as Nighttime vs. Daytime, featuring daytime soap stars competing against prime time TV stars, and some specials even removed the "TV series cast" format in favor of a single unifying theme among the four teams competing, such as Mutiny On The Love Boat, in which the cast of that show competed alongside such past guest stars as Robert Goulet, Jill St. John, Bert Parks and Rhonda Fleming.
This six-week mini-series was part of NBC's "All-American Summer", which also included America's Got Talent and MGM's revival of American Gladiators.
The game format was similar to the All-Star Specials. The families played three rounds (single-single-triple-sudden death). The winners of the two games played in another three-round match for the right to play Fast Money.
As a result of this version, Family Feud became only one of a handful of game shows to air on three different networks, with the other two being ABC and CBS.
The first computer version of Family Feud was released in 1983 for the Coleco Adam. Sharedata released versions for MS-DOS, Commodore 64 and Apple II computers in 1987 that were similar to the Adam version and based on the first 1976–1985 version. In 1989, The All New Family Feud was released, based on the syndicated version from 1988. GameTek released versions in 1990 for NES similar to Dawson, even though the package shows the Combs set, 1993 for SNES and Sega Genesis, 1994 for Panasonic 3DO and 1995 on CD-ROM based on the 1992–1994 version, although the host resembles Dawson. Hasbro Interactive released a version from 2000 for the PC and PlayStation. In 2004, Imagination Entertainment released a DVD game of Family Feud, with Richard Karn providing the welcome, rules and expectations, while Burton Richardson narrated the questions and revealed the answers. A 2nd edition was released in 2006, with Richardson as host and a 3rd edition was released in August 2007, with John O'Hurley hosting. A movie edition was released afterwards, also with O'Hurley hosting.
Tiger Electronics released two electronic games in 1998 and 1999, and (like Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune), included expansion cartridges.
Uproar.com once had an online version of the show using the format from September 1999. This online version included a single, double and triple-point round, while at the time the show was using three single-point rounds and one triple-point round. In September 2006, however, Uproar.com removed all games from its lineup and functioned as a traditional search engine website.
A new computer version, released in 2005, was created by IWin.com and can be bought online or downloaded for a free trial. Based on the Karn version, it can be played by single or team players. IWin.com also released a Holiday Edition of the game that was made available on a limited basis. A third version, the "Family Feud Online Party", allows multiple players to play on a team against other players. Several other versions, such as a Hollywood-themed edition and "Family Feud II", a sequel to the original and this year, "Family Feud III: Dream House", have also been available.
Seattle-based Mobliss Inc. also released a mobile version of Family Feud that was available on Sprint, Verizon and Cingular. Currently, Glu Mobile has released a newer mobile version of Family Feud for other carriers.
In 2006, a PlayStation 2 and PC version was released. Even though it has the logo from O'Hurley's first season, the first set used and depicted on the packaging is the one from Karn's last season. The 1976–1985 and 1988–1994 sets are available for use also.
A Game Boy Advance version was released that same year. Like the PlayStation 2 version, it featured the first O'Hurley logo, but its set and title graphic were based on the final Karn set.
Family Feud 2010 was released for the Wii, Nintendo DS, and PC in 2009. This version featured the 2008 revamped set from O'Hurley's tenure on the show. Although the 1988 theme song is featured in the menus, "The Party Theme" from 1999 is used during game play.
Family Feud Decades was released for the Wii in 2010. This version features sets and survey questions from the past four decades.
A DVD set titled All-Star Family Feud was released on January 8, 2008 and featured a total of 21 celebrity episodes from the original ABC/syndicated versions on its four discs. A re-release of the DVD set titled The Best of All-Star Family Feud was introduced on February 2, 2010 and included the same shows.
Category:1976 television series debuts Category:1985 television series endings Category:1988 television series debuts Category:1995 American television series endings Category:1999 American television series debuts Category:1970s American television series Category:1980s American television series Category:1990s American television series Category:2000s American television series Category:2010s American television series Category:American game shows Category:American Broadcasting Company network shows Category:Australian game shows Category:CBS network shows Category:English-language television series Category:First-run syndicated television programs in the United States Category:Television series by CBS Paramount Television Category:Television series by Fox Television Studios Category:Television series by Lionsgate Television Category:Television series by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions Category:Television series by Tribune Entertainment Category:Television spin-offs
ceb:Family Feud de:Familien-Duell fr:Une famille en or id:Famili 100 he:טוטו משפחתי nl:5 tegen 5 ja:クイズ100人に聞きました pl:Familiada pt:Family Feud ru:Сто к одному simple:Family Feud fi:Voitto kotiin th:4 ต่อ 4 แฟมิลี่เกม uk:Сто до одногоThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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