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** Megaword. [[labelnote:Explanation]]A notorious category used for about six months in the 1994-95 season; the puzzle would be a vocabulary word, and the contestant would get $1,000 bonus cash for using the word in a sentence. The category was a target of mockery by Pat during its lifespan, and both fans and contestants alike hated it for its extreme difficulty, most notoriously when the puzzle was OXIDIZED, leading to a ridiculous number of wrong letters and a round that dragged on for nearly six minutes.[[/labelnote]]
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Fixed link to "The Generation Game"


* [[Series/WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire "Is that your final answer?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase from ''Who Wants To Be a Millionaire'' to ensure that the contestant is actually going for the answer s/he has said.[[/labelnote]]

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* [[Series/WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire "Is that your final answer?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase from ''Who Wants To to Be a Millionaire'' to ensure that the contestant is actually going for the answer s/he has said.[[/labelnote]]



* [[Series/TheGenerationGame]] spawned an entire generation's worth of memes, many of which were CatchPhrases of Creator/BruceForsyth:
** "Nice to see you, to see you..." "[[AudienceParticipation NI]][[PhraseCatcher CE!]]" [[/labelnote:Explanation]]Brucie's iconic introductory CatchPhrase, one of the most famous in British TV history; though he's also used it in just about everything else he's presented since, this show was where it originated.[[/labelnote]]

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* [[Series/TheGenerationGame]] ''Series/TheGenerationGame'' spawned an entire generation's worth of memes, many of which were CatchPhrases {{catch phrase}}s of Creator/BruceForsyth:
** "Nice to see you, to see you..." "[[AudienceParticipation NI]][[PhraseCatcher CE!]]" [[/labelnote:Explanation]]Brucie's [[labelnote:Explanation]]Brucie's iconic introductory CatchPhrase, one of the most famous in British TV history; though he's also used it in just about everything else he's presented since, this show was where it originated.[[/labelnote]]
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* [[Series/TheGenerationGame]] spawned an entire generation's worth of memes, many of which were CatchPhrases of Creator/BruceForsyth:
** "Nice to see you, to see you..." "[[AudienceParticipation NI]][[PhraseCatcher CE!]]" [[/labelnote:Explanation]]Brucie's iconic introductory CatchPhrase, one of the most famous in British TV history; though he's also used it in just about everything else he's presented since, this show was where it originated.[[/labelnote]]
*** The "Thinker" pose.[[labelnote:Explanation]]Brucie would also make this pose, imitating Rodin's famous statue, at the start of every episode. There are most likely still people who [[WeirdAlEffect think Bruce came up with the pose himself and aren't aware of the statue's existence]].[[/labelnote]]
** "Didn't he do well?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Said by Forsyth after each contestant's run.[[/labelnote]]
** "Good game, good game!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Another CatchPhrase that Fosyth would say after a contestant's run.[[/labelnote]]
** "Let's have a look at the old scoreboard." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Said by Forsyth whenever the scoreboard was about to be shown.[[/labelnote]]
** "...a cuddly toy!" ''[audience cheers]'' [[labelnote:Explanation]]In the final round, the winner would get to watch a series of prizes roll past on a conveyor belt, and was then given a set amount of time to recall as many as they could; anything they named, they won. One of the prizes was ''always'' a cuddly toy, and it quickly became one of the most iconic objects in British game show history.[[/labelnote]]
* ''Series/PlayYourCardsRight'', the British version of ''Card Sharks'', also presented by Bruce Forsyth:
** "What do points make?" "[[AudienceParticipation PRI]][[PhraseCatcher ZES]]!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Brucie's succinct explanation of the rules.[[/labelnote]]
** "Higher! Higher!" "Lower! Lower!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]The game revolved around trying to guess whether the next card to be revealed would be higher or lower in value than the previous one, so inevitably, the audience would end up shouting this.[[/labelnote]]
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* "We'll be back in two and two."[[labelnoote:Explanation]]Chuck Woolery's CatchPhrase when throwing to commercial on ''Series/LoveConnection'', referencing the then-standard commercial break length of two minutes and two seconds, complete with a two-fingered hand gesture. Woolery also did this on ''Series/{{Lingo}}'' and ''Series/{{Scrabble}}''.[[/labelnote]]

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* "We'll be back in two and two."[[labelnoote:Explanation]]Chuck "[[labelnote:Explanation]]Chuck Woolery's CatchPhrase when throwing to commercial on ''Series/LoveConnection'', referencing the then-standard commercial break length of two minutes and two seconds, complete with a two-fingered hand gesture. Woolery also did this on ''Series/{{Lingo}}'' and ''Series/{{Scrabble}}''.[[/labelnote]]
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* "We'll be back in two and two."[[labelnoote:Explanation]]Chuck Woolery's throw to commercial on ''Series/LoveConnection'', referencing the then-standard commercial break length of two minutes and two seconds, complete with a two-fingered hand gesture. Woolery later did this on ''Series/{{Lingo}}'' as well.[[/labelnote]]

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* "We'll be back in two and two."[[labelnoote:Explanation]]Chuck Woolery's throw CatchPhrase when throwing to commercial on ''Series/LoveConnection'', referencing the then-standard commercial break length of two minutes and two seconds, complete with a two-fingered hand gesture. Woolery later also did this on ''Series/{{Lingo}}'' as well.and ''Series/{{Scrabble}}''.[[/labelnote]]
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* "We'll be back in two and two."[[labelnoote:Explanation]]Chuck Woolery's throw to commercial on ''Series/LoveConnection'', referencing the then-standard commercial break length of two minutes and two seconds, complete with a two-fingered hand gesture. Woolery later did this on ''Series/{{Lingo}}'' as well.[[/labelnote]]
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** "'''''Who said anything about a horse?!?'''''"[[labelnote:Explanation]]Pat's similar reaction to a 2014 episode that played out similarly to the above when the contestants guessed "Riding a white horse" and "Riding a brown horse" early in the round; the correct response was SEEING A BUDDY MOVIE.[[/labelnote]]
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* But if you do, chances are you'll hear Patrick Wayne tell you that "YOUUUUUUUUUUUU WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIN!" If not, that's okay, "Just cause you're divorced doesn't mean you can't have fun, riiiiiiiiiiiight?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the 1990 revival of ''Series/TicTacDough'', a couple choice quotes from host Patrick Wayne, another LargeHam of a host whose name often crops up when bad game show hosts are mentioned. The latter is from the run's Divorced Couples Week.[[/labelnote]]

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* But if you do, chances are you'll hear Patrick Wayne tell you that "YOUUUUUUUUUUUU WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIN!" "[[NoIndoorVoice YOUUUUUUUUUUUU WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIN!]]" If not, that's okay, "Just cause you're divorced doesn't mean you can't have fun, riiiiiiiiiiiight?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the 1990 revival of ''Series/TicTacDough'', a couple choice quotes from host Patrick Wayne, another LargeHam of a host whose name often crops up when bad game show hosts are mentioned. The latter is from the run's Divorced Couples Week.[[/labelnote]]



* ''Series/TwentyOne'' was RRRRRRRRRRRIGGED! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Early meme dating from the newsgroup alt.tv.game-shows, referring to the quiz show scandals of the late 1950s. While ''Twenty One'' was a big offender, this also applied to ''Series/TicTacDough'', ''The $64,000 Question'', and the smoking gun itself — ''Dotto''.[[/labelnote]]

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* ''Series/TwentyOne'' was RRRRRRRRRRRIGGED! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Early meme dating from the newsgroup alt.tv.game-shows, referring to the quiz show scandals of the late 1950s. While ''Twenty One'' was a big offender, this also applied to ''Series/TicTacDough'', ''The $64,000 Question'', and the smoking gun itself — ''Dotto''.''Series/{{Dotto}}''.[[/labelnote]]



** What? You didn't know any of this? I bet you didn't know that Woolery left ''[[Series/WheelOfFortune Wheel]]''.[[labelnote:Explanation]]A popular way of saying that a piece of game show news is old. The reference is to former ''Wheel of Fortune'' host Chuck Woolery, who left on Christmas Day 1981.[[/labelnote]]

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** What? You didn't know any of this? I bet you didn't know that Woolery left ''[[Series/WheelOfFortune Wheel]]''.[[labelnote:Explanation]]A popular way of saying that a piece of game show news is old. The reference is to former ''Wheel of Fortune'' ''Wheel'' host Chuck Woolery, who left on Christmas Day 1981.[[/labelnote]]



* [[Series/WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire "Is that your final answer?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase from ''WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire'' to ensure that the contestant is actually going for the answer s/he has said.[[/labelnote]]

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* [[Series/WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire "Is that your final answer?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase from ''WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire'' ''Who Wants To Be a Millionaire'' to ensure that the contestant is actually going for the answer s/he has said.[[/labelnote]]



** Circle/X gets the square! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Often said by the hosts when a contestant correctly agrees/disagrees with a celebrity. It is also often used in real life as a sarcastic retort to a blatantly obvious statement.[[/labelnote]]

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** Circle/X gets the square! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Often said by the hosts when a contestant correctly agrees/disagrees with a celebrity. It is also often used in real life as a sarcastic retort to a [[CaptainObvious blatantly obvious statement.statement]].[[/labelnote]]



* BRING ON THE WALL! [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase on ''Series/HoleInTheWall'', where contestants must contort their bodies to fit through holes made in an AdvancingWallOfDoom.[[/labelnote]]

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* BRING ON THE WALL! [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase on ''Series/HoleInTheWall'', ''Hole In The Wall'', where contestants must contort their bodies to fit through holes made in an AdvancingWallOfDoom.[[/labelnote]]



* "Dumb Dora was ''so dumb...''" "HOW DUMB WAS SHE?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Although the "X was so Y..." "How Y was X?" construct originated with JohnnyCarson, ''Series/MatchGame'' help popularize it whenever the show had a question about "Dumb Dora" or any other personality made up for the show's humorous fill-in-the-blank questions. The "How Y was X?" portion was usually asked by both the celebrity panel and audience, and host Gene Rayburn would typically rate their performance (e.g., "You blew it").[[/labelnote]]

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* "Dumb Dora was ''so dumb...''" "HOW DUMB WAS SHE?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Although the "X was so Y..." "How Y was X?" construct originated with JohnnyCarson, [[Series/TheTonightShow Johnny Carson]], ''Series/MatchGame'' help popularize it whenever the show had a question about "Dumb Dora" or any other personality made up for the show's humorous fill-in-the-blank questions. The "How Y was X?" portion was usually asked by both the celebrity panel and audience, and host Gene Rayburn would typically rate their performance (e.g., "You blew it").[[/labelnote]]



* "Not a match; the board goes back." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Hugh Downs often said this on ''Series/{{Concentration}}'' when a contestant's chosen numbers did not have the same prize behind them. DavidLetterman helped get this phrase here, as he says it occasionally when a joke falls flat.[[/labelnote]]

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* "Not a match; the board goes back." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Hugh Downs often said this on ''Series/{{Concentration}}'' when a contestant's chosen numbers did not have the same prize behind them. DavidLetterman Creator/DavidLetterman helped get this phrase here, as he says it occasionally when a joke falls flat.[[/labelnote]]



* ''Series/AllStarBlitz'', hobba hum hobba heeba humba. [[labelnote:Explanation]]The only circulating version of that show's theme is a very surreal remix with a lot of {{scatting}}, which was apparently used for only one week. The sheer bizarreness of this remix is quite well known.[[/labelnote]]

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* ''Series/AllStarBlitz'', hobba hum hobba heeba humba. [[labelnote:Explanation]]The only circulating version of that show's theme is a [[SurrealThemeTune very surreal remix remix]] with a lot of {{scatting}}, which was apparently used for only one week. The sheer bizarreness of this remix is quite well known.[[/labelnote]]
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* ''Series/FamilyFeud'': Richard Karn wants you to know that because he feels like a meme, he's going to [[Series/FamilyFeud DOUBLE THE POINTS]]!!!!!!!! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Karn's LargeHam explanation of the Double round, where the value of each survey answer is doubled, always followed by audience applause. He did the same thing with "triple the points" in the Triple round.[[/labelnote]]

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* ''Series/FamilyFeud'': Richard Karn wants you to know that because he feels like a meme, he's going to [[Series/FamilyFeud [[NoIndoorVoice DOUBLE THE POINTS]]!!!!!!!! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Karn's LargeHam explanation of the Double round, where the value of each survey answer is doubled, always followed by audience applause. He did the same thing with "triple the points" in the Triple round.[[/labelnote]]
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* [[Series/TheDatingGame I have a question for Bachelor #2...]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]From ''TheDatingGame'', in which a bachelorette inquires three mystery bachelors before deciding which one she wants to date.[[/labelnote]]

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* [[Series/TheDatingGame I have a question for Bachelor #2...]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]From ''TheDatingGame'', ''Series/TheDatingGame'', in which a bachelorette inquires three mystery bachelors before deciding which one she wants to date.[[/labelnote]]
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* ''TwentyOne'' was RRRRRRRRRRRIGGED! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Early meme dating from the newsgroup alt.tv.game-shows, referring to the quiz show scandals of the late 1950s. While ''Twenty One'' was a big offender, this also applied to ''Series/TicTacDough'', ''The $64,000 Question'', and the smoking gun itself — ''Dotto''.[[/labelnote]]

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* ''TwentyOne'' ''Series/TwentyOne'' was RRRRRRRRRRRIGGED! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Early meme dating from the newsgroup alt.tv.game-shows, referring to the quiz show scandals of the late 1950s. While ''Twenty One'' was a big offender, this also applied to ''Series/TicTacDough'', ''The $64,000 Question'', and the smoking gun itself — ''Dotto''.[[/labelnote]]
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** Dankey Kang. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation: A Final Jeopardy! clue read, "This video game character is blue, collects Rings, and goes fast." One contestant [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog got it right]], but the other two answered "Who is [[Franchise/DonkeyKong Dankey Kang]]?" and "Who is [[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda Princess Zorldo]]?"[[/labelnote]]

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** Dankey Kang. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation: A faked Final Jeopardy! clue read, "This video game character is blue, collects Rings, and goes fast." One contestant [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog got it right]], but the other two answered "Who is [[Franchise/DonkeyKong Dankey Kang]]?" and "Who is [[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda Princess Zorldo]]?"[[/labelnote]]
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** "I'll take an E, Bob." [[labelnote:Explanation]]DoubleEntendre letter request from the British version of ''{{Blockbusters}}'', which involves a board full of letters — each answer begins with the letter selected. "P" of course refers to "taking a pee"; "U" as in "I'll have ''you''" and "E" was a common slang for the drug Ecstasy.[[/labelnote]]

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** "I'll take an E, Bob." [[labelnote:Explanation]]DoubleEntendre letter request from the British version of ''{{Blockbusters}}'', ''Series/{{Blockbusters}}'', which involves a board full of letters — each answer begins with the letter selected. "P" of course refers to "taking a pee"; "U" as in "I'll have ''you''" and "E" was a common slang for the drug Ecstasy.[[/labelnote]]

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* '''[[Series/WhereInTheWorldIsCarmenSandiego "DO IT, ROCKAPELLA!"]]''' [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation:CatchPhrase in reference to the a cappella group Rockapella, who provided the music for ''Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?''[[/labelnote]]

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* '''[[Series/WhereInTheWorldIsCarmenSandiego "DO IT, ROCKAPELLA!"]]''' [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation:CatchPhrase [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase in reference to the a cappella group Rockapella, who provided the music for ''Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?''[[/labelnote]]Sandiego?''[[/labelnote]]
** Greg, ''go away.'' [[labelnote:Explanation]]How pretty much all of the host's conferences in DaChief's office ended.[[/labelnote]]
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* [[Series/TheNewlywedGame "Tell me specifically, where is the weirdest place you've ever gotten the urge to make whoopee?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]A notorious 1978 question from the show that asked prying questions of four sets of newlyweds; one wife answered "in the ass". For years, it was believed that this question and answer were {{Urban Legend}}s as host Bob Eubanks denied that it ever happened, until footage of the actual question and answer surfaced.[[/labelnote]]

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* [[Series/TheNewlywedGame "Tell me specifically, where is the weirdest place you've ever gotten the urge to make whoopee?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]A notorious 1978 question from the show that asked prying questions of four sets of newlyweds; one wife answered "in answered: "I don't know -- in the ass". ass?" For years, it was believed that this question and answer were {{Urban Legend}}s as host Bob Eubanks denied swore up and down that he had no memory of it ever happened, happening, until footage of the actual question and answer surfaced.[[/labelnote]]surfaced. The confusion arose because the version of the story that became a meme ''didn't'' happen -- all of America seemingly misremembered the phrasing as "That'd be in the butt, Bob."[[/labelnote]]
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** [[YouFool YOU FOOL!]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]From a 1999 episode where Gilbert Gottfried was the only star left on the board, but the contestants kept whiffing the increasingly easy questions and falling for Gottfried's obvious bluffs. Every time they whiffed, he would scream "YOU FOOL!"[[/labelnote]]

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** [[YouFool YOU FOOL!]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]From a 1999 episode where Gilbert Gottfried was the only star left on the board, but the contestants kept whiffing the increasingly easy questions and falling for Gottfried's obvious bluffs. Every time they whiffed, he would scream "YOU FOOL!"[[/labelnote]]FOOL!" By the end of the round, ''everyone on the board'' was shouting it -- if they weren't laughing too hard to speak.[[/labelnote]]
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** Dankey Kang. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation: A Final Jeopardy! clue read, "This video game character is blue, collects Rings, and goes fast." One contestant [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog got it right]], but the other two answered "Who is [[Franchise/DonkeyKong Dankey Kang]]?" and "Who is [[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda Princess Zorldo]]?"]]

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** Dankey Kang. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation: A Final Jeopardy! clue read, "This video game character is blue, collects Rings, and goes fast." One contestant [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog got it right]], but the other two answered "Who is [[Franchise/DonkeyKong Dankey Kang]]?" and "Who is [[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda Princess Zorldo]]?"]]Zorldo]]?"[[/labelnote]]
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** Dankey Kang. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation:A Final Jeopardy! clue read, "This video game character is blue, collects Rings, and goes fast." One contestant [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog got it right]], but the other two answered "Who is [[Franchise/DonkeyKong Dankey Kang?" and "Who is [[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda Princess Zorldo?"]]

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** Dankey Kang. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation:A [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation: A Final Jeopardy! clue read, "This video game character is blue, collects Rings, and goes fast." One contestant [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog got it right]], but the other two answered "Who is [[Franchise/DonkeyKong Dankey Kang?" Kang]]?" and "Who is [[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda Princess Zorldo?"]]Zorldo]]?"]]
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** Dankey Kang. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation:A Final Jeopardy! clue read, "This video game character is blue, collects Rings, and goes fast." One contestant [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog got it right]], but the other two answered "Who is [[Franchise/DonkeyKong Dankey Kang?" and "Who is [[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda Princess Zorldo?"]]
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* ''Series/FamilyFeud'': Richard Karn wants you to know that because he feels like a meme, he's going to [[Series/FamilyFeud DOUBLE THE POINTS]]!!!!!!!! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Karn's LargeHam explanation of the Double round, where the value of each survey answer is doubled. He did the same thing with "triple the points" in the Triple round.[[/labelnote]]

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* ''Series/FamilyFeud'': Richard Karn wants you to know that because he feels like a meme, he's going to [[Series/FamilyFeud DOUBLE THE POINTS]]!!!!!!!! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Karn's LargeHam explanation of the Double round, where the value of each survey answer is doubled.doubled, always followed by audience applause. He did the same thing with "triple the points" in the Triple round.[[/labelnote]]



** Survey said... [[labelnote:Explanation]] CatchPhrase heard in every version of ''Feud'', when asking how many points an answer scored in the Fast Money BonusRound. May be used in conversation when "revealing" the answer to a question.[[/labelnote]]

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** Survey said... [[labelnote:Explanation]] CatchPhrase originated on the 1975 pilot by Richard Dawson and heard in every version of ''Feud'', when asking how many points an answer scored in the Fast Money BonusRound. May be used in conversation when "revealing" the answer to a question.[[/labelnote]]
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** Good answer! Good answer! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Usually said by the other members of the family, no matter how far off-base the answer is. Some families even seem to say it ironically because they ''know'' the answer can't possibly be up there.[[/labelnote]]

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** Good answer! Good answer! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Usually said by the other members of the family, no matter how far off-base off base the answer is. Some families even seem to say it ironically because they ''know'' the answer can't possibly be up there.[[/labelnote]]



** Oh yeah, and Jim Caldwell wants to add that those red boxes are special categories, he'll be sure to explain them when we get to them. [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the 1985-86 season of the same show; when Jim Caldwell took over from Wink Martindale as host, Caldwell became obsessed with the red box {{Bonus Space}}s.[[/labelnote]]

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** Oh yeah, and Jim Caldwell wants to add that those red boxes are special categories, he'll be sure to explain them when we get to them. [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the 1985-86 1985/86 season of the same show; when Jim Caldwell took over from Wink Martindale as host, Caldwell became obsessed with the red box {{Bonus Space}}s.[[/labelnote]]



* [[PressYourLuck Big bucks]], no {{Whammy}}s...STOP! [[labelnote:Explanation]]The mantra of many a contestant on ''Series/SecondChance'', ''Series/PressYourLuck'', and ''Series/{{Whammy}}!'' — hitting a Devil/Whammy on the game board wiped out one's score.[[/labelnote]]

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* [[PressYourLuck [[Series/PressYourLuck Big bucks]], no {{Whammy}}s...STOP! [[labelnote:Explanation]]The mantra of many a contestant on ''Series/SecondChance'', ''Series/PressYourLuck'', and ''Series/{{Whammy}}!'' — hitting a Devil/Whammy on the game board wiped out one's score.[[/labelnote]]



** What? You didn't know any of this? I bet you didn't know that Woolery left ''[[WheelOfFortune Wheel]]''.[[labelnote:Explanation]]A popular way of saying that a piece of game show news is old. The reference is to former ''WheelOfFortune'' host Chuck Woolery, who left on Christmas Day 1981.[[/labelnote]]

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** What? You didn't know any of this? I bet you didn't know that Woolery left ''[[WheelOfFortune ''[[Series/WheelOfFortune Wheel]]''.[[labelnote:Explanation]]A popular way of saying that a piece of game show news is old. The reference is to former ''WheelOfFortune'' ''Wheel of Fortune'' host Chuck Woolery, who left on Christmas Day 1981.[[/labelnote]]



** ...or proclaim that a cancelled game show is [[PunctuatedForEmphasis NEW! NEW! NEW!]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]Another troll meme that started with someone repeatedly saying this about ''[[WheelOfFortune Wheel 2000]]'', and escalated from there. Often misspelled as "NU! NU! NU!" due to mutations with the aforementioned "hat putato" posts.[[/labelnote]]
* [[WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire "Is that your final answer?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase from ''WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire'' to ensure that the contestant is actually going for the answer s/he has said.[[/labelnote]]

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** ...or proclaim that a cancelled game show is [[PunctuatedForEmphasis NEW! NEW! NEW!]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]Another troll meme that started with someone repeatedly saying this about ''[[WheelOfFortune ''[[Series/WheelOfFortune Wheel 2000]]'', and escalated from there. Often misspelled as "NU! NU! NU!" due to mutations with the aforementioned "hat putato" posts.[[/labelnote]]
* [[WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire [[Series/WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire "Is that your final answer?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase from ''WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire'' to ensure that the contestant is actually going for the answer s/he has said.[[/labelnote]]



* That dating show from the 1990s is actually called FREAKIN' STUDS. [[labelnote:Explanation]]In reference to a "50 Greatest Game Shows" poll conducted by {{GSN}}. This was one fan's reaction to the fact that ''Studs'' ended up on the aired list, as it wasn't a long-running or well-remembered series.[[/labelnote]]

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* That dating show from the 1990s is actually called FREAKIN' STUDS. [[labelnote:Explanation]]In reference to a "50 Greatest Game Shows" poll conducted by {{GSN}}.Creator/{{GSN}}. This was one fan's reaction to the fact that ''Studs'' ended up on the aired list, as it wasn't a long-running or well-remembered series.[[/labelnote]]



** Who are three people that have never been in my kitchen? [[labelnote:Explanation]]On an episode of ''{{Cheers}}'' ("What Is... Cliff Clavin?"), KnowNothingKnowItAll postman Cliff Clavin appeared on ''Jeopardy!'' and had a runaway lead. He lost after wagering all of his winnings on the Final Jeopardy! clue and writing that as his response. ''Jeopardy!'' has made this episode into an AscendedMeme of sorts, as "pulling a Clavin" is now the term for an all-in Final Jeopardy! wager from a runaway lead.[[/labelnote]]

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** Who are three people that have never been in my kitchen? [[labelnote:Explanation]]On an episode of ''{{Cheers}}'' ''Series/{{Cheers}}'' ("What Is... Cliff Clavin?"), KnowNothingKnowItAll postman Cliff Clavin appeared on ''Jeopardy!'' and had a runaway lead. He lost after wagering all of his winnings on the Final Jeopardy! clue and writing that as his response. ''Jeopardy!'' has made this episode into an AscendedMeme of sorts, as "pulling a Clavin" is now the term for an all-in Final Jeopardy! wager from a runaway lead.[[/labelnote]]



** Eleventy billion dollars! [[labelnote:Explanation]]What "Keanu Reaves" bid in a ''SaturdayNightLive SNL'' ''Celebrity Jeopardy!'' sketch. This "number" is often used among game show fans to spoof the trend towards very high payouts.[[/labelnote]]

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** Eleventy billion dollars! [[labelnote:Explanation]]What "Keanu Reaves" bid in a ''SaturdayNightLive SNL'' ''[[Series/SaturdayNightLive SNL]]'' ''Celebrity Jeopardy!'' sketch. This "number" is often used among game show fans to spoof the trend towards toward very high payouts.[[/labelnote]]



* [[HollywoodSquares I'll take [celebrity's name] for the win, please.]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]The origin of "for the win", originally said by many contestants on the celebrity tic-tac-toe game when three-in-a-row was imminent.[[/labelnote]]

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* [[HollywoodSquares [[Series/TheHollywoodSquares I'll take [celebrity's name] for the win, please.]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]The origin of "for the win", originally said by many contestants on the celebrity tic-tac-toe game when three-in-a-row was imminent.[[/labelnote]]



* "The {{password}} is..." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Whispered by TheAnnouncer in most versions of the word-association game.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* "The {{password}} Series/{{password}} is..." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Whispered by TheAnnouncer in most versions of the word-association game.[[/labelnote]]



* [[{{Blockbusters}} I'll take a P, Bob.]]

to:

* [[{{Blockbusters}} [[Series/{{Blockbusters}} I'll take a P, Bob.]]



* BRING ON THE WALL! [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase on ''HoleInTheWall'', where contestants must contort their bodies to fit through holes made in an AdvancingWallOfDoom.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* BRING ON THE WALL! [[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase on ''HoleInTheWall'', ''Series/HoleInTheWall'', where contestants must contort their bodies to fit through holes made in an AdvancingWallOfDoom.[[/labelnote]]



* "You are TheWeakestLink... goodbye." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Spoken by the host of the show in question, when the "weakest link" player has been voted off by the others.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* "You are TheWeakestLink...Series/TheWeakestLink... goodbye." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Spoken by the host of the show in question, when the "weakest link" player has been voted off by the others.[[/labelnote]]



* [[TheDatingGame I have a question for Bachelor #2...]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]From ''TheDatingGame'', in which a bachelorette inquires three mystery bachelors before deciding which one she wants to date.[[/labelnote]]
* [[TheNewlywedGame "Tell me specifically, where is the weirdest place you've ever gotten the urge to make whoopee?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]A notorious 1978 question from the show that asked prying questions of four sets of newlyweds; one wife answered "in the ass". For years, it was believed that this question and answer were {{Urban Legend}}s as host Bob Eubanks denied that it ever happened, until footage of the actual question and answer surfaced.[[/labelnote]]
* "Dumb Dora was ''so dumb...''" "HOW DUMB WAS SHE?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Although the "X was so Y..." "How Y was X?" construct originated with JohnnyCarson, ''MatchGame'' help popularize it whenever the show had a question about "Dumb Dora" or any other personality made up for the show's humorous fill-in-the-blank questions. The "How Y was X?" portion was usually asked by both the celebrity panel and audience, and host Gene Rayburn would typically rate their performance (e.g., "You blew it").[[/labelnote]]

to:

* [[TheDatingGame [[Series/TheDatingGame I have a question for Bachelor #2...]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]From ''TheDatingGame'', in which a bachelorette inquires three mystery bachelors before deciding which one she wants to date.[[/labelnote]]
* [[TheNewlywedGame [[Series/TheNewlywedGame "Tell me specifically, where is the weirdest place you've ever gotten the urge to make whoopee?"]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]A notorious 1978 question from the show that asked prying questions of four sets of newlyweds; one wife answered "in the ass". For years, it was believed that this question and answer were {{Urban Legend}}s as host Bob Eubanks denied that it ever happened, until footage of the actual question and answer surfaced.[[/labelnote]]
* "Dumb Dora was ''so dumb...''" "HOW DUMB WAS SHE?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Although the "X was so Y..." "How Y was X?" construct originated with JohnnyCarson, ''MatchGame'' ''Series/MatchGame'' help popularize it whenever the show had a question about "Dumb Dora" or any other personality made up for the show's humorous fill-in-the-blank questions. The "How Y was X?" portion was usually asked by both the celebrity panel and audience, and host Gene Rayburn would typically rate their performance (e.g., "You blew it").[[/labelnote]]



** Old Man Periwinkle [[labelnote:Explanation]]The name Match Game used whenever the sentence to complete involved an old person. Gene Rayburn would usually do an old man voice for him.[[/labelnote]]
* "...The choice is yours, and yours alone." [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the kids' show ''LegendsOfTheHiddenTemple'', the end of the RulesSpiel given by "Olmec", an animatronic stone head voiced by Creator/DeeBradleyBaker.[[/labelnote]]

to:

** Old Man Periwinkle [[labelnote:Explanation]]The name Match Game ''Match Game'' used whenever the sentence to complete involved an old person. Gene Rayburn would usually do an old man voice for him.[[/labelnote]]
* "...The choice is yours, and yours alone." [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the kids' show ''LegendsOfTheHiddenTemple'', ''Series/LegendsOfTheHiddenTemple'', the end of the RulesSpiel given by "Olmec", an animatronic stone head voiced by Creator/DeeBradleyBaker.[[/labelnote]]



* "Not a match; the board goes back." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Hugh Downs often said this on ''{{Concentration}}'' when a contestant's chosen numbers did not have the same prize behind them. DavidLetterman helped get this phrase here, as he says it occasionally when a joke falls flat.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* "Not a match; the board goes back." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Hugh Downs often said this on ''{{Concentration}}'' ''Series/{{Concentration}}'' when a contestant's chosen numbers did not have the same prize behind them. DavidLetterman helped get this phrase here, as he says it occasionally when a joke falls flat.[[/labelnote]]



* '''[[WhereInTheWorldIsCarmenSandiego "DO IT, ROCKAPELLA!"]]''' [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation:CatchPhrase in reference to the a cappella group Rockapella, who provided the music for ''Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?''[[/labelnote]]
* Is it behind Door #1, Door #2, or Door #3? [[labelnote:Explanation]]Reference to the three numbered doors on ''LetsMakeADeal'', which may conceal a {{Zonk}} or a prize.[[/labelnote]]
* "Your starter for ten..." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Phrase used on ''UniversityChallenge'' to indicate the next question is a basic, ten-point one.[[/labelnote]]
* "For $10/$25/$50/$100,000...here is your first subject. Go!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Phrase used by Dick Clark to start the Winner's Circle round on various incarnations of ''Pyramid''.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* '''[[WhereInTheWorldIsCarmenSandiego '''[[Series/WhereInTheWorldIsCarmenSandiego "DO IT, ROCKAPELLA!"]]''' [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation:CatchPhrase in reference to the a cappella group Rockapella, who provided the music for ''Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?''[[/labelnote]]
* Is it behind Door #1, Door #2, or Door #3? [[labelnote:Explanation]]Reference to the three numbered doors on ''LetsMakeADeal'', ''Series/LetsMakeADeal'', which may conceal a {{Zonk}} or a prize.[[/labelnote]]
* "Your starter for ten..." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Phrase used on ''UniversityChallenge'' ''Series/UniversityChallenge'' to indicate the next question is a basic, ten-point one.[[/labelnote]]
* "For $10/$25/$50/$100,000...here is your first subject. Go!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Phrase used by Dick Clark to start the Winner's Circle round on various incarnations of ''Pyramid''.''Series/{{Pyramid}}''.[[/labelnote]]



* "Lower/Higher than a...?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]What the host of ''CardSharks'' will usually say prior to turning over the next card.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* "Lower/Higher than a...?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]What the host of ''CardSharks'' ''Series/CardSharks'' will usually say prior to before turning over the next card.[[/labelnote]]



* "Will the real X please stand up?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]What the host of ''ToTellTheTruth'' says to find out who's telling the truth and who the imposters are.[[/labelnote]]
** [[WeirdAlEffect Although these days, people are more likely to associate it with]] [[{{Eminem}} Eminem's "The Real Slim Shady"]].
* "I would like to introduce you to ten of the most (alliterative two-word phrase, usually with negative meaning) that ever stood between an (occupation) and his/her money, and here...they...are!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Said by ''Whew!'' host Tom Kennedy to players before attempting the Gauntlet of Villains for $25,000.[[/labelnote]]
** LONGSHOT! (screeeeeeeeeeech...CRASH!) [[labelnote:Explanation]]What a Charger on ''Whew'' would say when time was running out and s/he couldn't reach Level 6 in time. This forced a SuddenDeath single-pick of three possible bloopers to decide the round.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* "Will the real X please stand up?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]What the host of ''ToTellTheTruth'' ''Series/ToTellTheTruth'' says to find out who's telling the truth and who the imposters are.[[/labelnote]]
** [[WeirdAlEffect Although these days, people are more likely to associate it with]] [[{{Eminem}} [[Music/{{Eminem}} Eminem's "The Real Slim Shady"]].
* "I would like to introduce you to ten of the most (alliterative two-word phrase, usually with negative meaning) that ever stood between an (occupation) and his/her money, and here...they...are!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Said by ''Whew!'' ''Series/{{Whew}}'' host Tom Kennedy to players before attempting the Gauntlet of Villains for $25,000.[[/labelnote]]
** LONGSHOT! (screeeeeeeeeeech...CRASH!) [[labelnote:Explanation]]What a Charger on ''Whew'' ''Whew!'' would say when time was running out and s/he couldn't reach Level 6 in time. This forced a SuddenDeath single-pick of three possible bloopers to decide the round.[[/labelnote]]



* If you'd like to be a contestant on ''Hit Man'', forget it! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Rod Roddy's famous line in place of the contestant plug on said show's GrandFinale.[[/labelnote]]
* Bowling for X. [[labelnote:Explanation]]A snowclone meme originating from the franchise ''BowlingForDollars''.[[/labelnote]]
* ''AllStarBlitz'', hobba hum hobba heeba humba. [[labelnote:Explanation]]The only circulating version of that show's theme is a very surreal remix with a lot of scatting, which was apparently used for only one week. The sheer bizarreness of this remix is quite well known.[[/labelnote]]

Series/ThePriceIsRight has so many that it gets [[Memes/ThePriceIsRight its own page]].

to:

* If you'd like to be a contestant on ''Hit Man'', ''Series/HitMan'', forget it! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Rod Roddy's famous line in place of the contestant plug on said show's GrandFinale.[[/labelnote]]
* Bowling for X. [[labelnote:Explanation]]A snowclone meme originating from the franchise ''BowlingForDollars''.''Series/BowlingForDollars''.[[/labelnote]]
* ''AllStarBlitz'', ''Series/AllStarBlitz'', hobba hum hobba heeba humba. [[labelnote:Explanation]]The only circulating version of that show's theme is a very surreal remix with a lot of scatting, {{scatting}}, which was apparently used for only one week. The sheer bizarreness of this remix is quite well known.[[/labelnote]]

Series/ThePriceIsRight ''Series/ThePriceIsRight'' has so many that it gets [[Memes/ThePriceIsRight its own page]].

Added: 143

Changed: 28

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* [[TheJokersWild Joker...]]''[[TheJokersWild Joker...]]''[[TheJokersWild First Ladies!]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]Jack Barry's over-dramatic read of the giant slot machine on ''TheJokersWild''.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* [[TheJokersWild [[Series/TheJokersWild Joker...]]''[[TheJokersWild ]]''[[Series/TheJokersWild Joker...]]''[[TheJokersWild ]]''[[Series/TheJokersWild First Ladies!]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]Jack Barry's over-dramatic read of the giant slot machine on ''TheJokersWild''.''Series/TheJokersWild''.[[/labelnote]]


Added DiffLines:

** As we know, ''Series/TheJokersWild'' is a game of definitions.[[labelnote:Explanation]]CatchPhrase on the show's 1990 revival.[[/labelnote]]
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* But if you do, chances are you'll hear [[TicTacDough Patrick Wayne]] tell you that "YOUUUUUUUUUUUU WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIN!" If not, that's okay, "Just cause you're divorced doesn't mean you can't have fun, riiiiiiiiiiiight?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the 1990 revival of ''TicTacDough'', a couple choice quotes from host Patrick Wayne, another LargeHam of a host whose name often crops up when bad game show hosts are mentioned. The latter is from the run's Divorced Couples Week.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* But if you do, chances are you'll hear [[TicTacDough Patrick Wayne]] Wayne tell you that "YOUUUUUUUUUUUU WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIN!" If not, that's okay, "Just cause you're divorced doesn't mean you can't have fun, riiiiiiiiiiiight?" [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the 1990 revival of ''TicTacDough'', ''Series/TicTacDough'', a couple choice quotes from host Patrick Wayne, another LargeHam of a host whose name often crops up when bad game show hosts are mentioned. The latter is from the run's Divorced Couples Week.[[/labelnote]]



* [[PressYourLuck Big bucks]], no {{Whammy}}s...STOP! [[labelnote:Explanation]]The mantra of many a contestant on ''Series/SecondChance'', ''PressYourLuck'', and ''Series/{{Whammy}}!'' — hitting a Devil/Whammy on the game board wiped out one's score.[[/labelnote]]

to:

* [[PressYourLuck Big bucks]], no {{Whammy}}s...STOP! [[labelnote:Explanation]]The mantra of many a contestant on ''Series/SecondChance'', ''PressYourLuck'', ''Series/PressYourLuck'', and ''Series/{{Whammy}}!'' — hitting a Devil/Whammy on the game board wiped out one's score.[[/labelnote]]



** The title format of ''[[{{Revival}} Whammy! The All New Press Your Luck]]'' became a meme in and of itself. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Message board posters would come up with similar titles for hypothetical revivals, such as ''Dragon! The All New TicTacDough.''[[/labelnote]]
* ''TwentyOne'' was RRRRRRRRRRRIGGED! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Early meme dating from the newsgroup alt.tv.game-shows, referring to the quiz show scandals of the late 1950s. While ''Twenty One'' was a big offender, this also applied to ''TicTacDough'', ''The $64,000 Question'', and the smoking gun itself — ''Dotto''.[[/labelnote]]

to:

** The title format of ''[[{{Revival}} Whammy! The ''Series/{{Whammy}} [[{{Revival}}The All New Press Your Luck]]'' became a meme in and of itself. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Message board posters would come up with similar titles for hypothetical revivals, such as ''Dragon! The All New TicTacDough.Series/TicTacDough.''[[/labelnote]]
* ''TwentyOne'' was RRRRRRRRRRRIGGED! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Early meme dating from the newsgroup alt.tv.game-shows, referring to the quiz show scandals of the late 1950s. While ''Twenty One'' was a big offender, this also applied to ''TicTacDough'', ''Series/TicTacDough'', ''The $64,000 Question'', and the smoking gun itself — ''Dotto''.[[/labelnote]]



** A group of pill-pushers? [[labelnote:Explanation]]A humorous missolve from 1999 that has shown up in countless blooper specials. The actual answer was A GROUP OF WELL-WISHERS.[[/labelnote]]

to:

** A group of pill-pushers? [[labelnote:Explanation]]A humorous missolve mis-solve from 1999 that has shown up in countless blooper specials. The actual answer was A GROUP OF WELL-WISHERS.[[/labelnote]]

Changed: 91

Removed: 6707

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!!And because ''ThePriceIsRight'' is the granddaddy, it gets the most memes:
* "[Name], come on down!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]The call for a contestant who is picked out of the audience.[[/labelnote]]
* "It's a new ''car!''" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Intoned by TheAnnouncer whenever a pricing game offers just that.[[/labelnote]]
** Or, when Rich Fields was the announcer, "[[NoIndoorVoice IT'S A NEW CAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH!!!]]"
* "Telephone pole screamers". [[labelnote:Explanation]]Drew Carey chewed out the FanDumb on his personal blog in June 2009, and for at least the rest of that Summer, the sane fans used this term from the blog entry.[[/labelnote]]
* "$1, Bob/Drew!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Often said in the "One Bid" round, ostensibly when the fourth contestant thinks that the other three have overbid on the item up for bids. Most, however, seem to say "$1" just for the sake of saying it.[[/labelnote]]
** "$X+1, Bob/Drew!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Conversely, if they thought all three had underbid, they would bid $1 above the highest bid. If two players had, they'd bid $1 above the next-highest. Players absolutely hated being hit with this. Consider it [[VideogameCrueltyPotential game show cruelty potential.[[/labelnote]]
** "$420, Bob/Drew!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Some contestants think it's funny to repeatedly make this bid. Other similar-minded bids include various numbers containing "69", as well as outrageous bids like $2,000,000.[[/labelnote]]
* "Gentlemen/Ladies/O mighty sound effects lady..." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Said in the pricing game One Away, when asking if at least one of the numbers in the price is correct. Bob used "Gentlemen" and later "Ladies", while Drew changed it to "O mighty sound effects lady..."[[/labelnote]]
* "Hold my hand. Say Alakazam!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Another Drew-ism, usually used on reveals in pricing games.[[/labelnote]]
* Samoans lifting Bob Barker and inflicting all sorts of damage on him. [[labelnote:Explanation]]After a contestant from Samoa did just that, many more Samoan contestants followed suit.[[/labelnote]]
* Holly Hallstrom and her tendency to trip up. [[labelnote:Explanation]]One of the show's early models, who was clearly the CuteClumsyGirl of the bunch.[[/labelnote]]
* "Help control the pet population: Have your pets spayed or neutered!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Spoken by Bob, an animal rights activist, at the end of each show. Drew has carried on in this tradition as an homage.[[/labelnote]]
* Ezekiel Barker. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation:After Drew referred to Barker's Bargain Bar as being named for "Ezekiel Barker", many fans began referring to Bob Barker as Ezekiel. Shortly after the retirement of Barker's Bargain Bar and Make Your Mark, a few Golden Road.net users began making a RealPersonFic that showed the "history" of the Barker family.[[/labelnote]]
* Fansite golden-road.net has a lexicon that has attained meme status as well.
** "Exacta"
** "Wipeout"
** "El Skunko"
** "Can't Stop The Dob/Fool The Fingers", which declines to "Dobstopper/Fingerstopper" when a contestant is GenreSavvy (or lucky) enough to beat Roger Dobkowitz's or Kathy Greco's NintendoHard setups. Also applies in hindsight to "Can't Jive The Jay", for original producer Jay Wolpert's own hard setups (most notably, as seen on the DVD set, a $7,010 car used in Lucky Seven).
** "WSD" [[labelnote:Explanation]]a Showcase bid that is over by $250 or less; inversion of "DSW", shorthand for "Double Showcase Winner", someone who wins both Showcases of prizes because his or her bid was within $250 of the actual retail price without going over[[/labelnote]]
** "First Four Breakfast Club/Midday Revue" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Any First Four contestants (the first four called down at the top of the show) who are still in Contestant's Row following the sixth One-Bid; [[TheDrewCareyShow Mimi Bobeck]] got her own wing when Drew became host).[[/labelnote]]
** "Garf Of The Century" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Used for contestants who underbid on their Showcase by $10,000 or more. Alternatively, the term "Willy Of The Century" has been used for obvious Showcase overbids. The icons used on the forum are based on the ''Series/SaleOfTheCentury'' logo.)[[/labelnote]]
** "Friggin' Random Boat/Trailer/All-Trip Showcase", commonly shortened to "FRBS", "FRTS", and "FRATS" respectively.
** Golden-Road.net's posters also have embarrassingly cutesy nicknames for the pricing games on show recaps.
* The [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ytCEuuW2_A losing horns.]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]Said LosingHorns are played whenever a contestant loses most pricing games, and when there's a Double Overbid in the Showcase. Many other works use them as a sign of EpicFail.[[/labelnote]]
** Less commonly used are the BigWinSirens. [[labelnote:Explanation]]A series of loud bells and sirens that sound whenever someone wins the top prize in a high-stakes pricing game (Grand Game, Punch-A-Bunch, Triple Play), a cash bonus on the "Big Wheel", or both Showcases.[[/labelnote]]
* "...all this can be yours, if [[TitleDrop the price is right]]." [[labelnote:Explanation]]The end of TheAnnouncer's description of each Showcase, a set of prizes that the top two contestants get to bid on near the end of the game. The object is to bid as closely to the actual retail price as possible without going over. Also used after one-bid descriptions for the first few years. Was used on the original Bill Cullen version as well, along with the name of the manufacturer/distributor as its price authority.[[/labelnote]]
* "You bid on the merchandise we present. Go as high as you like, stop whenever you like...it goes to the one who bids highest to the actual retail price without going over, and the big winner comes back tomorrow/next week and takes on three new challengers." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Bill Cullen's explanation of the game on the original series.[[/labelnote]]
* "FRIED CHICKEN!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]In a pair of particularly off-kilter Showcases from Season 37, Rich Fields built up the prizes by asking Drew questions (i.e. "Do you know what makes fingers look great?" for a diamond ring), to which he would consistently respond "Fried chicken". Drew would go on to randomly shout this phrase for the remainder of that week, and this would get continuously referenced and mocked by game show fans.[[/labelnote]]
* "Once it's stopped, we can't start it again for 37 hours." [[labelnote:Explanation]]In his later years, Bob Barker made this joke every time he explained the rules of Range Game, to emphasize that the contestants can only stop the range finder once. Drew Carey attempted this joke on his first playing, but butchered it; to be fair, this had become a DiscreditedMeme by this point anyway.[[/labelnote]]

to:

!!And because ''ThePriceIsRight'' is the granddaddy, Series/ThePriceIsRight has so many that it gets the most memes:
* "[Name], come on down!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]The call for a contestant who is picked out of the audience.[[/labelnote]]
* "It's a new ''car!''" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Intoned by TheAnnouncer whenever a pricing game offers just that.[[/labelnote]]
** Or, when Rich Fields was the announcer, "[[NoIndoorVoice IT'S A NEW CAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH!!!]]"
* "Telephone pole screamers". [[labelnote:Explanation]]Drew Carey chewed out the FanDumb on his personal blog in June 2009, and for at least the rest of that Summer, the sane fans used this term from the blog entry.[[/labelnote]]
* "$1, Bob/Drew!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Often said in the "One Bid" round, ostensibly when the fourth contestant thinks that the other three have overbid on the item up for bids. Most, however, seem to say "$1" just for the sake of saying it.[[/labelnote]]
** "$X+1, Bob/Drew!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Conversely, if they thought all three had underbid, they would bid $1 above the highest bid. If two players had, they'd bid $1 above the next-highest. Players absolutely hated being hit with this. Consider it [[VideogameCrueltyPotential game show cruelty potential.[[/labelnote]]
** "$420, Bob/Drew!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Some contestants think it's funny to repeatedly make this bid. Other similar-minded bids include various numbers containing "69", as well as outrageous bids like $2,000,000.[[/labelnote]]
* "Gentlemen/Ladies/O mighty sound effects lady..." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Said in the pricing game One Away, when asking if at least one of the numbers in the price is correct. Bob used "Gentlemen" and later "Ladies", while Drew changed it to "O mighty sound effects lady..."[[/labelnote]]
* "Hold my hand. Say Alakazam!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Another Drew-ism, usually used on reveals in pricing games.[[/labelnote]]
* Samoans lifting Bob Barker and inflicting all sorts of damage on him. [[labelnote:Explanation]]After a contestant from Samoa did just that, many more Samoan contestants followed suit.[[/labelnote]]
* Holly Hallstrom and her tendency to trip up. [[labelnote:Explanation]]One of the show's early models, who was clearly the CuteClumsyGirl of the bunch.[[/labelnote]]
* "Help control the pet population: Have your pets spayed or neutered!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Spoken by Bob, an animal rights activist, at the end of each show. Drew has carried on in this tradition as an homage.[[/labelnote]]
* Ezekiel Barker. [[labelnote:Explanation]]Explanation:After Drew referred to Barker's Bargain Bar as being named for "Ezekiel Barker", many fans began referring to Bob Barker as Ezekiel. Shortly after the retirement of Barker's Bargain Bar and Make Your Mark, a few Golden Road.net users began making a RealPersonFic that showed the "history" of the Barker family.[[/labelnote]]
* Fansite golden-road.net has a lexicon that has attained meme status as well.
** "Exacta"
** "Wipeout"
** "El Skunko"
** "Can't Stop The Dob/Fool The Fingers", which declines to "Dobstopper/Fingerstopper" when a contestant is GenreSavvy (or lucky) enough to beat Roger Dobkowitz's or Kathy Greco's NintendoHard setups. Also applies in hindsight to "Can't Jive The Jay", for original producer Jay Wolpert's
[[Memes/ThePriceIsRight its own hard setups (most notably, as seen on the DVD set, a $7,010 car used in Lucky Seven).
** "WSD" [[labelnote:Explanation]]a Showcase bid that is over by $250 or less; inversion of "DSW", shorthand for "Double Showcase Winner", someone who wins both Showcases of prizes because his or her bid was within $250 of the actual retail price without going over[[/labelnote]]
** "First Four Breakfast Club/Midday Revue" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Any First Four contestants (the first four called down at the top of the show) who are still in Contestant's Row following the sixth One-Bid; [[TheDrewCareyShow Mimi Bobeck]] got her own wing when Drew became host).[[/labelnote]]
** "Garf Of The Century" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Used for contestants who underbid on their Showcase by $10,000 or more. Alternatively, the term "Willy Of The Century" has been used for obvious Showcase overbids. The icons used on the forum are based on the ''Series/SaleOfTheCentury'' logo.)[[/labelnote]]
** "Friggin' Random Boat/Trailer/All-Trip Showcase", commonly shortened to "FRBS", "FRTS", and "FRATS" respectively.
** Golden-Road.net's posters also have embarrassingly cutesy nicknames for the pricing games on show recaps.
* The [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ytCEuuW2_A losing horns.]] [[labelnote:Explanation]]Said LosingHorns are played whenever a contestant loses most pricing games, and when there's a Double Overbid in the Showcase. Many other works use them as a sign of EpicFail.[[/labelnote]]
** Less commonly used are the BigWinSirens. [[labelnote:Explanation]]A series of loud bells and sirens that sound whenever someone wins the top prize in a high-stakes pricing game (Grand Game, Punch-A-Bunch, Triple Play), a cash bonus on the "Big Wheel", or both Showcases.[[/labelnote]]
* "...all this can be yours, if [[TitleDrop the price is right]]." [[labelnote:Explanation]]The end of TheAnnouncer's description of each Showcase, a set of prizes that the top two contestants get to bid on near the end of the game. The object is to bid as closely to the actual retail price as possible without going over. Also used after one-bid descriptions for the first few years. Was used on the original Bill Cullen version as well, along with the name of the manufacturer/distributor as its price authority.[[/labelnote]]
* "You bid on the merchandise we present. Go as high as you like, stop whenever you like...it goes to the one who bids highest to the actual retail price without going over, and the big winner comes back tomorrow/next week and takes on three new challengers." [[labelnote:Explanation]]Bill Cullen's explanation of the game on the original series.[[/labelnote]]
* "FRIED CHICKEN!" [[labelnote:Explanation]]In a pair of particularly off-kilter Showcases from Season 37, Rich Fields built up the prizes by asking Drew questions (i.e. "Do you know what makes fingers look great?" for a diamond ring), to which he would consistently respond "Fried chicken". Drew would go on to randomly shout this phrase for the remainder of that week, and this would get continuously referenced and mocked by game show fans.[[/labelnote]]
* "Once it's stopped, we can't start it again for 37 hours." [[labelnote:Explanation]]In his later years, Bob Barker made this joke every time he explained the rules of Range Game, to emphasize that the contestants can only stop the range finder once. Drew Carey attempted this joke on his first playing, but butchered it; to be fair, this had become a DiscreditedMeme by this point anyway.[[/labelnote]]
page]].
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** "Garf Of The Century" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Used for contestants who underbid on their Showcase by $10,000 or more. Alternatively, the term "Willy Of The Century" has been used for obvious Showcase overbids. The icons used on the forum are based on the ''SaleOfTheCentury'' logo.)[[/labelnote]]

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** "Garf Of The Century" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Used for contestants who underbid on their Showcase by $10,000 or more. Alternatively, the term "Willy Of The Century" has been used for obvious Showcase overbids. The icons used on the forum are based on the ''SaleOfTheCentury'' ''Series/SaleOfTheCentury'' logo.)[[/labelnote]]
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* "...The choice is yours, and yours alone." [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the kids' show ''LegendsOfTheHiddenTemple'', the end of the RulesSpiel given by "Olmec", an animatronic stone head voiced by DeeBradleyBaker.[[/labelnote]]

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* "...The choice is yours, and yours alone." [[labelnote:Explanation]]From the kids' show ''LegendsOfTheHiddenTemple'', the end of the RulesSpiel given by "Olmec", an animatronic stone head voiced by DeeBradleyBaker.Creator/DeeBradleyBaker.[[/labelnote]]
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* [[ThatMitchellAndWebbLook That's Numberwang!]]
** Let's rotate the board! [[labelnote:Explanation]]From a game show parody sketch on ''ThatMitchellAndWebbLook'' called "Numberwang", the premise being a complete NonSequitur number-guessing game. References to Numberwang have bled over into the game show fandom, to the point that many consider it an overused meme.[[/labelnote]]

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* [[ThatMitchellAndWebbLook [[Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook That's Numberwang!]]
** Let's rotate the board! [[labelnote:Explanation]]From a game show parody sketch on ''ThatMitchellAndWebbLook'' ''Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook'' called "Numberwang", the premise being a complete NonSequitur number-guessing game. References to Numberwang have bled over into the game show fandom, to the point that many consider it an overused meme.[[/labelnote]]
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** "Garf Of The Century" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Used for contestants who underbid on their Showcase by $10,000 or more. The icon used on the forum is based on the ''SaleOfTheCentury'' logo.)[[/labelnote]]

to:

** "Garf Of The Century" [[labelnote:Explanation]]Used for contestants who underbid on their Showcase by $10,000 or more. Alternatively, the term "Willy Of The icon Century" has been used for obvious Showcase overbids. The icons used on the forum is are based on the ''SaleOfTheCentury'' logo.)[[/labelnote]]
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* DealOrNoDeal? [[labelnote:Explanation]]{{Title Drop}}ping question asked by any host of the show, when asking if the contestant wants to take the Banker's deal or keep eliminating suitcases or boxes in hopes of finding one with the top money prize in it.[[/labelnote]]

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* DealOrNoDeal? Series/DealOrNoDeal? [[labelnote:Explanation]]{{Title Drop}}ping question asked by any host of the show, when asking if the contestant wants to take the Banker's deal or keep eliminating suitcases or boxes in hopes of finding one with the top money prize in it.[[/labelnote]]
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** Circle/X gets the square! [[labelnote:Explanation]]Often said by the hosts when a contestant correctly agrees/disagrees with a celebrity. It is also often used in real life as a sarcastic retort to a blatantly obvious statement.[[/labelnote]]

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