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Home > Listing Index > Games > Blockbusters (game show)

Games - Blockbusters


Blockbusters was a television game show in which contestants answered trivia questions to complete a path across a game board of hexagons.

Broadcast history

United States

The original US version of Blockbusters, hosted by Bill Cullen
, ran from October 27, 1980, to April 23, 1982. A second version, hosted by Bill Rafferty
, ran from January 5 to May 1, 1987. Both versions aired on NBC. Reruns of the Cullen version currently air on GSN, and GSN also has aired the Rafferty version (it aired most recently from April through November 2005).

United Kingdom

Blockbusters had a more successful run in the UK, where it was shown from 1983 to 1993 on the ITV network with Bob Holness
hosting. The show, made by Central Independent Television, was played by sixth form students with prizes accrued for the students and their colleges. The theme music for this version was by Ed Welch. As a career actor, Holness played up the role of being an 'old duffer' to the young contestants that won him a cult following amongst students. After finishing on ITV, the show continued for a few years on the satellite channel Sky One, though some ITV regions continued to show the series. Reruns from 1992 have been shown on Challenge. Carlton Select also showed old shows, while that channel was still operational.

Subsequent series have been made for adult contestants, broadcast by BBC Two in 1997 (presented by Michael Aspel) and Sky One again in 2000 (presented by Liza Tarbuck). These versions failed to capture the same degree of popularity as the Holness incarnation.

Famous contestants include Jon Tickle (see ), Craig Charles, Russell Payne, and Orlando Bloom.

Other countries

The Australian version of Blockbusters was broadcast on the Seven Network, where players from two schools competed over the course of a week (five episodes), in a rolling format - where games could be started in the middle of an episode, and stopped and continued on the next episode. The school team earning the most points (based on questions answered from the main game, except tie-breaks) won a major prize for their school, such as an encyclopedia. The show was hosted by Michael Pope.

There was also a German version called Super Grips.

Main game

A solo player competed against a "family pair" that consisted of two related contestants (married couples were not allowed), thus setting out to prove if two heads really were better than one.

The game board consisted of 20 interlocking hexagons, arranged in five columns of four. Each hexagon contained a letter of the alphabet. A contestant would choose one of the letters, and would be asked a general-knowledge trivia question whose correct answer began with the chosen letter. (A typical question was something like, "What 'P' is a musical instrument with 88 keys?" The answer would be a piano.) In the UK, the phrasing that contestants would use to ask for a letter has entered the language, and is frequently heard to this day. It is also the source of a mildly amusing pun - "Can I have a 'P' please, Bob". In the US, such nonsense might not have even been considered.

The game began with a toss-up question to play for control of the board, starting with a letter that was chosen at random. The first contestant to buzz in with the correct answer gained control of that hexagon and was given the chance to choose another one. If the contestant answered incorrectly, the opposing team or player was given a chance to answer it. If nobody answered it correctly, the host asked another question whose answer began with that same letter.

The object of the game for the solo player was to complete a vertical connection from the top of the board to the bottom; that required at least four correct answers. The object for the family pair was to make a horizontal connection from the left side of the board to the right; that required at least five correct answers. The first player or team to win two games won the match.

For the 1987 NBC revival, a major change was made by dropping the "family pair" concept; instead, each game was played by one champion playing against one challenger. However, the gameboard was not structurally altered. While this would seem to give one player an unfair advantage, as he or she would have a shorter minimum path to win the game, the producers solved this problem by alternating which player had that advantage in each game. In this version, the challenger played the shorter top-to-bottom route in the first game, while in the second the champion took over that route. A third tie-breaker round, if necessary, was played on a smaller 4x4 gameboard that gave neither player an obvious advantage.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Blockbusters (game show) ]


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