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| (The) Money Maze was an American television game show seen on ABC in 1974 and 1975. The host of the show was Nick Clooney, the father of veteran actor George Clooney and a Cincinnati-based television personality. Alan Kalter was the announcer. It was produced by Daphne-Lipp Productions, of which Dick Cavett was a principal. The object of the game was to negotiate a large maze built on the studio floor. A contestant would direct his or her spouse from a perch above the maze; the spouse would need to find his or her way to a pushbutton on the side of a tower inside the maze. Front gameTwo married couples against the other for the right to enter the maze. Three regular rounds were played. Each round had a particular topic, with eight related clues. Two clues would be shown on a screen; one couple would select a clue for the other to attempt to answer. A correct answer scored a point, and that couple would then select from two clues (a new clue plus the on they didn't act one before) for their opponent. An incorrect answer gave the opponents a chance to answer instead. If they did so, they had a chance to answer as many of the remaining clues as they could; if they were also incorrect, play would continue in the round. If the two couples each answered four clues in the round, a tiebreaker would be played where two additional clues were shown. The first couple to activate a buzzer would select a clue to answer for one point, then try to answer the other for two points. If they were wrong on either, the other couple got a free attempt.The winning couple in each round would then send one member into the maze, with the other directing from above. The "runner" would have 15 seconds to find a phone-booth-size "tower" with pushbuttons on each side. Pressing the lit button before time expired won the prize. Later in the show's run, couples were given the option of trying to also reach a second tower within 25 seconds for a $500 bonus; if they accepted the challenge but couldn't reach both towers, the prize and the cash bonus were both lost. The final round was the Catch-Up Round. Clues proceeded as in earlier rounds, except that the couple trailing in score at that point of the game would do all the answering and the leading team would select the clues. The first clue was worth one point, the second worth two, and so on. If the trailing couple incorrectly answered at any time before their score surpassed their opponents, the round was over and the other couple won outright. If the trailing couple tied or passed the leading couple's score, the leading couple got one (and only one) chance for a final clue that would win the game. The winner at the end of this round would play "The $10,000 Dash," a final maze run for a prize of up to $10,000. If both couples were tied going into the Catch-Up Round, they each effectively won the game, and each would run the maze for $10,000. The $10,000 DashIn the final run, five of the towers (out of eight available) would be lit. Four of them would have zeroes on top, and the fifth would have "the all important 1." The 1 was indeed important, because the runner had to activate it to win anything at all. To win the $10,000, the runner had to activate all the pushbuttons, and exit the maze — pushing another button atop a podium near the exit — within one minute. The total prize was determined by how many "zeroes" were reached: the 1 plus three zeroes won $1,000, the 1 plus two zeroes won $100, and so on.Trivia
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