Concentration Wikia
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Host
Jack Narz
Announcer
Johnny Olson
Broadcast
Concentration70s
Syndication: 9/10/1973 – 5/19/1978
Origination
Metromedia Studios, Los Angeles, California
Packager
Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions
Distributor
Jim Victory Television

This is chronicling the 1970s version of Concentration.

Game format[]

Main Game[]

Two contestants faced a game board consisting of 30 numbered squares. Behind those numbers were matching pairs of prizes worth tens of dollars to hundreds of dollars. The hidden prizes cover up a rebus puzzle which the contestants try to solve. To start the game and as head starts, four squares revealed prizes that were offered in that game. On a player's turn he/she picked off numbers. When the show started, the contestant chose two numbers in both games; it was later changed to having contestants picked three numbers in the first game and later both games. If the numbers he/she picked uncovered a match, he/she won the prize and revealed pieces of a puzzle. If he/she doesn't match, control of the board goes to the opponent. In the three-number format, if a match was made, the unmatched number was turned back over as usual unless it was a wild card.

Special Squares[]

Also hidden on the board were special squares that affected game play.

  • Wild Card - This was a very special square which if uncovered, caused a automatic match. When the show started, there were two on the board and if they were both found, the contestant won a $500 cash bonus which was his/hers to keep win or lose. Later shows had four Wild cards on the board in the second game and the bonus was cut in half and reduced to $250.
  • Take One Gift - When matched, that gave the contestant in control the right to steal one of his/her opponents' prizes if he/she had any.
  • Forfeit One Gift - When matched, that forced the contestant in control to give away one of his/her own prizes if he/she had any. That square was later done away with entirely.
  • Free Look - When uncovered, that square revealed a puzzle part immediately and of course the contestant got to guess.
  • Bonus Number - Originally shown in both games and later only shown in the second game, when if matched, the contestant in control can pick a third number if the first two don't match. If a match was made, the unmatched number was turned back over as usual unless it was a wild card.

The first player to solve the puzzle kept all the prizes and went on to play the Double Play game for a new car.

Should time run out in the middle of the second game, the puzzle was revealed and the first player to buzz-in with the correct solution was declared the winner.

Double Play[]

In the Double Play game, the winning contestant had 10 seconds to solve two more rebuses. The first one was worth $100 and the second was worth a new car.

Later playings starting in Fall 1977 had contestants pick off numbers from a 9-square board which hide four matching pairs of prizes (one of them being a new car). The first prize matched became the grand prize for solving the second puzzle. But there was also a "Wild Card!" square that allowed the winning contestant to play for all prizes revealed up to that point.

Extra Time[]

  • When there was extra time left on the show, a third main game puzzle came into play. But this game was a "Money Game" with using paired amounts of foreign currency instead of regular prizes and no head starts. Winning the game won the American cash equivalent of the currencies earned (if any) plus an additional $100 bonus.
  • Also on occasion when there was extra time left on the show but not enough for a full third game ("Money Game"), a two player "Quickie Double Play" game was instituted. The rules were the same as before, only this time each player gets a puzzle and the full 10 seconds to solve it for an additional $50.

Trivia[]

Five months after the original Concentration ended, NBC (who owned the rights to the show) asked Mark Goodson and Bill Todman (known at the time for The New Price is Right) to produce a new version of the show for syndication. With Jack Narz as host, the show ran five seasons beginning in September 1973. The show was aired on most NBC-affiliated stations that carried the original series, but though the syndicated version taped enough episodes that could run every weeknight, some stations only ran the show once a week. Unfortunately by 1975, the show's ratings fell and many stations (including flagship WNBC-TV in New York) moved the show to either pre-dawn hours or other non-prime-time access slots and dropped it in Spring 1976. Some independent stations then picked up the show.

Jack Narz was hosting Now You See It for CBS while hosting this show.

After 42 years, episodes from the 1976 season of Concentration began re-airing on Buzzr on March 30, 2020.

Stations[]

Stations that aired this included:

  • New York - WNBC/WOR (now WWOR)
  • Los Angeles - KHJ (now KCAL)
  • Philadelphia - WCAU
  • Boston - WBZ
  • San Francisco - KPIX
  • Detroit - WWJ (now WDIV 4)
  • Cleveland - WEWS
  • Washington, D.C. - WTOP (now WUSA)
  • Pittsburgh - WTAE
  • Cincinnati - WKRC (once a week)
  • Buffalo - WBEN (now WIVB)
  • Providence - WJAR
  • San Diego - KFMB
  • Grand Rapids - WOTV
  • Albany - WTEN
  • San Antonio - KSAT
  • Orlando - WDBO (now WKMG)
  • Syracuse - WNYS
  • Sacramento/Stockton - KXTV
  • Fort Wayne - WANE
  • Tampa/St. Petersburg - WFLA
  • Louisville - WLKY
  • Milwaukee - WISN
  • Kansas City - WDAF
  • Salt Lake City - KTVX
  • St. Louis - KTVI
  • Indianapolis - WISH
  • Phoenix - KTAR (now KPNX)
  • Nashville - WNGE (now WKRN)
  • Atlanta - WXIA
  • Portland, OR - KATU
  • Greenville, SC - WFBC (now WYFF)
  • Portland, ME - WCSH
  • Jackson, TN - WBBJ
  • Birmingham - WBMG (now WIAT)
  • Chattanooga - WTVC
  • Minneapolis/St.Paul - KMSP
  • Lincoln, NE - KHAS
  • Cheyenne - KGWN
  • Elmira - WETM
  • Amarillo - KVII

Links[]

James Vipond’s Concentration Site
David's Concentration Page

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