The $10,000 Pyramid
From The TV IV
| The $10,000 Pyramid | |
| |
| Premiere | March 26, 1973 |
| Finale | June 27, 1980 |
| Airs | |
| Creator | Bob Stewart |
| Network | CBS (Season 1) ABC (Seasons 2–7) |
| Style | 30-minute game show |
| Company | Bob Stewart Productions |
| Episodes | 5 per week |
| Seasons | 7 |
| Origin | USA |
The $10,000 Pyramid (later The $20,000 Pyramid) was a game show that aired on CBS for one sesaon and then ABC for six seasons that started a renaissance of big-money shows.
Two teams, each comprised of a celebrity and a contestant compete in word association. Six subjects are shown on a board, each category containing eight subjects. The contestants select categories and in turn gives his/her partner descriptions of each subject (without divulging any part of or essence of the subject). The answerer tries to get as many as possible in 30 seconds.
The top scoring team after all categories are played goes to the Winner's Circle, an encircled platform facing a large lighted pyramid with six windows. The celebrity faces the pyramid, the contestant has his/her back to it. As each subject is shown ("States that start with 's'," "Things on a restaurant menu," etc.) the celebrity gives a list of things that fit the subject. Each subject correctly guessed on the first line (of 3 windows) is worth $50, the two middle windows are worth $100 a piece, and the top window is worth $200. All six windows in 60 seconds pays $10,000. A player is retired after winning the $10,000 or stays on for five shows.
CBS canceled The $10,000 Pyramid on March 29, 1974 to make room for a new game show, Now You See It. But ABC brought it back on May 6, 1974 for an even longer run. It changed names to The $20,000 Pyramid on January 19, 1976 (contestants vied for $10,000 first time going to the Winner's Circle, a total of $15,000 second time, and $20,000 for a third time). It launched a nighttime edition, The $25,000 Pyramid in the fall of 1974.
In development, the show was called Cash On The Line, and CBS hated everything about it except for the end game, which became Pyramid's main game. The Pyramid board originally contained ten windows (which is what TV Guide's synopsis ended up printing). Two nights before taping the pilot, Bob Stewart realized that there was no way a contestant could get ten subjects in sixty seconds. After calling CBS with this epiphany, Stewart had a 2x4 plank cover the lower four windows. It remained there during its run on CBS and taping tenure at the Ed Sullivan Theater in New York.
Contents |
Cast
| Person | Role | Duration | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main Cast | ||||||||
| Dick Clark | Host | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
| Bob Clayton | Announcer | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
Seasons
In-Depth
- At a Glance: Additional information about the series


