$20,000 Pyramid 1978 - Didi Conn & Fred Grandy - Part 2

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  • Опубликовано: 19 ноя 2008
  • Fred Grandy and Crystal go for $10,000 in the winners' circle.
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Комментарии • 60

  • @act4666
    @act4666 3 года назад +1

    I jumped up for that win!!! Good going babe!!! You did great.

  • @scottmiller6495
    @scottmiller6495 3 года назад

    A marvelous exciting win with terrific clues given by an outstanding Entertainer with superb quality all around!!!!!

  • @zachhoran
    @zachhoran 15 лет назад +7

    Inside of a Wheel would be buzzed in the 80s, no?

    • @jmjfanss
      @jmjfanss 7 лет назад

      Zach Horan nope.

    • @chapter7thomas
      @chapter7thomas 6 лет назад +1

      Zach Horan
      Yes, he would have been buzzed in the 80's for sure. How about saying A WHEELS' INSIDE...or A HAT'S EDGES

    • @neumannsod
      @neumannsod 6 лет назад

      Hat's edges are brims, not rims. And I've read on other clips (I didn't remember it) they didn't buzz prepositional phrases back then. In the 80s and now, they kind of had to. The players were too good in the 80s and now the subjects are easier.

  • @tugboat2030
    @tugboat2030 Год назад +1

    The Grand Canyon, a glass, a basketball net

  • @scottmiller6495
    @scottmiller6495 5 лет назад +1

    A very good win and nicely done.

  • @catherinegabriel760
    @catherinegabriel760 5 лет назад +2

    GOOD JOB, Gopher!!

  • @BrylcreemBill
    @BrylcreemBill Год назад +2

    "The inside of a wheel" contains a prepositional phrase. He should have been buzzed.

    • @fstrgray82
      @fstrgray82 5 месяцев назад +1

      They were more lenient in the 70s. Tony Randall once said "stuffings in little bottles of pills" for Things Made of Cotton, and his partner won.

  • @morgan8757
    @morgan8757 14 лет назад +2

    I like freds clue of cool people

  • @richie19190
    @richie19190 15 лет назад +2

    Great wqin, but I think that Fred gave a descriptive clue on the top box. Should have been buzzed, but the judges missed it. Oh well, at least the lady was excited to win $10,000.

  • @DavidGarringerJr
    @DavidGarringerJr 4 года назад +2

    What is the name of the font used on the Winner's Circle dollar amounts?

  • @nextbarker2702
    @nextbarker2702 3 года назад +1

    EDGE might've been a synonym for RIM in the 1980's though

  • @catherinegabriel760
    @catherinegabriel760 5 лет назад +1

    YOU GO, GOPHER!! lol

  • @catherinegabriel760
    @catherinegabriel760 5 лет назад +3

    Basketball hoops= Things with a rim

    • @wschmrdr
      @wschmrdr 5 лет назад

      That one's borderline. The hoop itself is described as a rim, which does not fit the subject. However, if you define the hoop as to include the backboard and support poles, it'd be a yes. Similar to using "Diving Board" for "Things with a Platform", because the diving board includes the fulcrum and the supports.

  • @chapter7thomas
    @chapter7thomas 11 месяцев назад

    The INSIDE OF A WHEEL is a description. 😮

  • @chapter7thomas
    @chapter7thomas 5 лет назад +1

    The inside of a wheel should have been buzzed as it is an illegal clue. Another judging mistake.

  • @disvids8754
    @disvids8754 5 лет назад

    "things with grooves" should have been a $100,000 category

  • @WrestlingHeretic
    @WrestlingHeretic 15 лет назад +1

    That's right. The key is to avoid a prepositional phrase.

  • @catherinegabriel760
    @catherinegabriel760 5 лет назад +4

    A basket ball hoop, Would they have accepted that??

    • @chapter7thomas
      @chapter7thomas 5 лет назад +1

      Yes that would have been accepted.

    • @wschmrdr
      @wschmrdr 4 года назад

      Maybe. At the end of the day (similar to "diving board" on things with a platform), likely yes, but they may have zapped initially because the hoop is sometimes described as "the rim", meaning it isn't something with a rim. But because the basketball hoop includes the backboard and support poles, it should be OK.

    • @63utuber
      @63utuber 4 года назад

      They buzzed it on another occasion

    • @wschmrdr
      @wschmrdr 4 года назад +1

      Not sure what episode you're referring to, but I do wonder if it was argued during the commercial that, when you buy a basketball hoop at a sporting goods store, you get the backboard and support hardware in addition to the rim. I know for sure Things with a Platform was buzzed for "diving board", when a "diving board" includes the support fulcrum, railings for the high ones, and the platform. It was reversed after the commercial, and then Stuart Pankin made a joke about the judge that got a buzzer response from the judge.

  • @SueBeaWho
    @SueBeaWho 15 лет назад +1

    Speaking of groovy - I love her husband's "groovy" clothes lol! Ah I miss the 70's!

  • @der22672
    @der22672 7 лет назад +10

    He should have been buzzed for that. Too descriptive I think. Your only suppose to give a list. They were very generous with that.

    • @wschmrdr
      @wschmrdr 5 лет назад +1

      That was common place in the 70's. 80's you may have been correct.

    • @DannyBkyn
      @DannyBkyn 5 лет назад +2

      They were much more lenient in the early years of the show.

    • @jasonbeard4713
      @jasonbeard4713 2 года назад

      @@DannyBkyn Would my clue of "The edge of a cup/bowl" have been buzzed?

    • @DannyBkyn
      @DannyBkyn 2 года назад +1

      @@jasonbeard4713 Yes. Because a cup or bowl's edge IS a rim - they don't HAVE rims.

    • @jasonbeard4713
      @jasonbeard4713 2 года назад +1

      @@DannyBkyn Thank you. I feel that this portion of Pyramid and Password are the two best game shows, forcing you to use your mind.

  • @SlideItEarl
    @SlideItEarl  15 лет назад +1

    A similarly worded clue by Fred at the buzzer in part 4 of this episode was deemed illegal, yet his clue here was not. And it's not like the judges on this show didn't have the heart to take away an answer that won the big money if the clue was illegal. Sometimes during a celebration you would hear the buzzer sounding in the background and see the trilon turned to its "blank" pyramid side, and they'd have to calm everyone down and break it to the contestant that he/she didn't win the big money.

    • @neumannsod
      @neumannsod 6 лет назад

      Nixing "paint on an easel" and accepting "the inside of a wheel" is pretty arbitrary. Is it that "easel" is a more specific word than "inside?"

    • @wschmrdr
      @wschmrdr 4 года назад

      With paint on an easel, you're describing the paint, which is a thing itself. However, with the inside of a wheel, "inside" isn't really a thing so much as a locator, with the "wheel" still being the thing, so it was OK. Obviously in later years they modified the rules to exclude descriptive prepositional phrases (not ALL prepositions, as sometimes you have the title of something like "Hall of Fame" or "Table of Contents" that's still OK), but the spirit of the rule has always remained the same.

  • @tpir1972
    @tpir1972 13 лет назад +1

    OF is the only propositional phrase PYRAMID ever allowed.

    • @jmjfanss
      @jmjfanss 5 лет назад

      That's right.

    • @63utuber
      @63utuber 4 года назад

      @@jmjfanss No, it ain't - "why" and "say" categories were free-for-alls

    • @BelfastBailey
      @BelfastBailey 4 года назад

      No, there was one where Laurie (forget her last name) was trying to describe “Things that are engraved” and they didn’t get it. She said, I wanted to say the inside of a wedding ring and Dick said, “We’ll, yes, it would ha be to be a wedding ring”a inside.” You could use “of”
      if it was part of the clue itself such as “queen of Hearts” and the category is Alice in Wonderland characters. But using it to describe something? NEVER!

  • @themurph2000
    @themurph2000 15 лет назад +3

    Did she say "this is my friend, Dick Clark"?

  • @BelfastBailey
    @BelfastBailey 4 года назад +1

    HOW did he get away with “the inside of a wheel?” WOW!

    • @gladfan1989
      @gladfan1989 3 года назад +1

      They weren't as strict as the 80's version was.

    • @michaelfalkner1186
      @michaelfalkner1186 Год назад +2

      @@gladfan1989 This. That would've been buzzed as prepositional all day long, and that's why Belfast Bailey made the mention.

  • @PriceRight89
    @PriceRight89 15 лет назад

    To my knowledge, they allowed phrases with the word "of"

  • @catherinegabriel760
    @catherinegabriel760 5 лет назад +1

    What the hell is the problem??

  • @catherinegabriel760
    @catherinegabriel760 5 лет назад +1

    A basket ball hoop? Is that to discriptive

    • @wschmrdr
      @wschmrdr 5 лет назад

      Descriptive, no. "With" is the key word. If "a basket ball hoop" can be described as including the backboard, the supports, and the connecting hardware, it would be OK. If not, then it cannot, because it IS a rim, not something with a rim. A similar thing came up with "Things with a platform" in the 80's, and the clue "diving board" was given. It was buzzed, but later determined acceptable because the diving board includes the supports.

  • @danbarker4857
    @danbarker4857 7 лет назад +6

    THE INSIDE OF A WHEEL? A WHEEL'S INSIDE would've been better,

  • @SalukiHawk1972
    @SalukiHawk1972 3 месяца назад

    Cool people is an invalid clue. The category is things with grooves not groovy things so the clue doesn't fit the category....or was this a rule back then?

  • @63utuber
    @63utuber 4 года назад

    "things with grooves" should have been tougher - or maybe would be later on
    I just can't see how a cool person has grooves

    • @wschmrdr
      @wschmrdr 4 года назад

      Back then, they were described sometimes as "groovy". Might not have been allowed in the 80's because "cool" and "groovy" may be synonymous, but naturally the 70's rules were a little different.
      These days it'd be a tough category... a record, an interstate shoulder... a new dirt road... can't think of too many more.

  • @chapter7thomas
    @chapter7thomas 6 лет назад +1

    THE INSIDE OF...is part of a prepositional phrase thst should not have been accepted at all. The judging at this time was horrendous.

    • @jmjfanss
      @jmjfanss 5 лет назад

      @yandrsupreme of is accepted.

  • @chapter7thomas
    @chapter7thomas 5 лет назад +1

    One of the rules was that prepositional phrases were illegal clues. And the judge sure made a mistake.

    • @brockreynolds870
      @brockreynolds870 2 года назад +1

      In the 70's, they always allowed you to use "of".