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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/64kquestion.jpg]]
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3On April 21, 1940, the Creator/{{CBS}} radio network premiered a quiz show called ''Take It or Leave It''. Like most radio quizzes of the era, the premise was simple: answer the first question correctly, and you won $1. You could "take it" and stop, or answer another question to double the money, losing what you earned if you answered incorrectly. A contestant could keep going until they reached the seventh and final question, which awarded the [[GameShowWinningsCap grand prize]] of $64. The show became ingrained in the pop culture of the time; the notion of the "$64 question" was a popular metaphor for an important question or decision, and even the StudioAudience's [[CatchPhrase warning]] about what would happen if you answered wrong ("You'll be ''SORRY!''") was notable enough to be referenced in a few ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' shorts, namely the game-show inspired ''WesternAnimation/TheDucksters''. It moved to Creator/{{NBC}} in 1947 and was renamed ''The $64 Question'' in 1950; the show ended in 1952.
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5With television picking up steam by the mid-1950s, and the FCC ruling that television game shows were not gambling, Louis G. Cowan decided that it was about time to resurrect the classic in a big way: on June 7, 1955, CBS television viewers witnessed the premiere of ''The $64,000 Question''. The game was simple: pick a category - bonus points if it was a category in which one wouldn't expect the contestant to be knowledgeable at first glance, such as a U.S. Marine captain who was an expert cook, or an opera-loving shoe salesman - and answer questions from it to win money. The first was worth $64, and as always, the next question was worth double the previous amount (the next tier after $512 was an even $1,000 rather than $1,024, so the next amounts after that were $2,000, $4,000, $8,000, $16,000, $32,000, and finally, $64,000). The contestant could stop at any time, but lost everything or dropped to a safepoint if they answered wrong. Beginning at the $4,000 level, each contestant was only asked one question per week. Further, the contestant was also placed in an isolation booth beginning at $8,000, and later questions had multiple parts.
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7Saying that ''Question'' was an instantaneous success is an understatement. It surpassed fellow CBS series ''Series/ILoveLucy'' to become the #1 show of the 1955–56 television season, and its popularity was so absolute that cinemas and restaurants were practically empty on Tuesday nights because just about everyone was watching. Those who managed to win the $64,000 prize became instant celebrities (including several children, namely an 11-year-old stock market expert and a 12-year-old champion speller), and the recurring "Jazz" category even spawned a co-branded jazz compilation album. Cowan, owing to the success, was also promoted to president of CBS-TV. There was even a spin-off the following Spring, ''The $64,000 Challenge'', which aired on Sunday nights and featured top winners from the main show competing against each other for more money.
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9However, ''The $64,000 Question'' would fall as quickly as it rose, for multiple reasons. The success of ''Question'' spawned other big-money quiz shows that [[FollowTheLeader mimicked its serialized, week-by-week drama]], including ''Series/{{Dotto}}'', ''Series/TicTacDough'', and perhaps its most notable rival, ''[[Series/TwentyOne Twenty-One]]''. In mid-1958, a scandal emerged when it was revealed that ''Dotto'' had been rigging matches in an effort to drive viewership. Following a Summer hiatus, ''The $64,000 Challenge'' was cancelled and ''Question'' moved to its Sunday-night timeslot in September 1958. In response to the significant decline in viewership that the scandals brought, ''Question'' was cancelled just two months later in November.
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11Although it did not resort to outright {{Kayfabe}} like ''Dotto'' and ''Twenty-One'', it was revealed during investigations that ''Question'' was the subject of [[ExecutiveMeddling manipulation by executives of the program's main sponsor, Revlon]], including its CEO Charles Revson (who had initially disliked the show, until he saw the massive profits it generated for his company). Taking advantage of its use of returning players, Revson insisted on stacking the decks in favor of contestants he felt would get the show good ratings, and giving the "duds" a hard time.[[note]]Even good ratings and popularity with the viewing public, such as that enjoyed by psychologist and boxing expert Dr. Joyce Brothers during her run on the show, were no guarantee that a contestant wouldn't be singled out for "stiffing": Brothers was disliked by Revson because she didn't epitomize the values of cosmetics, according to a 1992 ''Series/TheAmericanExperience'' documentary about the quiz show scandals. She still came out on top: she correctly answered a $16,000 question about referees that was supposed to have cost her the game, and went on to win the grand prize.[[/note]]
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13The scandals were a GenreKiller for the "big-money" game shows of the era: five-figure prizes were generally avoided until the arrival of ''[[Series/{{Pyramid}} The $10,000 Pyramid]]'' in 1973. It also killed the "single-sponsor" model that had been common in radio and television, with the networks demanding more creative control and ownership of their programming (which in the case of game shows, would help ensure fairness). ''Question'' received a syndicated revival in 1976, ''The $128,000 Question'', which lasted two seasons (the first produced in New York, the second in Canada). On this series, winning $64,000 entered you into a tournament at the end of the season where the winner got another $64,000.
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15In the late-1990s, Creator/{{ABC}} producer Michael Davies (who had worked on ''Series/{{Debt}}'' and ''Series/WinBenSteinsMoney'') was considering producing a revival of ''Question'', as part of an effort to reinvigorate the declining genre. However, he threw the idea aside when he caught wind of a new show that was about to take Britain by storm: ''Series/WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire''.
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17----
18!!This series contains examples of:
19%% * BroadcastLive: As was common practice at the time.
20* ConsolationPrize: Getting the $1,000, $2,000, or $4,000 questions wrong awarded the player $512. At the $4,000 milestone, the consolation prize was changed to a Cadillac.
21** On the 1970s revival, missing between $64-$4,000 won $1; $8,000 or $16,000 won a Buick Skylark; while missing $32,000 or $64,000 gave the player $16,000. Season 2 players missing the $32,000 question won $8,000 and a Buick Electra, while missing the $64,000 question won $24,000 and the Electra.
22* GameShowAppearance: It was subject to a few during its heyday:
23** The Season 6 premiere of ''[[Series/ColgateComedyHour The Colgate Comedy Hour]]'', hosted by Music/DeanMartin and Creator/JerryLewis and aired September 18, 1955, opened with "The $64,000,000 Question". Martin plays host Hal April and Lewis plays returning champion Morty M. M. Morton. Morty is forced by the host to go for the $32,000,000 question and somehow manages to answer the ridiculously obscure multi-part question, allowing him to go for the $64,000,000 question (again, not by choice), where he must be submerged in a tank of water while the host reads the very long-winded question.
24** The episode of ''Series/ThePhilSilversShow'' aired September 25, 1956 sees Sgt. Bilko trying to cheat on the show, a rather HilariousInHindsight moment by the time of the quiz show scandals.
25** In the teaser for the ''Series/AlfredHitchcockPresents'' episode "The Crooked Road", aired October 26, 1958 (exactly two weeks before the by-then scandal-ridden game show was cancelled on November 9), Hitchcock is placed in the SoundProofBooth and told to identify "what the following person just ate, drank, or drove." Hitchcock pauses, then says "Ah yes...the answer is..." and the shot fades out to commercial.
26* GameShowHost:
27** Hal March hosted the original TV run; Sonny Fox and then Ralph Story hosted the ''Challenge'' spin-off. Mike Darrow hosted the first season of the 1970s revival, with [[Series/{{Jeopardy}} Alex Trebek]] replacing him on the second. Greg Gumbel[[note]]elder brother of former NFL on NBC and Series/{{Today}} host and then-current Early Show on Creator/{{CBS}} host Bryant and (after hosting the CBS "NFL Today" pregame show for the final four seasons of CBS having [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague NFC coverage]] (1990-93); then after CBS lost the NFL to Creator/{{FOX}} in 1994; jumped over to NBC, where he hosted NBC's NFL pregame show from 1994 until NBC lost AFC coverage rights to CBS, and thus [[TheBusCameBack returning to CBS]] as the lead play-by-play broadcaster for that sport at the time of the pilot[[/note]] hosted the unsold 2000 attempt.
28** The CBS radio show was hosted by Bob Hawk (1940-1941) and Phil Baker (1941-1947). The NBC run was hosted by [[Series/IveGotASecret Garry Moore]] (1947-1949), Eddie Cantor (1949-1950), [[Series/TheTonightShow Jack Paar]] (from June 11, 1950 to March 1951, and from December 1951 to cancellation on June 1, 1952) and Baker again (March-December 1951).
29* HiddenDepths: Contestants were chosen if they were knowledgeable in a category that, given the contestant's profession or station in life, would surprise viewers.
30* {{Malaproper}}: Sonny Fox lost his job as host of ''Challenge'' because of his unfortunate habit of bungling words, calling answers correct that weren't, and even inadvertently giving away the answers on camera. He was replaced by Ralph Story after only a few weeks.
31* ProductPlacement: As was customary at the time, the program was heavily sponsored, in this case by the Revlon cosmetics company. The show's overall success paid off for Revlon, whose staff meticulously adjusted how it promoted its products during it to ensure maximum effectiveness. However, their involvement in ''Question'' also led to its most notable instances of ExecutiveMeddling...
32* ScrewTheMoneyIHaveRules: Rev. Charles E. "Stoney" Jackson, a Tennessee preacher who had won $16,000 on ''Question'' answering questions about was "the world's great lovers," was invited back to participate on ''Challenge'' and won $4,000 answering a question that producer Shirley Bernstein ([[Music/LeonardBernstein Leonard's]] sister) had given him the answer to before the show. He hadn't realized the show was rigged until the question came up during the game, and afterward refused to accept his winnings. He even went to the print media with the intention of blowing the whistle on the show, but this was before the Herb Stempel incident on ''Series/TwentyOne'' and [[CassandraTruth no one took Jackson seriously]].
33%% * SoundProofBooth: Used on the higher-level questions. Sponsored by Revlon!
34* SpinOff: ''The $64,000 Challenge'', where past contestants who won at least $8,000 (and later celebrities at the insistence of Revlon's CEO Charles Revson) faced off in a competitive version of the game to win even more money, with no cap! Notably, it premiered only about 10 months after its parent. Only a game show this popular could get a spin-off that quickly.
35%% * StudioAudience
36* TransatlanticEquivalent: Several.
37** The United Kingdom had two: ''[[http://ukgameshows.com/ukgs/The_64,000_Question The 64,000 Question]]'' from 1955-58 hosted by Jerry Desmond, with a top prize of 64,000 [[UsefulNotes/OldBritishMoney sixpence]], or £1,600 (doubled shortly into the run to 64,000 shillings, or £3,200); and ''[[http://ukgameshows.com/ukgs/The_64,000_Dollar_Question The $64,000 Question]]'', which ran from 1990-93 with host Creator/BobMonkhouse and a top prize of £6,400 (i.e., [[NonIndicativeName nowhere near $64,000]]; to be fair, the IBA limited the amount game shows could give away to £6,000 and special permission had to be granted to get the missing £400). There was also a version of ''Challenge'' hosted by Robin Bailey which ran briefly in 1957.
38** Australia debuted ''Coles £3,000 Question'' (sponsored by Coles Supermarkets) in 1960, which became ''Coles $6,000 Question'' on February 14, 1966 - the day the country switched from Pounds to Dollars. Coles dropped its sponsorship in July 1971, and the show was renamed ''The $7,000 Question''; it also ended later that year.
39** Another notable version, not only for its longevity, was the Polish one. Known as ''Wielka gra'' (literally ''The Great Game''[[labelnote:trivia]]The decision not to put a specific amount of money in the title proved '''very''' helpful when hyperinflation struck in late 1980s.[[/labelnote]]), it survived a staggering '''44 years''', running from 1962 to 2006. It was, arguably, the NintendoHard rendition of the original series, featuring notoriously specific categories[[labelnote:examples]]"Mountains of Asia", "History of Antarctica discoveries", "Geography of Mediterranean countries"... And these are not even the most obscure ones![[/labelnote]] that were picked by the contestants far in advance of the actual taping and had a LOT of research put in making the questions.
40* UnexpectedlyObscureAnswer: These kinds of questions were used in an attempt to force losses from contestants Revson didn't like, going so far as to swap out the questions that had been secured in a bank vault prior to the show. There was an IBM sorting machine on-set to imply that the question envelopes were chosen randomly, but [[BlatantLies all the envelopes in it were actually the same.]]
41** This idea backfired spectacularly when a contestant named Joyce Brothers was meddled into having ''boxing'' be her category. She subverted their expectations by aggressively studying the subject, and became the second person to win the $64,000. This included correctly answering a surprise question about refereeing that was supposed to have cost her the game, due to Charles Revson disliking her despite the high ratings she attracted. Brothers even got a one-off stint for CBS as a color commentator for a boxing match, but she soon became better-known for her involvement in a different specialist subject: psychology.
42* WhoWantsToBeWhoWantsToBeAMillionaire: It's clear that ''Series/WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire'' can be viewed as a SpiritualSuccessor to ''Question'' in more ways than one - money ladder with checkpoints, thousands of dollars on the line, a glitzy set, and suspense. ''Millionaire'' may have codified the modern version of a big-money quiz show, but it has a lot to owe to ''Question''. Michael Davies, an ABC producer, originally wanted to produce a revival of ''Question'' before learning about the impending premiere of ''Millionaire'' -- awestruck over the intricacy and detail of its presentation. He went as far as asking multiple colleagues in Britain to send him VCR recordings of the premiere so he could see what all the hype was about.
43** Answer eleven questions and you get $64,000... Sound familiar?
44** In April 2000, CBS piloted a revival from Dick Clark Productions to cash in on the success of ''Millionaire'' with a top prize of $1,028,000, but it was scrapped. The pilot has been seen by a select few outside the network (such as [[http://www.usgameshows.net/x.php?show=64000Question2000 this review]]), and is generally considered terrible. CBS ultimately ordered a Dick Clark-hosted U.S. version of ''Series/WinningLines'' -- a series from the creators of ''Millionaire'' -- instead.

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