Who's Whose
Who's Whose | |
---|---|
Genre | Panel game |
Directed by | Alexander Leftwich |
Presented by | Phil Baker |
Country of origin | USA |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 1 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Lester Lewis |
Location(s) | New York City, NY |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Picture format | Monochrome |
Audio format | Mono |
Original release | June 25, 1951 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | The Goldbergs |
Followed by | It's News to Me |
Who's Whose is a weekly panel quiz show that ran on the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) television network. It premiered as a TV series on June 25, 1951 and is noted for being one of the first television series to be dropped after one episode.
Host and panelists
Who's Whose was hosted by long-time radio comedian and radio game show host Phil Baker. His on-air assistant was a man in a turban, dubbed "Gunga."[1] The three regular celebrity panelists for the show were Robin Chandler, Art Ford, and Basil Davenport. They were joined by guest panelist Emily Kimbrough. The show was broadcast live and a kinescope was created for a planned airing on the West Coast at a later date.
Game play
A round began with the "panel of experts" facing a group of three men and three women. Through questioning, the panel tried to determine which man was married to which woman.[2] Curiously, the print advertisement for the program which was placed by CBS in local newspapers on the day of the show's premiere incorrectly stated that the goal of the panel was to "try to determine which of three people is married to a fourth."
In an additional separate round, the panel attempted to guess the identity of the spouse of a noted celebrity.
Background
Who's Whose was brought in to replace The Goldbergs, which was dropped by its sponsor (General Foods) when its creator Gertrude Berg refused to fire the blacklisted actor Philip Loeb.[3] The last episode of The Goldbergs ran on June 18, 1951. The official explanation given by the sponsor for dropping the show was that it was for "economy reasons." Who's Whose was slated to run in The Goldbergs old timeslot during the summer and then be replaced in the fall.[4]
Audition show (pilot)
The concept for Who's Whose was tested in May 1951. An audition show (nowadays known as a pilot) was produced, but it was created in a unique, cost-saving way. The sound from the test program was recorded on audiotape in a radio studio,[5] while the visuals were recorded by taking a series of still camera photographs of the proceedings. The show's concept was then demonstrated by playing back the audio while flipping through the still photos. This technique was dubbed a "two-bit kine."[6] After the show was sold to CBS a standard kinescope was produced to further develop the concept of the show.[5]
Packaging and sponsorship
Who's Whose was brought into existence as a "package" deal by the advertising agency Young & Rubicam (Y&R). Packaging is the once-common practice dating back to the days of network radio whereby an outside entity such as an advertising agency would assemble the various production elements, including a commercial sponsor, which are needed to bring about a show. The proposed show would then be presented to a network as a "complete package." (The similar concept of movie packaging is still fairly common). Actual production of the show was handled by independent packager Lester Lewis.[7]
General Foods picked up sponsorship of the show in order to advertise its Sanka coffee brand, which it was already selling on the Goldbergs show. General Foods was able to place the show in the same timeslot as The Goldbergs because it basically "controlled" the timeslot in which the Goldbergs ran, namely Mondays from 9:30 to 10:00 pm Eastern Time on CBS-TV. This was also a common practice which also dated back to the days of network radio, where a single sponsor would pay the full costs for a certain timeslot and thus be given a great deal of leeway in determining what ran during that period. Today, rising commercial rates have made this practice usually too expensive for any one sponsor to afford.
Critical response, cancellation and aftermath
The reaction to the Who's Whose was decidedly negative. It was described at the time as "one of the most poorly produced TV shows yet to hit our living room screen,"[8] and "a miserable flop."[9] Columnist Rex Lardner wrote that the show was "the worst ever to hit television" and called for the return of The Goldbergs.[10] Reviews reported that the program was lacking in production, that the four panelists played the game poorly, and emcee Phil Baker was uncomfortable and clumsy. Not only did the panelists fail to identify the wife of the famous baseball player Dizzy Dean, but Dizzy Dean himself caused additional consternation for the staff when he disappeared while backstage awaiting his appearance. Fortunately, he was finally discovered holed up in a closet listening to a Yankee-Dodger baseball game on the radio.[11]
The series was quickly canceled after its premiere. An article in the New York Times published four days after the show's broadcast noted its cancellation and its immediate replacement by a new panel quiz series, It's News to Me, with General Foods (and Sanka) remaining as the sponsor in the timeslot.[12] Phil Baker, who had signed a contract to receive $1000 a week, was paid off to conclude the contract.[7]
Young & Rubicam's long-term reputation for successfully "packaging" shows was damaged by the Who's Whose debacle. This failure, along with a number of other recent disappointments and failures, was followed by reports in August that the agency was likely getting out of the business of packaging radio and television shows, and that high-ranking people would be leaving the agency.[13]
Historical footnote: two CBS June 25, 1951 disappointments
By coincidence, the date of June 25, 1951 would prove doubly disappointing for CBS television plans. At 4:35 pm EDT that afternoon CBS had officially introduced commercial color television to the U.S. airwaves with its broadcast of its inaugural program of commercial color television entitled Premiere. This special presentation was aired a few months after the Federal Communications Commission had formally approved CBS's color system as the color broadcasting standard for the United States. The CBS color system would prove to be a failure, and in 1953 the FCC switched its approval to a system based on Radio Corporation of America's (NBC's parent company) competing color system.
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Who's Whose. |
- ↑ "WHO'S WHOSE". Weekly Variety. 1951-06-27. p. 31.
- ↑ Simpson, Peg (1951-06-25). "Baker Emcees New Panel Show on CBS Tonight". The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY). p. 27.
- ↑ Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle. The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows - 1946-Present (2007). p. 545. ISBN 978-0-345-49773-4.
- ↑ "Sponsor Dropping 'Goldbergs' on TV". New York Times. 1951-05-19. p. 19.
- 1 2 "Gripe In Webs' 'Freeze' Of Kine Facilities". Weekly Variety. 1951-07-04. p. 35.
- ↑ "A DOLLAR SAVED -- New TV Audition Gimmick Uses Tape, Still Photo". The Billboard. 1951-05-19. p. 11.
- 1 2 "'Who's' Was". Weekly Variety. 1951-07-04. p. 32.
- ↑ Clark, Rocky (1951-07-01). "Tele-Views: 'WHO'S WHOSE' GONE". The Bridgeport Post (Connecticut). p. 19.
- ↑ Wolters, Larry (1951-06-28). "BIGGEST QUIZ ON WHO'S WHOSE: WHY BOTHER?". Chicago Tribune. p. W6.
- ↑ "TV Critic Pleads for Mollie [sic] Goldberg's Return". The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle. AJP. 1951-07-20. p. 3.
- ↑ Crosby, John (1951-07-08). "Radio and Television in Review (Dizzy Dean anecdote)". The Lincoln Star (Nebraska). p. 84.
- ↑ "Radio-TV Notes". New York Times. 1951-06-29. p. 27.
- ↑ "Y. & R. May Quit Packaging AM-TV Shows; Shake-Up Due". The Billboard. 1951-08-04. p. 4.