Click (game show)

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Created byMerv Griffin
Directed byKevin McCarthy (1997–1998)[1]
Bob Hersh (1998–1999)
Presented byRyan Seacrest
Click
GenreGame show
Created byMerv Griffin
Directed byKevin McCarthy (1997–1998)[1]
Bob Hersh (1998–1999)
Presented byRyan Seacrest
Narrated byAmber Bonasso
Amber Willenborg
Theme music composerSteve Lindsey[1]
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons2
Production
ProducerJohn Lauderdale[1]
Production locationsThe Production Group Studios
Los Angeles, California (season 1)
Jonas Jensen Studios
Seattle, Washington (season 2)
Running timeapprox. 22–26 minutes
Production companyMerv Griffin Entertainment
Original release
NetworkSyndication
ReleaseSeptember 6, 1997 (1997-09-06) 
January 30, 1999 (1999-01-30)

Click is an American television game show based around computers and the then-relatively novel medium of the Internet. The youth-oriented series was created by Merv Griffin and hosted by Ryan Seacrest, with a female co-host who also served as announcer: Amber Bonasso in season 1,[1] and Amber Willenborg in season 2.[2]

It aired in syndication from September 6, 1997 to January 30, 1999, and reruns aired for several years thereafter on Game Show Network. This was the final new game show that Griffin created to premiere during his lifetime.

Website

Three teams (green, red, and yellow) of two teenagers played three rounds, referred on air as "Levels", where the aim was to answer questions worth varying amounts of money.

In each level, the contestants stood at podiums facing a large video wall (which acts as a computer), each screen of that wall had an icon with a symbol representing a category on it. A flashing cursor bounces around the board and stops when someone "clicks the mouse" (pushing down a large red button in the center of the podium at the central station) A question is then read, and teams earned cash for correct answers.

Two main categories (called "Stations") were featured in the first season; regular knowledge categories were answered at "The Motherboard", the station where teams played the game. The Hard Drive station was added in Season Two and was where the regular knowledge categories were answered. "The Motherboard" was only used for clicking the mouse on one of the three stations.

Possible topics included:

  • E-Mail—identifying a famous person who wrote a fictional e-mail. Moved to Chat Room for season 2.
  • Click Pix—A picture clue was given for a question.
  • Click Video—A video clue was given to the question.
  • Sound Bytes—Audio clues were used for questions.
  • Home Page—Identifying a topic from a series of clues, grouped into a "home page" format. Added during the second season.

Word Wizard/Chat Room

Topics included:

  • Spell Check choosing the correct spelling among a choice of three, during season 2 this was changed to searching for a misspelled word in a sentence.
  • Dictionary—Choosing the answer that best fits the definition of a given word, among a choice of three. The Dictionary was moved to the Hard Drive in season 2 and had four choices.
  • Funetics—Identifying license plate-type puzzles, or a word spelled phonetically. Used in season 1 only.
  • Instant Message—Identifying who is online, via a fictional instant message. Also added during the second season.

Hard Drive (season 2 only)

Topics included:

  • Health
  • Science
  • Landmarks
  • Language
  • Literature
  • Food
  • Nature
  • Politics
  • Headlines
  • College
  • Music
  • Math
  • Animals
  • U.S. History
  • World History
  • Dictionary
  • TV and Film
  • Religion
  • Culture
  • Geography
  • Sports

Note: These general knowledge categories were asked at the motherboard during the first season.

Rounds

References

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