For real 'scraping the bottom-of-the-barrel' entertainment, you
couldn't go past The Gong Show. Debuting in 1976, Chuck
Barris introduced The Unknown Comic, the flounder dance, and (in
the process) greatly influenced modern day performance art with
this cool spoof of the amateur talent show.
Celebrities would judge contestants, and after pretending to
restrain themselves would give a really bad act 'the Gong'.
After an initial pilot with Gary Owens as host and Arte
Johnson, Joanne Worley, Richard Dawson and Adrienne Barbeau as
judges, Barris managed to sell both a daytime and a night time
version.
The show premiered on NBC's daytime schedule in June 1976 and
the syndicated evening version showed up in the fall. Barris
hosted in the daytime, replacing Owens as host of the evening show
after its first year.
The show would always throw in one or two people who actually were
talented - someone had to win a prize, after all. The top scorer
of the day won the grand prize of $516.32. But generally it was
the epitome of bad TV.
By the time The Gong Show ceased production in 1980,
such noted B-list personalities as Jamie Farr, David Letterman,
Rex Reed, Steve Garvey Pat Harrington, and Scatman Crothers were
given command of the gong.
As a result of the popularity of the show, lots of schools and
camps (and Australian 'variety' shows - not naming any names,
Daryl) pinched the idea and held their own gong-style talent
shows. Spin-offs included The $1.98 Beauty Contest and The
Gong Show Movie.
TRIVIA NOTE Host/co-producer Chuck Barris was a real renaissance man. Not
only was he responsible for those twin pillars of popular culture,
The Dating Game and The Newlywed Game, but he also
wrote Palisades Park for Freddy Cannon in 1962.
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Peggy Guy
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Chuck Barris
Gary Owens
Johnny Jacobs
Phyllis Diller
Dr Joyce Brothers
Jaye P Morgan
The Unknown Comic
Jamie Farr
Rex Reed
David Letterman
Scatman Crothers
Pat Harrington
Steve Garvey