| The $64,000 Question was a popular United States
television game show.
It is a descendant of a radio game show going back to the 1940s known first as Take It Or Leave It and then as $64 Question. The host asked contestants a series
of questions, each more difficult than the preceding one. After answering a question correctly, the contestant had the choice to
"take" the prize for that question, or "leave it" in favor of a chance at the next question. The first question was worth $1, and
the value doubled for each successive question, up to the seventh and final question, worth 64 United States dollars.
The phrase "The $64 Question" became slang for a particularly difficult or important question or problem.
Strangely the phrase 'the $64,000 question' is common in Britain,
where it means 'the most important question', despite the fact that the original game show is virtually unknown in the UK. Later
there was a British adaptation of the show, still called The $64,000 Question, although the top prize was only £6,400.
This was, however, quite a lot of money for a British game show at the time (early 1990s).
The television version premiered in 1955, and was hosted by Hal March. A contestant would be asked several questions, earning money which escalated as the questions
became harder. Once the contestant had reached $4000 in winnings, they would come back the next week for one question. They could
quit at any time and retire with their money, but until they won $8000, if they got a question wrong, they were eliminated
without winning anything. Once the contestant won $8000, if they missed a question they received a consolation prize of a new
Cadillac. Once reaching the $8000 level, they were
placed in the Revlon "isolation
booth", where they could hear nothing but the host's words. As long as the contestant kept answering correctly, they could
stay on the show until they had won $64,000.
The program was an enormous hit immediately, reaching number one on the charts, even drawing more viewers than I Love Lucy. It spawned many imitators, including Twenty-One, The Big Surprise and
The
$64,000 Challenge. Challenge was a sister show to Question -- $64,000 winners on Question would move
over to Challenge, where they could win another $70,000. Among the winners on both shows was Doctor Joyce Brothers, who proved her expertise in her chosen category, boxing.
The biggest winners on the combined shows were 11-year-old Robert Strom, who won $192,000 with new escalating question
plateaus, and Teddy Nadler, who won a total of $252,000.
TV Guide kept a running total of the amount of money won on
Question, with $1,000,000 the total by the end of November 1956.
The show ran until 1958, when the quiz show scandals hit.
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