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      • Each contestant gets a celebrity partner, and one partner provides clues to the other about six mystery words, leaving the other to guess those words before the time runs out. The team with the most points gets to play in the winners circle, where the top prize is $100,000.
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  2. The $100,000 Pyramid: With Michael Strahan, Brad Abelle, Rosie O'Donnell, Bobby Moynihan. Revival of the classic game show, hosted by Michael Strahan. With the help of their game partners, contestants paired with celebrities must guess words or phrases that appear on the show's pyramid-shaped gameboard to win money.

    • (633)
    • 2016-06-26
    • Comedy, Game-Show
    • 60
    • Game Format
    • Trivia
    • Episode Status

    Main Game

    Two teams, each consisting of a celebrity guest and a studio contestant, attempted to guess a series of items relating to different categories within a short time limit based on clues given by their partners.The show's title referred to its pyramid-shaped game boards, both in the main game and in the bonus round, featuring six categories arranged in a triangular fashion. As always in the main game, each category's title was cleverly written in order to give team members a vague idea of what i...

    Winner's Circle

    The Winner's Circle essentially reversed the process: one member of the winning team had 60 seconds to describe six categories of increasing difficulty to their partner by listing items relating to each category. Contestants always had the option of whether they wanted to give or receive clues in the Winner's Circle, but celebrities usually gave the majority of the time. Regardless of who gave the clues, there were strict rules involving the types of clues players could not give in the Winner...

    The original title for the show was Cash on the Line, and featured a very different format. The theme song used for this version of Pyramid was "Tuning Up" by Ken Aldin.

    14 of 15 Hollywood episodes exist, and were shown on GSN. Three episodes exist in Black & White at the UCLA Film & Television Archive. The Friday episode from the premiere week in March 1973, one from June 1973, and another from December 1973, also exist. See Also: The $10,000/$25,000/$20,000 Pyramid/Episode Guide

  3. Jul 17, 2023 · 1 Answer. Sorted by: 4. No, of course you can't just say antonyms. ABC's own website is pretty useless, not providing an official list of rules for some reason but— at least according to the net —key rules for the last round are. No direct synonyms. No hand gestures, to keep the focus on the words. No prepositional phrases for some reason.

  4. Aug 28, 2017 · 2 Answers. Sorted by: 7. While not directly about the TV show, the rules for the 2008 board game version, published Endless Games, does explicitly say that homonyms are allowed: NOTE: As the Pyramid is a verbal game, words that sound alike are equal to the correct answer.

  5. This is chronicling the original 1980s era of The $100,000 Pyramid. Two teams, each consisting of a celebrity guest and a studio contestant, attempted to guess a series of items relating to different categories within a short time limit based on clues given by their partners. The game consists...

  6. The various Pyramid series have won a total of nine Daytime Emmys for Outstanding Game Show, second only to Jeopardy!, which has won 13. Dick Clark is the host most commonly associated with the show, having hosted the network daytime version from 1973 to 1980 (which moved from CBS to ABC in 1974, and increased its namesake top prize from ...

  7. Revival of the classic game show, hosted by Michael Strahan. With the help of their game partners, contestants paired with celebrities must guess words or phrases that appear on the show's pyramid-shaped gameboard to win money.

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