- TV POWWW
TV POWWW was a syndicated
game show , in which viewers via telephone control thevideo game featured in the program, in hopes of winning prizes. TV POWWW was a franchised game show format, hosted locally by hosts at stations that purchased the rights to the program. TV POWWW was syndicated from the late-1970s to the mid-1980s.The actual formatting of the program may vary -- many presented TV POWWW as a series of segments that run during the commercial breaks of television programming (a la "
Dialing for Dollars "), while some (such asKCOP inLos Angeles ) presented TV POWWW as a standalone program.TV POWWW used games from the
Fairchild Channel F console early in its run. Later, they would switch toIntellivision games, after that console went on the market.Gameplay
In the video game being featured, the at-home player would give directions over the phone, while seeing the game over the screen. When the viewer determined that the weapon was aiming at the target, they say "Pow!", in which that weapon would activate.
It is unknown what kind of technology was involved -- some say that it was by the use of special circuitry, turning voice into simple digital signals that the console would understand. Others say that a human merely listened to the given directions and moved the controller according to the directions.
One of the pitfalls of the gameplay was that, due to broadcasting technicalities, there was significant lag in the transmission of a television signal. The player would experience this lag when playing at home, which likely made playing the game somewhat more difficult.
Featured Games
Channel F
* Shooting Gallery
Intellivision
* Tic Tac Toe
* Moving Target (a game similar toBreakout )
*NFL Football
*Major League Baseball
*NBA Basketball
*Space Battle TV POWWW variants
TV PIXX
One notable version of TV POWWW was one used by
New York based television stationWPIX , called TV-PIXX (playing on the station's call letters). Hosted by station staff announcerRalph Lowenstein , it was aired during the traditional weekday afternoon slot of children's TV as an interlude. Participants would be called at home to play a videogame that appeared on their screen.Participants interacted with the game by saying the word "PIXX" to perform game-related actions. Prizes included T-shirts and $10 U.S.
Savings Bonds . They could double their prize or win a bonus prize (such as advance tickets to see upcoming films) by answering a Trivia question. For a chance at playing, children could send a postcard with their name, address, and phone number to TV PIXX. David Elliot, ofStaten Island NY, was the grand all time champion of TV Pixx, having won the elusive "Keyop" award, named after the famed character from "Battle of the Planets ". WPIX's program lasted until 1982; for many New York viewers, TV PIXX was their first glimpse of the Intellivison home game system. [ [http://www.intellivisionlives.com/media/newsletters/news020327.html Intellivision Lives website: Newsletter, March 2002] ]witchback
Switchback aired on
CBC Television station CBRT inCalgary, Alberta in 1985, also including Intellivision games.Other stations that carried TV POWWW
*
KHNL-TV ,Honolulu, Hawaii
*KPNX-TV ,Phoenix, Arizona
*KTVU-TV ,Oakland, California
*KTXL-TV ,Sacramento, California
*KXTX-TV ,Dallas /Fort Worth, Texas - Hosted byB.J. Cleveland
*WTXX-TV ,Waterbury, Connecticut
*WAWS ,Jacksonville, Florida
*WEYI-TV ,Flint, Michigan
* WLRE (nowWGBA ),Green Bay, Wisconsin
*WMAR-TV ,Baltimore, Maryland
*WUHF-TV ,Rochester, New York During the "Ranger Bob" cartoon show
* WCLQ-TV,Cleveland, Ohio
* WKEF-TV,Dayton, Ohio (two versions; one for kids on their daily afternoon show "Clubhouse 22", and one for adults on "Evening", a local talk/human interest show.)
*WTXX ,Hartford, Connecticut
* WXNE (now WFXT),Boston, Massachusetts
* WYEA (nowWLTZ ),Columbus, Georgia
*WYTV ,Youngstown, Ohio
*WKPT-TV ,Kingsport, Tennessee
* KHTV,Houston, Texas - Known asTV Kid POWWW
* TVW-7,Perth, Western Australia
* RVN-2/AMV-4, Australia's Wagga Wagga andAlbury-Wodonga regions
* SBT,Brazil
*BBC1 ,United Kingdom References
ee also
*
The Golden Shot "(similar British program with a play-at-home element)"
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