Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Here are 5 more game shows worth bringing back to TV

- Jenny Cohen

What’s old, but also new? Game shows!

Networks (especially ABC) are reaching back into TV history to give new life to classic game shows, rebooting “Match Game,” “Card Sharks” and “Press Your Luck,” among others, for successful summer runs. Nickelodeo­n also returned to the game-show game with its messy but entertaini­ng “Double Dare.” “Jeopardy!” is still going strong at 35.

Even rapper Snoop Dogg got into the game with a revival of “The Joker’s Wild” on TNT.

But there are still a few more we’d like to see dusted off. So, here’s our plea to start up one of these classic shows again so we can be a contestant on the reboot, or at least tune in.

‘Password’

This classic game show aired on CBS in the 1960s and ABC in the ’70s, in which two teams guessed the secret password. Partners gave them only a one-word clue. It could be a perfect pairing with ABC’s recent revival of “The $100,000 Pyramid,” which also matches a celebrity with a non-celebrity contestant. And it already has had an occasional revival on “The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon” featuring celebrity guests.

‘Remote Control’

Nothing quite captured 1980s pop culture like this quiz show. MTV featured “TV channels” as categories to test contestant­s’ knowledge of TV and pop culture, including “Dead or Canadian,” “Sing Along With Colin Quinn” and “Prime Time,” which often included questions about current series, such as “L.A. Law.” Bet you haven’t thought about that show in a long time. In addition to Quinn, “Remote Control” featured up-and-coming performers like Denis Leary and Adam

Sandler.

‘Supermarke­t Sweep’

It’s summer in the early ’90s. School’s out, but it’s too hot to ride your bike to a friend’s house. Smartphone­s haven’t arrived, and the internet is barely a thing. What to do? We tuned in to “Supermarke­t Sweep,” a “Price Is Right”-style show that aired on ABC and Lifetime, in which contestant­s answer questions about food to win extra time running around a mock grocery store. The game show easily could be updated for a modern crowd, complete with a run through a Whole Foods and bonuses for finding avocado toast.

‘The Weakest Link’

Surprising­ly, this British import lasted for only one season on NBC (and a second in syndicatio­n), which could make it the perfect reboot. Contestant­s had to answer a series of trivia questions and then either bank the money they collected with correct answers or lose it all with wrong ones. After each round, someone would be voted out, with host Anne Robinson, in a clipped British voice, proclaimin­g, “You are the weakest link. Goodbye.” Robinson was not sweet by any means, and bringing back her acerbic streak to prime time could help a series like this stick out among other primetime game shows delightful­ly hosted by the likes of Ellen DeGeneres and Michael Strahan.

‘What’s My Line?’

The “line” in the title isn’t the kind you use to pick up a guy on Tinder. It’s what a person does for a living — their line of work — and it’s not always easy to guess. The celebrity panel for this CBS hit had to guess what normal people did for a living using a series of questions until one of them guessed “the line” correctly. So could a game show about occupation­s finally help us understand what an “Instagram influencer” is? It would be fun to try.

 ?? AP ?? Carol Burnett and Peter Lawford search for word clues and answers under the eye of host Allen Ludden, center, on the 1960s iteration of “Password” on CBS. The show has had an occasional revival on “The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon.”
AP Carol Burnett and Peter Lawford search for word clues and answers under the eye of host Allen Ludden, center, on the 1960s iteration of “Password” on CBS. The show has had an occasional revival on “The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon.”

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