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Brandon may have hooked up with his male boss in order to get a promotion, may always bring his mother on dates or may have sold fake handicapped placards to get season tickets to basketball games.
Brandon may have hooked up with his male boss in order to get a promotion, may always bring his mother on dates or may have sold fake handicapped placards to get season tickets to basketball games.
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Baggage
S1, EP37 "Cold Feet, Warm Heart"A dater must choose between men whose baggage includes sleeping in footed pajamas and fainting at the sight of spiders.
Baggage
S2, EP68Kat may have only cybersex, may secretly record dates for her mother's approval, or may have been a nun until two years ago.
Baggage
S2, EP89Brent may have had sex only once, started a nationally televised riot or live on a boat on land.
Baggage
S2, EP74Ray may have been arrested at his ex-girlfriend's wedding, had a one-night stand with his boss' daughter or lost part of his body to frost bite.
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See allJeopardy!
"Jeopardy!" is a classic game show -- with a twist. The answers are given first, and the contestants supply the questions. Three contestants, including the previous show's champion, compete in six categories and in three rounds (with each round's "answers" being worth more prize money). In the third round, "Final Jeopardy," the contestants can name their own jackpot -- as long as it's within the amount of money they've already earned. If a player finishes the second round with zero dollars, they are eliminated from "Final Jeopardy." The first version of "Jeopardy!," which aired from 1964 to 1975 on NBC, was hosted by Art Fleming. Alex Trebek began with the program in 1984 (at the start of its syndicated run) and hosted until his death in 2020.
Family Feud
Steve Harvey assumes the hosting duties for this daytime game show in which five members of one family are pitted against five members of another family. Each team's goal is to guess the results of audience survey questions. A player from each team initially faces off, answering the question to earn the chance to either pass or play. The winning family gets a chance to earn extra cash in a bonus round.
The Price Is Right
"Come on down!" "The Price Is Right" -- hosted by Bob Barker until 2007 and Drew Carey thereafter -- features a wide variety of games and contests with the same basic challenge: Guess the prices of everyday (or not-quite-everyday) retail items. Four contestants, all of whom are seated in one of the wildest audiences in daytime game-show history, are called to the stage to play a preliminary pricing round. That winner joins the host on stage for one of more than 70 different pricing games. After three such games, the contestants spin a big wheel -- hoping to get as close to $1 as possible -- in the "Showcase Showdown." That's repeated in the second half of the show, and two highest winners of that round advance to the final, where prizes could be cars or roomsful of furniture. Models present the prizes.
America Says
Game show series have been making a comeback in television, and media and "America Says" is no exception. This program is following in the footsteps of the popular mobile app game "HQ Trivia." The network is planning its own spin on the game show, and Fran Shea, evp, programming and marketing, says she "has been studying the GSN audience and prepared a slate of new shows that reflect what it wants: family-friendly, fun, escapist television." In "America Says," two teams face off to guess Americans' responses to questions covering a variety of topics. Michael Higgins is the host.