IMDb RATING
7.5/10
4.6K
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Contestants compete for prizes and cash, including cars and vacations, in games that test their knowledge of consumer goods pricing.Contestants compete for prizes and cash, including cars and vacations, in games that test their knowledge of consumer goods pricing.Contestants compete for prizes and cash, including cars and vacations, in games that test their knowledge of consumer goods pricing.
- Nominated for 2 Primetime Emmys
- 49 wins & 130 nominations total
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Featured reviews
After over thirty years on the air, this I think it is right to call this show an institution. The Price Is Right is one of the few shows on television that is loved by young and old alike and that can be attributed to Bob Barker and the production staff who have done everything over the years to keep it fresh and innovative as well as exciting for the viewers. This is truly one show that I am proud to say that I grew up with.
The Price is Right is without a doubt the best not to mention the longest running game show in the history of Television. I have watched the Price is Right ever since I was a little boy and I still watch watch it to this day. But, Here is what makes the Price is Right the best game show and that is none other then BOB BARKER! Bob Barker is the best host ever and he is the one that that makes the show the success that it always has been. I can almost a sure you that once Bob Barker either retires or dies that the show will never make it because no matter who they get to replace Bob the game show just would not be the same because Bob Barker is a one of a kind and there is only one of him!
With those 3 little words, you know that you're in for a fun time every weekday, and even after over 50 years being on the air, it's not slowing down anytime soon!
When the show first debuted in 1972, it started off as a half-hour show before expanding to an hour 3 years later in 1975, and the rest is television history!
The late, great Bob Barker was the first host of the show, and hosted it with class, sophistication and quickness. He hosted it for the first 35 seasons of the show before retiring in 2007 at the end of the season.
Then, at the start of the show's 36th season, we get our 2nd host in the name of Drew Carey, who is still hosting it as of this year, and even though he was a little nervous when he first started, he quickly got comfortable in the role, and I liked him as the host. Even if Carey isn't as good as Barker, at least he's being himself and not trying to imitate him in the process. Alongside the host were the announcers, starting with the late Johnny Olson as the show's first announcer until his sad death in 1985, and after some guest announcers filled in for the late Olson, the show's 2nd announcer Rod Roddy, joined in 1986 and announced until his death in 2003, then Rich Fields would take over a year later continued to announce for the show after Barker left the show and Carey took over, and after Fields left in 2011, George Gray would become the show's 4th announcer and has since remained the announcer as of this year.
And of course, the show wouldn't be completed without the rotating models from Barker's Beauties to the current ones, like the lovely and elegant Janice Pennington, the beautiful and sexy Dian Parkinson (my favorite model of the Barker's Beauties era), the cute and adorable Holly Hallstrom (my 2nd favorite of the BB era), the equally beautiful Kathleen Bradley, the lovely Chantel Dubay, the equally beautiful Brandi Sherwood, and from the current era, Gwendolyn Osborne, Amber Lancaster, Alexis Gaube, and my personal favorite of the current era, the beautiful and lovely Rachel Reynolds!
So, if you love pricing games and winning big money or a brand-new car, then come on down and watch The Price Is Right!
When the show first debuted in 1972, it started off as a half-hour show before expanding to an hour 3 years later in 1975, and the rest is television history!
The late, great Bob Barker was the first host of the show, and hosted it with class, sophistication and quickness. He hosted it for the first 35 seasons of the show before retiring in 2007 at the end of the season.
Then, at the start of the show's 36th season, we get our 2nd host in the name of Drew Carey, who is still hosting it as of this year, and even though he was a little nervous when he first started, he quickly got comfortable in the role, and I liked him as the host. Even if Carey isn't as good as Barker, at least he's being himself and not trying to imitate him in the process. Alongside the host were the announcers, starting with the late Johnny Olson as the show's first announcer until his sad death in 1985, and after some guest announcers filled in for the late Olson, the show's 2nd announcer Rod Roddy, joined in 1986 and announced until his death in 2003, then Rich Fields would take over a year later continued to announce for the show after Barker left the show and Carey took over, and after Fields left in 2011, George Gray would become the show's 4th announcer and has since remained the announcer as of this year.
And of course, the show wouldn't be completed without the rotating models from Barker's Beauties to the current ones, like the lovely and elegant Janice Pennington, the beautiful and sexy Dian Parkinson (my favorite model of the Barker's Beauties era), the cute and adorable Holly Hallstrom (my 2nd favorite of the BB era), the equally beautiful Kathleen Bradley, the lovely Chantel Dubay, the equally beautiful Brandi Sherwood, and from the current era, Gwendolyn Osborne, Amber Lancaster, Alexis Gaube, and my personal favorite of the current era, the beautiful and lovely Rachel Reynolds!
So, if you love pricing games and winning big money or a brand-new car, then come on down and watch The Price Is Right!
If Bob Barker didn't exist, television would've had to invent him. His folksy and highly-controlled approach is slick, witty, charming, disarming and utterly appropriate for the populist realm of game shows.
Until "Who Wants To Be Millionaire?," you could safely assert that there was no more populist a game show than "The Price Is Right." The cross-section of people who "come on down" to play the game is as culturally diverse a melting pot as you'll find on television. And because of this, it is easy for the viewer to relate to the contestants, and to feel for their ups and downs.
Skillfully facilitating all of this is Barker, who is refreshingly old-school in his across-the-board respect for the contestants. And he doesn't have to strain to "sell" the pricing games to the viewers -- most are clever, challenging and enduring.
One of the interesting elements about "Price" is that a contestant can be inept as a pricer, but if they're lucky enough, they could still advance to win the "showcase" at the end of the show. The "anything can happen" element this creates helps make the show even more interesting, if occasionally frustrating. (It seems unfair to disqualify an excellent showcase guest that is over by a few hundred, while the "winning" guest is under by several thousand. But those are the rules.)
Cheers to Mr. Barker, and to Rod and "the beauties."
Until "Who Wants To Be Millionaire?," you could safely assert that there was no more populist a game show than "The Price Is Right." The cross-section of people who "come on down" to play the game is as culturally diverse a melting pot as you'll find on television. And because of this, it is easy for the viewer to relate to the contestants, and to feel for their ups and downs.
Skillfully facilitating all of this is Barker, who is refreshingly old-school in his across-the-board respect for the contestants. And he doesn't have to strain to "sell" the pricing games to the viewers -- most are clever, challenging and enduring.
One of the interesting elements about "Price" is that a contestant can be inept as a pricer, but if they're lucky enough, they could still advance to win the "showcase" at the end of the show. The "anything can happen" element this creates helps make the show even more interesting, if occasionally frustrating. (It seems unfair to disqualify an excellent showcase guest that is over by a few hundred, while the "winning" guest is under by several thousand. But those are the rules.)
Cheers to Mr. Barker, and to Rod and "the beauties."
Come on Down, but need I say more this is a long running TV classic that millions of Americans loved each and everyday! So good you have a loud and cheering audience and contestants are selected to make bids on prices of showcase items for then a chance to compete at higher prices and win big money! And many of the games and items shown are tough, but it's so interesting to try and price items. Bob Barker always made it watchable, he's a legend so classy and professional his voice and hosting is classic he was such a hard worker for so many years. A final note the showcase models were fantastic to watch also it made the male viewer take his eye and mind off the prizes for awhile at least especially when the screen showed sexy beauties Nikki Ziering or Dian Parkinson. Really a daytime TV legendary classic!
Did you know
- TriviaThe final three pricing games played on Bob Barker's final show ('Double Prices', 'Bonus Game', and 'Any Number') were the first three games played on his first show, but in reverse order. On Decades week on the season 44 premiere in September 2015 the games were replayed in the same order as the show's premiere on September 4th 1972, and on June 26th 2023 the final show in the Bob Barker studio 33 to air, the games were again played in the reverse order.
- GoofsIf a contestant won the right to a bonus spin in a Showcase Showdown (spinning the large wheel), Bob Barker always warned the contestant that the wheel had to make at least one revolution during the bonus spin or "it doesn't count and you don't get to spin again." The fact that the contestant would not get another chance to spin means that the insufficient spin WOULD count. However, the value on the wheel would be voided, so even if that spin would have won the Showdown, the contestant is disqualified. So the spin, in fact, would not count.
- Quotes
Bob Barker: [just before the Range Finder in Range Game starts moving] Don't press the button until you want to stop the Range Finder, because we can't start it again for thirty-seven hours.
- Crazy creditsFollowing producer Mark Goodson's death in December 1992, until 2007 when Drew Carey took over as host, the announcer would continue to announce during the closing credits that the show was "a Mark Goodson production", mainly in his honor.
- ConnectionsAlternate-language version of O Preço Certo em Euros (2002)
- SoundtracksNew Price Is Right Theme
4th Theme
Composed by Sheila Cole (ASCAP)
Published by Goodson-Todman Assoc. Inc. (ASCAP)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- The New Price Is Right
- Filming locations
- CBS Television City - 7800 Beverly Boulevard, Fairfax, Los Angeles, California, USA(as Bob Barker Studio)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 1.78 : 1
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