
I haven't mentioned GSN's Black-and-White Overnight bloc lately. They've been running old episodes of What's My Line? for the eight-jillionth time and Beat the Clock and The Name's the Same for what I believe are the first reruns ever. I find Beat the Clock to be largely unwatchable. I thought the show was stupid when I was six years old and nothing has changed since then. The Name's the Same is not without interest, however, largely because of its panel which over the years included Carl Reiner, Abe Burrows, Gene Rayburn, Meredith Willson, Joan Alexander and — in episodes reaired recently — comedian Arnold Stang and the creator of Droodles, Roger Price.

Mr. Price, who passed away in 1990, was a comedy writer of some renown in the fifties. He did the foreword for The Mad Reader, the first paperback collection of Harvey Kurtzman's MAD comics. Later on, Price edited a short-lived, little-known (but very funny) humor magazine called Grump, and co-created with Leonard Stern the party game, "Mad Libs." He was also a cartoonist of sorts, doing his "Droodles" on TV shows, books and even for a time, a syndicated newspaper strip. The Droodle at above left is entitled, "A ship arriving too late to save a drowning witch" and the one at above right is "Man playing trombone in a phone booth." Well, what else would you call them?
The Name's the Same was a never-quite-successful attempt by game show mavens Goodson and Todman to replicate their own What's My Line? but with odd names instead of occupations. The show came and went and came back again and changed rules and hosts and panelists but never achieved the stature of the original. Robert Q. Lewis was the moderator for much of its run and he managed to be everything you wouldn't want in a game show host. He was cold, he was bad at ad-libbing and he was very bad at (or perhaps uninterested in) setting up the panelists to be funny. As a result, the show depended heavily on "gambits" for its humor. "Gambit" was the behind-the-scenes term for a question that was planted with the panel so they would "inadvertently" ask something very funny. The other night, for example, they had to guess what was in a box that, we knew, contained baby clothes. One of the lady panelists asked, "Is this something a woman might get as a wedding present?" The audience howled but it was pretty obvious the exchange was planned. Some weeks, the show did this to excess.
Lewis was replaced as host by Dennis James, who was even worse, and other emcees were tried. Coming up in about ten days or so on GSN should be a run of episodes that were hosted by Bob Elliott and Ray Goulding. They just about closed out the show's run because, I guess, someone figured that if two of the funniest men ever on TV and radio couldn't make the program work, no one could. Anyway, I've never seen the Bob & Ray episodes so I'm looking forward to them.
We don't yet know what GSN will put in the slot when their inventory of The Name's the Same runs out in seven or eight weeks. Odds are it will be another run of either the I've Got a Secret or To Tell the Truth libraries. I'd like something that hasn't been rerun but I'll settle for either of those again. Anything…just so long as it isn't increased airings of Beat the Clock.