Difference between revisions of "Quiz Kids"
(Created page with "'''''Quiz Kids''''' was a quiz show broadcast on radio from 28 June 1940 until 27 September 1956. The show began broadcasting from Chicago's NBC radio affiliate, but shows we...") |
Matt Weiner (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''''Quiz Kids''''' was a quiz show broadcast on radio from 28 June 1940 until 27 September 1956. The show began broadcasting from Chicago's NBC radio affiliate, but shows were later expanded to other cities. An Australian version ran form 1942-62. | '''''Quiz Kids''''' was a quiz show broadcast on radio from 28 June 1940 until 27 September 1956. The show began broadcasting from Chicago's NBC radio affiliate, but shows were later expanded to other cities. An Australian version ran form 1942-62. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:366619127 10230048500386322 6156700571854302428 n.jpg|thumb|Future literature canon member [[John Ashbery]] competed on ''Quiz Kids'' as a teenager.]] | ||
==Format== | ==Format== | ||
− | ''Quiz Kids'' may have been the first attempt to air a quiz competition of sorts involving non-professionals. Listeners to the show would send in questions which were then researched by an adult staff to be read on-air to the panel of kids. The listeners whose questions were selected won a prize, and if the question stumped the panel they won a better prize (this was similar to the radio show ''Information Please'') | + | ''Quiz Kids'' may have been the first attempt to air a quiz competition of sorts involving non-professionals. Listeners to the show would send in questions which were then researched by an adult staff to be read on-air to the panel of kids. The listeners whose questions were selected won a prize, and if the question stumped the panel they won a better prize (this was similar to the radio show ''Information Please''). At some point, the prizes included televisions. Some of the champion child participants won a trip to Chicago as a prize. |
Kids (all under age 16) were chosen for the show based on IQ scores, school performance, poise, and radio presence. | Kids (all under age 16) were chosen for the show based on IQ scores, school performance, poise, and radio presence. | ||
Line 9: | Line 11: | ||
In some markets ''Quiz Kids'' made a short-lived transition to television, however by that time the era of competition quiz shows had arrived, likely dooming the format to oblivion. | In some markets ''Quiz Kids'' made a short-lived transition to television, however by that time the era of competition quiz shows had arrived, likely dooming the format to oblivion. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Literary critics generally agree that the fictitious radio show ''It's a Wise Child'' that is repeatedly referenced in J.D. Salinger's stories is based on ''Quiz Kids''. | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== |
Latest revision as of 23:56, 1 September 2023
Quiz Kids was a quiz show broadcast on radio from 28 June 1940 until 27 September 1956. The show began broadcasting from Chicago's NBC radio affiliate, but shows were later expanded to other cities. An Australian version ran form 1942-62.
Format
Quiz Kids may have been the first attempt to air a quiz competition of sorts involving non-professionals. Listeners to the show would send in questions which were then researched by an adult staff to be read on-air to the panel of kids. The listeners whose questions were selected won a prize, and if the question stumped the panel they won a better prize (this was similar to the radio show Information Please). At some point, the prizes included televisions. Some of the champion child participants won a trip to Chicago as a prize.
Kids (all under age 16) were chosen for the show based on IQ scores, school performance, poise, and radio presence.
One interesting point is that since the questions were obviously poorly designed, many times questions had multiple correct answers, which the kids came up with, often bewildering the poor host - something that would bewilder bad quizbowl for decades to come.
In some markets Quiz Kids made a short-lived transition to television, however by that time the era of competition quiz shows had arrived, likely dooming the format to oblivion.
Literary critics generally agree that the fictitious radio show It's a Wise Child that is repeatedly referenced in J.D. Salinger's stories is based on Quiz Kids.