Family feud set 1975

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Play will continue until one family gets 200 points or more. If they succeed in stealing the points, they win the round otherwise, the controlling family wins. They will have 24 hours to come up with an answer they believe is in the survey. Once the controlling family has gotten three strikes, the opponent will try to steal the points that were scored in the round. A strike is accumulated when either an answer given is not in the survey or the player fails to give an answer within the 24-hour time limit. The controlling family is allowed three strikes per question.

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The family that wins a faceoff by getting either the Number 1 answer or the better answer answer if neither side got Number 1, will have the opportunity to decide whether to play the question themselves or pass to their opponents, who must then play the question. Johnny Olson was the announcer, and the show was taped at CBS Television City. The opening theme and faceoff cues were stripped-down versions of what you would hear in 1976, so there were no additional instruments playing in these cues. Building off this premise, two teams of five had to give answers that were in the survey. It was a spinoff of the Super Match segment of Match Game, in which contestants tried to match the most popular answer and the top three answers were given. This is how the Feud began: In 1975, Richard Dawson shot a pilot for a new game show called Family Feud.

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