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Swanson's Pot Pies.
Tender meat, garden vegetables with the right amount of gravy,
all in a flaky crust.
Swanson, the quality pot pie.
And take your change the Tootsie way.
Tootsie Pop Drops, Tootsie Pops and Tootsie Rolls
in a new style candy jar.
Now, back to Wink.
Thank you, Jay.
Now, then, John,
last time you played against the Dragon,
the Dragon defeated you in fairly short order.
The audience is gonna try to help you
because you have nobody here
to help represent you.
Right. Right.
So, they're gonna give you all the right decisions,
right, John?
I hope so.
Come on over. Let's see what happens.
[audience applauding]
Thank you. Thank you.
I hope you do it this time.
Turn right around here. Take a look at that Board.
You know what you're playing for:
the prizes that you failed to get last time you were here
when got beat by the Dragon.
The disco jukebox, the photo murals,
the camera and projector, the widescreen television,
which you could use, I take it?
Oh, yes.
All that comes
to a grand total
of over $3,700.
Now, you're gonna see a Dragon jumping all over the Board.
Take a look at the Board.
John, in case I didn't make the point
last time you were here, this is the thing
you don't wanna find: the monster.
Gonna cover him up, move him around.
You're not gonna know where he is, as you know.
You're gonna see nine numbers,
and the audience is gonna help you
come up with the right numbers.
Gonna whip him.
Alright. Do it.
Gonna whip him.
Alright.
Prove it.
Prove it, John.
Do it.
Let's try
Number 1.
Alright. Right at the top of the Board, Number 1.
Let's look behind Number 1 and root along with John.
There we go, $100.
[audience applauding]
Now, we ask some very attractive people
out here to help.
I'll try Number 4. They think Number 4.
Number 4?
I see a lot of Number 4s. Let's look behind four.
You need $900 more.
$500. You need $400 more.
[audience applauding]
$400 more, and you got it.
Let's go back to the audience.
You can do it with one call.
Two. Number 2.
Little deuce.
Number 2.
He takes Number 2 from that good-looking gal
in the front row, I'll bet you.
Tic. Add that to Tac, you got a win, or $400.
[audience applauding]
Let's try
Number 8.
Number 8? Okay.
Stand right up here. Let's look behind Number 8.
Is it Tac or $400?
No, it's $150, though.
[audience applauding]
$750 you got up there on the Board.
You need $250 more. What is your pleasure?
I'm gonna try five. I was whipped the last time.
I'm gonna try five again.
Five. 'Cause the last time
you were here,
the Dragon beat you.
Let's see if you have better luck.
He certainly wouldn't show up there again.
No. You got a win.
[audience applauding]
Our Dragon will fool you sometimes.
He was known to show up in the same position
two times in a row.
Sometimes, even three if the person's really unlucky.
I don't doubt it.
Let's see where
the Dragon was.
Three, six, seven or nine?
Which one of those numbers would have revealed him?
There he was behind Number 6.
Well, they gave you some help.
Did you listen to 'em,
or were all the selections your own?
No, no. I listened to them this time.
Okay.
I don't trust myself.
I don't blame you, watching the way you did
this last time.
You know what your grand total is now?
I have no idea.
With that family home
room package,
you have a grand total now, sir John, of $10,800
in cash and prizes.
[audience applauding]
And we're gonna get a new game going right now.
Let's meet
a new opponent, alright?
Alright. Thanks.
Go back over there.
Okay, Jay Stewart, help us out.
Bring somebody else out here.
(Jay) Okay, Wink.
Let's welcome a writer now
who's also worked as a stockbroker.
And his interests include jogging
and collecting antique photos.
Meet Rich Kalnit.
[audience applauding]
Hi, Richard. How are you?
Fine, Wink. Nice to see you.
May I welcome you to Tic Tac Dough first of all?
Thank you very much.
And I would like
to ask you a little bit
about your antique photo collection.
That's a rather unusual hobby.
Yes, it is.
I collect photographs, which you call daguerreotypes,
and they're from the earliest days of photography,
from invention.
How old are they?
Well, they date from 1839,
and mostly, about 120, 140 years old.
Are any of these of famous people?
Yes. I have photographs of P. T. Barnum
and of Henry Clay and of Daniel Webster.
They must be very valuable.
They're increasing
all the time.
Right.
Well, we're gonna hear some more
about your collection a little later, alright?
Fine.
Let's take a look
at the Board.
Richard, John, take a look, please.
These are the subjects.
Our questions will deal with Famous Blondes,
The '40s, Mythology, Dans and Dons,
Television Roles, Men of Ideas,
Potluck Pictures, Popular Music
and Classical Music.
John?
Let's take TV Roles
in the middle
to start off with, Wink.
Okay. Television Roles in the middle box.
This fine series of the '60s
told of the adventures of Napoleon Solo
and Illya Kuryakin,
two secret agents fighting the criminal organization
called THRUSH.
First, name the series, John.
And then, secondly, name one of the stars
who played Kuryakin or Solo.
Give you a few seconds on that.
[clock ticking]
It's the television series about the adventures
of Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuryakin.
Name the series, John.
The series was
"The Man from U.N.C.L.E."
Correct.
Name one of the stars who played
either Kuryakin or Solo.
I don't know.
[buzzer sounds]
One of the stars was David McCallum.
He played Kuryakin.
And Robert Vaughn
played Napoleon Solo.
Robert Vaughn...
Robert Vaughn. Right.
Robert Vaughn
and David McCallum.
Let's move the categories again.
We shuffle.
Still looking for our first X or O on the Board.
Richard, let's see if you can do something about that.
I'll take, uh, Dans and Dons.
And he's taking Dans and Dons.
And this is the first question in that category:
This animated movie star named Donald
began his rise to fame at the Walt Disney Studios
in 1934.
He's always been a temperamental character,
but he still manages to charm audiences all over the world.
Richard, name him.
It's Donald Duck.
Got to be. Donald Duck.
Put an O there.
Let's shuffle them around.
[audience applauding]
So, we add $200 to the pot.
John?
Need an X to catch up, John.
We're gonna have to try Pop Music in the middle, Wink.
Alright. Again, worth $300 to the pot.
John, this rock-and-roll band got its start in the '60s
with hits like "Satisfaction" and "*** Tonk Women."
More recently, the band had a hit single
with a disco tune titled "Miss You."
First, name the band, and then name its lead singer.
Think about that.
[clock ticking]
Big band in the 1960s, especially.
Hits like "Satisfaction" and "*** Tonk Women."
Name the band, John.
The Rolling Stones.
Right. Name the lead singer.
Mick Jagger.
Right, for the center box.
Put an X there.
$300 to the pot.
[audience applauding]
Let's move them around. Richard, we move over to you.
He could have fooled me.
I didn't think he's gonna come up with that answer,
the way he's shaking his head.
Alright, Rich.
I'll, uh... I'll try Classical Music, Wink.
Classical Music, it is.
Richard, this Polish-born 19th-century composer
wrote over 200 compositions for the piano
and is considered a master of the form.
Name him.
It's Fr d ric Chopin.
Correct!
[audience applauding]
We put an O there. $200 in the pot.
We'll be back right after these words.
[audience applauding]