[1] For example, a person in a taxicab is told by the driver that he is nearsighted and color blind; the contestants would guess whether the passenger would exit the cab or not.
[6] The format of guessing the outcome of a "hidden camera" video would subsequently be reused in two later game shows, Anything for Money and Hold Everything!.
Variety reviewer Bill praised All About Faces, writing, "The show has a rapid pace, what with the number of situations presented in each half hour, and a beneficial comedic spontaneity via ad lib aspects by the actors on location.
"[7] Newsday television critic Marvin Kitman called the show "uninspired nonsense" that "dup[ed] people into doing silly things which degrade human foibles", writing that it "began competing for the title of the most idiotic games show last August".
[8] The author Alex McNeil called All About Faces a "lackluster game show".