Everybody's Talking

Veteran producer Jack Barry created this show during a brief period working for Goodson-Todman.

Due to lingering bad publicity concerning his possible involvement in the rigging of Twenty-One and Tic-Tac-Dough in the late 1950s, he asked that his name be kept off the credits.

It was the last American daytime television program aired in black and white, despite the "Big 3" commercial networks having converted to color by September 1967.

The first player to score $200 went on to a bonus round, identifying short descriptions for additional prize money.

David Schwartz, Steve Ryan and Fred Wostbrock, "The Encyclopedia of TV Game Shows," 3rd edition, 1999.