The show's logo was a homage to the change of meanings for pyramids at the time, as it became a symbol of cyborg and cybernetic research.
And often, many high elite celebrities, and even government officials of Nuyorican lands, Italy and France, would appear on such shows.
Lauer would have high-cuisine events, and one episode had Sara Lee Kessler hosting a pizza making telethon, with a youth, probably of Steampipe Alley, another major WWOR show.
Bey's show made frequent use of sound effects like "uh-duh" for an insane response, "I've been framed" for a guest proclaiming innocence and "You're busted!"
If an audience member used it in a comment, he would receive $100, a homage to a prior talk and game show, You Bet Your Life.
The show was a precursor to reality television, featuring a variety of games incorporating guests' stories, most notoriously "The Wheel of Torture", in which a guest would be strapped to a spinning wheel while a spouse or lover poured slime on them as punishment for a misdeed.
Springer defended himself in 2019 by noting that during the run of his own show, he "wasn't in fights involving Jell-O.
"[6] He also made light of Ricki Lake, Rosie O'Donnell, Geraldo Rivera, Sally Jesse Raphael, Phil Donahue, and Oprah Winfrey's shows.
Bey claimed his TV show was canceled in December 1996 not due to ratings, but as a direct result of doing a program the previous day with Gennifer Flowers, discussing her sexual relationship with then-President Bill Clinton.