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''Jackpot Bowling'' (also known as ''Phillies Jackpot Bowling''〔("Phillies Jackpot Bowling" (1959) )〕 and ''Jackpot Bowling Starring Milton Berle'') was a professional bowling show on NBC from January 9, 1959 to March 13, 1961.〔(Jackpot Bowling Starring Milton Berle - TV.com )〕 ''Jackpot Bowling'' was the first national TV bowling show since ''Bowling Headliners'' aired in the early days of television (1948–50). ''Jackpot Bowling'' originally aired on Fridays at 10:45 PM following the ''Cavalcade of Sports Friday Night Fight''. Leo Durocher was the show's first host, but bowed out after only two shows and was replaced by Mel Allen.〔 Allen's lack of bowling knowledge made him an unpopular host, however.〔(NewspaperARCHIVE.com - Search old newspaper articles online )〕〔(NewspaperARCHIVE.com - Search old newspaper articles online )〕 On April 10, 1959 Bud Palmer became the show's third host.〔(NewspaperARCHIVE.com - Search old newspaper articles online )〕 Allen returned in October 1959 and remained with the show until April 1960, after which Palmer returned and hosted through June. The show was put on a summer hiatus after the June 24, 1960 episode, as its ''Cavalcade of Sports'' lead-in had ended its run on NBC. When it returned on September 19, 1960, a retooled version hit the airwaves; the series not only moved to Monday nights at 10:30, Brunswick became a co-sponsor with Bayuk's Phillies Cigars, the Hollywood Legion Lanes replaced Wayne, New Jersey's T-Bowl as the show's venue, and Milton Berle was installed as host〔(C.B.S. POSTPONES BERGMAN TV PLAY; Drama Delayed Indefinitely When Dire... - Free Preview - The New York Times )〕 with Chick Hearn providing play-by-play. (NBC installed Berle as host in part because the network was desperate to burn off its 30-year contract with Berle, whose popularity had been in steady decline and also to emphasize more comedy as the nation's taste for high-budget contests had waned in the wake of the 1950s quiz show scandals.) The show now ran 30 minutes, and the professional bowler challenges were supplemented with a late-night-style monologue from Berle and segments of celebrities being interviewed by Berle and then rolling a shot for charity. The series would only run another six months with Berle as host and would end on March 13, 1961. ==Gameplay== Two players competed to bowl up to nine strikes. After each bowler took 9 turns, the player who bowled the most strikes won $1,000. Any player who rolled six strikes in a row won a jackpot which, in the earlier seasons, started at $5,000 and increased $1,000 each week it was not won. In the final season hosted by Milton Berle, the jackpot started at $25,000 and $5,000 was added each week that it was not broken. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Jackpot Bowling」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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