Back In The Day: SHOWER GAME
After being under the radar for 26 years, Golden-Road.net’s staff unearthed two playings of Shower Game late in 2004, with permission from then-producer Roger Dobkowitz to post screencaps from them; nearly a decade later, on April 2, 2014, video of the first playing was finally put online by, strangely enough, Wink Martindale.
The car shower’s chain would cause a gigantic key with the word “CAR” on it to lower from the ceiling; of the other five showers, three would spray the contestant with confetti, and the other two would spray one hundred $1 bills. The contestant could enter showers and pull chains until he found either the car key (thus winning) or $100 (thus losing, but keeping the money).
The game had a huge prop with six shower stalls on it; it rivaled Hurdles in size, stretching all the way from the Turntable to Door #3. Each of the six shower stalls had a price on it; one of them was the price of the car. Each stall had a chain in it for the contestant to pull.
Shower Game only lasted 10 playings over three months months during the rarely-rerun Season 7. Rumors persisted that the game was retired because viewers wrote letters saying it reminded them of the Holocaust; various staff members over the years have given different answers as to whether this was plausible or whether this was a lurid explanation to explain a short-lived poorly-documented game. In either case, most agree it was not exciting enough to be worth keeping its massive set around backstage.




In three of the showers, the contestant is showered with confetti! The confetti may make a mess, but it means that the contestant may move on to another shower. In the remaining two showers are 100 one dollar bills. Get the money or the key to the car and the game is over.






(October or November 1978)








- Check out the Golden-Road FAQ on “Shower Game“
- Check out other short-lived Season 7 oddities, like “Telephone Game“, “Finish Line“, and the original rules of “Penny Ante” and “Punch-a-Bunch”
- Check out the year 1978 in the “Timeline”
- Scrub it back to “Who’s Got Game?“