Bowling for Dollars was broadcast from TV stations serving medium to large communities all across North America. In many of these markets, the host was introduced by the announcer as "the Kingpin himself".
Baltimore There were two separate runs. Both aired on
WBAL-TV, and both sites were filmed in studio (with bowling being with a Brunswick set): •
Duckpins and Dollars Hosts:
Bailey Goss, then
Chuck Thompson This show only required contestants to make one strike for the jackpot — a significantly harder task in duckpin bowling than in standard tenpins. •
Bowling for Dollars Hosts:
Tom Cole, then Ron Riley, then
Royal Parker At one point, the show alternated between duckpin and tenpin bowlers.
Boston This edition was titled
Candlepins for Cash, featuring the regional
candlepin variation of bowling, and had two separate runs: •
WNAC-TV (now
WHDH), 1973–1980, hosted by
Bob Gamere; originated from area bowling lanes using
WOR-TV's remote truck, then at special lanes built in the basement of WNAC-TV's
Government Center studio • WXNE-TV (now
WFXT), 1980–1982, hosted by
Rico Petrocelli; originated from
Wal-Lex lanes in
Waltham (closed in 2002). Both editions only required contestants to make one strike for the jackpot — a significantly harder task in candlepin bowling than in standard tenpins. In the last two seasons of the show, the player would get $30 for a spare plus one bonus ball, worth $2 more per pin knocked down. When a person threw a 10-box (all pins knocked down on the third ball) they got $20 plus one bonus ball. The 2006 show
Candlepins For Dollars that aired on
WLVI Channel 56 was not related to this format.
Buffalo • Station: WGR-TV/
WGRZ Channel 2 • Host: Ed Kilgore • Sites: • Original—In studio. (It's believed that the set shared the same studio with the news set.) • Revival—
Dave & Buster's at the
Eastern Hills Mall in
Clarence, New York. A revival of
Bowling for Dollars aired between January and February 2008 on WGRZ, also hosted by Kilgore. This version, airing weekdays at 11:45 AM, was much shorter, with only one frame. It used a rotation of numerous theme songs, mostly from game shows of the 1970s. A similar competing show, called
Beat the Champ, aired on
WBEN-TV during the original Channel 2 program run, hosted by
Van Miller. This was one of two local-origination bowling programs on Channel 4 throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the other being a women's team-bowling program called
Strikes, Spares & Misses hosted by
Chuck Healy.
Charlotte • Station: WPCQ (now
WCNC) Channel 36 • Host: Larry Sprinkle • Site: George Pappas Park Lanes • Only runs for a short time from September 10, 1984, until September 1985.
Cincinnati • Station:
WKRC-TV Channel 12 • Host:
Glenn Ryle; fill-ins included weatherman Mike Fenwick, sportscaster Dale Conquest, and WKRC radio host, Jerry Thomas. • Site: In studio lanes. The set for
Nick Clooney's daytime talk show sat atop the lanes. There was also a daytime version that featured only lady bowlers called
Strikes and Spares, hosted by Jerry Thomas. • The show first premiered on WKRC as a 13-week trial run in the fall of 1971. It became a regular series on September 3, 1972, airing live at 7:00 p.m. weeknights, later moving to 6:30 p.m. • Gus Bailey, then-station PD, cancelled the show in the fall of 1975; its last weeknight program was Thanksgiving night. • WKRC began a pre-recorded Saturday afternoon filler show in 1976, hosted by Dick Schorr, who also hosted the weeknight edition on sister station
WTVN-TV (now WSYX) in Columbus. (WKRC-TV and WTVN-TV/WSYX were both owned by Taft Broadcasting, now they are both owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group.)
Cleveland Had three separate runs of
Bowling for Dollars. Two used in-studio lanes. • 1st run (September to December 1972) • Station: WUAB Channel 43 • Host: Wirt Cain who was primarily a Cincinnati TV personality. He would drive to Cleveland every other weekend to record 10 Bowling For Dollars shows. • Location: The show was recorded at Parmatown Lanes on Day Drive, which was next door to the Channel 43 studios. • 2nd run (August to September 1973) • Station:
WEWS Channel 5 • Hosts: Don Webster, Paul Wilcox • 3rd run (August 15, 1977 to January 5, 1979) - First aired weeknights at 7:00 from August 1977 to September 1978, and later moved to 5:30 PM until January 1979. • Station:
WJW (then WJKW) Channel 8 • Host:
Dick Goddard • Substitute Host:
Bob "Hoolihan" Wells • The jackpot started at $200 and increased by $20 per contestant until it was won. The top prize once went over $3000. • Site: In-studio lanes (Brunswick set with A2 pinsetters and custom sweeper labels. The sweeper label mentions WJKW's then-logo only and callsign). • Announcers: Joe Grant, Andy Hale, John FitzGerald
Columbus, Ohio • Station: WTVN Channel 6 (Now
WSYX) • Host: Dick Schorr, Gene Fullen with Sally Flowers • Site: Two in-studio lanes • Aired weeknights at 7:00 PM.
Dallas/Fort Worth • Aired on:
WFAA Channel 8
ABC (August 11, 1975 – September 26, 1978), (6:30 PM Monday through Friday). • Host:
Verne Lundquist for most of the series • Site: Forum Lanes in
Grand Prairie, Texas (which at that time was the host site for
PBA tournaments held in the spring) and Golden Triangle Bowl in
Irving, Texas.
Dayton, Ohio • Station: WLWD (now
WDTN) • Host: David G. McFarland • Site: In-studio lanes (aired live)
The show aired Mon-Fri at 7:00 p.m. Detroit • Station: WWJ-TV/
WDIV Channel 4 (original run);
WADL Channel 38 (2013–present) • Host: Bob Allison, Chuck Springer • Site: Thunderbowl Lanes in
Allen Park, MI This was originally at Highland Lanes in Toledo, Ohio, where it was also seen on WDHO Channel 24 (now WNWO-TV). It moved to Detroit in about 1974. A revival of this show began in June 2013 on WADL, initially as a one-hour retrospective special, with a weekly half-hour series starting in September. As with the original version, the WADL version was hosted by Bob Allison and originated from Thunderbowl Lanes. • Time: 4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. every Saturday
Kansas City • Station:
KMBC Channel 9 • Host: Fred Broski • Site: Originally at King Louie West Lanes in
Overland Park, 2 years NKC Pro bowl, then in studio
Kitchener, Ontario, Canada • Station:
CKCO-TV Channel 13 • Host: Jim Craig (1972/73), then Bill Inkol (74-?), later Jeff Hutcheson, Tom Knowlton • Site: Victoria Bowlerama/Twin Cities Bowl
Los Angeles • Station:
KTLA Channel 5 (July 4, 1972 – March 4, 1977); KHJ-TV (now
KCAL-TV) Channel 9 (February 27-September 15, 1978) • Host:
Chick Hearn (July 4, 1972 – September 3, 1976; February 27-September 15, 1978);
Jim Lange (September 6, 1976 – March 4, 1977) • Site: KTLA's version was taped in their in-studio lanes (Brunswick set), KHJ-TV's version was taped at the Grand Central Bowl in Glendale, CA.
Milwaukee 1st station •
WVTV Channel 18 (October 12, 1971 – June 1974) • Site: Red Carpet Lanes North (Now closed) • Host: Dick Johnson until October 1975. Replaced by co-hosts Lee Rothman and Tom Kohl • In June 1974, WVTV and station owner
Gaylord Broadcasting created a different bowling show called
The Bowling Game, which would air until January 4, 1987 on WVTV. It then moved to
WDJT-TV where it aired until at least 1993.
2nd station •
WISN-TV Channel 12 (September 9, 1976 – January 1978) • Site: In studio • Host: Bruce Bennett
Minneapolis-St. Paul • Station:
KSTP-TV (Summer 1973 – 1979) • Host:
Tom Ryther,
Johnny Canton • Site: Village North Bowl (closed), Jim Maddens Diamond Lake South Lanes (closed), Cap'N Jacks Lanes (closed), Cedarvale Lanes. Every broadcast features customed pinsetter sweeper labels that mentions the show's program.
New York City • Station: WOR Channel 9 (now
WWOR-TV) (September 17, 1973 – October 25, 1979) • Host:
Bob Murphy, then
Larry Kenney • Site:
Madison Square Garden Bowling Center (closed in 1988), then a studio in
Brooklyn, located across from the
Romper Room set Host Larry Kenney later achieved national fame as the voice of Lion-O in the smash hit 1980s cartoon
ThunderCats and the voice of
Karate Kat in
The Comic Strip. Kenney was also a regular on the
Imus in the Morning radio show. During the show's run, the 48-lane Madison Square Garden Bowling Center featured red AMF Magic Triangles and 82-70 pinsetters, with Lanes 47 and 48 being directly used for the program.
Philadelphia • Stations: WTAF-TV (now
WTXF-TV);
WPHL-TV • Host: Dick Schorr (WTAF), Bob Gale (WTAF), and Tom Dooley (WPHL). • Site: The WTAF version was taped at Willow Grove Park Lanes in 1969 (closed in 1984), moved to Andorra Key Lanes in 1972 (closed in 1979), then in the basement of their Center City studios, which also served as the studio for weekly bowling matches, while the WPHL version was taped at Boulevard Lanes (closed) in Philadelphia.
Pittsburgh • Station:
WTAE Channel 4 • Host:
Nick Perry, then Ron Jaye. • Lanes: In Studio Lanes. These same lanes were also used for Channel 4's Greater Pittsburgh Championship Bowling, a fixture on Saturday afternoons throughout the 1970s and 1980s. The In-Studio Lanes used pinboys at the time.
Rochester, New York • Station: WOKR-TV Channel 13 (Now
WHAM-TV) • Host: Ron DiFrance, then Matt Rinaldi • Site: In studio. (Studio's lanes also host Sunday's
Junior Bowling and
Brighton-Panorama TV Roll-offs hosted by sportscaster DiFrance, then Tony Distino.) In the 1970s, the studio previously used a
Brunswick setup which featured A2 pinsetters with custom sweeper labels (the sweeper labels mentions the station's lineup; including the upcoming program after
Bowling for Dollars). In the 1980s, the studio lanes were upgraded to an
AMF set with two sets of Magic Triangles and 82-30 pinsetters (with same custom sweeper labels).
Sacramento • Station:
KXTV channel 10 • Hosts: Ken Gimblin • Sites: Unknown.
San Francisco • Station:
KBHK-TV channel 44 • Hosts: Al Hamel. • Sites: Unknown. • KBHK's version ran from March 13 until September 8, 1978.
St. Louis • Stations:
KDNL-TV channel 30 (1973-1976),
KTVI Channel 2 (c. 1976–1980) • Hosts: Russ Carter (KDNL) and Morgan Hatch (KTVI). • Sites: In studio lanes (KDNL version), Arena Bowl (KTVI version, no longer in existence)
Syracuse • Station: WSYR-TV channel 3 (now
WSTM-TV) • Hosts:
Bud Hedinger The WSTM version was taped in the basement of the studios on James Street with a Brunswick set. The studios were also used for the taping of Challenge Bowling, a regional junior bowling show co-hosted by Marty Piraino. Tampa-St. Petersburg • Station:
WTSP Channel 10 (then WLCY-TV); (March 1975 – January 1976) • Host: Jim Bradley • Site: Sunshine Bowl in
Pinellas Park (closed, following hurricane damage in 2004 and, during rebuilding, a fire in 2005; since demolished and replaced by a Walmart Neighborhood Grocery) Jimmy Ingram and his family starred in one episode.
Washington, D.C. First Version: • Station:
WDCA Channel 20 • Host: Don Scott • Site: A Bowl America in
Arlington, Virginia, later Brunswick River Bowl in
Bethesda, Maryland Second Version: • Station:
WTTG Channel 5 • Host:
Johnny Holliday • Site: River Bowl in
Bethesda, Maryland Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada • Station:
CKND-TV • Host: Bob Washington • Show Announcer: Dave Clayes • Site: Academy Uptown Lanes. The center relocated in 2018 and is now known as Uptown Alley - a modern family entertainment complex north of the Polo Park shopping center. • This was a
five-pin edition of the show, which ran from 1979 to the mid-1980s. • The jackpot started at $200 and increased by $15 per contestant until it was won. • Strike or spares earned $20 for the bowler and pin pal. An open frame was scored as per five pin rules and $1 per pin was awarded. • If a spare was made then a third ball would be allowed – if this ball was a strike, the prize was $40. • In the initial running of the show, if the first strike was achieved and the second strike missed, the turn was over and the prize was $20. Later on, if the first strike was achieved and the second strike missed, the bowler could attempt a spare. If the spare was made, the prize was $40. • The bowler must throw three consecutive strikes to win the jackpot. • If a third strike attempt was missed, the prize was $40. • Each 30-minute episode consisted of seven bowlers. One bowler among the seven would be selected at random as the Bonus Bowler. If the Bonus Bowler won the jackpot, they won an array of additional merchandise and services.
York-Harrisburg, Pennsylvania • Station:
WPMT Channel 43 • Host: Lou Castriota • Site: Suburban Bowlerama; York, PA • Ran from August 1984 until January 1985. ==References==