During
World War II, the show frequently went on tours from its
New York City base to promote the buying of
war bonds. Instead of the usual cash prize, a question writer would win a bond. The show received several awards as an outstanding radio quiz show. It is also believed to be the earliest example of the
panel game genre. The program was so popular that, from 1939 to 1943, excerpts of 18 radio broadcasts were filmed and released by
RKO Pictures as a series of
theatrical shorts. Two card games based on the series were also released, as was a 1939 tie-in quiz book from
Simon & Schuster. The show was satirized by the zany panel of radio's
It Pays to Be Ignorant, which likewise enjoyed a successful radio run from 1942 to 1951. In 1947, Golenpaul edited the
Information Please Almanac, a reference book which continued through the years in different formats (including the website Infoplease). The program was mentioned by name in the 1949 film
A Letter to Three Wives, as well as the 1944 film
The Eve of St. Mark. At the start of the 1942 movie
Woman of the Year,
Spencer Tracy's character enters a bar and hears on the radio
Katharine Hepburn's character appearing on
Information Please. ==Television==