'', circa 2016 Robinson and Toyne considered making
Balderdash into a television game show as early as 1986. While in California to pursue her acting career, Robinson met Rachel Nelson and Elizabeth Bryan, who were both newly divorced and working on books about divorce. The three created a board game, initially called
Embracing Divorce, which involved collecting charms representing items like love, hope and giving, that went on a "count your blessings"
charm bracelet. The three successfully marketed the resulting "Count Your Blessings" jewelry on
QVC cable television, but the board game took longer. In 2009, the makers of the
Chicken Soup for the Soul books agreed to publish the revised game, now called
Count Your Blessings, in conjunction with the book
Chicken Soup for the Soul: Count Your Blessings, which Robinson and Bryan contributed to writing. In 2006, after returning to Canada from Hollywood, Robinson created the game
Identity Crisis (stylized as
!dentity Crisis?) with graphic designer Patrick Lightheart and Richard Gerrits, her
talent agent. It is also based on a parlor game, where teammates try to guess the name of a celebrity based on a limited number of clues. The show involved contestants paired with celebrities trying to answer questions about pop culture. It was proposed to
CBS in 2011, as
Identity Crisis, after the board game which Cox and Arquette played often. The show's host
Craig Ferguson, hosted the
late night talk show The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson on the same network. It ended up premiering in
broadcast syndication in September 2014, distributed by
Debmar-Mercury and
FremantleMedia. Making a complete circle from board game to game show and back,
Celebrity Name Game also became a board game released by
PlayMonster in 2016.
Celebrity Name Game ran for three seasons, into 2017, winning Ferguson two consecutive
Daytime Emmy Awards as best game show host in 2015 and 2016. An
Australian version of Celebrity Name Game, hosted by
Grant Denyer, aired from 2019 to 2020. Katie Kildahl, an assistant on
Celebrity Name Game, had invented a ribald dice game about
penis size that the show's production crew played. Robinson and Gerrits joined her to submit the game to PlayMonster, which published it as
Size Matters in 2017. == Writing ==