A wide variety of games and sketches were featured, including: •
Three Sewer Monte - Angelo Antonelli (who always pronounced the "three" in the game's title as "tree") chose a member of the audience to pull the string on one of three pipes hanging overhead. If the right one was chosen, it was worth a prize; otherwise, the audience member would have "spiders primavera" (a mix of rubber spiders and spaghetti) dumped on their head. •
The Dream Date Game - A parody of
The Dating Game, in which a bachelorette asked questions of three potential bachelors (one of whom was always Cantone in disguise). •
Where In the World? - Kids attempted to identify world landmarks to win prizes. •
Steampipe Theatre - Cantone (as "Cecil B. DeMario") would serve as acting coach to a group of kids as they attempted to re-enact scenes from a well known film or play. •
Cream the Teach - Two kids from a local school were given 30 seconds to throw pies at one of their teachers (whose head was stuck through a prop wall); if they managed to land one directly in the teacher's face, they won a prize for their school. •
Something to Think About - In one of the show's few semi-serious segments, neighborhood kid Richie Morales would relate a story to the audience, typically involving himself and his friends, intended to offer genuine advice on handling real-life situations. •
Eye In the Pie - A kid contestant was given 30 seconds to find Sammy Sammy Jr's
glass eye inside a pie in order to win a prize. For the show's
Thanksgiving episodes, this segment became
Eye In the Stuffing, with the search taking place inside a bowl of stuffing. •
Out of Gas - Italian tenor Poochano Pavarachi would lead a group of kids in a flatulence-themed
Musical chairs variant, where all the chairs were equipped with
whoopee cushions; the sole survivor would win a prize. •
The National Gallery of Excuses - Cantone would read various excuses for childhood offenses (not finishing homework, etc.), as sent in by home viewers; those whose excuses were read on-air received a prize. •
At the Alley - A takeoff of TV's
At the Movies, snooty critic Rex Can Read would offer a scathing review of a well-known nursery rhyme or fairy tale, which was typically at odds with that of his more agreeable fellow critic, young Bill Getsharassed (a parody of
Bill Harris). •
Mystery Guest - Based on the long-running panel game ''
What's My Line?'', a blindfolded panel of three audience members attempted to guess the identity of a celebrity by asking "yes" or "no" questions, with each kid allowed to keep asking questions until getting a "no" answer or successfully identifying the guest; doing so was worth a prize. Among the Mystery Guests who appeared in this segment were
Morris the Cat,
Brice Beckham, and fellow WWOR host
Morton Downey Jr. •
Brain Drain - The last segment of each show; inspired by the popular kids'
game show Double Dare, two kids competed in a rapid-fire 60-second question round, and the player with the high score won a prize and went on to run an
obstacle course for the chance at the day's grand prize. == External links ==