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Hold Everything!
Hidden Cameras, Pat Bullard & C Listers, what more could you Ask For?

Syndication: (June
1990 - August 1990)
There are certain types of game
shows that are quite endearing to the game show public. One of
those is the stunt show. Going back to Beat the Clock, and
evolving to Almost Anything Goes, Double Dare, among others of that ilk.
The shows that I just listed are classics. However, there has
always been 1 type of show that drove people to absolute madness...The
Hidden Camera Game Show.
Ah yes, the Hidden Camera Game
Show. The basic premise is pretty much that you'd watch a
situation unfold for about 2-3 minutes and be bored out of your mind,
then the video freezes and then you have to predict what would happen
next. Many shows have tried to make this type of show interesting,
but all of them have failed. But the worst of these types of shows
has to belong in the Summer of Crap that was 1990 that brought us a ton
of pain. How much pain, let me count the ways as we present Hold
Everything!
So, let's see who's hosting
this....

AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!
So, already we're going to be
suffering. Yes, that's Pat Bullard. Don't let the late 80s
mulletlicious hairstyle fool you. That is still the smarmy worm
that I roasted in the Card Sharks 2001 induction. With this being
11 years earlier, he was just as bad, if not worse. I need to
remind myself to do a full-scale induction on Pat Bullard in the future.
In the beginning of the show, Pat Bullard said that "We'd be surprised
and entertained as we reveal how people really are." He'd be
better off by saying, "We're going to be showing you a bunch of unfunny
segments and our celebs are going to be just as uninteresting. I
mean, I'm one smarmy pile of goo and the only reason I got this job is
because nobody else wanted this job anyways."

Now, the set. The Set has
to be one of the cheapest sets I've seen. I mean, it's mainly made
up of 3 cheap barcaloungers from 1979, some Ikea bookshelves, a table
with 3 2-digit egg-crate readouts built into it. Oh, and a big
chair that Pat would hover over, but never sit in. I think the
only set cheaper at that time was another Dan Enright disaster in All
About The Opposite Sex, which I'll get into sometime soon. But back to
Hold Everything! I could make a game show out of my own house and
it would be a much better looking set than this. I mean, when the
best looking thing about the set is the readouts, then you've gone way
below expectations.
The gameplay is equally as
stupid as the set & Pat Bullard. The celebrities...yeah, I forgot.
This show features celebrities instead of regular contestants. I
guess Dan Enright couldn't be bothered to get real contestants to play
the game, so he had to pay bottom dollar to movers and shakers in the
industry like...

Frank Bonner, who's best days
were back in 1982....

Anne Bloom, who starred in Not
Necessarily the News during its dying days....

And Hal Williams who played
third banana to Jackee Harry on 227. So, we got ourselves a
C-Lister bonanza here.

Ok, now I should get back to the
gameplay, if you can call it that. It's pretty much like I
described in the opening. A hidden camera bit was being shown to
the celebrities. Now this was supposed to lead up to some
hilarious situation, but since we can't get that in any show that Pat
Bullard does, It just leads to some stupid stuff. For example,
this bit was filmed at a dentists office. The lady on your left is
the suspect, just keep tha...ah, screw it. I'll just skip to the
end. The dentist who looks like someone who they pulled out of
central casting wants to pull out a tooth the old fashioned way: by rope
and yanking it. He then asks if the lady will help and then...

Yeah, we get a very stupid Hold
Everything! soundbyte by Larry Van Nuys. I would actually put it
up on here, but I decided against it via better judgment. Also,
the show is too toxic to put up anywhere, video or audio wise.
Yes, it's that insipid and horrific.

So now, we get the celebs
discussing about it and each celeb has to decide if the person will go
along with the person or not. Yeah, it's just as boring as it
sounds.
And you pretty much seen the
entire show. That's all the show is. It just repeats for a
couple more times until 4 situations are shown and the celebrity who did
the best won $1,000 for their favorite charity. I mean, in 1990,
$1,000 was peanuts, especially when shows like Wheel of Fortune,
Jeopardy, Classic Concentration, Family Feud and pretty much every
single cable game show on at that time were giving away more. I
mean, Make The Grade gave away at most, $1,100 in cash, plus a trip,
which was about another $1,100 or something like that.
I'm glad that's over.
Bullard's smarminess and godawful haircut, paired up with the worst
concept in game show history, and C-listers galore make for possibly the
worst show in 1990. How long did this utter pile of garbage last?
9 Weeks. That's right, 9 Weeks! So, not only is it one of
the worst game shows in history, but it's one of the shortest lived.
This wouldn't be the end for Pat Bullard, as he would have his own talk
show on E! and go on to host Love Connection in 1998. Dan Enright
would go on to produce TTD 90 before retiring from TV shortly
afterwards.
If this doesn't seem like my
best work, then I apologize. The first time I saw this show, I was
extremely angry at the crap quality of it all. Everything from Pat
Bullard's messed up hair, to the cheap set ripped from a Kmart Showroom,
to the C-Grade celebrities, to the theme song, among everything else
about this show. If You're a trader, don't ask for this show.
You'll be better off for not watching this.
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