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Joe
Farago
Bankrupt host for a bankrupt show

Host: Break the Bank (1985-1986)
It's really hard to be foisted
into a bad situation and try to make it good. Especially if you
are replacing a veteran host who's had enough of a producer who thinks
what he's doing is right, yet he's wrong. A veteran host who also
thinks that the format that they did should have been light-hearted when
the producer wanted it to be a serious affair, when it just looked
goofy. A veteran host who's just came off another titanic failure
of a show and hoped this show would at least be decent. Of course
I'm talking about this man.

Gene Rayburn. Gene Rayburn
was a fantastic host on such shows as Make the Connection & Match Game.
In 1983, Gene Rayburn hosted a show called The Match Game Hollywood
Squares Hour with lead singer of Sha Na Na, Jon Bauman. In
retrospect, it was a good idea, but it was really executed badly.
The show was cancelled in 1984 to make way for other programming and
Gene went home and relaxed. In 1985, Gene Rayburn signed on to do
Richard Kline's first ever foray into producing game shows, which would
turn out to be Break the Bank. When the show debuted, the writing
was already on the wall when Gene was told to take all the events they
did in the bonus game seriously. I don't know why, but having the
contestant plug a fake kitchen product, do a fake newscast or say a
tongue twister 3 times doesn't seem like something that would go across
as serious TV to me. Plus, it doesn't help that Gene, who was
nearing retirement age at the time has lost a step in the card reading
department, but I've talked enough about this. But don't worry,
I'll be coming back to this in the future. But after 13 weeks of
this, Gene quit and a replacement host had to fill the void. Enter
this guy.

Joe Farago. Now before he
was selected to host this show, Joe had bit roles in movies. More
notably, as the TV anchorman in the classic 1984 action movie, The
Terminator. What should also be noted is that he was on the very
first episode of this show as a "fast talker". Ironic, eh?
Yeah, I thought not. Now, I can easily say that he wasn't as good
as Gene was, but that's pretty obvious from watching an episode.
He tried to throw some funny lines every now and then and they wound up
more pathetic than anything else.

He was also known to do some
impersonations in the show, like a man underwater & Mickey Mouse.
Although I'd admit they were fine, they could have been a lot better.
But enough about his painful attempts at comedy, let's look at his
hosting. Well, a good host could take a bad product and make it
watchable, sorta like how Bill Cullen took stinkers like Winning
Streak and Blankety Blanks and made them watchable. Joe Farago
took a pedestrian product and made it worse.

This was also highlighted by
leading the audience and contestants in a cheer of the show's title to
toss it to commercial. Yeah, it's just as pathetic as it sounds.
Joe is also monotone for hosting this type of show. I think if
they let Gene at least be allowed to have some fun with the stunt
format, he might of not minded doing this show. But Farago seemed
bored half the time, which as a game show host cannot be. Bored
with the format, bored with the show. Although to be honest, he's
not helped here by a format done better with Password Plus & Even the
Winners Big Money Game on Sale of the Century.

After more puzzles, he then does
the bonus game, but first he explains about the power of the bank card.
He puts this thing over like the second coming of Jesus. Telling
the couple that another couple broke the bank with this very same bank
card for over $45,000. I swear, it's like if Farago would become a
pitchman for the card. You know what, that's it. He's acting
like a pitchman. An infomercial specialist. So, he continues
to sell an unworking pile of junk to the couples that this could help
them win big money.

Another thing that doesn't help
Joe Farago out is that he doesn't know how to stretch for time.
Mainly because at most, it takes about 8 or so minutes to play the front
game, about 3 to do the end game, 2 minutes for announcer Michael Hanks
to announce the prizes and fee plugs and who produced the show, leaving
Joe about 6-7 minutes to stretch for time. These moments are quite
painful to watch, even when the majority of the time is talking about
the front game and how one person helped the other person win the game.
So, with some stretching time wasted, we get to the big moment, placing
the bank card into the slot and seeing what they won.

Well, the won a ceiling fan for
the day, along with the money up front. And as Joe painfully puts
it, a ceiling fan is kind of cool. Only one picture can sum up my
feelings for that joke.

Thank you High.
And to add to the crappy pun
parade, ratings were anything but high for the show and Joe was out of a
job in September of 1986 when Richard Kline decided to ditch Break the
Bank and make Strike it Rich. So what did happen to Joe Farago?
Well, guess what. He became an ace pitchman. He can
currently be seen every day, if you look hard enough selling the GT
Xpress line of countertop cooking appliances, with Ms. Pudding Head
herself Cathy Mitchell. I've seen both of them and I remember the
first one where Joe said he kept on having brain lapses about Garlic
Bread. Leading to this picture when Cathy told Joe that the Garlic
Bread will not burn.

He probably had this same look
on his face after he just got the gig for Frankenstein: The College
Years.
(Thanks to Infomercial Agony for
the use of the Joe Garlic Bread picture.)
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