The Tennis Elbow Foot Game

(A short paragraph in one of the newspaper obits leads to this.)
(Broadcast)
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== Broadcast ==
== Broadcast ==
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BBC Home Service and Radio 4, 4 October 1966 - 30 April 1968 (approx. 30 programmes in 2 series)
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BBC Home Service and Radio 4, 4 October 1966 to 7 May 1968 (39 episodes in 2 series)
BBC2, 14 July - 3 October 1968 (10 programmes)
BBC2, 14 July - 3 October 1968 (10 programmes)
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== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==

Revision as of 08:22, 7 April 2011

Contents

Host

unknown

Broadcast

BBC Home Service and Radio 4, 4 October 1966 to 7 May 1968 (39 episodes in 2 series)

BBC2, 14 July - 3 October 1968 (10 programmes)

Synopsis

A competitive word association game. The chairman throws out a word, such as tennis. One panellist comes up with a word linked to tennis, such as elbow, as in tennis elbow. The other player must link to elbow, for instance foot, as in parts of the body. Points are won if the opposition cannot come up with a word within the short time limit, if they could not convince the chairman of a link between their words, or if they repeated themselves.

The inventor, David Hatch, used the idea again for one of the rounds on I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, the antidote to panel games. In their version, the object is to provide words that are completely unrelated to each other.

No episodes of The Tennis Elbow Foot Game survive in the BBC Sound Archive. The BBC Treasure Hunt would welcome any off-air recordings.

The information we have for this programme is uncertain or incomplete. If you have any other information to add to this entry, please send it to us using the Feedback form below. Thank you!

Inventor

David Hatch

Feedback

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