5 Feet of Fury

Hey, it was the Seventies…Chuck Barris, ‘Gong Show’ creator (and, maybe, CIA assassin) dies at 87

To understand America in the 1970s, you have to study the Gong Show.

(And Confessions of a Dangerous Mind is a terrific movie, and Sam Rockwell’s performance spine-tinglingly eerie.)

NYT:

The show featured a series of performers, most of them amateurs, and a panel of three celebrity judges. Mr. Barris himself was the brash, irritating host.

The performers, who were often terrible, would be allowed to go on until one of the judges couldn’t stand it anymore and sounded a gong, putting an end to the spectacle. Those who weren’t gonged were rated by the judges on a 1-to-10 scale. In keeping with the ridiculousness of the proceedings, the prize amount they vied for was ridiculous: $516.32 on the daytime version of the show, $712.05 on the prime-time edition.

The show, which ran on NBC until 1978 and then in syndication (with revivals in later years), became a cultural sensation. Critics complained about its crassness and cruelty, but Mr. Barris, like purveyors of burlesque and circus sideshows in earlier generations, knew there was a large audience for lowbrow. At one point the daytime version was attracting 78 percent of viewers 18 to 49.