High Rollers

http://dbpedia.org/resource/High_Rollers an entity of type: Thing

High Rollers is an American television game show that involved contestants trying to win prizes by rolling dice. The format was based on the dice game shut the box. High Rollers debuted on July 1, 1974, as part of NBC's daytime lineup. In September 1975, an accompanying series was launched in syndication and aired once weekly on local stations. Both of these series ended in 1976, with the daytime series ending on June 11, 1976. Alex Trebek was the host for these series. On April 24, 1978, NBC brought High Rollers back with Trebek hosting and aired it until June 20, 1980, when it was one of three series cancelled to make room for The David Letterman Show. The series was produced by Heatter-Quigley Productions. rdf:langString
rdf:langString High Rollers
xsd:integer 2013115
xsd:integer 1117396085
rdf:langString Title card from the 1987-88 syndicated series
rdf:langString Merrill Heatter Productions
rdf:langString Heatter-Quigley Productions
rdf:langString Century Towers Productions
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString Jerome Shaw
rdf:langString Orion Television Syndication
rdf:langString Rhodes Productions
rdf:langString Bob Quigley
xsd:date 1974-07-01
xsd:date 1978-04-24
xsd:date 1987-09-14
xsd:date 1988-09-09
rdf:langString Burbank, California
rdf:langString Hollywood, California
rdf:langString Dean Goss
xsd:integer 185 559
<second> 1560.0
rdf:langString Stan Worth
rdf:langString High Rollers is an American television game show that involved contestants trying to win prizes by rolling dice. The format was based on the dice game shut the box. High Rollers debuted on July 1, 1974, as part of NBC's daytime lineup. In September 1975, an accompanying series was launched in syndication and aired once weekly on local stations. Both of these series ended in 1976, with the daytime series ending on June 11, 1976. Alex Trebek was the host for these series. On April 24, 1978, NBC brought High Rollers back with Trebek hosting and aired it until June 20, 1980, when it was one of three series cancelled to make room for The David Letterman Show. The series was produced by Heatter-Quigley Productions.
<minute> 26.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 19385
xsd:date 1988-09-09
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 185 559
xsd:date 1974-07-01
xsd:date 1978-04-24
xsd:date 1987-09-14
xsd:double 1560.0

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