Tic-Tac-Dough is an American television game show based on the paper-and-pencil game of tic-tac-toe. Contestants answer trivia questions to put up their respective symbol, X or O, on a tic-tac-toe board. Four versions were produced: the initial 1956–59 run on NBC, a 1978–86 run initially on CBS and then in first-run syndication, a syndicated run in 1990, and a 2025 revival on Game Show Network. The show was produced by Barry & Enright Productions. However, the rights to the format are controlled by NBCUniversal.
Jack Barry, the co-producer, was the original host of the 1950s version, followed by Gene Rayburn and then Bill Wendell, with Jay Jackson and Win Elliot hosting prime time adaptations as well. Wink Martindale hosted the network and syndicated version beginning in 1978, but left the program to host and co-produce Headline Chasers and was replaced by Jim Caldwell for the 1985–86 season. Patrick Wayne hosted the 1990 version. In April 2024, GSN announced another revival, to be hosted by Brooke Burns, which premiered on April 14, 2025.
The gameboard on the original 1950s series used rolling drums (each containing the same nine categories) to display subject categories, with light displays beneath them to indicate X's and O's. When Tic-Tac-Dough was revived in 1978, the gameboard was made up of nine Apple II systems connected to individual to represent each game screen, all linked to a central Altair 8800 computer, which displayed the categories, X's and O's, bonus game numbers and amounts, and a dragon, in addition to a moving screensaver and custom messages; it was the first game show to use computerized graphics.
On the original 1950s Tic-Tac-Dough, a winning contestant played until either he/she was defeated or elected to stop; the new champion's initial winnings would be deducted from the outgoing champion's final total. On the 1978 CBS series, contestants played until either being defeated or reaching the network's $25,000 total winnings limit. The syndicated series allowed contestants to play until defeated, and for every five matches that they won, champions were rewarded with a new automobile.
As questions are answered correctly, a money amount is added to a "pot", or amount of money awarded to the winner.
1956–59, NBC Daytime, 1978, CBS | $200 | $100 |
1957–58, NBC Nighttime | $500 | $300 |
1978–86, Syndicated | $300 | $200 |
1990, Syndicated | $1,000 | $500 |
For each tie game before being defeated, losing challengers received $100 on the 1950s version and $250 from 1979 to 1986; champions who eventually lost the match after a tie game did not receive any additional money.
On the GSN version, there are three rounds of play. For the first two rounds, each category is a multiple-choice question with three answers. In round one, each correct answer is worth 100 points, and a Tic-Tac-Dough is worth 500 points. In round two, the points are doubled, and one category is worth double points. An incorrect answer changes the box chosen into a new category and finding the dragon hidden on the board forfeits the contestant's turn. In round three, each contestant has their own board of nine categories and 60 seconds to get as many Tic-Tac-Doughs as possible. Each correct answer is worth 300 points, and a Tic-Tac-Dough is worth 1,000 points. An incorrect answer blocks that box and finding the dragon costs the contestant 5 seconds. The contestant with the most points at the end of the game wins $1,000 and plays the bonus round; otherwise, in case of a tie, a sudden-death question in a pre-determined category will be read to the players, and whoever buzzes in with the correct answer takes the $1,000 and advances; an incorrect response gives the opponent the opportunity to win it; however, should the other player miss, the procedure is repeated until someone wins it.
Finding both TIC and TAC constituted an automatic victory, awarding the prize package and increasing the pot to $1,000. If the dragon was found, the game ended immediately and the contestant forfeited the money. After any safe choice, the contestant had the option to stop the game and keep the money. For a brief period in 1983, a contestant had to accumulate exactly $1,000 or find TIC and TAC, but this requirement was quickly eliminated.
Three of one symbol and four of the other were hidden on the board, arranged so that a Tic-Tac-Dough could be achieved with only one of them. If the champion chose the other symbol, they could only win the prize by finding the Dragon Slayer. Regardless of the outcome, the entire board was revealed at the end of the round.
Although champions remained on the show until defeated, a cap was placed on their overall winnings from 1982 until 1984 as noted above. This was done after CBS, by way of acquiring Tic-Tac-Dough for its flagship station WCBS-TV in New York, became the program’s network-of-record; this meant that the show, as well as its Barry & Enright stablemate The Joker's Wild had been a year earlier when CBS did the same thing for that series, was subjected to network standards and practices. At the time, CBS had set a $50,000 winnings limit for all game shows broadcast over its airwaves, with any overage being donated to a charity of the champion’s choice.
Beginning on September 12, 1956, Barry began hosting Twenty-One in Primetime. The show was initially on Wednesday nights but quickly moved to Thursday nights. At this point, Gene Rayburn began hosting Tic-Tac-Dough on Fridays. Twenty-One later moved to Monday nights in February, 1957, and Barry once again hosted the show all five days of the week. Barry left the show and was replaced by announcer Bill Wendell on October 6, 1958. Wendell hosted the show, with the announcing taken over by Bill McCord, until its demise on October 23, 1959.
A nighttime version, produced in color, played for bigger stakes aired from September 12, 1957, to December 29, 1958. Jay Jackson was the original host, and was replaced by Win Elliot on October 2, 1958, for the duration of the show's nighttime run. Johnny Olson filled in as both host and announcer at varying points on this version.
Tic-Tac-Dough did not go unscathed before its cancellation. The April 3, 1958 episode featuring U.S. military serviceman Michael O'Rourke winning over $140,000 became one key subject of the federal grand jury investigating the quiz fixing. That run occurred during Jay Jackson's tenure as host. Jackson was never implicated in any wrongdoing himself, and he had left the show well before the quiz investigations began, but he never again hosted a television game show. The same could not be said for Tic-Tac-Dough producer Howard Felsher. Felsher was in charge of all facets of the show's production, including selecting contestants. One of them, sixteen-year-old Kirsten Falke, auditioned as a folk singer. This led her to the offices of Tic-Tac-Dough producer Felsher, who provided Kirsten with the answers and hints to win on the show and a promise to showcase her talent and sing. "I botched it up", said Kirsten. She requested her categories in the wrong order and, as a result, walked away with a paltry $800. A grand jury subpoenaed Kirsten to testify, and Felsher implored her to lie. Felsher admitted to Congress that he urged roughly 30 former show contestants and all of his production staff to lie to the grand jury, and that he had himself lied under oath. Felsher also estimated that about 75% of the nighttime Tic-Tac-Dough run had been rigged. Felsher was fired in the fallout of the quiz show scandals by NBC,As reported in the May 19, 1959 Time article but later resurfaced as a producer for Goodson-Todman Productions in the 1970s and 1980s.
The daytime show was unaffected, and host Gene Rayburn suffered no damage to his career. After Tic-Tac-Dough, he went to Goodson-Todman, where on December 31, 1962, he began the first of his hosting assignments of Match Game.
However, the CBS TTD ran only nine weeks because of the high popularity of its competition on NBC, Card Sharks. It was replaced by daytime repeats of All in the Family, which had already been running on CBS for about two and a half years. When it was cancelled by CBS, TTD had averaged a 3.9 rating/21 share through July 28, and had a clearance rate of 84%. TTD was one of numerous failed attempts by CBS to find a suitable lead-in to The Price Is Right, by then a daytime institution; it was not until The New $25,000 Pyramid and Press Your Luck arrived in 1982 and 1983, respectively, that the network finally succeeded in that effort.
On September 18, a nighttime version premiered in first-run syndication, where it aired in some markets as a companion series to Joker, which went into an off-network version the previous season. This was a nearly identical situation to a 1976 game packaged by Barry and Enright, Break the Bank, which was hurriedly put into syndication after ABC cancelled it just three months into a daytime run in order to expand two of the network's daytime serials; the syndicated version ran during the 1976–77 season.
Wink Martindale hosted Tic-Tac-Dough for its first seven seasons, then left on May 24, 1985, to host his new creation, Headline Chasers. Jim Caldwell took over as host on September 23, 1985, and hosted until the series finale on May 23, 1986. Jay Stewart served as announcer for the first three years. Charlie O'Donnell replaced Stewart in 1981 (O'Donnell had taken over the same position from Stewart on the other two Barry & Enright produced game shows The Joker's Wild and Bullseye) and would continue the role until the series ended in 1986. Occasional substitutes for those announcers included Johnny Gilbert (including the syndicated premiere), Bob Hilton, Mike Darow, John Harlan, and Art James.
In an interview, Martindale stated that while the CBS version began airing Barry & Enright Productions secured a spot to air a syndicated version that began in the fall. The CBS version ended due to poor ratings, but the syndicated version drew high numbers and as a result had an eight-year run.
Throughout its eight-year run, the show used its theme song entitled "Crazy Fun", which was composed by Hal Hidey. From 1978 to the end of 1980, the show was recorded at CBS Television City in Hollywood in studio 31 and studio 43 at different times. From 1981 to 1984 and again for the final season from 1985 to 1986, the show was taped at the studios of KCOP (also known as Chris Craft Studios). The 1984–85 season was taped at The Production Group Studios, while Chris Craft Studios was getting an overhaul.
Beginning around early 1979, every Friday was "Hat Day", where Martindale received hats from viewers to show off at the end of the show. Some were winter hats, and some even dealt with the show (such as having a picture of a dragon on them). He also wore hats on the Friday shows of Las Vegas Gambit, which he was also hosting on NBC at the time, requiring Martindale to commute between Los Angeles and Las Vegas for over a year.
The gameboard, designed by Bob Bishop of Apple Computer, Inc., was driven by nine Apple II computers, each one responsible for displaying a single box of the gameboard, and in turn controlled by an Altair 8800 system. It was one of the first uses of computer graphics on a television game show.
As noted above, Patrick Wayne hosted, while Larry Van Nuys announced with Art James substituting for two weeks. The 1990 revival was one of four game shows to premiere on September 10, 1990, with five premiering altogether for the season. Like the other four series, however, Tic-Tac-Dough did not find an audience. The series was the first of the five to be cancelled, airing its final new episode on December 7, 1990, after thirteen weeks. Three months of reruns followed and the show aired for the last time on March 8, 1991.
Tic-Tac-Dough | Chuck Faulkner | Nine Network | 1960–1964 | |
Tick-Tack-Quiz | Fritz Benscher | ARD | 1958–1967 | |
Tic-Tac-Toe | Michael "Goofy" Förster | RTLplus | 1992 | |
X-0 da Dinero | Salvador Nasralla | Televicentro | 1990–present | |
Tak-Tik-BOOM | Dede Yusuf | RCTI | 1992–1998 | |
Charles Bonar Sirait (Season 2) | 2010 | |||
Arie Untung (Season 3) | ||||
Teletris | Roberto Stampa Silvio Noto | Programma Nazionale | 1962–1964 | |
Telebum | Silvio Noto | 1965 | ||
Kółko i krzyżyk | Bolesław Kielski | Telewizja Polska | 1961–1975 | |
X-O da dinero | Juan Viñas | TVE | 1959–1960 | |
Criss Cross Quiz | Jeremy Hawk Barbara Kelly | ITV | June 7, 1957 – September 22, 1967 | |
Junior Criss Cross Quiz | Jeremy Hawk Chris Kelly Bob Holness Mike Sarne Chris Howland Gordon Luck Peter Wheeler Bill Grundy Danny Blanchflower Barbara Kelly | November 13, 1957 – June 29, 1967 | ||
Tic-Tac-Dough | Jack Barry (1956–1958) Gene Rayburn (1956–1957, Fridays only) Jay Jackson (1957–1958, primetime) Win Elliott (1958, primetime) Bill Wendell (1958–1959) | NBC | 1956–1959 | |
(The New) Tic-Tac-Dough | Wink Martindale | CBS | Summer 1978 | |
Tic-Tac-Dough | Wink Martindale Jim Caldwell | Syndication | 1978–1985 1985–1986 | |
Patrick Wayne | 1990 | |||
Brooke Burns | Game Show Network | April 14, 2025 – present |
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