The Joker's Wild

1968 Pilot Spiel: "Welcome to "The Joker's Wild"! The only game show on television where the categories really come to life because our categories are people. Baseball, represented by Don Drysdale. Music, represented by Rosemary Clooney. Show Biz, represented by Rich Little. Homemaking, represented by Irene Ryan. Politics, represented by Pat Paulsen. These panel members will be asking questions on their own categories. And now, here's our host of our show, Allen Ludden!"

1969 Pilot Spiel: "Welcome to "The Joker's Wild"! Television's newest game show where the players really determine their own fate by spinning our category wheels. The categories on the first game are Space, Etiquette, Baseball, Cooking, Movies. And now, here's the host of our show, Allen Ludden!"

CBS Version Spiel (1972): "From Television City in Hollywood, CBS presents America's most exciting new show, "The Joker's Wild"! Now here's the host of our show, Jack Barry!"

70s and 80s Spiel: "From (Television City in) Hollywood, here's the game where knowledge is king, and lady luck is queen. It's "The Joker's Wild"! And now, here's our host, Jack Barry/Jim Peck/Bill Cullen!"

1990-1991 Spiel: "Welcome (back) to the game where knowledge is king, and lady luck is queen, It's (the return of) "The Joker's Wild"! And now, here's your host, Pat Finn!"

A quiz based game show also based on slots.

In olden days, it was the show where categories are presented by spinning a slot machine.

Several categories are in the mix and after choosing a category, you answer a question related to it to get money.

One category showing is worth single amount, two of the same category is worth double the amount and three of the same is worth triple. Also, there is one Joker space on each reel, the player has the choice of making the joker any category or by selecting one of the others and the joker.

The show went through three versions.

1968 Pilot
In this pilot shot on December 8, 1968 and hosted by Password host Allen Ludden, the giant slot machine had categories that "came to life", because the categories were represented by five celebrity guests. They were:


 * Irene Ryan - Homemaking
 * Pat Paulsen - Politics
 * Don Drysdale - Baseball
 * Rosemary Clooney - Music
 * Rich Little - Show Biz

Two contestants faced the panel of five celebrities and the slot machine with their faces representing the five categories on it's wheels, and jokers. What makes this version of Joker's Wild different is that contestants don't have to answer just one question, they can also answer two or three. They each took turns pulling the lever in front of them to activate the celebrity wheels. When they stop, the player in control can choose which celebrity/celebrities to take. Before each question the contestant in control can choose to either take the question(s) or pass it/them to his/her opponent. Whoever star was chosen, the panelist will then ask a question or questions under his/her own category in which correct answers scored points according to how many of any celebrity appeared. One of each celebrity made each question worth one point; two of one celebrity, and one of another made the value of each question be two points; and finally, three of a single celebrity made each question worth three points. Now should the contestant in control miss a question, the opposing player had a chance to answer a bonus question from the last celebrity to read a question. There were also jokers on the wheels, and like the show says, "The Joker's Wild"; the player in control can make the joker(s) into any category/celebrity they like whether it's on the board or not. Both players took an equal number of turns and the first player to score 13 points wins the game. Should the first contestant make it 13 or more first, the other contestant had one last spin in an attempt to catch-up. Finally, if at anytime three jokers appear (that's Joker, Joker, JOKER!), that player has a chance to pull off an instant win by answering one question from one category correctly.

The winner of each game won $250 and a chance to spin for three prizes of various qualities, ranging from a 5¢ piece of chewing gum to $500 cash. The winning contestant took up to three spins of the wheels, on each spin, three prizes were displayed. After the first spin, the winner can either keep the first set of three, or reject them all for another spin. On the second set of three the winning player can either keep the those prizes, or reject them all for one final spin, and whatever the champ got on the third & final spin was his/hers to keep.

There were no returning champions in this pilot. Two new contestants every game.

1969 Pilot
A second pilot was taped a month later on January 5, 1969. There were no celebrities this time, with Ludden simply reading the questions himself; despite this change, the 1968 host-contestant podium remained in use.

Both pilots were produced by Barry in association with CBS, with Lee Vines announcing.

1970 (The Honeymoon Game)
This was a different version of The Joker's Wild; for it was played with celebrities & recently married couples, and was supposedly a 1 1/2 hour show, but instead it became an hour long show.

1971 KTLA Series
A "tryout series" aired locally on Los Angeles' KTLA for about three months and was hosted by Jack Barry. The rules were similar to the rules below with the following exceptions:

Three contestants competed in each game, with the champion spinning first to begin the game. Spinning three different categories and answering a question in any of the three categories was worth $25, while pairs were worth $50 and triples were worth $100. $250 was needed to win, and as before an equal amount of turns was given. A three-Joker spin resulted in an automatic win with a correct response to a question from any of the five categories in play.

In the event of a tie, the lowest scorer was eliminated and play continued until one was ahead after each round. The bonus round was similar to that of the Ludden pilots but had more elaborate prizes.

Highlights of this version were shown during promos of the eventual series, which began production on CBS in 1972.

1972-1986 Version
In this more familiar version, two contestants faced a giant slot machine & answered questions. On those wheels are five categories. Each player in turn pulled a lever in front of them which caused the category wheels to spin. When the wheels stopped, that player was given a choice of up to three categories. Host Barry asked a question under that category and a correct answer won money for that player; but an incorrect answer gave the opponent a chance to steal the money by answering the same question. Question values were determined by how many of that category appeared. A single category was worth $50, a double category/pair was worth $100, and a triple was worth $200 (originally $150). The first player to reach $500 or more won the game. Also on the wheels were jokers, they're wild (hence the name of the show). The contestants can match up the joker with any category they chose, and they can also use the joker(s) to go off the board, and select a different category. But if at anytime three jokers come up (that's Joker, Joker, JOKER!), that player can instantly win the game by answering one question from one category correctly; however, if unsuccessful, the opponent could not steal and the game continued as normal. Originally the player would automatically win without answering a question by getting three jokers. Both players took an equal number of turns, in the event the first player (originally the champion, later the challenger) reached $500 first, the second player took one final spin in an attempt to catch-up. In the event of a tie at $500, extra rounds were played and whoever was ahead in score at the end of a complete round was the winner. The winner of the game kept his/her money and earned a chance to play the bonus game.

These are the many post 1978 pictures of categories.

Special categories
Special categories were presented during the syndicated era.


 * Multiple Choice Introduced in 1978, a player is given three possible answers to a general knowledge question, and had to choose the correct answer.
 * Near the end of the CBS run and for the first half of the new syndicated version's 1977-78 season, all questions were multiple-choice, except for some visual categories.
 * Pot Luck - A question from any of the other four categories in the game.
 * Grab Bag - A straight-forward general knowledge question.
 * Who, What, or Where? - self explanatory
 * A to Z/Alphabet Soup - In this category, the host announced a letter which the correct answer began with, then he read the question, and all the contestant had to do was to give the correct answer beginning with that letter (ala Blockbusters).
 * This particular category was also used on sister shows Tic Tac Dough & Bullseye. On Tic Tac it was called "Take a Letter", and on Bullseye it was called "It's the Letter ___!".
 * Crossword Definitions - The host would announce the number of letters in a word and read a definition pertaining to that word. The contestant must guess what the word is associated with that definition.
 * What's Missin_? - A sentence pertaining to a phrase or a title, or a list, was read and the contestant's job is to fill in the missing word or complete the list.
 * Today's Name Is... - Questions in this category pertain to a famous person, actor/actress, etc.
 * Fact or Foto - The host gave the subject to the answer, then the player had to choose to hear a fact about the answer to a question or to see a photo of the answer. An incorrect response gave their opponent both the fact and photo before answering.
 * How Low Will You Go? - This was played similar to "Bid A Note" on Name That Tune. A question with a list of eight clues was asked and the players bid-off as to how few clues (s)he would need to answer it. A wrong answer meant the opponent was supplied with all the clues before giving an answer.
 * Just One More - Identical to the "Auction" category on Tic-Tac-Dough, both players bid on a question with multiple answers. The highest bidder gets control. If the player completes the bid the player gets the money. If the player fails, the opponent has to provide just one answer from the list to earn the money.
 * Take a Chance - Identical to the "Challenge Category" on Tic-Tac-Dough, the host reads a question and the player decides to play & answer the question him/herself or take a chance by letting the opponent answer it. If the opponent gets the question wrong, the first player gets the money. If the player decides to answer and gets it wrong, the opponent gets the money.

Special Scoring Questions
These are categories affected the scoring of the game.
 * Mystery(?) - Identical to the "Secret Category" on Tic-Tac-Dough, this category debuted on the premiere episode in 1977, and lasted until after the 8th season. If & when the contestant spun & picked the category, the question was played for double value. These were seven vertical cards marked with question marks (?) on the front of the host's podium numbered from 1 to 7, representing seven mystery categories. The contestant chose one of those cards, then the host would announce the category (not one of the other 4) and read the question, with a correct answer earning the player $100, $200, or $400 depending on the spin. On occasion, the Mystery Category questions could be multiple-choice.
 * Fast Forward ____________- This is the only special category that lasted throughout the entire syndicated series, and all the questions in that game came from one subject. This was where the player can answer as many questions as he/she wished, with the option to stop after each correct answer. Stopping was important, because if at any time the player in control gave a wrong answer, he/she lost all the accumulated money won back to the starting score and gave the opponent a chance to answer the missed question for the face value ($50, $100, or $200). This was usually an alternative to three jokers, when someone really trailing behind needed to catch up.
 * Stumpers - Introduced in 1983, "stumpers" were all questions missed by both players from previous shows. The player who spun & chose the category could elect to answer the question for single value after the host gave the two wrong answers given by those two players or go for double the dollar value by answering the question without any help. Originally, the category was a straightforward question from any category, with $100 added to the value of the question, making the question worth $150, $200, or $300.
 * Bid __________ Debuted during Barry's final season. A player had to answer a certain amount of questions (similar to the format of Bullseye) to win the money times the number of questions required. To start, the player chose how many questions they would like to answer (with a minimum bid of two), with the value of the spin multiplied by the amount of the bid. Should the first player miss the question, his/her opponent can complete the bid themselves by answering the remaining questions correctly. An incorrect answer by the opponent ended the questioning and that player would spin on their proper turn for another category. Like "Fast Forward", the category can be used to catch up if trailing; unlike "Fast Forward", however, the accumulated money was not lost if the question was missed, allowing the opponent to steal the accumulated money by providing the last correct answer.
 * Choose the Clues - The host reveals the subject for the question and the opponent decides if the player in control would be given one or two clues. One clue was worth double the amount while two clues was worth the regular amount. If the spinning player is given only one clue and misses, the opponent is given both clues for the regular amount and the chance to answer.

Natural Triple
In the syndicated version of the show, contestants won a bonus for spinning a natural triple in the main game in addition to answering a question worth $200. From 1977 to 1983, contestants who spun a natural triple won a special prize which was kept win or lose. Beginning in the fall of 1983, contestant who spun a natural triple won a special jackpot called the "Natural Triple Jackpot" which was an accumulating jackpot prize package. Prizes were kept regardless of the game's outcome.

Bonus Game
The bonus game had three different versions.

The Prize Wheels
In the first two weeks of the series, the categories were replaced with prizes ranging in value from tens of dollars to hundreds of dollars. The winning contestant spun the wheels up to two times, on each spin, three prizes were displayed. After the first spin, the winner can either keep the first set of three prizes, or trade them back for one more spin, and whatever the winner got on the second spin was theirs to keep.

In the first two shows, some of the prizes were circled. If the winning player could spin three circled prizes, he/she also won a car. It was later scrapped in favor of having the car or another big prize on the wheels (usually the third).

The Prize Wheels were briefly revived during the kids' tournament in the syndicated version though it was played differently. The winning kid got to spin the wheels three times. On each spin, he/she picked which prize to take and the wheel with the chosen prize was locked while the other(s) spin as usual.

Jokers & Devils
In this bonus which premiered on the show's third week, the jokers were still on the wheels, but now they were accompanied by devils. The devils were a representation of the late host Jack Barry, plus they had a pitchfork behind them. The winning contestant spun the wheels up to three times (originally four). On each spin, if only jokers appeared (again that's joker, joker, JOKER!), he/she won a prize (the prize was generally announced before each spin, but for a brief period, it was announced after a successful spin). But if one devil showed up, he/she lost the prize(s); to prevent this from happening, after each successful spin, the contestant had a choice to stop and take the prizes or continue playing. During the four spin era, the last spin was worth a new car or another big prize.

Oddly enough, this bonus game and the previous bonus game were played in the same episode that this game debuted. The episode begun with the final playing of the Prize Wheels game, and the champion who played that one won the next main game and went on to play the first Jokers & Devils game, which he lost.

When this bonus first premiered, the jokers had the word "Wild" underneath them just like the main game. But in 1973 due to the fact that the wheels didn't change in between the bonus game & main game in one episode, the word "Wild" was replaced with the word "Joker".

For Christmas episodes, the Jokers and Devils were replaced with Santa Clauses and Scrooges. Three Santas won a prize, one Scrooge lost everything.

Face the Devil
In this bonus round, the categories & jokers were replaced by dollar values ranging from $25-$200, and devils which still resembled host Jack Barry. The winning player can take as many spins as they liked. The goal on each spin is to spin only money amounts, each time he/she did that, that contestant would win the combined total of the money amounts shown. But if at anytime a devil appeared that player would lose all the accumulated money up to that point. That's why the host gave the contestant the option to stop the game and keep whatever he/she won after each successful spin. But if the contestant can reach $1,000 or more, that player not only gets to keep the cash, but also wins a special prize package; and (starting in 1977 in the syndicated version) if the winning player can spin a natural triple (three of the same money amounts), he/she automatically wins the money & prizes.

Joker's Jackpot
In the early years of the CBS version, contestants played for an accumulating cash jackpot called the Joker's Jackpot. After each bonus game (before the bonus during a brief period), the champion could decide to either keep the money won in the main game in addition to the prizes won in the bonus game and leave the show, or play another game knowing that if the champion lost that game, the grand total of the main game winnings were lost & added to the jackpot (the bonus game prizes were not in jeopardy). Champions who won three games in a row (originally four), won the Joker's Jackpot. The Joker's Jackpot started at $2,500 and continued growing until it reached $25,000 or more since $25,000 was CBS' winnings limit at the time. Weeks later after reducing the number of wins to three, breaking the jackpot also won a brand new car. Originally champions who broke the Joker's Jackpot retired from the show, later shows had them continue playing until they lose, stop or reached the $25,000 limit, with the main game money from previous attempts at the jackpot no longer in jeopardy.

The first contestant to break the jackpot was Kathy Wexler; the jackpot at that time was $13,800. But she never won any prizes because she kept on getting beaten by the devil in the bonus game.

When the Face the Devil bonus game instituted, the Joker's Jackpot was removed entirely and champions now played for just a brand new car. To win the car contestants had to win five games in a row, and there were no more risks involved win or lose.

Tournament of Champions
For the first three years of the syndicated version, "Tournaments of Champions" were held annually, featuring 8 of the biggest winners from the previous year (for the $50,000 and $1,000,000 tournaments, the tournament field was 16). Different rules applied to Tournament of Champions play: the players played for points instead of dollars, and in the championship game, two wins out of three were needed for the top prize (3 out of 5 for both the third and fourth tournaments). In the event a natural triple was spun, $500 went to the player's favorite charity. Players drew numbers to determine who would spin the wheels first. If the player who spun first (in the challenger's podium) spun three jokers and answered a question correctly, that player's score goes to 500 points. The player who spun second (in the champion's podium) would get one final turn to tie the game in that case, or win the game if trailing by less than 200 points; so therefore in any case, both players get an equal number of turns. The player who was ahead after each completed round after the target score of 500 points was reached or exceeded was declared the winner. Also, no bonus game was played throughout the tournament; after one game was completed, another game began.

Frank Dillon won the $50,000 and $100,000 tournaments in 1977 and 1978, respectively; Eileen Jason captured the $250,000 tournament in 1979 defeating Dillon in the finals. The $50,000 was a prize package ($25,000 cash, a trip around the world, and a Chevy Nova), the $100,000 prize was a cash annuity that was paid out annually over a ten year period, and the $250,000 prize was a $200,000 annuity, plus $50,000 in prizes.

$1,000,000 Tournament
For what would turn out to be the final ToC in 1980 (due to a majority of stations being CBS O&O's who imposed their then-$25,000 limit on winners), The Joker's Wild became the first television program to advertise that it was giving away $1,000,000. It was the total purse for this ToC, whose players would split their earnings with 16 nominated charities. During this tournament, the theme to another Barry & Enright game show, the 1976 version of Break the Bank, was used instead of the regular opening and closing themes; however, the regular Joker's Wild theme was used as a bumper. Also by the time this tournament came into effect, contestants started to wear nametags, and they would continue to wear them through the end of the series. Cassandra Dooley, one of the participants, had to have her name abbreviated because it was so long.

Money Distribution
* The winner gets $25,000 a year for a decade and his/her charity gets the full $250,000. Runner-up gets $10,000 a year for a decade and the full $100,000 for his/her charity.

Rob Griffin won the $1,000,000 tournament, defeating Cassandra Dooley. Rob donated half his winnings to the March of Dimes, while Cassandra donated half her winnings to Big Brothers Big Sisters.

Audience Game
From 1981-1985 during the neon set years, at the end of every show (originally the weekending show), an audience game was played. This was where audience members got a chance to win money for themselves.

Three audience members came on down, and each one took a spin on the money wheels in which its amounts ranged from $10-$50 plus $100 spaces, for a maximum of $300 in one spin. Originally they can take up to two spins; if they liked what they saw on the first spin, they stayed with it; if not, they can reject the amount and spin again. In either case, whatever they won was theirs, and the audience player with the highest amount of money went on to spin against the devil for more cash and a bonus prize. In case of a tie, a spin-off was played to determine the winner. Any money won from the spin-off spins was added to their totals.

Cullen's Audience Game
In the eighth season when Bill Cullen took over, the rules were modified. Since Bill wasn't able to go to the studio audience due to his limpage from polio, two audience members came up on stage to play the game. The third player was a home viewer who played the game by phone; he/she had to activate the wheels using the star key (*). Other than that, most of the rules stayed the same.

1990-1991 Version
This version was entirely different from the original. Three contestants competed instead of two, and the questions were all words, phrases, and names, and the contestants' job is to come up with a definition or the meaning of the clue. Correct answers earned money and answered another clue. One mistake caused the opponents to buzz in and steal the money & control by answering the same clue. The game always began with a toss-up question for control of the joker machine.

The two survivors of round one moved on to round two, and the winner of the game moved on to the bonus game.

The show had two formats during its season-long run, with the show reverting to the first one towards the end of the run.

Format #1
The joker machine consists of dollar amounts ranging from $5-$50 with the last window consisting of a joker. Each spin decides the value of each clue. If the joker in the last window appeared, the value was tripled (maximum of $300), and the player in control had 15 seconds to answer as many clues as he/she can for the tripled value, with an incorrect answer stopping progress.

Round 1
In the first round all questions were general knowledge. To start, a jump-in clue was given and the first player to buzz in with a correct answer won control of the joker machine & the questions. The first player to reach $500 or more advanced to round two with the second place player, while the third place player was eliminated from the game. The surviving players' scores were also carried over into the next round.

Round 2
In round two, dollar values ranged from $10-$75 (maximum of $450), and the player in control had a choice of two categories for which they must answer clues from. Plus there was an "Opponent's Choice" space on the third wheel in addition to the joker, which is just what it sounds like; when landed on, the opponent got to decide the subject. The first player to reach $2,000 or more won the game.

Format #2
The rules were changed to have elements of the classic Joker's Wild inserted into the game but with the definitions format remaining. This time, up on the wheels were categories (ala Classic Joker's Wild), and the joker can appear in all three windows. Like the title says, the jokers were wild, and the player in control can match it up with any category shown, but there was no right to go off the board as jokers could only represent categories on the wheels. Also unlike the original, the categories were not announced at the start of a round. As before, values were determined by how many of that category appeared. All amounts were cut in half, meaning that a single was worth $25, a double was worth $50, and a triple was worth $100. Should three jokers appear in any spin, that contestant was automatically awarded $250 to his/her score, plus a choice of three categories behind the jokers for $100/clue.

Round one was basically the same, except that it now took $1,000 to end the first round; excluding "Opponent's Choice", the second round was played exactly under the same perimeters.

Bonus Round
To start, the winning player was given 60 seconds to answer as many words as he/she can. All correct answers began with the same letter given at the start. Host Pat would give a maximum of three definitions, and the player must give the correct word to the definitions. Each correct answer earned one spin to the joker machine; if he/she doesn't know the answer, the contestant can pass.

When time ran out, that player took the number of spins earned to the joker machine. On the wheels this time were jokers, prizes, and cash amounts from $500-$2,000. There are no Devils in this version. The contestant's job was to match one prize on all three windows in the spins allotted. If the player saw a prize he/she liked, he/she can freeze the window containing that prize, and try to go for that. Jokers were still wild, and the contestant can use them to match up with any prize shown. However, jokers could not be frozen and they had to be converted to prizes when shown individually. If the contestant can get three jokers (that's Joker, Joker, JOKER!) in a single spin, that player would win the Joker's Jackpot which started at $5,000, and grew by $500 every day it was not won.

Big Winners
Tex Crenshaw - He appeared on the show during the premiere week of the CBS Joker's Wild. Tex was the first contestant to win a car on the show. He won it after defeating two-time winner Mary Sprouse, by playing the 2nd version of the prize round. At that time, the circles were removed in favor of having the car or any other big prize on the wheels. Tex took his two spins, and after rejecting the prizes on his first spin, he took his second & final spin which gave him the car. Upon winning the car, he came up to the board pointed at the car, and hugged & shook hands with host Jack Barry.

Kathy Wexler - She was the first contestant during the CBS run to win the Joker's Jackpot. By that time the rules were changed so that the Jackpot can be won by winning three games instead of four. Supposedly, she would've won it by having the challenger lose on the final turn, but she actually won it by stealing the question on Entomology (insects). The challenger missed by saying "locust" & "grasshopper" (though game show rules state that a contestant's first answer must be accepted), causing Kathy to strike paydirt with her saying the correct answer "Bollweevil". The jackpot at that time was $13,800, which was added to the $1,600 she won from the three games she won giving her a total of $15,400 all in cash (no bonus round prizes).

Ken Phyfe - He was another big time winner from the CBS run. He was the first contestant to break the Joker's Jackpot more than once. Prior to the game in which he broke the jackpot the second time, he played a major unusual game against then challenger Karen Vensusan; both players ran into trouble answering questions from two categories (Bing Crosby & Horse Racing). In the end, Karen lost with no money at all while Ken added another $550 to his total. Then in the next game on the next show after playing his bonus game in which he won all three prizes, Ken played against a lady named Ingrid Van der Sapp from Holland in which he won and broke the Joker's Jackpot for the second time with a score of $500-$350. His total for breaking the second jackpot came to $17,267.

Mark Gluckman

Hal Shear - He mostly won the game & bonus games by the use of his plaid suit aka his "Lucky Suit". At one time, a challenger named Adrienne Carter was on the verge of becoming the new champion because she reached $500 first, while Hal supposedly lost with $200. According to the rules, both players must take the same number of turns; when the first player (originally the champion, later the challenger) reached $500 first, the other player must take one last spin in order to catch up. So after Adrienne reached $500 first, Hal took his final turn; he was trailing by $300 so he only needed three jokers to win the game. So to start, he rubbed his suit, then he pulled the lever, and as luck would have it, he got the three jokers he needed, causing Jack Barry to act like he was drunk and jokingly tell Hal, "Don't you EVER take that suit off, EVER, for the rest of your life!" Following that, Hal managed to answer his question correctly about Radio City Music Hall in the News '78 category, and won his eighth game. This by far was one of the greatest comebacks in game show history.

Eileen Jason

Joe Dunn - He was the show's only retired champion in the syndicated run having won $66,200. His retirement from the show came to pass due to the fact that the show (because it was aired in mostly CBS' O & O stations) was following CBS' winnings limit rules which had just increased from $35,000 to $50,000. Before he won $35,000, the producers were already discussing raising the winnings limit, before finally deciding to increase the limit to $50,000. Since his winnings were beyond that limit, $16,200 of his winnings were donated to his favorite charity, and the rest he got to keep.

Thomas Van Dyke - He was the 90s version's biggest winner having appeared 14 days (won 13 of those days), and on his next to last day, he won the Joker's Jackpot of $17,500. His final total was $55,562 in cash & prizes, all won during Format #1, the "Dollar" format.

Mary Hunt - She holds the distinction of winning the largest Joker's Jackpot in the history of the show which was $36,000 plus the $2,000 she won from the game for a total of $38,000 in cash, all won during Format #2, the "Category" format.

Trivia
An attempt was made to revive The Joker's Wild in 2007 and paring it with a show called Combination Lock but with no success.

Board Games
Three editions were made by Milton Bradley from 1973-1975, including a kids version called Joker Joker Joker in 1979. All of these were based on the 70's version. (Only The first edition of the game included the "Jokers and Devils" Bonus Round.)

Video Games
In 1994, Phillips produced two versions for its CD-i platform, these versions were based more or less on the first syndicated series, while the sets on both versions resembles the early 90's version. Wink Martindale hosted the first  version, while Marc Summers hosted the "Jr." version. Charlie O'Donnell served as announcer for both versions.

Slot Machine Game
A Slot Machine based on the 70's version was released by IGT in 2009.

Spin-Offs
The Honeymoon Game - A unsold spinoff pilot tried in 1970

Joker Joker Joker - A children's version that ran from 1979-1981

Music
1969, 1972-1975, 1977-1978 Open - "The Savers" by Gershon Kingsley & Jean Jacques Perrey

1990 - Joe Manolakakis

1975 - Alan Thicke
Close - "Joker's Jive"

Commercial (1975) - "Morning Sun"

1972
"Funky Express" by Duncan Lamont

"Jet Generation" by Sammy Burdson

"Milky Way" by Henrik Nielsen

"Pop Promotion" by Gerhard Narholz & Jurgen Jaenner

"Shopping Centre" by Manfred Minnich

Ticket Plug - "Bell Hop" by John Shakespeare

1975, 1977-1978
"Berkenhead School" by Jack Arel & Jean Claude Petit

"Punch Drunk" by Duncan Lamont

"Swamp Fever" by John Cameron

Categories Reveal - "Gamineries" originally by Jean Leroi

Joker's Jackpot Win - "Mardi Gras" by Henrik Nielsen

1978 - Hal Hidey
Audience Game - "Keep Travelling"

Devil - "Bits And Pieces"

Links
Information on The Joker's Wild Pilot

THE JOKER'S WILD HOMEPAGE

The Joker's Wild @ Game Show '75

Adam Nedeff's page on the Bill Cullen years of The Joker's Wild

Adam Nedeff's older page on the Bill Cullen years of The Joker's Wild

David's Joker's Wild Page

Rules for The Joker's Wild at the Game Show Temple

Josh Rebich's Joker's Wild Rules Page

YouTube Videos
Kathy Wexler becomes the first to win the Joker's Jackpot

Carmen Gutierrez becomes the first to win the Joker's Jackpot via Three Jokers

Mary's $36,000 Win!