Family Feud

OPENING SPIELS:

1976-1985; 1994-1995:

''It's time for the Family Feud! Introducing the (insert family #1 [and their names]), ready for action! And the (insert family #2 [and their names]), on your marks! Let's start the FAMILY FEUD!!!! With/Here's the star of Family Feud, RICHARD DAWSON!!!''

1988-1994:

Daytime 1988-1992/Syndicated 1988-1992; 1993-1994: ''Let's meet the (insert family #1 [and their names]), ready for action! Playing against the (insert family #2 [and their names]), on your marks! Let's start the (NEW) FAMILY FEUD!!!! With the star of Family Feud, RAY COMBS!!!''

Daytime 1992-1993: ''Welcome to the Family Feud Challenge! What is the top answer to this question: (insert question). The number 3 answer is (insert answer). The number 2 answer is (insert answer). What is the number 1 Bullseye answer? You'll get the answer as we play Bullseye on...the Family Feud Challenge!+ Introducing (our returning champions), the (insert family #1), ready for action! Playing against the (insert family #2), on your marks! Let's start the FAMILY FEUD!!!! With the star of the Family Feud Challenge, RAY COMBS!!!''

+Ray would announce the Bullseye answer after he came out.

Syndicated 1992-1993: ''Welcome to the New Family Feud! What is the top answer to this question: (insert question). If you said the number 1 answer is (insert answer), you hit the Bullseye on The New Family Feud! Introducing (our returning champions) the (insert family #1), ready for action! Playing against (our challengers) the (insert family #2), on your marks! Let's start the NEW FAMILY FEUD!!!! With the star of Family Feud, RAY COMBS!!!''

1999-2002:

''Today on Family Feud, from (insert location here, followed in the first season by a rhyming couplet about the family name), it's the (insert family #1)!! From (insert location here, followed in the first season by a rhyming couplet about the family name), it's the (insert family #2)!! You're about to see these two families/teams battle it out, for $10,000/$20,000 in cash, ’cause it's time to play...the FAMILY FEUD!!!! Now here's the star of our show, LOUIE ANDERSON!!!''

2002-2003:

''It's time for the Family Feud! Introducing the (insert family #1 and their names), playing against (our returning champions,) the (insert family #2 and their names)! You're about to see these two teams battle it out, for $20,000 in cash! Cause it's time to play, the FAMILY FEUD!!!! Now here's the star of our show, RICHARD KARN!!!''

2003-2006:

"It's time to play, Family Feud! It's (Our returning champs) (insert family #1), playing against the (insert family #2)!! Now here's the star of our show (insert funny nickname here), MR. RICHARD KARN!!!"

2006-2009:

"It's time to play, Family Feud! Introducing (All the way from [city, state],) the (insert family #1), (ready for action [first and half of second season only])! Playing against (All the way from [city, state],) the (insert family #2), (on your marks [first and half of second season only)! And now, here's your host, ([insert funny nickname here] first season only), JOHN O'HURLEY!!!"

2009-2010:

"It's time to play, Family Feud! Returning for their (x) day, it's the (insert family #1)! Playing against the (insert family #2)! And now, here's your host, JOHN O'HURLEY!!!"

2010-2011:

''Premiere: This is Joey Fatone from Universal Orlando Resort in sunny Florida! It's time to play, Family Feud! And now, here's the star of our show, STEVE HARVEY!!!''

''It's time to play, Family Feud! This is Joey Fatone from Universal Orlando Resort in sunny Florida! And now, here's the star of our show, give it up for STEVE HARVEY!!!''

2011-2012: ''Joey: This is Joey Fatone. It's time to play...Family Feud! Give it up for STEVE HARVEY!!!''

''Steve: Welcome to Family Feud! I'm [your man] Steve Harvey. We got a good one today. It's the (insert family #1), playing against, the (insert family #2)!''

2012-present: ''Joey: [This is Joey Fatone.] It's time to play...Family Feud! With your host/give it up for STEVE HARVEY!!!''

''Steve: Thank you, Joey Fatone. Welcome to Family Feud! We got a good one today. Returning for their (x) day, with a total of $XX,XXX; it's the (insert family #1)! Playing against, the (insert family #2)!''

A spin-off from Match Game, this show is where two families battle it out by answering surveys to win points. The first to reach a set number of points (mostly 300) gets a chance to play Fast Money for a grand cash prize. Each family has 5 members per team, except from 1994-1995, when there were only 4 members per team.

Face-Off
At the beginning of each round, two members of each family come up to the main podium and play a mini-round for control of the question called "Face-Off". The host announced how many answers are on the board (which are always in order based on popularity), and then read a survey question and the first player to buzz-in gets to answer. The player to give the number one answer or have his/her answer be higher than the other player's answer won control. In case of a tie (both answers with the same number of people who gave it) the player who answered first won control. If neither player gave an answer on the board, the players at the main podiums get a chance to answer for control.

For time reasons, during Louie Anderson's & (some of) Steve Harvey's tenure, if neither player's answer was on the board the question was thrown out, and a new one was played.

During Dawson's first version & the current version, the player that won the Face-Off has a decision to either let his/her family play the question or pass the question to their opponents.

Main Question
The family that won the face-off earns control of the question. The controlling family's job is to reveal the remaining answers hidden on the board with each correct answer adding points to the bank above the board. The answer's value is determined by how many people who gave it. Each player on the controlling team in turn gave an answer and if the answer he/she gave is correct, it is flipped over and revealed. Revealing all the answers on the board won the round (this is classified as a "Clean Sweep"). Giving a wrong answer at any time earned a strike; getting three strikes (one in the final round from 1999-2003) caused the team to lose control of the question, giving the opposing family a chance to steal by giving one correct answer. A successful steal won the round, but an unsuccessful steal gave the round to the first family. The winners of the round took all the points in the bank plus (in the pilot, from 1992-1995, and again from 1999-2003) the value of the correct answer given by the stealing family.

Question Values
The first few questions had its values be worth the number showing. Later on in the game, the values of all the questions would be doubled (the double value round wasn't available from 1999 to 2003); and still later, all the point values would be tripled (in the Dawson era and the first four years of the current version, the triple valued question would be the last question of the game).

Winning
The first family to reach a set number of points won the game. For most versions, the goal is 300 points. In the first season of the Dawson run and pilot episode, the goal was 200 points; but in the final season of the Dawson run, the goal was set to 400 points. (In the original Dawson version and his 1994 comeback, when the game takes too long to reach the 300/400 goal, Richard goes to the controlling family to tell them that each teammate has three seconds to answer once he reads the question to them during the TRIPLE Round. Beginning in 2003, when the 300 goal was returned, Karn will only read the question once to both families upon Tripling the point values; though he did read it again after the captain of the stealing family gave an answer. In Karn's final season whenever he reads the question once, home viewers will show the survey question at the bottom of the screen.) From 1999 to 2003 there was no goal, the team with the most points won the game, even though most families in this period reached the goal of 300 points. In addition, there was only one strike for the team in the triple round (round 4). This created a scenario in which a team could give an incorrect answer and still win if there were not enough points in the bank for the other team to win by a successful steal. Other times when an opposing family already had more points than the bank, if a controlling family gave an incorrect answer, the game would automatically end. Until 1992, dollars were used instead of points.

Bullseye/Bankroll Round & Sudden Death Question
Starting in 1992, Family Feud instituted a new Bullseye round. This was the round that affected the grand prize for either family if and when they make it to Fast Money. In this round, both families started with a bankroll of $5,000 ($2,500 in the first half of the Family Feud Challenge). Five questions were asked to each pair of family members in a Face-Off fashion, and only number one answers counted. The first player to buzz-in with the number one answer added money to their own Fast Money bank; this resulted in a possible $10,000 in the first half or $20,000 in the second half. The syndicated version used this round from 1992-1994, with the doubled values.

Scoring
Here how they scored for each question:

Fast Money
The winning family went on to play Fast Money for a grand cash prize. The winning family chose which two players will play the game. The first family member stood at center stage while the second family member went off stage to a soundproof area. The first player has 15 seconds (later 20) to answer five Family Feud questions. He/she has to give the most popular answer to each question. When he/she was done, the answers were reveled on a different board followed by the number of people who gave them. After all the answers were revealed and scored, the second player came out and took his/her turn. The second player had 20 seconds (later 25) to answer the same five questions but with one exception: he/she cannot repeat any of the answers previously given by the first player or a double buzzer will sound, at which point the host says, "Try again." The contestant must give a different answer (the second player will also be charged for similar answers or an answer which fits into the same category as the first player's answer). When the second player was done, his/her answers were revealed and scored. The family wins $5 for each point made in the round, but if the two playing players reached 200 points or more, the family wins the grand cash prize.

NOTE: Very rarely, the first contestant from the winning family playing Fast Money would get 200 points and win the big money all by himself/herself. During Ray Combs' tenure, whenever that occurred, he would trick the second player into thinking that the first player did terribly and then ask him/her five phony ridiculous questions.

Grand Cash Prizes
The grand cash prizes were different depending on the series:


 * Daytime Versions (1976-1992) - $5,000
 * Syndicated Versions (1977-1992, 1999-2001) - $10,000
 * Current Version (2001-2009, 2010-present) - $20,000
 * CBS Gameshow Marathon Version (2006) - $100,000 for the player's charity (main game win), $50,000 for a home viewer (Fast Money win)
 * NBC Celebrity Version (2008) - $50,000 for a win, $25,000 for a loss (both for charity)

Bullseye/Bankroll
Here are the max values in terms of Bullseye/Bankroll money:


 * Combs Version (1992-1994): 1st Half - $10,000, 2nd Half/Syndicated (1992-1994) - $20,000
 * Dawson Version (1994-1995): 1st Half - $7,000, 2nd Half - $14,000
 * O'Hurley Version (2009-2010): $30,000

Returning Champions
On the ABC run, families retired from the show after winning over $25,000, a limit which had been lifted during the final season to $30,000. On the syndicated series from 1977-1985 and from 1999-2002, two new families competed on each show. From 1988-1992 and from 2002 onward, winning families could return for up to five days. From 1992-1995, families simply continued until defeated. Starting in September 2009, families who won 5 days in a row won a brand new car (Chrysler 300C from 2009-2010, Ford Taurus from 2010-2012, Ford Edge from 2012-).

All-Star/Celebrity Family Feud primetime specials
In all versions of the All-Star/Celebrity primetime specials, four celebrity teams (celebrities and their families also in the Al Roker version) competed to win money for their favorite charities.

In the Richard Dawson all-star series, there were three games a show. The first two games were played to 200 points, and the third one was a one question showdown; and the Fast Money round was played after each game; the first two Fast Monies were worth $5,000, and the third one was worth $10,000.

In the Al Roker celebrity series, there were also three games all of which were played as the civilian shows but without the double value rounds; not only that, Fast Money does not play until the end of the show. All Fast Money rounds were worth $50,000 to the winning celebrity families' charities should they make it to 200 or more, and not winning was worth half the amount or $25,000.

1988-1994
The 1988–1994 version carried special tournaments for the four highest winning families from certain periods of time returning for a Winner-Take-All Tournament of Champions. These were rarely held at first for both the CBS and syndicated versions.

The main game rules applied, but if a family reached 200 points in Fast Money, $5,000 went into a jackpot that started at $25,000 and went up to potentially $55,000 on the CBS version. Likewise, on the syndicated version, the jackpot started at $50,000 and went up $10,000 for each time Fast Money was won, up to a possible $110,000. If the score was less than 200, nothing was added to the jackpot, as the $5 a point rule was discarded for the tournament. Each semifinal was the best-of-three games, with the first family in each one to win two games advancing to the finals, which was also a best-of-three match. There was no Fast Money round played during the finals. The scoring was similar to the 1984–1985 season (single-single-single-single-double-triple) or the regular CBS/Syndicated version from late 1989–1990 (single-single-single-double-triple) in the finals, with the first family to reach $400 winning the game instead of $300. The first family to win two out of three games won everything in the jackpot in addition to what they won in the regular game. Again, no Fast Money was played.

No additional tournaments were conducted on the syndicated version after the second season. The CBS version continued conducting them, but in mid-1990, tournaments were held every month, with the top four money-winning families of the previous month returning. The main game point goals for winning a semifinal and a final game were the same, but the match format was changed from the best-of-three to a one-game match for both the semifinals and the finals. Thus, the potential maximum was lowered to $35,000.

2002-present
The current version began doing tournaments in 2002. The first occurred in May 2002 with the Family Circle Tournament of Champions, with eight winning families returning in a single-elimination tournament. The jackpot started at $50,000 and went up $20,000 for each time Fast Money was won, up to a possible $170,000. For this particular tournament only, if Fast Money was not won, $5 per point was added to the jackpot. Each game was played to 300 points except for the finals, which required 500 points to win the game and the jackpot. The winning team for this tournament won a trip to Charleston, South Carolina and tickets to the Family Circle Cup women's tennis tournament in nearby Daniel Island, in addition to the money, which was $112,230. The runners-up for this tournament won a trip to Jamaica.

This version, however, did not do tournaments on an occasional basis until May 2005. Again, eight families were brought back, but this time, they consisted of either families who previously lost their first game for the tournament that was held in May 2005 and May 2006, or previously winning families, but not necessarily focusing on the higher winning families of the past for the tournament held in February 2006. The differences at this point for the tournaments were that the jackpot started with nothing, except for the February 2006 Tournament of Champions, which began at $10,000 and went up $20,000 for each time Fast Money was won, up to a possible $130,000. Losses in Fast Money did not add anything to the jackpot, as in the 1988–1994 version, and the championship game was played to 400 points and used the 4 singles-double-triple round format (with Sudden Death if applicable). Trips were sometimes awarded to the jackpot-winning family, including Hawaii during the February 2006 tournament and Mexico during the May 2006 tournament. Again, no Fast Money was played in the finals.

The tournament format did not return again until 2013, where the jackpot started at $40,000 and could get as high as $160,000 and was sponsored by Publishers Clearing House. As before, no Fast Money was played in the finals, and the first team to reach 400 points won the jackpot; the runners-up received $20,000.

The Original Board
For a span of the first 20 years, Family Feud used a trilon game board. Two sides of the board had twelve flip panels (six in each column) used for revealing answers during the main game (though no question ever had 12 answers, the most was 10), one of those sides was covered up by the show's logo during the opening and was taken down backstage when the opening was finished, and the words "double" & "triple" were placed on both sides of the main game board to indicate that the values were either doubled or tripled, and the third was a digital board which displayed the show's title and was used for Fast Money. During the opening and sometimes closing of the show, the digital board had an animated light pattern: The original Dawson series had its board light up/turn off one row at a time, while the 1988-1994 series had their board light up/turn off in a "four square-like" manner. This was not used for the closing, but was used for the closing of the 1994-1995 series. For most of the series, the digital board in neutral title mode was displayed in yellow on black, but in the pilot and in the early episodes of the Combs run, the board displayed black on yellow.

Alterations
All Versions: In the 1975 pilot, the trilon board was housed in a box-like shape, with all three numerical displays (the bank & family's scores) up top. Under the board were three little boxes which were used to display the strikes. The number sides of the flip panels had the numbers sandwiched between 2 triangles. They were similar to that of Match Game the show that gave us Family Feud, and the unplayed panels were tan with a pale blue circle in them. When the show became a series in 1976 and lasting until 1994, the trilon board was now housed inside the now familiar blue oval with rectangles sticking out of either side to make room for the family's scoreboards (the bank was still at the top as it had always been; plus, the strikes were now superimposed). The oval board has chasing lights which lit up from the center to the ends; one of the top sides would light up when a family won the round and the entire side would light up when a family has won the game. While the Dawson shows always had their lights turned off, the Combs shows turned on theirs when it was time to play Fast Money and continued to have them turned on during the final segment of the show.

Today's Board
When the show returned in 1999 after a four year hiatus and to keep up with the times, the trilon/digital board was replaced with a single TV monitor which like the digital board in the 1994-1995 run did all jobs. The bank display returned to holding three digits until 2010, when all displays became computerized. The main game board still held eight answers and the number sides still had the same look from before only now the unplayed slots were the same, they just don't have numbers on them; from 1999-2010, the bottom two slots were replaced with one large slot with the word "DOUBLE" or "TRIPLE" on it to indicate affection of the values, these days only the sudden death question had the large "TRIPLE" slot below since there was only one answer needed to be given. The Fast Money board is completely computer animated, it has ten black slots to house the answers & ten black squares on the right to house the point scores (the scores next to the right side answers on the original versions used to be on the left), and one additional slot for the total scores. For individual reveals, a red square was used to reveal the answers and ending up in the point square and it accompanies the now familiar reveal sound, the square disappeared when the value was revealed. While the face-off podium was seen for the entire show in the past, for the current era, it would be removed for the remainder of the show.

Alterations
Louie's Era: When Louie Anderson was the host, the monitor was a projection TV housed inside a oval-like square with chase lights on it. It was located on a wall which doubled as an opening for host Anderson to go through. Not only that, the bank was now in blue eggcrate mode (the toteboards used to be in a Ferranti-Packer font), while the family's scoring displays in the same font were now shown on their podiums. For the final season of this run and continuing into Karn's run, the show's logo would be seen on the floor, similar to Combs' run.

Galleries
To see pictures of the many looks of the Family Feud logos over the years click here.

To see pictures of the many sets of the Family Feud over the years click here.

Sounds
The strike buzzer, the correct answer clang and the win bells were recycled from a previous ABC Goodson-Todman game show, Showoffs.

The Face-Off buzzer sound was used in a few other Goodson-Todman shows such as Child's Play, Classic Concentration, Trivia Trap & Chuck Henry's Now You See It.

Inventors
Mark Goodson & Bill Todman

Music
1975, 1976-1985, 2006 - "The Feud" by Walt Levinsky, Robert A. Israel & Ken Bichel

1988-1994, 2002-2003, 2008-present - Edd Kalehoff & Score Productions

1994-1995 - Edd Kalehoff & Score Productions

1999-2002, 2003-2008 - John Lewis Parker

2003 (Unused) - John Lewis Parker

The 1976 main was originally a prize cue by Walt Levinsky on The Price is Right and when Mark Goodson heard it, it inspired him to create this show.

The last few notes of the 1976 theme are currently being used on The Price is Right as the introduction to Grand Game; they were also used for a brief period as the intro to Plinko. Trivia Trap also used these notes for getting all the wrong answers eliminated. For a brief time in the 1990s, the 1988 theme's end notes replaced those from the 1976 theme in the aforementioned Grand Game introduction.

The 1994 opening vamps as well the unused main themes from the 1994 version were recycled into the daytime and 1994 versions of The Price is Right as showcase cues.

Although the 2003 main is unused, replaced with the 1988 main, the face-off cue was still used on the show.

Merchandise
Board games based on the 1976 version were released from 1977-1985 by Milton Bradley in eight editions.

Spin-Offs
Gameshow Marathon - Family Feud was the finale of the 7 games.

100 Mexicanos Dijeron-The original Spanish language version that aired on Telefutura from 2002 to 2006.

¿Que Dice la Gente? - The short-lived Spanish language revival that aired on Telefutura from 2006 to 2008.

Celebrity Family Feud - A nighttime hour-long six-episode summer series that aired on NBC in 2008 with teams of celebrities playing for charity. All but one episode aired. The new graphics and music this show had were incorporated into the current syndicated version.

In Popular Culture
Sesame Street had a spoof of Family Feud, called "Family Food", featuring a family of muppet contestants and Richard Dawson himself, teaching about the concept of a full, healthful meal. Prior to this, in 2012 Burger King had a short-lived promotional game called The "Family Food" Sweepstakes, where you had to collect game pieces by scratching off the Top Answer for a chance to win a Nintendo 3DS Family Pack, a Kindle Fire, a 2013 Ford Explorer, a $10,000 BBQ Makeover, Trips to a Taping of the show, Southwest Airline Airfare for a year, $100,000 in cash and more.

Cartoon Network's MAD series parodied Family Feud as Batman's Family Feud. with the set resembling the 1988-1994 Combs' era, with Steve Harvey as host (who would incidently go on to host the actual show since 2010).

A 1998 episode of Histeria! called "The U.S. Civil War Part II" had a Feud Spoof called The Uncivil War hosted by Lydia Karaoke (voiced by Nora Dunn) where Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, and General Sherman were pitted against Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, and Stonewall Jackson to find out the reason behind the civil war.

A 1994 episode of The Critic, “Marty's first Date”, has a movie poster for Family Feud: The Movie with the last names of Sheens & Bridges in the backdrops. Jay Sherman (voiced by Jon Lovitz) responded, "It stinks!"

Pookie Poo, an Internet Cartoon from the late 90's did their spoof of Feud based on the 99-02 version called Nutty Family Fools the host for it was Loogie (obviously a spoof of Louie Anderson).

Family Guy also had their share of Feud spoofs as well, a 1999 episode called Da Boom The Griffins encounter another band of survivors that tried to make them a question as a parody of the show. A 2006 episode called Stewie B. Goode one of the first segments of "Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story", Peter Griffin playing as Richard Dawson cops a feel from one of the female contestants ala Dawson-esque style. A 2010 episode called Big Man on Hippocampus begins with the Griffins becoming contestants on the 70's version of the show against the Callaghan Family as they fall one point short of winning $5,000 in the Fast Money Round. Also, Lois French-kisses Dawson, for which she had been waiting a long time to do, and Dawson pushes Peter to the podium, causing him to suffer from memory loss.

A 2012 episode of American Dad called Old Stan In The Mountains, Stan Smith's son Steve carves a totem pole of five Family Feud hosts' resembling the likes of Richard Dawson, Ray Combs, Louie Anderson, Richard Karn and Steve Harvey but omitting John O'Hurley.

In A Baby Blues Christmas Special from 2002, Darryl (voiced by Mike O'Malley) dreams that he and Wanda (voiced by Julia Sweeney) were appearing on Family Feud with the set sort of resembling the short-lived 1994-1995 version. It also had a mix theme music from both the Dawson & Combs eras of the show. Dawson was voiced by Maurice LaMarche.

In the Robot Chicken Episode called Bloopers! Three, had a blooper skit where an action figure like Richard Dawson kissing female contestants named Audrey and Susan until Matthew for which he grabbed his hand and gives him a passionately gay kiss in the mouth. After the blooper skit, its host said that a future Family Feud host would later hang himself (obviously referring to Ray Combs, who hanged himself in 1996).

Barbara Mandrell's variety show on NBC (Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sitters) and a parody of the show with the three Mandrell sisters as one family and three of the Statler Brothers as the other. The Statlers' Bass Singer Harold Reid, played a hilarious Flanderized parody if Richard Dawson (Richie Kissy) who hit on the Mandrell sisters excessively, kissed them at every turn and tilted the game ridiculously in their favor while treating the other three Statlers as Butt Monkeys.

A 1979 episode of the short-lived ABC sitcom Angie feature an episode of Family Feud as an on the road show with Richard Dawson and Gene Wood appearing as themselves.

An early episode of Mama's Family had the Harpers as contestants on the show, playing against the Van Courtland family and unfortunately not ending up successful; they lose on Thelma's answer to the question "Name something you wind up", "Letter".

The July 1985 issue of Seventeen magazine contains a journal-like story, from a teen girl's point of view, of her family's exciting Family Feud adventure from auditioning to be contestants all the way to actually appearing on the show against an unidentified opposing family. The story does not end happily, however; the girl's family ends up losing to their opponents on (largely) her answer to the question "Name something you use scouring powder on", "Windows". (The remaining answer was "toilet".)

The NBC sitcom 227 also featured Family Feud in one of their shows in 1988. This game was a "Neighbor vs. Neighbor" game, with Mary Jenkins (Marla Gibbs) & Sandra Clark (Jackee Harry) as team captains. Sandra's team won the game but didn't win Fast Money. Prior to this, Family Feud was mentioned in a 1985 episode.

The NBC sitcom Scrubs episode My Two Days in 2001, features a short dream sequence in which JD (Zach Braff) is on Family Feud as the team captain with Louie Anderson appearing as himself, along with a team of men (obviously competing against a team of women who are not seen in the sequence at all) to answer the question Name one thing guys wanna see more than anything in the whole wide world to which JD responded, Ok Louie, we're gonna go with Boobs in which Louie says ''Show me Boobs! revealing itself as the number one answer with 93 people out of 100 agreeing in the survey.''

In Living Color contributed to the Feud Franchise, as well. As a regular skit with the Jackson Family playing against The Royal Family with Ray Combs appearing as himself. Another one was called Family Dozens in which the survey answers were fully calibrated with Yo Mama jokes. The host for it was Stu Dufny, played by Nick Bakay.

Saturday Night Live even parodied Family Feud. This sketch was entitled “Dysfunctional Family Feud” based on the 1980's Combs version. Prior to this, their were two other SNL Feud skecthes: one in the 70's as a Coneheads skit while the other was from 2009 as "Celebrity Family Feud" with the Osmond Family playing against the Phillips family. Both of these skits were based on the 1970's Dawson version.

Mad TV also parodied Family Feud, with Will Sasso as Louie Anderson. Another one featured The Sopranos. The third one had the cast from the Lord of The Rings playing against the cast of Cold Mountain with a actor playing as Richard Karn. the fourth and final one was based on the short-lived 2008 NBC primetime version of Celebrity Family Feud with the Kardashians (who were on the real show as well) played against the stars from The Disney Channel with Keegan-Michael Key as Al Roker.

Road Runner & American Online parodied Family Feud as High Speed Internet Challenge. Its set and pieces had colors resembling The Price is Right while its host resembles the likes of Wink Martindale.

In 2002, Old Navy made a series of commercials called "Family Fleece" (featuring actress Morgan Fairchild), a parody of the Feud where families showed off the clothes that were for purchase.

A Diet Dr. Pepper commercial parodied Family Feud as Crime Family Feud in 2001. The commercial starts with showing the Anderson/Karn era-like logo, then it cuts to a survey board with the top six answers on it after which a John O'Hurley look-alike host asked the question: Name a Popular Family Activity. Then the guy on the right side hits the button and says "Racketeering" then the host shouts "Show Me Racketeering!" revealed as the number two answers with 18 people out of 100 agreeing. Finally the announcer says ''Not everything can be as good as the original, but Diet Dr. Pepper is. It taste more like regular Dr. Pepper'' as it cuts to a woman in the studio audience drinking a Diet Dr. Pepper with a guy sitting on the right side of her saying, "Good Answer!"

Taglines
"We love ya, see ya here on the (Family) Feud. Bye-bye." - Richard Dawson (1976-1985; 1994-1995)

"God bless all the little children in the World." - Richard Dawson (The Final Episode)

"For the Feud, I'm Ray Combs saying thank you for watching, have a great day (on CBS), and see you next time. Bye-bye. (Play at home!)" - Ray Combs (1988-1994)

"Be good to your family. Come back and see our families on the Feud." - Louie Anderson (1999-2002)

"I'm John O'Hurley. Thanks for joining us here on the Family Feud. We'll see you next time. Bye-bye." - John O'Hurley (2006-2010)

"I'm Al Roker saying, 'Love your family, don't feud.'" - Al Roker (2008)

Links
Official Site

Official Site (Celebrity Version)

YouTube Profile

Josh Rebich's Family Feud Rule Sheets