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Pet Star
Pet Star, on Discovery's Animal Planet, searches far and wide for the best in outrageous pet tricks. the final showdown this summer will bring 15 finalists together to compete for $25,000 in cash and prizes, with the voting being done on a Quick Tally® Audience Response System. |
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The Last Comic Standing
NBC's hilarious series searches the country for the funniest people in America and Quick Tally® Audience Response System is there counting votes when more accuracy is needed to determine a winner than just laughter and applause. |
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Sabado Gigante
An example of a show we've done outside the English Speaking community - Carried throughout Latin America by Univision. |
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To Tell The Truth
When famed game show producers Goodson/Todman Productions revamped their classical tv show for the '90's they chose the reliability of Quick Tally® |
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The Great Skate Debate
World's Largest Interactive Event
World's First Major Sports Event judged by an audience using 5,000 handsets - Hosted by CBS Morning Show host Harry Smith & Pat Summeral |
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Greed
Quiz Show which ran from 1999-2000 and hosted by Chuck Woolery can now be seen in re-runs on The Game Show Network. |
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"InterNight Special: The Racial Divide"
Tim Russert and Gwen Ifill hosted a special live edition of InterNight. A panel and a live studio audience of young people discussed the issue of race in America and how it is affecting our youth today |
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R.A.C.E. World's First Multi-site Interactive TV Program
QTIS pioneered the first nationwide multi-site interactive television broadcast, which took place in 1989. The R.A.C.E. an acronym for Racial Attitudes and Consciousness Exam, linking over 300 respondents in 10 cities, the interactive network was designed By Quick Tally and was used to administer questions on racial attitudes created by the National Opinion Research Center. The live show was Bryant Gumbel's brainchild, and NBC chose Quick Tally for its superior graphic displays, immediate response time, and teleconferencing abilities. |
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Your Big Break
Ed McMahon produced this 2001 Talent show where the audience voted for their favorite act. |
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Racism: What Is The Right Thing
A three hour interactive special, Two hundred Black, White, Hispanic and Asian high school students registered their feelings on a variety of hard-hitting questions dealing with racial prejudice, ethnic stereotyping and parental, school and media responsibility. A distinguished multi-racial panel answered questions from Jim Lampley and the students. |
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The Big (Blank) Show
Millimeter Magazine wrote: Democracy according to MTV producers: let the studio audience select programming choices and air them during a one-hour show; let the national audience participate in prize-winning through a new interactive service. The Big (Blank) Show which premiered in May, allows a live studio audience to choose what home viewers will watch on the musical/comedy series. MTV considers the element of surprise as the show%uFFFDs unique attraction. |
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CBS News Special "Save Our Schools"
Golden Globe Award Winner
A ground-breaking two-hour prime-time special in Los Angeles called S.O.S.: Save Our Schools hosted by Jim Lampley. The program using Quick Tally voting and its on-air graphics, instantly polled the in-house audience of students, educators, council members and interested citizens with preplanned and impromptu questions allowing the host to quantify and graphically show the studio audiences reaction to statements made by the guests. The program won a Golden Mike Award. |
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PBS Town Hall Meeting
Condition Critical: The American Health Care Forum
An unprecedented two-hour, prime time, nationally televised event hosted by Phil Donahue took place at the First Parish Church Lexington, Massachusetts, the birthplace of American participatory democracy. Quick Tally provided the audience response technology for this important modern exercise in participatory electronic democracy. |