I know people debate a lot about when this term became part of everyday vocabulary, and I happened to come across some evidence that it wasn't something people in the US used as of January, 1976.
Background (Americans over 40 can skip this part): there's an old game show called Match Game, which aired in the 1970s in the US, which was sort of the golden age of TV game shows. I remember any time I was home sick, or had a snow day from school, afternoon TV was soap operas, which I hated, but morning TV was these campy game shows with adults acting ridiculous, and I loved them. The version I'm talking about is the '73-'79 version. The part of the game was "Super Match," where the contestant who just won a match against someone else, has to guess the most popular response to a "match" poll asked of a previous studio audience. The third most popular answer is worth $100, the second, $250, and the most popular is worth $500. I looked for a youtube clip of just this section, but I find mostly just whole episodes, or clips of the celebrity segments. But you can look for yourselves.
So, the Game Show Network has been airing reruns of this in the mornings, and while looking for some background noise while I cleaning, I put it on this morning. The show airing was from sometime in early 1976, probably still in January, although they tape in advance, so it may actually have been filmed in November of '75, or something, and the audience poll even earlier.
The question was "__[blank]__ killer."
The contestant gets to ask three of the celebrity panelists for suggestions, after that, the host usually offers a suggestion as well, if he thinks the other suggestions were off the mark (although, I think the game was fair in that the host didn't know what the actual answers were).
Then, the contestant picks one, or uses another idea.
The panelists' suggestions, in order, were "weed" killer; "bug" killer; and "ant" killer. The host suggested "lady" killer.
The actual answers were $100 = "pain" killer; $250 = "man" killer; and $500 = "lady" killer.
The contestant picked weedkiller, and lost entirely, which from what I remember, is unusual.
I thought is was worth mentioning, because I see lots of debate on when the term "serial killer" actually came into common parlance. I see that "serial murderer" appears in a 1966 book, and "serial homicide" is documented as having been used in a lecture in 1974, but no one is quite sure when people were commonly using "serial killer."
It sure wasn't by New Year's of 1976.
Background (Americans over 40 can skip this part): there's an old game show called Match Game, which aired in the 1970s in the US, which was sort of the golden age of TV game shows. I remember any time I was home sick, or had a snow day from school, afternoon TV was soap operas, which I hated, but morning TV was these campy game shows with adults acting ridiculous, and I loved them. The version I'm talking about is the '73-'79 version. The part of the game was "Super Match," where the contestant who just won a match against someone else, has to guess the most popular response to a "match" poll asked of a previous studio audience. The third most popular answer is worth $100, the second, $250, and the most popular is worth $500. I looked for a youtube clip of just this section, but I find mostly just whole episodes, or clips of the celebrity segments. But you can look for yourselves.
So, the Game Show Network has been airing reruns of this in the mornings, and while looking for some background noise while I cleaning, I put it on this morning. The show airing was from sometime in early 1976, probably still in January, although they tape in advance, so it may actually have been filmed in November of '75, or something, and the audience poll even earlier.
The question was "__[blank]__ killer."
The contestant gets to ask three of the celebrity panelists for suggestions, after that, the host usually offers a suggestion as well, if he thinks the other suggestions were off the mark (although, I think the game was fair in that the host didn't know what the actual answers were).
Then, the contestant picks one, or uses another idea.
The panelists' suggestions, in order, were "weed" killer; "bug" killer; and "ant" killer. The host suggested "lady" killer.
The actual answers were $100 = "pain" killer; $250 = "man" killer; and $500 = "lady" killer.
The contestant picked weedkiller, and lost entirely, which from what I remember, is unusual.
I thought is was worth mentioning, because I see lots of debate on when the term "serial killer" actually came into common parlance. I see that "serial murderer" appears in a 1966 book, and "serial homicide" is documented as having been used in a lecture in 1974, but no one is quite sure when people were commonly using "serial killer."
It sure wasn't by New Year's of 1976.
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