Information Please was an American radio quizprogram that aired primarily on NBC from May 17, 1938, to June 25, 1948, later moving to CBS and Mutual, and continued in various formats until April 22, 1951, featuring a panel of intellectuals moderated by Clifton Fadiman who fielded and answered obscure questions submitted by listeners, often with humorous and erudite commentary.[1][2][3]Created by producer Dan Golenpaul, the show emerged as a summer replacement series amid the popularity of early 1930s quiz formats like Vox Pop, but distinguished itself by inverting the typical contestant-expert dynamic: instead of ordinary people being quizzed, a rotating panel of experts tackled challenging queries from the audience, earning the program a reputation for intellectual rigor and lively debate.[2] Regular panelists included newspaper columnist Franklin P. Adams (known as F.P.A.), naturalist and New York Times editor John Kieran, and pianist-comedian Oscar Levant, who contributed to the show's signature blend of wit, sarcasm, and cultural insight until his departure in 1943; guest experts such as authors, scientists, and celebrities like Orson Welles or Groucho Marx frequently appeared, adding variety and star power.[1][2]Each 30-minute episode followed a structured yet spontaneous format: after an introduction by announcer Milton Cross or Nelson Case, Fadiman presented listener-submitted questions—often on history, science, literature, or current events—with submitters receiving $2 for used queries and an additional $5 if the panel was stumped, fostering a sense of public engagement that drew over 9 million weekly listeners at its peak.[2] Sponsored initially by Canada Dry Ginger Ale from late 1938 with a modest $400 weekly budget, the series pioneered electronic transcription in 1939 for rebroadcasts to the West Coast, allowing preservation of nearly all episodes and enabling its coast-to-coast syndication.[1][2]The program's cultural impact extended beyond broadcasting; its literate tone and focus on knowledge inspired Golenpaul to launch the Information Please Almanac in 1947, an annual reference book that became a bestseller and ran for decades, while a short-lived television adaptation aired on CBS in 1952 but failed to recapture the radio version's charm due to the visual medium's challenges with the format.[1][4] Today, surviving recordings—totaling over 127 hours—remain popular among old-time radio enthusiasts for showcasing mid-20th-century American intellectualism and the era's conversational style.[1]
History
Origins and Creation
Dan Golenpaul, a radio producer active since the early 1930s, created Information Please in 1938 after becoming frustrated with the simplistic nature of existing quiz shows like Professor Quiz, where experts easily outmatched contestants.[5][2] Inspired by the common telephone directory assistance phrase "information please," Golenpaul envisioned a program that inverted the format, allowing ordinary listeners to challenge a panel of experts with obscure questions crowdsourced via mailed submissions, such as postcards, to elevate intellectual discourse on air.[5][6]Golenpaul's prior experience producing shows like The Magazine of the Air (1934) and coordinating special events at station WHN informed his approach to developing highbrow content for radio audiences.[2] In early 1938, he pitched the concept to NBC Blue Network programming head Bill Karlin at flagship station WJZ, securing approval for a summer replacement series with a modest $400 weekly budget; network executives insisted on a prestigious host, leading to the selection of Clifton Fadiman, the erudite book editor of The New Yorker, for his literary knowledge and engaging wit.[2][6] Golenpaul prepared an audition recording with Fadiman moderating a panel of experts fielding pre-written questions to demonstrate the spontaneous, discussion-based style.The show premiered on May 17, 1938, at 8:30 p.m. on the NBC Blue Network as a network-sustained program without a commercial sponsor, though Canada DryGinger Ale soon became its initial backer starting in November 1938.[2][4] The debut episode followed the core structure that defined the series: Fadiman introduced questions submitted by the public, prompting panelists to debate and answer collaboratively, with submitters receiving $2 for each used question and an additional $5 if the panel was stumped, fostering an atmosphere of erudite banter rather than rote quizzing.[2] This innovative setup quickly distinguished Information Please from its contemporaries, emphasizing knowledge-sharing over competition.
Broadcast Run
Information Please premiered on the NBC Blue Network on May 17, 1938, as a sustaining program, marking the start of its 13-season run that concluded on NBC on April 22, 1951, after moves to CBS in October 1946 and Mutual in September 1947. The show, hosted by Clifton Fadiman, initially aired weekly on Tuesdays from 8:30 to 9:00 p.m. ET in a 30-minute format, drawing strong listenership through its intellectual quiz format.[4][7][8][2][3]In late 1940, the program transitioned from the NBC Blue Network to the more prominent NBC Red Network (the core of the full NBC lineup), coinciding with its first commercial sponsorship by Lucky Strike cigarettes, which replaced the initial backer Canada Dry Ginger Ale that had supported the show since 1938.[9] This shift enhanced its national reach and production resources, allowing for continued weekly broadcasts amid evolving radio landscape demands. Sponsors later changed to H.J. Heinz in 1943 and Mobil Oil in 1945, reflecting wartime economic adjustments in advertising.[9]The broadcast schedule evolved over the years, moving from Tuesdays to Wednesdays at 10:30 p.m. ET by the mid-1940s to accommodate network programming changes, while maintaining the consistent 30-minute duration.[10] A key production innovation came in 1939, when Information Please became the first major prime-time network program to use electrical transcription—recording the live East Coast broadcast on discs for a three-hour delayed rebroadcast on the West Coast, addressing time zone challenges without live duplication.[11][12]During World War II, the show adapted to wartime restrictions and logistics, including the first prerecorded repeat broadcast in 1941 to comply with resource conservation mandates, and occasional remote recordings from locations like Boston's Symphony Hall in December 1942 to facilitate panelist participation amid travel limitations.[9] These adjustments ensured uninterrupted airing through the conflict, sustaining its popularity as a beacon of informative entertainment.[13]
Decline and Cancellation
Following World War II, Information Please experienced a gradual decline starting in 1947, driven by escalating production costs and the growing allure of television, which fragmented radio audiences and shifted entertainment preferences toward visual media.[14] Ratings, which had peaked at 15.7 during the 1938–39 season, began to fall as sponsors reevaluated investments in radio programming amid these changes.[14]The program's sponsorship landscape added to the pressures, with early backer Lucky Strike—having supported the show from 1940 to 1943—followed by others that provided inconsistent support, reflecting broader industry instability and contributing to financial strain.[14]In March 1948, creator Dan Golenpaul sued the Mutual Broadcasting System for $500,000, accusing the network of allowing affiliates to air unauthorized versions of the Friday co-op edition, which disrupted revenue and led to a temporary hiatus from late 1948 through early 1949.[15] Golenpaul responded by pursuing revival efforts, including format adjustments to modernize the panel quiz and proposals for syndication to broaden distribution beyond major networks.[14]Despite these attempts, the show struggled to regain momentum upon its return in 1949 under varying sponsorships and networks, ultimately airing its final episode on April 22, 1951, after a 13-year run across NBC, CBS, and Mutual.[14]
Format and Production
Quiz Mechanics
The radio format of Information Please centered on listener-submitted questions mailed in on postcards, which the host read aloud to a panel of experts for immediate, unprepared responses covering diverse topics such as history, science, literature, and current events.[16] The panelists, drawing on their individual specialties like journalism or music, collaboratively discussed and attempted to answer each query, fostering an atmosphere of intellectual banter rather than competitive scoring among themselves.[17]Prizes were awarded to the question submitters rather than the panel, with $2 paid for each question used on air in the show's early months of 1938, increasing to $5 if the panel was stumped and unable to provide a correct answer.[18] By 1940, these amounts had risen to $10 for used questions and $25 for those that stumped the experts, often accompanied by humorous panel explanations of their errors to entertain listeners.[18] During World War II, cash prizes shifted to war bonds and stamps to support the war effort, maintaining values around $10 for used questions and up to $25 plus an Encyclopedia Britannica set for stumpers.[17]Episodes lasted 30 minutes and typically featured four to six questions, structured to build from straightforward inquiries to more challenging "stump the experts" segments designed to test the panel's limits. The broadcast concluded with the host's summary of key insights from the discussion, reinforcing the show's blend of education and amusement.[16]
Hosting and Panel Dynamics
Clifton Fadiman served as the host of Information Please from its inception in 1938 through much of its run, employing a warm, witty, and supportive style characterized by his quick wit and broad knowledge. He was known for gently chiding panelists when they missed answers, such as remarking, “Come, come, gentlemen—everyone knows that,” which added a light-hearted, schoolmasterish tone to the proceedings without stifling the flow. Fadiman's moderation encouraged spontaneity and banter among the panelists, framing questions in an engaging manner to spark lively discussions rather than rote responses.[19][1]The panel typically consisted of three regular experts—newspaper columnist Franklin P. Adams, sports columnist and naturalist John Kieran, and pianist-composer Oscar Levant—alongside Fadiman as moderator, creating a core group whose diverse expertise covered literature, science, arts, and current events. Interactions emphasized intellectual sparring and ad-libbed humor, with the panel's erudite answers often laced with puns, storytelling, and casual unpretentiousness that fostered a conversational rather than strictly competitive atmosphere. Levant's sarcasm stood out, as he possessed a “positive genius for making offhand cutting remarks,” while debates frequently arose when even the experts faltered on listener-submitted questions, highlighting authentic moments of humor and correction.[1][19]Production elements reinforced the show's dynamic feel, with episodes broadcast live from New York studios on the NBCBlue Network, featuring minimal scripting beyond the prepared questions to allow for unscripted exchanges. This approach, in the Tuesday evening 8:30 PM slot starting from its 1938 premiere, enabled the panel's natural interplay, including groan-inducing wordplay and spontaneous wit, while electronic transcription—pioneered by the show in 1939—allowed rebroadcasts to the West Coast. The result was a highbrow yet accessible format that prioritized engaging dialogue over polished performance.[19][1]
Panelists
Regular Panelists
The core of Information Please's panel consisted of three regular experts whose diverse backgrounds and personalities defined the program's blend of erudition and entertainment: Franklin P. Adams, John Kieran, and Oscar Levant. These panelists, alongside host Clifton Fadiman, fielded listener-submitted questions on a wide array of topics, contributing to the show's reputation for witty, informative discourse from its debut on NBC radio in 1938.[16][7]Franklin P. Adams, affectionately known as F.P.A., was a celebrated newspaper columnist, poet, and satirist whose expertise in poetry, literature, and popular culture made him a cornerstone of the panel. Renowned for his sharp humorous quips and lighthearted banter, Adams appeared in nearly every episode from the show's launch in 1938 until 1948, bringing a touch of Algonquin Round Table sophistication to the broadcasts.[20][21][22]John Kieran, a distinguished sports columnist for The New York Times and an avid naturalist, specialized in natural history, sports, and literature, often serving as the panel's fact-checker with his vast, encyclopedic recall. His precise, unflappable responses on topics ranging from ornithology to Olympic history helped maintain the show's intellectual rigor; Kieran participated throughout most of the program's run, from 1938 into the late 1940s.[23][24][25]Oscar Levant, an acclaimed concert pianist, composer, and film commentator, infused the discussions with his acerbic wit, sarcasm, and insights into music and Hollywood culture, adding a layer of celebrity glamour and irreverence. He joined the panel at the outset in 1938 and contributed biweekly for much of the early years, departing in 1943 amid his rising film career.[26][27][28]Following Levant's exit, the show occasionally featured brief replacements such as music critic and composer Deems Taylor to maintain the panel's balance of expertise.[19]
Notable Guests
The radio quiz program Information Please regularly featured a fourth panelist who was a guest, selected for their expertise, fame, or ability to inject fresh perspectives into the discussions, appearing in virtually every episode alongside the core trio of regulars.[1] These guests, often celebrities or intellectuals, comprised about one-quarter of each broadcast's panel and helped diversify the show's intellectual banter with humor, specialized knowledge, or timely insights.[29]Comedian Fred Allen, a prominent humorist of the era, appeared as a guest panelist in the early 1940s, bringing his signature dry wit and absurdist commentary that occasionally stumped the regulars and added levity to the proceedings.[30] Similarly, Groucho Marx joined the panel for a memorable October 31, 1941, episode, where his rapid-fire quips and comedic timing on topics ranging from history to pop culture provided a sharp contrast to the show's more erudite tone, delighting listeners with his unpredictable responses.[31]Intellectual figures also enriched the broadcasts; conductor and composer Leonard Bernstein served as a recurring guest in the 1940s, particularly shining on music-related questions and demonstrating his encyclopedic knowledge of classical repertoire, which elevated the panel's discussions on the arts. In a post-World War II context, baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson appeared on April 23, 1947, shortly after breaking Major League Baseball's color barrier, offering expert insights on sports while subtly highlighting civil rights challenges amid the era's racial tensions.[32] These appearances not only broadened the program's appeal but also underscored its role in showcasing diverse voices during a transformative period in American culture.
Accolades and Cultural Impact
Awards and Recognitions
During World War II, Information Please played a significant role in promoting U.S. war bonds, conducting live appearances that raised substantial funds for the war effort. A notable event on April 12, 1943, in Hartford, Connecticut, generated $203.48 million in war bond sales, including $200 million pledged by 150 local businesses in exchange for tickets to the performance.[33] Another appearance on September 27, 1943, in Newark, New Jersey, raised $277.4 million from an audience of 3,270 attendees.[34] These initiatives aligned with the U.S. Treasury Department's broader campaigns to finance the war, and the show's contributions were recognized by the department for enhancing public participation in bond drives during 1943.[35]Industry publications praised Information Please for its innovative format, which fostered high listener engagement by soliciting questions from the audience and featuring expert panelists in real-time debates. Variety and Billboard noted its pioneering role in elevating quiz shows beyond entertainment, emphasizing intellectual discourse that drew educated audiences and sustained popularity through interactive elements.[36] Additionally, it became the first major radio program to utilize prerecorded repeats, allowing transcription of episodes for West Coast broadcasts to accommodate time zone differences starting in 1939.[37]The show's sponsorship by Lucky Strike cigarettes during the 1940s was lauded in advertising trade circles for effectively tying product promotion to the program's sophisticated appeal, contributing to successful campaigns that boosted brand visibility among upscale listeners.[38]
Media Influences and References
The popularity of Information Please extended beyond radio into visual media through a series of theatrical short films produced by RKO Pictures from 1939 to 1943, which adapted the show's format into live-action sequences where panelists like Clifton Fadiman and John Kieran fielded and answered audience-submitted questions on topics ranging from history to science.[39] These shorts, typically running 10-20 minutes, captured the intellectual banter and expert discussions that defined the program, often incorporating visual aids like maps or props to illustrate responses, and were distributed to theaters as part of double features to capitalize on the show's cultural cachet.[40]Commercial tie-ins further amplified the show's reach, including an official card game released in 1940 that allowed players to quiz each other with trivia cards inspired by listener questions from the broadcasts, and the Information Please Almanac, first published in 1947 and edited by John Kieran, which compiled notable questions, answers, and factual insights from the program into a reference volume.[41][4] These products not only monetized the intellectual appeal of the series but also encouraged home-based engagement with its quiz mechanics, mirroring the participatory spirit of the radio episodes.The show permeated popular culture, serving as a reference point in the 1949 film A Letter to Three Wives, where it is invoked as a symbol of everyday intellectual entertainment listened to by characters amid domestic drama. It was also parodied in 1940s radio sketches, most notably in a January 17, 1943, episode of The Jack Benny Program that lampooned the panel's erudite style through exaggerated expert blunders and humorous misfires on trivia questions.[42]Information Please influenced the development of the panel quiz genre, with its format of celebrity experts tackling obscure queries credited as a direct precursor to later shows like What's My Line? (1950), which adopted similar interactive panel dynamics while shifting focus to mystery guessing.[41]
Adaptations
Television Versions
The television adaptation of Information Please aired on CBS as a summer series from June 29 to September 21, 1952, consisting of 13 half-hour episodes broadcast on Sunday evenings at 9:00 p.m. ET.[43][9] It served as a summer replacement for the musical variety series The Fred Waring Show. The program retained the core radio format of audience-submitted questions posed to a panel of experts but incorporated visual elements suited to the medium, such as occasional props or diagrams to illustrate queries, while maintaining its emphasis on verbal discussion and erudite banter.[44]Clifton Fadiman hosted the first seven episodes, drawing on his long tenure from the radio original, before John K. M. McCaffery took over starting August 17 for the remaining six broadcasts. Franklin P. Adams and John Kieran returned as regular panelists, providing continuity with the radio show's intellectual tone, alongside rotating guests from fields like literature and science.[45] Episodes typically featured three panelists fielding four to six challenging questions, with submitters receiving $10 book certificates via the American Booksellers Association for questions used and $25 if the panel was stumped.[3]The series received moderate critical praise for preserving the radio version's wit and knowledge but struggled with audience engagement in the nascent television landscape, where faster-paced visuals dominated.[44] Low viewership led to its cancellation after the planned summer run, with no immediate U.S. television revivals of the core format.[9]
International Adaptations
The Australian adaptation of Information Please premiered on commercial radio in 1939, introduced by station 3DB in Melbourne as a program allowing listeners to submit questions for expert panelists to answer.[46] Hosted by John Stuart, the show featured local Australian panelists who provided insights on diverse topics.[47] It aired on stations such as 2CH, 2UW, and 2SM, typically in 30-minute episodes on Saturdays and Tuesdays.[47]The format closely mirrored the U.S. original, with listener-submitted questions forming the basis of each broadcast, answered by a panel of experts in a conversational style that emphasized wit and knowledge.[47] However, adaptations tailored the content to Australian audiences, incorporating questions on national history, geography, sports like cricket and Australian rules football, and cultural matters relevant to the continent.[46] This localization helped foster audience engagement, as the show encouraged public participation by reading out and addressing queries from ordinary listeners, promoting a sense of national discourse.[46]The program proved popular, running concurrently with the American version and airing weekly episodes that sustained listener interest through the 1940s and 1950s.[47] Its longevity reflected the appeal of interactive radio formats in pre-television Australia, though it eventually concluded in the early 1960s as television's emergence shifted entertainment preferences.[47]In the United Kingdom, the BBC adapted the format as The Brains Trust, which launched in 1941 and drew direct inspiration from Information Please by featuring experts responding to audience queries in a panel discussion style.[48] These experiments highlighted transatlantic influences on British radio but were shaped by wartime programming priorities.[49]
Legacy
Recordings and Availability
Approximately 261 of the 377 episodes of the radio series Information Please have survived, with the majority dating from the 1940s.[8] These preserved recordings are held in collections such as the Library of Congress's NBC radio archives and various old time radio repositories.[50]Commercial releases of select episodes became available in the 2000s through Radio Archives, which produced CD sets featuring restored audio. Volumes 1 through 3, for example, compile episodes from 1938 and 1939, highlighting the panel's banter on topics ranging from literature to current events.[2][19][51] Additional volumes, such as Volume 5, extend coverage to later broadcasts.[52]Online access to surviving episodes is widespread via free downloads on platforms like the Internet Archive and dedicated old time radio sites.[53][1] A Podbean podcast series, launched in the 2010s, offers remastered versions of episodes for streaming, focusing on high-quality audio reproduction.[54] More recent options include the GSMC Classics podcast, which provides episodes for streaming as of 2023.[55]Most surviving recordings are in monaural format, reflecting the era's broadcast technology, and some wartime episodes were not preserved due to material shortages and limited recording practices during World War II.
Enduring Influence
Information Please pioneered the use of audience-sourced questions in quiz programming, a format where listeners submitted queries via mail to challenge a panel of experts, setting a precedent for interactive entertainment that emphasized intellectual engagement over simple recall. This innovative approach, which rewarded contributors for particularly difficult questions, influenced the broader evolution of the quiz show genre, contributing to the development of later programs that incorporated public participation and expert commentary.[56]The show's educational value lay in its promotion of intellectual discourse among educated panelists, fostering a public appreciation for erudite conversation during the pre-television era. By featuring experts like Franklin P. Adams and John Kieran debating diverse topics—from literature to current events—Information Please elevated radio as a medium for thoughtful exchange, contrasting with more sensationalized programming of the time. This legacy persists in 21st-century analyses of Golden Age radio, where the program is cited as a exemplar of how broadcast media could cultivate cultural literacy and critical thinking, as seen in historical overviews that highlight its role in shaping audience expectations for informative content.[57]In modern media, Information Please receives nods as a foundational influence on contemporary quiz and panel formats, symbolizing an era of pre-TV erudition where wit and knowledge were prized over spectacle. Clifton Fadiman's urbane moderating style, characterized by sharp facilitation and literary flair, finds echoes in NPR's Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!, a satirical news quiz show that similarly blends expert banter with audience interaction to deliver accessible intellectual humor.[58]