


The name of the program is based on the colloquial term Sunday painter, because of the original broadcast date it became The Monday painter. The remaining six episodes, which were originally planned to run up to the 250th edition, were no longer produced by the broadcaster, as the audience quotas had not reached the desired level at the time. On July 8, 1996, the station broadcast the 244th and last episode of Monday Painters on this slot. Thus remained Pictionary by 28 December 1992 at the regional evening program of the ARD.Īfter a one-year break in 1993, the Südwest 3 program continued with new episodes in January 1994, but now only lasted half an hour. These 10 programs could each be seen at 5:33 p.m., exclusively in the then regionally separate ARD evening program of SDR and SWF, before the game show was again relocated to other broadcasting slots the evening before. The program kept this slot until December 20, 1988.įrom Mato November 20, 1989, the popular game show returned with 10 issues (episode 122 to 131) on Monday evening. From Janu, Die Mondaymaler was then shown again in the main evening program broadcast nationwide by ARD on Tuesday evening at 8:15 p.m. in the ARD afternoon program as a special edition on Christmas Eve, in which only children's teams played against and with one another. On December 24, 1981, the program was broadcast once at 3:45 p.m. With the latter's exit, the program switched from Jto Octoagain to Südwest 3 and was also taken over by other ARD regional programs. Īfter a few conceptual changes, the program went on air on Januunder the title Die Mondaymaler with Frank Elstner in the evening program of German television. The game show ran from 1969 to 1972 under the title Punkt, Punkt, Komma, Strich on Südwest 3 and was initially moderated by Fred Sackmann, from 1971 by Frank Elstner.
