# Past Times Pinball History Ep 9: Ballyhoo

**Source:** Past Times Arcade  
**Type:** video  
**Published:** 2024-01-03  
**Duration:** 2m 38s  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LeUMxVuuigY

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## Analysis

Past Times Arcade presents a historical overview of Ballyhoo, the 1932 game that launched Bally Manufacturing Company. The video covers designer Raymond Moloney, the game's massive success (50,000 units in two months), original pricing ($16.50), and mechanical features like the plunger system and scoring multiplier hole. The host compares Ballyhoo's design inspiration from a magazine of the same name and demonstrates the machine's gameplay.

### Key Claims

- [HIGH] Ballyhoo was the first game released by Bally, and the company was named after it — _Past Times Arcade host, presenting as established historical fact_
- [HIGH] Raymond Moloney designed Ballyhoo, inspired by a magazine called Ballyhoo — _Past Times Arcade host_
- [HIGH] 50,000 Ballyhoo units were released two months after Gottlieb's Baffle Ball — _Past Times Arcade host_
- [HIGH] Ballyhoo sold for $16.50 and could be purchased with wooden or metal legs — _Past Times Arcade host_
- [HIGH] Ballyhoo featured a 'bally hole' at the top that functioned as a 2x score multiplier — _Past Times Arcade host, demonstrating on machine_
- [MEDIUM] Wiffle, made in Youngstown Ohio, was the first game with a coin slide — _Past Times Arcade host, comparing to Ballyhoo_

### Notable Quotes

> "Ballyhoo was the first game released by Bally. It was so popular that they actually named the company after it."
> — **Past Times Arcade host**, 0:00-0:15
> _Core historical fact establishing Ballyhoo's foundational importance to Bally Manufacturing_

> "So this was designed by Raymond Moloney. Raymond was a fan of a magazine called Ballyhoo which actually gave the name to the game"
> — **Past Times Arcade host**, 0:15-0:30
> _Establishes design inspiration source and designer attribution_

> "They released 50,000 of these two months after Alvin Gottlieb released Baffle Ball"
> — **Past Times Arcade host**, 0:30-0:45
> _Demonstrates Ballyhoo's rapid commercial success relative to competitor Baffle Ball_

> "The bally hole at the top is actually for a two times multiplier of your score"
> — **Past Times Arcade host**, 3:00-3:15
> _Explains key mechanical gameplay feature and scoring mechanism_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| Ballyhoo | game | 1932 pinball game, first release by Bally Manufacturing, inspired by Ballyhoo magazine |
| Bally Manufacturing Company | company | Pinball manufacturer founded and named after Ballyhoo game; released 867 games under the Bally name |
| Raymond Moloney | person | Designer of Ballyhoo (1932) |
| David Gottlieb | person | Released Baffle Ball, competitor to Ballyhoo released two months earlier |
| Baffle Ball | game | Early pinball game by Gottlieb, released two months before Ballyhoo's 50,000-unit run |
| Wiffle | game | Early pinball game made in Youngstown, Ohio; first game with a coin slide mechanism |
| Past Times Arcade | organization | Pinball arcade venue showcasing historically significant machines including the featured 1932 Ballyhoo |
| Ballyhoo magazine | product | Magazine that inspired the name and visual design of the Ballyhoo pinball game |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Pinball history and origins, Game design and mechanical innovation, Early pinball manufacturers (Bally, Gottlieb), Vintage pinball machine features and mechanics
- **Secondary:** Arcade venue preservation and education, Theme licensing and IP inspiration in pinball

### Sentiment

**Positive** (0.85) — Host expresses enthusiasm and reverence for historical significance of Ballyhoo; tone is educational and celebratory of pinball heritage. No criticism or negative sentiment detected.

### Signals

- **[event_signal]** Past Times Arcade Pinball History series (Episode 9) documenting and preserving classic pinball machines for public education and engagement (confidence: high) — Series presentation format, machine preservation, public access arrangement

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## Transcript

 Today for past times pinball history we're going to feature this 1932 Ballyhoo. Ballyhoo was the first game released by Bally. It was so popular that they actually named the company after it. So this was designed by Raymond Maloney. Raymond was a fan of a magazine called Ballyhoo which actually gave the name to the game and I can't help but notice here are some magazine covers that I printed out look at the colors the patterns and how it compares to the game here so they released 50,000 of these two months after Gottlieb released baffle ball this was the first game again by Bally who ended up releasing 867 games under the name of Bally manufacturing company they They also released this game, John Youssi here it's seven balls for a penny. They also released it in 10 balls for a penny. When these were sold, they sold these for $16.50. You could also get wooden legs or metal legs as a stand. You notice here that we have a little bit of a plunger that's angled up to shoot the balls onto the play field We have a couple other ones over here Let go over here and check out this Wiffle This is one we featured before too This was made here in Youngstown Ohio which is just down the road This was the very first game with a coin slide And this has a ball lifter that you rotate up and then you shoot the plunger. Whereas this one will shoot the balls from a lower trough. So I'm going to put my penny in here. All right. I'll shoot this first ball. Not a great start. Oh, too bad. So we had a free play here in the middle. Also, the bally hole at the top is actually for a two times multiplier of your score. So what would happen is if this was on a bar or in a gas station or somewhere else, if you reach a certain score, sometimes that attendant would either pay you out, maybe a prize, maybe some money, maybe it's a gift, maybe another free game, and so on. So this is one of the featured games up here actually not to play at past times, historically significant, not able to be played by the public, but it's a 1932 Ballyhoo. So come on in and see these along with some other historic games up here at Past Times Arcade.

_(Acquisition: youtube_groq_whisper, Enrichment: v3)_

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*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: 71991841-c6a7-42c9-b325-863a8a939588*
