claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.016
Rare 1951 Bally Broadway single-card bingo machine discussed with limited historical documentation.
Only one known unit of the 1951 Bally Broadway exists
medium confidence · Nicholas Backbone citing information from Phil (surname unclear from transcript) and Dennis O'Dell documentation
Bally made two different games titled Broadway
medium confidence · Phil's notes as referenced by Nicholas Backbone
Broadway used the same cabinet and playfield as Bright Lights but with different coin door configuration
medium confidence · Phil's notes cited by Nicholas Backbone
Broadway was distributed in Syracuse, New York area restaurants and bars with $2 payout for four-in-a-row and $10 for five-in-a-row
medium confidence · Information attributed to 'Bill' as cited by Phil's notes
The game was never advertised and may have been a special order for a single operator
low confidence · Nicholas Backbone's speculation based on rarity and distribution pattern
“This looks like a really interesting piece here and it got some great artwork”
Nicholas Backbone @ early in episode — Establishes enthusiasm for the machine despite scarcity of documentation
“It's Papa Duke much a one card version of Brightlights and currently only one is known to exist”
Nicholas Backbone (paraphrasing Phil) @ mid-episode — Key claim about rarity and relationship to Bright Lights
“If you got four in a row, they paid you two bucks and five in a row was a ten dollar payout”
Nicholas Backbone (attributing to Bill via Phil) @ mid-episode — Documents the specific payout structure for this regional variant
“The game was never advertised so it's possible it was a special machine for a single operator who could buy enough to make production worth it”
Nicholas Backbone @ later in episode — Proposes theory about why documentation is so sparse
historical_signal: Episode documents and analyzes a rare 1951 Bally Broadway bingo machine with extremely limited existing records; appears to be one of only one or two known units
high · Nicholas Backbone describes Broadway as an early bingo with scarce information; only one known unit; attribution to Dennis O'Dell's schematics and instruction cards as primary sources
restoration_signal: Dennis O'Dell's ownership and documentation (schematics, instruction cards) of the single known Broadway unit represents active preservation of rare electromechanical pinball history
medium · Nicholas Backbone mentions Dennis O'Dell owns one of these games and provided documentation; plans to follow up with him about the machine
community_signal: Collaboration between podcast host, collectors (Dennis O'Dell), and unnamed historians (Phil, Bill) to piece together fragmented historical documentation about obscure machines
medium · Nicholas Backbone credits multiple sources (Phil's notes, Bill's Syracuse information, Dennis O'Dell's schematics) and acknowledges he would have no knowledge of the game without Phil's contribution
content_signal: 4 For Amusement Only podcast continues detailed exploration of obscure early bingo machines with archaeological approach to documentation
high · Episode 267 dedicated to single rare machine; methodical analysis of artwork, technical specifications, and regional distribution; continuation of coverage series from prior episodes
gaming_signal: Broadway appears to have been a regional variant optimized for specific operator/location with localized payout structure ($2/$10 in Syracuse area)
groq_whisper · $0.017
medium · Bill's testimony that Broadway was in most restaurants and bars in Syracuse with specific payouts; game was never advertised; possible special order for single operator