| Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? |
 New Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (UK) Logo | | Format | Quiz show | | Created by | Celador | | Country of origin |
United Kingdom | | Production | | Running time | 30 minutes (daytime) (1998 - 1999) 60 minutes (primetime) (1999 - present) | | Broadcast | | Original channel | ITV | | Original run | 4 September 1998 – Present | | External links | | Official website | Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? is a television game show which offers very large cash prizes for correctly answering successive multiple-choice questions of increasing difficulty. The format is owned and licensed by the British production company Celador. The maximum cash prize (in the original British version) is one million pounds. Most international versions offer a top prize of one million units of the local currency, though the actual value of the prize varies widely, depending on the currency's exchange rate. In at least one country (the United States) the top prizes are no longer cash, but annuities. Who Wants to be a Millionaire may refer to:: Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, a series of popular international game shows Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (UK game show), the original series Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (US game show), Stani bogat in Bulgaria Kaun Banega Crorepati...
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Quiz Show is a 1994 film which tells the true story of the Twenty One quiz show scandal of the 1950s. ...
Celador is an independent production company formed in 1983. ...
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Independent Television (generally known as ITV, but also as ITV Network) is a public service network of British commercial television broadcasters, set up under the Independent Television Authority (ITA) to provide competition to the BBC. ITV is the oldest commercial television network in the UK. Since 1990 and the Broadcasting...
is the 247th day of the year (248th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1998 (MCMXCVIII) was a common year starting on Thursday (link will display full 1998 Gregorian calendar). ...
Quiz show redirects here. ...
For other uses, see Cash (disambiguation). ...
Celador is an independent production company formed in 1983. ...
In the United Kingdom, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? is a television game show which offers a maximum cash prize of one million pounds for correctly answering successive multiple-choice questions of increasing difficulty. ...
For details of notes and coins, see British coinage and British banknotes. ...
The term annuity is used in finance theory to refer to any terminating stream of fixed payments over a specified period of time. ...
The programme originated in the United Kingdom, where it is hosted by Chris Tarrant. It is based on a format devised by David Briggs, who, along with Steve Knight and Mike Whitehill, devised a number of the promotional games for Chris Tarrant's breakfast show on Capital FM radio. The original working title for the show was Cash Mountain. When it first aired in the UK on September 4, 1998, it was a surprising twist on the gameshow genre. Only one contestant plays at a time (similar to some radio quizzes), and the emphasis is on suspense rather than speed. There is no time limit to answer questions, and contestants are given the question before they must decide whether to attempt an answer. Christopher John Tarrant OBE (born 10 October 1946, Reading, Berkshire) is an English radio broadcaster, television presenter and war lord, now best known for hosting the TV game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. // Tarrant was educated at the Kings School, Worcester (1960-4) where he excelled at...
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Breakfast television (UK) or morning show (U.S.) is a type of news and entertainment television program, broadcast live in the morning (typically between 6:00am and 9:00am). ...
The Capital Radio building in Leicester Square, London. ...
is the 247th day of the year (248th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1998 (MCMXCVIII) was a common year starting on Thursday (link will display full 1998 Gregorian calendar). ...
The show is named after a 1956 Cole Porter song[citation needed] from the film High Society which emphasised the desirability of love over material possessions: "Who wants to be a millionaire? I don't. / And I don't 'cause all I want is you." Cole Albert Porter (June 9, 1891 â October 15, 1964) was an American composer and songwriter from Peru, Indiana. ...
High Society is a 1956 musical film made by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in VistaVision with music and lyrics by Cole Porter. ...
In 2000, a board game based on the hit television series of the same name was released by Pressman Toy Corp. Year 2000 (MM) was a leap year starting on Saturday (link will display full 2000 Gregorian calendar). ...
A board game is a game played with counters or pieces that are placed on, removed from, or moved across a board (a premarked surface, usually specific to that game). ...
Pressman Toy Corporation is a toy manufacturer based in Piscataway, New Jersey which was founded in 1922 by Jack Pressman. ...
In March 2006, Celador announced that it was seeking to sell the worldwide rights to the show, together with the UK programme library, as the first phase of a sell-off of the company's format and production divisions. Dutch company 2waytraffic has now acquired Millionaire and the rest of Celador's programme library. March 2006 : â - January - February - March - April - May - June - July - August - September - October - November - December- â Fijian Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase announces that the 2006 Fiji general elections will be held in the second week of May 2006 from the 6th to the 13th. ...
2WayTraffic is a Dutch company that acquired in December of 2006, the rights of the company Celador International and Who Wants To Be A Millionaire. ...
Stage The show is filmed in front of a studio audience who are arranged in circular tiers around a pit in which the action takes place. At the beginning of each show, the host introduces a group of ten contestants (5 in the Taiwanese version, 6 in the Finnish, the Bulgarian and Icelandic versions and 8 in the Armenian, FYROM, Latvian and Nigerian versions), giving their names and where they are from. Each contestant brings along a friend, lover or relative (not to be confused with the phone-a-friend explained later), who sits in the audience and, if the contestant progresses, is periodically shown on camera looking pleased, excited, nervous etc. For the Chinese civilization, see China. ...
For an explanation of terms related to Macedonia, see Macedonia (terminology). ...
Rules The contestants first have to undergo a preliminary round, called "Fastest Finger First", where they are all given a question and four answers from the host, and are asked to put those four answers into a particular order. (In the very first series of the British version, and until the end of the 2003 season in the Australian version, "Fastest Finger First" required the contestants to answer one multiple choice question correctly as quickly as possible.) The contestant who does this correctly and in the fastest time goes on to sit in the chair (the "hotseat") and play for the maximum possible prize (often a million in the local currency, though this depends on its value). In the US version, this round was called "Fastest Fingers", and was eliminated when the show moved to syndicated distribution in 2002. Now contestants are required to pass a standard game show qualifying test at contestant auditions (usually 100 questions), and these contestants have passed a more difficult qualifying test than in the UK format. In the United States, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (also known simply as Millionaire) is a television game show which offers a maximum prize of $1,000,000 (originally lump sum; now annuitized) for correctly answering 15 successive multiple-choice questions of increasing difficulty. ...
Once in the hot seat, the contestant is asked increasingly difficult general knowledge questions by the host. Questions are multiple choice: four possible answers are given and the contestant must choose the correct one. On answering the first question correctly, the contestant wins £500 (in the UK – other countries vary the currency but have the same basic format). Subsequent questions are played for increasingly large sums (roughly doubling at each turn). On the first few questions, some choices often have joke answers. The complete sequence of prizes is as follows:
| Old - £100
- £200
- £300
- £500
- £1,000
- £2,000
- £4,000
- £8,000
- £16,000
- £32,000
- £64,000
- £125,000
- £250,000
- £500,000
- £1 million
| New - £500
- £1,000
- £2,000
- £5,000
- £10,000
- £20,000
- £50,000
- £75,000
- £150,000
- £250,000
- £500,000
- £1 million
| These prizes are not cumulative; for example, for answering the first three questions correctly the contestant wins £300, not £100 + £200 + £300 = £600. After viewing a question, the contestant can "walk away" and "take the money" (or rather "get the cheque" in some versions) that they have already won, rather than attempting an answer. If the contestant answers a question incorrectly, then they lose all the money they have won, except that the £1,000 and £50,000 prizes are guaranteed: if a player gets a question wrong above these levels, then they drop down only to the previous guaranteed prize. This means that the player can always attempt the £2,000 and £75,000 questions without fear, since they are guaranteed the previous amount even if they get the answer wrong. The game ends when the contestant answers a question incorrectly, decides not to answer a question, or answers all fifteen questions correctly, thus winning the top prize of £1,000,000. In the United States, since the autumn of 2004, the $32,000 level has been reduced to $25,000, the $64,000 to $50,000 and the $125,000 to $100,000; in addition, the $500,000 level is now paid off annually, with an initial payment of $125,000 followed by 10 equal yearly payments. The $1 million is now $125,000 plus 20 equal payments.
New format of the show On August 13, 2007, it was announced that the UK version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? is changing its format, cutting the number of questions it takes to reach the £1 million jackpot. The prize money will start at £500 rather than £100 and there will be only 12 questions to replace the former 15. After reaching £1,000, the prize fund will increase to £2,000, £5,000, £10,000, £20,000 and £50,000, which is the second "safe haven", previously £32,000. The first set of contestants to face the new rules were comedians Jon Culshaw and John Thomson in a charity special, shown on ITV on 18 August 2007.[1] is the 225th day of the year (226th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 2007 (MMVII) is the current year, a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and the AD/CE era in the 21st century. ...
Jonathan Peter Culshaw (born 2 June 1968 in Ormskirk, Lancashire) is a British impressionist and comedian. ...
John Patrick Thomson (born Patrick Francis McAleer, April 2, 1969) is an English actor and stand-up comedian, known for his roles in The Fast Show and Cold Feet. ...
Independent Television (generally known as ITV, but also as ITV Network) is a public service network of British commercial television broadcasters, set up under the Independent Television Authority (ITA) to provide competition to the BBC. ITV is the oldest commercial television network in the UK. Since 1990 and the Broadcasting...
is the 230th day of the year (231st in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 2007 (MMVII) is the current year, a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and the AD/CE era in the 21st century. ...
Lifelines If at any point the contestant is unsure of the answer to a question, he or she can use one or more "lifelines". After using lifelines, contestants can either answer the question, use another lifeline, or walk away and keep the money (except for the Double Dip lifeline). - Fifty-Fifty (50/50): The contestant asks the host to have the computer randomly eliminate two of the incorrect answer choices, leaving the contestant with a choice between the correct answer and one incorrect one from which to select.
- Originally, in both the UK and U.S. versions, the answers eliminated were not random but were pre-selected as the ones the contestant was least likely to pick. This was not mentioned on the air (for example, U.S. host Regis Philbin would just say "computer, take away two of the wrong answers") but was revealed in interviews.[citation needed] Today the selection is random (and U.S. host Meredith Vieira always says so).
- Ask the Audience: The contestant asks the studio audience which answer they believe is correct. Members of the studio audience indicate their choices using an audience response system. The results are immediately displayed on the contestant's and host's screens.
- For some time on the syndicated U.S. version, the question was also asked through AOL Instant Messenger to those who had signed up to answer questions for this lifeline. The contestant saw the studio-audience and AOL responses displayed separately. The AOL tie-in was discontinued beginning with the 2006-2007 season.
- Phone-A-Friend: Contestants may call one of up to five pre-arranged friends. The contestant must provide the five friends' names and phone numbers in advance. In countries where the show is broadcasted live, the friends are alerted when their contestant reaches the hotseat, and are told to keep the phone free and to wait for three rings before answering. The contestant has thirty seconds to read the four choices to the friend, who must select an answer before the time runs out. Phone-a-friends often express their certainty as a percentage ("I am 80% sure it's C.") In the event that a contestant has a disability which affects his or her ability to use this lifeline without assistance, the contestant will have the option of having the host read the question and answer choices to the friend, and obtain an answer from them. Phone-a-friends may not be called on cellular phones, and individuals participating as phone-a-friends may do so only twice during any given broadcast season of Who Wants to be a Millionaire.
During the show's primetime run on ABC, the Phone-A-Friend lifeline was sponsored by the old AT&T, who supposedly connected the phone calls. Regis Francis Xavier Philbin (born August 25, 1931) is an Emmy Award-winning American television personality best known for his roles as a talk show host, game show host, and presenter at various events. ...
Meredith Vieira (born December 30, 1953) is an Emmy Award-winning American television personality, game show hostess and journalist. ...
Infrared audience response control Audience response is a type of interaction associated with the use of audience response systems, to create interactivity between a presenter and his audience. ...
AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) is a free, advertisement-supported proprietary instant messaging and presence computer program which uses the OSCAR instant messaging protocol and the TOC protocol. ...
For other uses, see AOL (disambiguation). ...
This article is about the American broadcast network. ...
This article is about the current AT&T. For the 1885-2005 company, see American Telephone & Telegraph. ...
In February 2004, the U.S. launched a short-lived spinoff known as Who Wants to Be a Super Millionaire. On this particular version, two new lifelines were introduced, but they were only available after a contestant cleared the $100,000 question (the tenth question in this version): Who Wants to be a Super Millionaire, often shortened to Super Millionaire, was a television game show spinoff to the American version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. ...
- Three Wise Men: The contestant asks a sequestered panel chosen by the sponsor which answer they believe is correct. The panel, consisting of three people, one being a former million-dollar-winner of the show, has thirty seconds to select an answer but does not need to reach a consensus—each member of the panel may provide a different answer. This lifeline is also used in the Russian version of the show though it can be used on any of the 15 questions.
- Double Dip: The contestant can give two answers for a question. However, once a contestant elects to use the Double Dip lifeline, the contestant cannot walk away from the question. The contestant must indicate and confirm that he or she intends to use this lifeline before giving a first answer. If the first answer is incorrect, the contestant gives another answer—but if the second answer is also wrong, then the contestant will leave with only $100,000. If the first answer given is correct, the lifeline is still considered to have been used. Using a Double Dip after a 50/50 essentially gives the contestant a free shot at the question. The 50/50 eliminates all but two of the choices, and the Double Dip gives two chances to select the correct answer, ensuring a correct answer. The combination of 50/50 and Double Dip was never used on the show, though.
In 2004, the syndicated U.S. version introduced another new lifeline: - Switch the Question: This lifeline becomes available only after the contestant has correctly answered the $25,000 question. If the contestant has not chosen a final answer on the revealed question, this lifeline entitles the contestant to switch out the original question for another question of the same value. Once the contestant elects to use this lifeline, he or she cannot return to the original question, and thus the correct answer is revealed for the record. In addition, any lifelines used by the contestant while attempting to answer the original revealed question prior to the question switch will not be reinstated. This lifeline has also been used in occasional specials of the UK show, but referred to as Flip. It is now used in the American, Australian, Arabic, French, Greek, Israeli, Indonesian, Indian, Italian, Norwegian, and Serbian versions of the show.
Origin The game has similarities with the 1950s show The 64,000 Dollar Question. In that show the money won would also double with each question, and if the wrong answer was given all the money was lost. Contestants would get a free car as a consolation prize if they had reached at least $8,000. The $64,000 Question was a popular United States television game show from 1955-1958; The $64,000 Challenge (1956-1958) was its popular spinoff show. ...
In the 1990s, future Who Wants to be a Millionaire? executive producer Michael Davies attempted to revive Question as The $640,000 Question for ABC, before abandoning that effort in favour of the British hit. Michael Davies is a British producer of television game shows in the United States. ...
Disputed claims of creation Since the show launched, several individuals have claimed that they originated the format and that Celador have appropriated their intellectual property. Sponsored by the Daily Mail, Mike Bull, a Southampton-based journalist, took Celador to the High Court in March 2002 claiming authorship of the Lifelines. Celador settled out of court with a confidentiality clause. The Daily Mail is a British newspaper and the oldest tabloid, first published in 1896. ...
In 2003 Sydney resident John J Leonard also claimed to have originated a format substantially similar to Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (although it had no LifeLines). He has to date been unable to raise the minimum quarter of a million pounds a non-UK resident needs to finance legal action against Celador in the High Court. In an effort to finance his case he published a detailed account of how he created the show.[2][3] In 2004, Alan Melville and John Baccini sued Celador over a similar claim. On that occasion Celador reached a confidential out-of-court settlement with both men.[4]
Is that your final answer? The series also established a catchphrase with "Is that your final answer?" This question derived from a rule requirement that the player must clearly indicate his or her choice before it would be made official (since the nature of the game allowed the player to think aloud about the options before committing to an answer). Many parodies of the game show capitalised on this phrase. (In the game, players could preempt the question by themselves stating "final answer" or some variant, and this is common during the early questions of each round; sometimes it is not even enforced during the early questions, although after realizing that some contestants could manage to answer even the first few questions incorrectly, the "final answer" rule is employed throughout the entire show). Another hallmark of the show is the use of dramatic pauses before the host acknowledged whether or not the answer was correct. The pauses tended to become more tense the higher the amount of money on the line. Occasionally, if it is time to go for an advert break, the host will take the final answer but not announce if it is right until after the break. A catch phrase is a phrase or expression that is popularized, usually through repeated use, by a real person or fictional character. ...
Parodies - The Amanda Show had a parody known as "So you want to win five dollars."
- Hip hop group The X-Ecutioners featured a skit on their 2002 album Built from Scratch called "Who Wants to Be a M*****f**kin' Millionaire", which humorously ends with a successful contestant choosing to quit the game after winning a mere $250.
- In The Simpsons episode Day of the Jackanapes, Moe Szyslak participates in a TV show called Me Wantee! that spoofs the quiz.
The Amanda Show is a live-action comedy and variety show aired on Nickelodeon in the United States, Australia, The Netherlands and the United Kingdom and Family in Canada. ...
The Ecutioners is a group of hip hop DJs / turntablists from New York. ...
Built From Scratch is one of X-Ecutioners albums. ...
Simpsons redirects here. ...
Day of the Jackanapes is the thirteenth episode of the twelfth season of The Simpsons. ...
Morris Moe Szyslak (pronounced //) is a fictional character on the animated series The Simpsons, voiced by Hank Azaria. ...
National variants -
// Main article: Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (UK game show) The show is hosted by Chris Tarrant. ...
Top prize winners -
The winners of the top prize for each version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire? are // Rob Coach Fulton, October 17, 2005 Martin Flood, November 14, 2005 Anton Sutterluetty, June 11, 2001 (won 10,000,000 ATS) Asen Angelov answered the major prize question and was awarded 100,000...
See also This is a listing of topics pertaining to television programs. ...
This is a list of television shows that were franchised and adapted in different version. ...
References - ^ New prize levels for Millionaire - Digital Spy
- ^ Millionaire
- ^ The Sydney Sun-Herald, March 30 2003
- ^ Birmingham Sunday Mercury, August 28 2005
External links The URL www. ...
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