Ask the audience should always be used early in the game. The later questions are so difficult that only a small proportion will know, so the results of the vote don't tell you much as most will be guessing.
I've seen the audience get the million question right, so I don't know. If you can get through with two life lines, then use them on the last question that's always great lmao.
Never discuss the answer in depth if you're going to ask the audience either. The influence of your thoughts will make it likely that the results are skewed. If I were on the show I'd ask the audience members who didn't know to abstain (might not be allowed) or to vote for 1921. This would leave people who are more certain to actually guess at something that might be right.
@@maxscardanelli6185"I may be some time" was famously said by an Arctic explorer. Here is a copy and paste from wikipedia. According to Scott's diary entry of 16 or 17 March Oates had walked out of the tent the previous day into a −40 °F (−40 °C) blizzard to his death. Scott wrote in his diary: "We knew that poor Oates was walking to his death, but though we tried to dissuade him, we knew it was the act of a brave man and an English gentleman." According to Scott's diary, as Oates left the tent he said, "I am just going outside and may be some time."
@@maxscardanelli6185 explorer Oates on the scott expedition was injured or sick and ws slowing down the expedition and the race to reach the south pole first. he walked out of the tent, saying" i'm going out now, i may be some tiime" effectively walking to his death sacrificing himself so the team could make the pole first. little did he know they had already lost the race and Amundsen got there first.
You could hear Jeremy giving the audience a hint in the tone of his voice at 4:55 he obviously knew the answer. People should probably monitor the host if they don't know the answer, my observation tells me that the host usually gives you slight hints if you're headed in the right direction.
I think you might be reading into this a little too much - he just said "let's see", and clearly got stuck in the middle of the sentence thinking of what to say next - shame Ask the Host was already used up, though - Jeremy would've known this 100%
@@EnterShikari01Hearts of Iron 4 is a grand strategy game set in WW2, there are mods for the game that change the setting to that of WW1. In the game you’ll often get Pop-Up messages for important historical events (germany annexing austria, Hindenburg desaster). In the WW1 mod there is one such pop-up fot Amundsen reaching the south pole.
@@samhaigh5355 It'll probably return at some point in July. If you go to the application website, it says the application window closes on the 28th of June, so at some point, all of it will be filmed over a week, then it'll be edited and aired hopefully before August starts.
Who wants to be a millionaire lifeline rules: 1. If you think you may use the audience, 50:50 or Jeremy, say nothing. The “computer” nearly always leaves the two you were swithering between. The audience will tend to back up your thinking through confirmation bias, same applies to Jeremy, unless they know the answer for certain they will be susceptible to confirmation bias, can’t help it it’s human nature, giving them the reasons you think an answer is correct makes it worse. You don’t want to be talking people in to giving you a certain answer, you just want the answer. 2. Never use 50:50 before the audience. The people who know will still get it right but the people who don’t will all vote for the same thing which could result in it winning the poll. 3. 50:50 is only useful if you are a swithering between two, say nothing before hand and hope it eliminates one of them. 4. Never take a punt on a £500,000 question (unless you have a safety net), you need to be sure.
Right! Another question: if you dither long enough with your answer, does your phone lifeline have enough time to look it up on the Internet, or what are the rules? She hesitated so long ... I knew the answer, but had time enough to confirm it 😃
@@danihesslinger7968 The phone a friends all have a person from the production crew with them to make sure they aren’t cheating. Jeremy gives a disclaimer on each call now “can I confirm you have someone from the crew there” or something to that effect. They never used to ask this, but I assume the phone a friends have always been in a holding pen somewhere and not just at home in front of google.
Yea it’s so frustrating to the point of cringe how many contestants make such a trivial blunder, despite being knowledgeable enough to make it that far.
I had a friend in school that had a theory that if you don't know the answer to a multiple choice question, go with C or the longest answer. Would've worked on this one.
That’s interesting I can sort of follow the logic of the longest answer being right cos it takes more effort maybe or the other options are easier to come up with… the C bias is probably real overall but I wonder why.
That is, indeed what my Gran. Dot used to say when she used to watch the show, especially when she was living with my family back in 2002 whilst caring for my terminally ill mother [who sadly passed later on that year] who was battling Motor Neurone Disease at the time.
True but its easier to say it when your on a comment section, if the answer was B and she left you people would say oh she should have listened to audience...
I guessed 1911, but I don't know why. It just somehow seemed like the right date because he didn't seem that far back when I learned about him. 1891 seemed too early and 1921 too late for me. It's tough to win, obviously.
i guess 1911 and 1921 because it sound the right year. it's in history book at school but of course if you already old like most people in that studio , surely already forgot it.
Thats a brillant idea to be fair. If i ever get the Chance to Play the german Version of Who wants to be a millionair (bc im from germany) i will remember your comment
@@GelatinousPineappleit’s allowed, but I remember one contestant in the US show tried this strategy saying “please only vote if you’re absolutely certain of the answer” Turned out there were at least 10%-15% who were “absolutely certain” of each of the 4 answers so that wasn’t of any help lol. It could be that the designers foolproofed this cheap strategy by defaulting to a random answer for each person in the audience that doesn’t vote at all.
@@JMcKaySV Everyone over 55 would have said 1911 before any of the answers came up, they used to teach us history back in the day. Such a simple question for a Half Mill.
Sometimes it's always that little majority of the Audience that manages to get it right and not many contestants follow that- they follow so much into the bigger percentages and sometimes that can indeed steer you in the wrong direction of them thinking they know the answer to the question.
I remember reading that Tom Crean was beaten to the South Pole by a small margin by a Norwegian called Roald in 1911, plus Queen Victoria died in 1901 so it ended the victoriana era
I can’t believe it I actually know this answer haha. Learnt about Robert Scott’s race to the South Pole and I know he got there in 1912. Which would mean Amundsen got there 1911.
She was talking about A and B before the audiance. And some 24 marked C. Why she didn't consider it ? Like those people new the answer if not they would go with what she picket in the first place, A or B.
Actually, the French edition had to ditch the Ask the Audience lifeline. It transpired that the audience would on purpose give the contestants the wrong answer. It's a bit of a French thing for the public to want a contestant to fail rather than to get behind. don't know why lol
Always surprises me that Clarkson doesn’t know the £4000 questions but always seems to have the answer to a £1/2 million pound question, it’s then we must realise why he is host
Paying attention in history class in high school should be encouraged by telling children they can later win money with unimportant facts everyone should know.
Thought 1912 before the answers popped up, but it's not an easy question. It being after the Swedish-Norwegian Union dissolved seemed almost guaranteed, but few British would know when that happened. A few months before Titanic sank, I suppose is a good way to remember it (also a few months before Sweden arranged the Olympics, but that's more obscure).
Use your final lifeline before risking it like that lmao atleast haha I think that was the greed talking really, she must have wanted to save it incase she got to the million pound question haha.
I don't think it's "greed" or even "cockiness" to save a lifeline for the possibility that your guess is right, especially if you doubt that any of your friends would know the answer. It's just proper, rational planning.
Oh dear i thought all knew it was just before WW1 Has she never read about Scotts British Antarctic Expedition! Just leaving the tent for a short while, the last words in his Journal. WHy this Victorian idea Discovery Expedition from 1901 to 1904, is when Scott went first to the area.
Never say what you think the answer might be if you are even slightly inclined to ask the audience. You will skew the answers given by those who do not know it. Why do people never seem to learn this?
that lady was right for playing . with great risk comes great reward if she hadn't tried she would have regretted it . she's no coward. I hope I could do that .
I Knew the answer surprisingly. he beat ernest shackelton an irish exployer to the pole. another guy something scott was trying to get there aswell at the same time. scott died. he used horses on his expedition as far as I remember the idiot. all happened in 1911 : )
All i can say for these contestants is you either win lose or go home with nothing but less money or nothing at all but there some excellent contenders who played really well despite the risks
I wasn't sure until she actually mentioned not remembering anything for the 100-year anniversary. That triggered my memory; in episode 1 of Frozen Planet, David Attenborough is standing at the south pole "exactly 100 years, almost to the day". I know roughly when Frozen Planet was filmed...
In Who Wants to be a Millionaire , Sri Lankan edition Sirasa Lakshapathi , Ask the Audience is the best way to win an answer because they are Always Right 🇱🇰🇱🇰😎😎🤟🤟
😅years ago I watched who wants to be a millionaire. He was an elderly guy, he had reached the last question which was. Which town in England, has a street called Land of green ginger. I shouted at the television, is in Hull. He did not know and lost a million pounds.. I lived in Hull. Sad
Always important to be careful about talking yourself through an answer you genuinely have no idea about. She said "If it was 1911 I would have remembered some 100th anniversary". Well not everything is televised and blasted in your face. Nor every anniversary. 100th anniversaries for things happen every day. And this once again proves that you should not use the audience for a very specific history question that you don't know. If you don't know it, most of them won't know it either. You use the audience when you are a hermit crab who has no idea who the Kardashians are, and a Kardashian question comes up. Pretty sure you can still walk away at this point, right? She could have taken the 250k? Some of the shows let you see the question, and walk away. Did she have to answer here? Or did she talk herself into a point where she was certain she was correct?
A RB Really? How comes the figures always add up to 100% then? surely they must be told to vote or those who abstain would result in odd figures like 93% etc
I usually like this program, but she almost sent me to sleep zzz waiting for her to answer. Jesus How boring was she? She had a good lifeline she could've used it. I knew the answer. Still 125k not bad. She would never have gone for it dropping to 32k
Ask the audience should always be used early in the game. The later questions are so difficult that only a small proportion will know, so the results of the vote don't tell you much as most will be guessing.
Mr E Nigma Agreed
100% agree. You really can't use them any later than the first question after the 2nd guaranteed threshold
I've seen the audience get the million question right, so I don't know. If you can get through with two life lines, then use them on the last question that's always great lmao.
Once someone had 85% in a million dollar question in Hong Kong
Bernie Cullen had 69% on the million dollar question
Never discuss the answer in depth if you're going to ask the audience either. The influence of your thoughts will make it likely that the results are skewed.
If I were on the show I'd ask the audience members who didn't know to abstain (might not be allowed) or to vote for 1921. This would leave people who are more certain to actually guess at something that might be right.
Take the audience lifeline before you start talking through the question.
50 50 too
@@dylan8550 wrong never do 50-50 first
@@georgericher3996 not what i said. Do 50 50 before you start talking about it.
george richer do 50/50 before talking it over. the computer has a tendency to leave the two answers you think it is.
@@supercool1312 That's what L. Ron Hoyabembe was saying initially, hence the word "too". People need to learn to read.
I coughed when she said it could be 1911 .
Yeah you thought she would of heard
it was Craig David lol
@@georgefindlay1982 it's proper bo im tellin ya
*I went for 1911 immediately as the year my Dad born and remember him telling me Titanic Sunk in 1912 Strange Memories from long ago*
😆
I don't think she's getting enough credit for the "I may be some time." joke. That was good!
Could you explain the joke to me please? As I'm not an expert on the Antarctic lol.
@@maxscardanelli6185"I may be some time" was famously said by an Arctic explorer. Here is a copy and paste from wikipedia.
According to Scott's diary entry of 16 or 17 March Oates had walked out of the tent the previous day into a −40 °F (−40 °C) blizzard to his death. Scott wrote in his diary: "We knew that poor Oates was walking to his death, but though we tried to dissuade him, we knew it was the act of a brave man and an English gentleman." According to Scott's diary, as Oates left the tent he said, "I am just going outside and may be some time."
@@maxscardanelli6185
explorer Oates on the scott expedition was injured or sick and ws slowing down the expedition and the race to reach the south pole first. he walked out of the tent, saying" i'm going out now, i may be some tiime" effectively walking to his death sacrificing himself so the team could make the pole first. little did he know they had already lost the race and Amundsen got there first.
Beyond persuading the audience, she totally talked herself into believing she knew more than she knew.
You could hear Jeremy giving the audience a hint in the tone of his voice at 4:55 he obviously knew the answer. People should probably monitor the host if they don't know the answer, my observation tells me that the host usually gives you slight hints if you're headed in the right direction.
Not at all
I think you might be reading into this a little too much - he just said "let's see", and clearly got stuck in the middle of the sentence thinking of what to say next - shame Ask the Host was already used up, though - Jeremy would've known this 100%
Bro haha that's a cool theory but I think you're looking too deep into it
I knew this because of a newspaper pop up in the Great War mod for Hearts of Iron 4
Michael PCG lol
I knew I had seen that somewhere! Been too long since I played that mod
hahaha same
In English please. I don’t understand what you’re saying.
@@EnterShikari01Hearts of Iron 4 is a grand strategy game set in WW2, there are mods for the game that change the setting to that of WW1. In the game you’ll often get Pop-Up messages for important historical events (germany annexing austria, Hindenburg desaster).
In the WW1 mod there is one such pop-up fot Amundsen reaching the south pole.
Jeremy is class. He definitely tried to guide the audience to the right answer.
9:57
You can tell the audience was 100% behind her, based on their reaction when the loss cue played...
I would have been too.
Spoiler!
@@CarlosHigg you gotta stay out of the comments
She still banked 125k tho that’s no light work
Ooffff
@@sabssabs It was a worth it gamble in my opinion, hell I'd probably go for the million if I was guaranteed 125k
@@mrbow50001 you wouldn't even go double or nothing on a coin flip for 40 quid if it meant losing 20
@@mygoogle7684 Heads
@@mygoogle7684 Exactly, losing £125,000 isn't a joke.
I hope millionaire comes back soon, I miss it.
I think you'll find it.s already back!
@@NickyMitchell85 where, I don't see it on itv at the moment
💯
@@samhaigh5355 It'll probably return at some point in July. If you go to the application website, it says the application window closes on the 28th of June, so at some point, all of it will be filmed over a week, then it'll be edited and aired hopefully before August starts.
The show was just cancelled in the states...
Who wants to be a millionaire lifeline rules:
1. If you think you may use the audience, 50:50 or Jeremy, say nothing. The “computer” nearly always leaves the two you were swithering between. The audience will tend to back up your thinking through confirmation bias, same applies to Jeremy, unless they know the answer for certain they will be susceptible to confirmation bias, can’t help it it’s human nature, giving them the reasons you think an answer is correct makes it worse. You don’t want to be talking people in to giving you a certain answer, you just want the answer.
2. Never use 50:50 before the audience. The people who know will still get it right but the people who don’t will all vote for the same thing which could result in it winning the poll.
3. 50:50 is only useful if you are a swithering between two, say nothing before hand and hope it eliminates one of them.
4. Never take a punt on a £500,000 question (unless you have a safety net), you need to be sure.
Right! Another question: if you dither long enough with your answer, does your phone lifeline have enough time to look it up on the Internet, or what are the rules? She hesitated so long ... I knew the answer, but had time enough to confirm it 😃
@@danihesslinger7968 The phone a friends all have a person from the production crew with them to make sure they aren’t cheating. Jeremy gives a disclaimer on each call now “can I confirm you have someone from the crew there” or something to that effect. They never used to ask this, but I assume the phone a friends have always been in a holding pen somewhere and not just at home in front of google.
@@shazmeister2005 Thanks 😃
rule 1 isnt always true tbh
She should’ve stayed quiet before asking the audience and then suggest her opinion
Thats how real player uses audience poll
Yea it’s so frustrating to the point of cringe how many contestants make such a trivial blunder, despite being knowledgeable enough to make it that far.
Those of us who remember John Mills as Captain Scott would be SCREAMING the answer
I just enjoy Jeremy so much.
I do. He's the best host ever for Who Wants To Be A Millionaire.
I had a friend in school that had a theory that if you don't know the answer to a multiple choice question, go with C or the longest answer. Would've worked on this one.
That’s interesting I can sort of follow the logic of the longest answer being right cos it takes more effort maybe or the other options are easier to come up with… the C bias is probably real overall but I wonder why.
If you got no idea then take your money and run
That is, indeed what my Gran. Dot used to say when she used to watch the show, especially when she was living with my family back in 2002 whilst caring for my terminally ill mother [who sadly passed later on that year] who was battling Motor Neurone Disease at the time.
Disagree it's a one in four chance just go for it! You came in with nothing and at worst are leaving with £125,000
True but its easier to say it when your on a comment section, if the answer was B and she left you people would say oh she should have listened to audience...
Take money and run i like that 😁
@@potterpotty01 you have better odds going to a casino and putting it all on black. idiotic thought process
I guessed 1911, but I don't know why. It just somehow seemed like the right date because he didn't seem that far back when I learned about him. 1891 seemed too early and 1921 too late for me. It's tough to win, obviously.
i guess 1911 and 1921 because it sound the right year.
it's in history book at school but of course if you already old like most people in that studio , surely already forgot it.
As a Norwegian, I feel so bad that she didn't get that question right! If I was her friend, she could've called me! 🇳🇴🇬🇧
Only scandanavian people can survive in polar regions✅
I don't think you have any friends
🤣🤣🤣🤣
pretty sure 90% of Norway wouldnt know the answer,
@@AAAisAAA no one f**king asked for your cheek!
She should have to say audience: Push D if you not completely sure
That's actually genius..! I wonder if it's allowed
Thats a brillant idea to be fair. If i ever get the Chance to Play the german Version of Who wants to be a millionair (bc im from germany) i will remember your comment
Imagine if the answer was D
@@GelatinousPineappleit’s allowed, but I remember one contestant in the US show tried this strategy saying “please only vote if you’re absolutely certain of the answer”
Turned out there were at least 10%-15% who were “absolutely certain” of each of the 4 answers so that wasn’t of any help lol. It could be that the designers foolproofed this cheap strategy by defaulting to a random answer for each person in the audience that doesn’t vote at all.
Jeremy: “On your keyboards now let’s put C ... let’s see if you can help...”
If only the audience and contestant got the hint
But if I remember the rules of the show, Jeremy is not given the answer until the player says "Final answer." So, Jeremy wasn't hinting at anything.
@@kokoken1 but he knew the answer, as he said
@@גלעדשלמון he probably didn't though
@@JMcKaySV Everyone over 55 would have said 1911 before any of the answers came up, they used to teach us history back in the day. Such a simple question for a Half Mill.
@@JMcKaySV he literally said in the video that he knew the answer...
Sometimes it's always that little majority of the Audience that manages to get it right and not many contestants follow that- they follow so much into the bigger percentages and sometimes that can indeed steer you in the wrong direction of them thinking they know the answer to the question.
The power of conformity
If many of the audience were not sure they feel there best chance is to go with her hunch especially as she has got that far...
I remember reading that Tom Crean was beaten to the South Pole by a small margin by a Norwegian called Roald in 1911, plus Queen Victoria died in 1901 so it ended the victoriana era
I can’t believe it I actually know this answer haha. Learnt about Robert Scott’s race to the South Pole and I know he got there in 1912. Which would mean Amundsen got there 1911.
when the options came up I immediately thought 1911. It just sounded like the best option
rs84 I thought it might’ve been slightly earlier, but if it was those options that came up, I would’ve gone for it
Same here. But i wonder how clear my mind would be if i was in the hot seat
When in doubt pick c
Congratulations
BGFutureBG forgot your coffee?
I would have phoned, even if I would think, that nobody would know it.
You wouldn't do much if you were there in the stage into the hot seat trust me, the experience is much different.
Yes, definitely. She should have phoned to get a second opinion. It was a huge gamble she took.
I think you have to have a punt in this situation. Has 125g already, getting 4/1 on the punt for 500!!
She was talking about A and B before the audiance. And some 24 marked C. Why she didn't consider it ? Like those people new the answer if not they would go with what she picket in the first place, A or B.
Quetzalcoalt yeah
This was the contestant right before no one got the question right on fastest finger first
What did she expect its anniversary to be like? It’s been 8 years and the event itself is certainly not that big.
"I am not sure it's beating at all." RIP
Glad I wasn't in the audience because I'd have shouted " No " ! 😬
Tecwen Witach, fancy seeing you here
The public of " Qui veut gagner des millions ? " in France today for the ninth question to 12 000 € said 77% for the answer B ...
It was the answer D
What was the question ?
@@jasondouchet Which card game contains the most cards ?
A- The belote
B- The tarot
C- The battle
D- The crapette
@@paixliberte3202 oof
Actually, the French edition had to ditch the Ask the Audience lifeline. It transpired that the audience would on purpose give the contestants the wrong answer. It's a bit of a French thing for the public to want a contestant to fail rather than to get behind. don't know why lol
Never trust a Frenchie 😇😇
Good luck to you ✌️
Got a bit too greedy at this point she's lucky she didn't lose £218,000 instead of £125,000!
If she had that much to lose, she might have used the phone-a-friend lifeline too
If many of the audience were not sure they feel there best chance is to go with her hunch especially as she has got that far...
Yes. She made the mistake of influencing the audience.
9:57 9:58
Second scariest lose theme in Millionaire
Oh yes very clever with the see---see.!
Nobody in Sweden gets that much time to answer a question.
She still did ok ,great work
Always surprises me that Clarkson doesn’t know the £4000 questions but always seems to have the answer to a £1/2 million pound question, it’s then we must realise why he is host
She should have a friend from the Chase like Vegas
Paying attention in history class in high school should be encouraged by telling children they can later win money with unimportant facts everyone should know.
Victoria died in 1901 so a part of 1901 was a part of the victorian age too
your right. 22 days of it.
this woman knew how to take her sweet sweet time
Watching this december 14th 2021. Haha
I read it yesterday
She is smart
She knew she made the audience pick 01
nah...smart would have been to not reveal any information, knowing full well, that you're gonna have to use a/the lifeline/s.
@No.Parking Why did she go for 01 then?
Poor girl: one elimination process would have been, that pictures/photographs of his expeditionexist 😃
Like a whirlpool. It never ends.
I feel like the history questions in the UK focus more on dates than in the US.
Classic example of why ask the audience should be the first lifeline used. Any later than the $64k question and they’ll struggle
Thought 1912 before the answers popped up, but it's not an easy question. It being after the Swedish-Norwegian Union dissolved seemed almost guaranteed, but few British would know when that happened. A few months before Titanic sank, I suppose is a good way to remember it (also a few months before Sweden arranged the Olympics, but that's more obscure).
9:57
I knew the right answer
She should have took her time to answer it ,she was impatient to answer that qickly
LMFAO
She should have used both her remaining life lines
This was be sad resulted. but, this question is difficult. To begin with, Is there know who First South Pole reached person?
She’s doing my head n sheeesh what a time to take
Fun fact: first person since 2007 to see the question for £500,000
I don't know the answer but if it wasn't a competition I would guess 1901 however guess it was wrong 😥 😔
Use your final lifeline before risking it like that lmao atleast haha
I think that was the greed talking really, she must have wanted to save it incase she got to the million pound question haha.
She had £125k guaranteed, so she was right to go for it
I don't think it's "greed" or even "cockiness" to save a lifeline for the possibility that your guess is right, especially if you doubt that any of your friends would know the answer. It's just proper, rational planning.
Oh dear i thought all knew it was just before WW1 Has she never read about Scotts British Antarctic Expedition! Just leaving the tent for a short while, the last words in his Journal. WHy this Victorian idea Discovery Expedition from 1901 to 1904, is when Scott went first to the area.
Never say what you think the answer might be if you are even slightly inclined to ask the audience. You will skew the answers given by those who do not know it. Why do people never seem to learn this?
I thought C, because it was during the war, and so no big fun about that achievement.
How do people not know this?
that lady was right for playing . with great risk comes great reward if she hadn't tried she would have regretted it . she's no coward. I hope I could do that .
I Knew the answer surprisingly.
he beat ernest shackelton an irish exployer to the pole.
another guy something scott was trying to get there aswell at the same time.
scott died. he used horses on his expedition as far as I remember the idiot. all happened in 1911 : )
All i can say for these contestants is you either win lose or go home with nothing but less money or nothing at all but there some excellent contenders who played really well despite the risks
I wasn't sure until she actually mentioned not remembering anything for the 100-year anniversary. That triggered my memory; in episode 1 of Frozen Planet, David Attenborough is standing at the south pole "exactly 100 years, almost to the day". I know roughly when Frozen Planet was filmed...
In Who Wants to be a Millionaire , Sri Lankan edition Sirasa Lakshapathi , Ask the Audience is the best way to win an answer because they are Always Right 🇱🇰🇱🇰😎😎🤟🤟
I’m surprised this lady was allowed the amount of time.😊procrastination at its finest!
cant she just call anyone with internet they will instantly know the answer
😅years ago I watched who wants to be a millionaire. He was an elderly guy, he had reached the last question which was. Which town in England, has a street called Land of green ginger. I shouted at the television, is in Hull. He did not know and lost a million pounds.. I lived in Hull. Sad
Jeremy "Polar explorers whould know"
She "Unfortunately I don't know any"
While there's one sitting in front of her 😂
Who is here before 10000 views? 🙋♂️
DAN7EH change UR MIND why du like ur own comment
Isaac Meehan ? I did not my friend.
DAN7EH change UR MIND lol
Very beautiful
The question was way too easy !
It's only easy if you know it LOL
Always important to be careful about talking yourself through an answer you genuinely have no idea about. She said "If it was 1911 I would have remembered some 100th anniversary". Well not everything is televised and blasted in your face. Nor every anniversary. 100th anniversaries for things happen every day. And this once again proves that you should not use the audience for a very specific history question that you don't know. If you don't know it, most of them won't know it either. You use the audience when you are a hermit crab who has no idea who the Kardashians are, and a Kardashian question comes up.
Pretty sure you can still walk away at this point, right? She could have taken the 250k? Some of the shows let you see the question, and walk away. Did she have to answer here? Or did she talk herself into a point where she was certain she was correct?
I'm vaguely certain she says
Made my day this
I like Jeremy, much better than Tarrant. He's funny. Do miss him on Top gear though. Can't watch Top gear now without them three. Just not the same
Audience could have googled it,this game is unfair in recent era
Does the audience have to give an answer? Or can they just not touch the keypads if they don't know?
no, they could simply not do anything at all
Why do none of the contestants ask them to do that and ask only people who are certain to press the button?
Or ask the ones who don't know to press 1921. Is that allowed?
That's what I thought. I'd prefer not to press if I don't know.
A RB Really? How comes the figures always add up to 100% then? surely they must be told to vote or those who abstain would result in odd figures like 93% etc
1901
Where can I watch full episode of this ?
shiras misbah on Demand
First like though
Baby reindeer 😂
At least she did not lose £218,000 like Duncan Bickley and Rob Mitchell both did..... Thank *goodness* she didn't set her safety net at £32,000!!
people taking ages to answer, irritate me.
Thats a painful one lol should have rang a friend anyone crazy women.
it was at a time where there was airplanes. so it had to be 1911
All that 11 mins for nothing
AUDIENCE WHAT HAPPENED
I knew it because the double disaster of Scott's death and the Titanic sinking were in 1912.
Yeah before the options came up I said "1912". So I would've gotten 1911 from that
On that Norwegian explorer question, none are actually correct. It’s 1895.
no it is't. he reached the south pole in 1911
Try Google/wikipedia
It would be lovely to name the contestant in the description. Often a bit impersonal.
The clue, in the film, tractors
I knew it
I usually like this program, but she almost sent me to sleep zzz waiting for her to answer. Jesus How boring was she? She had a good lifeline she could've used it. I knew the answer. Still 125k not bad. She would never have gone for it dropping to 32k
Big time gamble