I *love* the transition to this game: Bob building it up, the car rolling out, Bean Stalker blasting and the audience (and usually the contestant) going wild. Perfection.
Ten Chances in 1978: A price ending in 5, and another ending in 1. What a twist it would be to go back to those possibilities today (unannounced). I think a “price must end in 0 or 5” rule is reasonable.
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Imagine a contestant has five dollars left and chose '5' as the last number AND the last number was a '0'. Would've been a painful loss!
The camera shots from 2:35 to 2:47 are insanely good!!
I *love* the transition to this game: Bob building it up, the car rolling out, Bean Stalker blasting and the audience (and usually the contestant) going wild. Perfection.
9:43 It seems Joyce's prediction was right. Number 3 was the most expensive. That's what Joyce should've chosen.
Ruckus! I loved thatshow. Anazing jonathan was thr greatest
Eileen did excellent on Lucky Seven. 😀👍
17:26 This was *not* Joyce's day. It was just pure bad luck!
That Ten Chances playing is perfect example as to why they had to implement the unwritten zero rule. That car was not meant to be won.
3months and 2 days from being born
Ten Chances in 1978: A price ending in 5, and another ending in 1. What a twist it would be to go back to those possibilities today (unannounced). I think a “price must end in 0 or 5” rule is reasonable.
28:48 Jay Wolpert strikes again.
Dian, Holly and Janice: vavavoom!
Do you have the price is right when the $5 & $15 green sections debut in 1978 ?
wager 4967