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Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?

Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? is an international television game show franchise of British origin, created by David Briggs, Mike Whitehill and Steven Knight. In its format, currently owned and licensed by Sony Pictures Television, contestants tackle a series of multiple-choice questions to win large cash prizes in a format that twists on many game show genre conventions – only one contestant plays at a time, similar to radio quizzes; contestants are given the question before deciding whether to answer, and have no time limit to answer questions; and the amount offered increases as they tackle questions that become increasingly difficult. The maximum cash prize offered in most versions of the format is an aspirational value in local currency, such as one million pounds in the UK or 75 million rupees (7.5 crore) in India.

Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
Created by
Original workWho Wants to Be a Millionaire? (British game show)
Owner
Years1998–present
Films and television
Television seriesWho Wants to Be a Millionaire? (see International versions)
Audio
Original musicScores composed by Keith and Matthew Strachan
Miscellaneous
Theme park attraction(s)Who Wants to Be a Millionaire – Play It! (U.S.)
GenreGame show
First aired4 September 1998; 25 years ago (1998-09-04)
DistributorSony Pictures Television[1]

The original British version debuted on 4 September 1998 on the ITV network, hosted by Chris Tarrant, who presented his final episode on 11 February 2014 after which the show was discontinued. A revived series of seven episodes to commemorate its 20th anniversary aired from 5 to 11 May 2018, hosted by Jeremy Clarkson. The revival received mostly positive reviews from critics and fans, as well as high viewing figures, leading ITV to renew the show for several more series. Since its debut, international variants of the game show have been aired in around 160 countries.

History Edit

The format of the show was created by David Briggs, Mike Whitehill and Steven Knight, who had earlier created a number of the promotional games for Tarrant's morning show on Capital FM radio, such as the bong game. Tentatively known as Cash Mountain,[2] the show took its finalised title from a song written by Cole Porter for the 1956 film High Society, starring Frank Sinatra and Celeste Holm. Since the original version launched, several individuals have claimed that they originated the format and that Celador had breached their copyright. While many pursued litigation, they were all unsuccessful, and each claim was later settled out-of-court on an agreement/settlement.[3][4][5]

In March 2006, original producer Celador announced that it was seeking to sell the worldwide rights to Millionaire, together with the rest of its British programme library, as the first phase of a sell-off of the company's format and production divisions. British television producer Paul Smith first had the idea to franchise the UK programme internationally. He developed a series of standards for international variants that ensured they mirrored the British original closely. For example, all hosts were required to appear on-screen wearing Armani suits, as Tarrant did in the UK; producers were forbidden from hiring local composers to create original music, instead using the same music cues used by the British version; and the lighting system and set design were to adhere faithfully to the way they were presented on the British version.[6] Some of Smith's rules have been slightly relaxed over the years as the franchise's development has progressed.

Dutch company 2waytraffic ultimately acquired Millionaire and all of Celador's other programmes. Two years later, Sony Pictures Entertainment purchased 2waytraffic for £137.5 million.[7] Sony Pictures Television currently owns and licences the show's format, while Disney–ABC Domestic Television, the Walt Disney Company's in-home sales and content distribution firm controls the US version independently of Sony.

Gameplay Edit

Rules Edit

A group of contestants on each episode play a preliminary round called "Fastest Finger First". All are given a question by the host and four answers which must be placed within a particular order; in the first season of the original version (1998) and the first four seasons of the Australian version (1999–2002), contestants have to answer a multiple-choice question. If any contestants are visually impaired, the host reads the question and four choices all at once, then repeats the choices after the music for the round begins. The contestant who answers correctly in the fastest time goes on to play the main game. In the event that no one gets the question right, another question is given; if two or more contestants answer correctly but with the same time, they are given a tie-breaker to determine who will move on. This round is only used when a new contestant is being chosen to play the main round, and can be played more than once in an episode among those remaining within the group seeking to play the main game. In celebrity editions, the round is not used; celebrities automatically take part in the main game.

Once a contestant enters the main game, they are asked increasingly difficult general knowledge questions by the host. Each features four possible answers, to which the contestant must give the correct answer. Doing so wins them a certain amount of money, with tackling more difficult questions increasing their prize fund. During their game, the player has a set of lifelines that they may use only once to help them with a question, as well as two "safety nets" – if a contestant gets a question wrong, but had reached a designated cash value during their game, they will leave with that amount as their prize. While the first few questions are generally easy, subsequent ones might prompt the host to ask if the answer they gave is their "final answer" – if it is, then it is locked in and cannot be changed. If a contestant feels unsure about an answer and does not wish to play on, they can walk away with the money they have won, to which the host will ask them to confirm this as their final decision; in such cases, the host will usually ask them to state what answer they would have gone for, and reveal if it would have been correct or incorrect.

Original format Edit

During the British original, between 1998 and 2007, the show's format focused on fifteen questions. The payout structure was as follows (questions at guaranteed levels are highlighted with a bolded text):[8]

Question number Question value
1 £100
2 £200
3 £300
4 £500
5 £1,000
6 £2,000
7 £4,000
8 £8,000
9 £16,000
10 £32,000
11 £64,000
12 £125,000
13 £250,000
14 £500,000
15 £1,000,000

Between 2007 and 2014, the number of questions was reduced to twelve; the overall change in format was later incorporated into a number of international markets over a period of four years, including the Arab world, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, France, Poland, Spain, and Turkey. The payout structure, as a whole, was subsequently changed as a result, with the second safety net relocated to £50,000 at question 7 (questions at guaranteed levels are highlighted with a bolded text):[9]

Question number Question value
1 £500
2 £1,000
3 £2,000
4 £5,000
5 £10,000
6 £20,000
7 £50,000
8 £75,000
9 £150,000
10 £250,000
11 £500,000
12 £1,000,000

The game show's revival for British television in 2018 reverted to the original arrangement used before 2007, but with one notable difference, in that the second safety net was made adjustable – once a contestant reached £1,000, the host asked them, before giving the next question, if they wished to set the next cash prize amount as the second safety net, with this allowing them to set up as high as £500,000 in their game as a result.

US format Edit

The original US version premiered on ABC in August 1999 as part of a two-week daily special event hosted by Regis Philbin. After this and a second two-week event aired in November 1999, ABC commissioned a regular series that launched in January 2000 and ran until June 2002. The syndication of the game show was conceived and debuting in September 2002. The only difference between it and the British version was that episodes were halved in length – 30 minutes, as opposed to the 60-minute length of the original version. The change meant that the preliminary round of the show was eliminated, and contestants had to pass a more conventional game show qualification test. Exceptions to this arrangement, in which it was used under the name "Fastest Finger" included: primetime special editions of the programme; the 2004 series that was dubbed Super Millionaire, in which the final prize was increased to $10,000,000;[10] and for the 10th anniversary special of the US edition, which ran during August 2009 for eleven episodes. The decision to remove this round later occurred in other international versions, including the British original before its reinstatement in the renewed series.

Clock format Edit

In 2008, the US version changed its format so that contestants were required to answer questions within a set time limit. The limit varied depending on the difficulty of the question:[11]

Question number Time limit
1–5 15 seconds
6–10 30 seconds
11–14 45 seconds
15 45 seconds
(+ any accumulated remaining time from the previous 14 questions)

The clock started immediately after a question was given and the four possible answers appeared. The clock paused when a lifeline was used. If the clock ran out with no answer locked in, the contestant walked away with any prize money won up to that point, unless the "Double Dip" lifeline had been used, in which case a failure to give a second answer was treated the same as a wrong answer. This format change was later adopted into other international versions – the British original, for example, adopted this change for episodes on 3 August 2010.[12] The Indian version was introduced on 11 October 2010.

Shuffle format Edit

On 13 September 2010, the US version adopted another significant change to its format. In this change, the game featured two rounds. The first round consisted of ten questions, in which the cash prize associated to each value, along with the category and difficulty for each question, was randomised per game. As such, the difficulty of the question in this round was not tied to the value associated to it, and a contestant did not know what amount they won unless they provided a correct answer, or chose to walk away. As part of this format, the amount of money a contestant won in this round was banked, but if they walked away before completing the round, they left with half the amount that had been banked; if they gave an incorrect answer during this round, they left with just $1,000.[13] If they answered all ten questions correctly, they then moved on to the second round, which stuck to the standard format of the game show – the remaining questions were set to general knowledge and featured cash prizes of high, non-cumulative values. The contestant could, at this point, walk away with the total amount banked from the first round; otherwise, an incorrect answer meant they left with $25,000. The format was later modified for the fourteenth season of the US version, but retained the same arrangement for the last four questions.

In 2015, the so-called "shuffle format" was scrapped and the show returned to a version that closely resembled the original format.[14]

Other international formats Edit

Risk format Edit

In 2007, the German version modified the show's format with the inclusion of a new feature called "Risk Mode". During the main game, contestants are given the choice of choosing this feature, in which if they choose to use it, they gain the use of a fourth lifeline that allows them to discuss question with a member of the audience, in exchange for having no second safety net – if they get any question between the sixth and final cash prize amount wrong, they would leave with the guaranteed amount given for correctly answering five questions. This format became adopted in Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Italy, Philippines, Poland, Russia, Switzerland and Venezuela.

A different variant has only one custom safety net before the start of the contestant's game.

The Taiwanese version did not have any safety nets or any option to quit; the contestant's winnings won up until they were incorrect on any question was cut by half.

Hot Seat format Edit

In November 2008, the Italian version modified the format of the show under the title Edizione Straordinaria (lit.'Extraordinary Edition'). In this variation of the game, six contestants take part, with each taking it in turns to answer questions and build up their prize fund.[15] Utilising the time limit format introduced in the US version, this variation on the format grants a contestant the right to pass the question on to another player, who cannot pass it on themselves, while eliminating both the option of walking away from a question, and the use of lifelines.[15] If a contestant cannot pass on or correctly answer a question, they are eliminated, and the highest cash value they made is removed.[15] The game ends when all contestants are eliminated or the question for the highest cash value is answered – if a contestant who answers the final question gives a correct answer, they win that prize; if the final question is answered incorrectly, or the last contestant is eliminated, they win a small prize, provided they reach the fifth question safety net.[15] This format was later introduced to various markets over the course of a four-year-period from 2009 to 2012, including Norway, Hungary, Spain, Vietnam,[16] Indonesia, Australia, and Chile.[17]

In 2009, the Australian version was modified to use the new Italian format, and the name was also changed from "Extraordinary Edition" to "Hot Seat". In 2017, as part of new modification to the format, the game incorporated the use of the Fastest Finger First round, with the winner able to select a lifeline, out of three that the show provided.

Gamblers' Special format Edit

In 2013, the German version modified the show's format, which runs concurrent with the original format, where only one guaranteed level exists, at €1,000, and maximum prize is €2,000,000.

Lifelines Edit

During a standard play of the game, a contestant is given a series of lifelines to aid them with questions. In the standard format, a contestant has access to three lifelines which each can be used only once per game. More than one lifeline can be used on a single question. The standard lifelines used in the original format of the game show include:

  • 50:50 (Fifty-Fifty): the game's computer eliminates two wrong answers from the current question, leaving behind the correct answer and one incorrect answer. From 2000, the selection of two incorrect answers were random.
  • Phone a Friend: the contestant is connected with a friend over a phone line and is given 30 seconds to read the question and answers and solicit assistance. The time begins as soon as the contestant starts reading the question.
  • Ask the Audience: the audience takes voting pads attached to their seats and votes for the answer that they believe is correct. The computer tallies the results and displays them as percentages to the contestant. This lifeline was removed on international versions with episodes taped without an audience due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the US, "Ask the Audience" and "Phone a Friend" had corporate sponsorship at different periods. The original AT&T sponsored "Phone a Friend" during the original ABC primetime show and the syndicated version's first season; the current AT&T sponsored the 2009 primetime episodes. From 2004 to 2006, AOL sponsored "Ask the Audience" and allowed users of Instant Messenger to participate in the lifeline by adding the screen name MillionaireIM to their contact list. When a contestant used the lifeline during the show, users received an instant message with the question and the four possible answers and voted for the correct answer. The computer tallied these results alongside the results from the studio audience.[18]

Contestants pre-select multiple friends for "Phone a Friend". As soon as the contestant begins to play, producers alert the friends and ask them to keep their phone lines free and wait for three rings before answering.[19] On 11 January 2010, the US version eliminated the use of "Phone a Friend" in response to an increasing trend of contestants' friends using web search engines and other internet resources to assist them during the calls. Producers came to feel that the lifeline was giving contestants who had friends with internet access an unfair advantage; they also believed it was contrary to the original intent of the lifeline: friends provided assistance based on what they knew.[20]

During recordings of the current British version, security personnel from the production office stay with contestants' friends at their homes to ensure integrity. During "The People Play" specials in 2012 and 2013, friends travelled to the studio and stayed backstage. When a contestant used the lifeline, the friend they called appeared on a monitor in the studio, and both the friend and contestant were able to see and communicate with each other.[21][22]

Unique lifelines Edit

During the course of the game show's history, there were a number of unique lifeline additions in various versions of the programme. These include, but are not limited, to:

  • Switch the Question – Used in the US version between 2004 and 2008, and in the UK original during celebrity specials between 2002 and 2003 and standard episodes between 2010 and 2014, this lifeline became available after a contestant answered the tenth question of the game. The computer replaced the current question with another of the same difficulty. The contestant could not reinstate any lifelines used on the original question.[11] A variation of this lifeline for the US version called "Cut the Question", was brought into use in 2014 for a week-long run of special episodes that featured child contestants, in which it could only be used within the first ten questions. This is also used in the Indian version as a permanent lifeline. However, it is available anytime in the game (except for the highest cash prize question) and participants can choose the topic from which the question is taken from. The difficulty level depends on the cash prize for the question.
  • Double Dip – One of two lifelines created for the Super Millionaire spin-off of the US version. When used, this lifeline allowed contestants to have two guesses at a question, but forbade them from using any other remaining lifelines or from walking away with their current winnings. Contestants can first use "50:50" and then used "Double Dip" on the same question, guaranteeing them the correct answer. When the standard US format incorporated a time limit on questions, the show retired "50:50" and replaced it with "Double Dip".[11] This lifeline was also used in the Russian version (without a clock format) but did not replace "50:50".[23]
  • Three Wise Men – The other lifeline created for Super Millionaire. When chosen, a sequestered panel of three experts (chosen by the producers) appears via face-to-face audio and video feed to provide assistance. Like "Phone a Friend", this lifeline incorporated a 30-second time limit for its use. This lifeline was also used in the Russian version between 2006 and 2008 but did not feature experts.
  • Two Wise Men – Used in the Vietnamese version of the show from episodes broadcast on 5 May 2020, replacing "Ask Three of the Audience". It has the same function as "Three Wise Men", however there are only two experts instead of three. It becomes available after the fifth question.
  • Ask the Expert – Inspired by "Three Wise Men", this lifeline provided the contestant with one person, an expert selected for them, to help with the question. Unlike its predecessor, this lifeline had no time limit on its use, but was only available after the fifth question;[24] after "Phone a Friend" was removed in 2010, it was made readily available at any time in the game. In the US version, the lifeline was sponsored by Skype for its live audio and video feeds.[24] In the Hong Kong edition, it replaced the "Phone a Friend" lifeline for a one-off special in 2001 and for two celebrity specials in 2018, though, with the celebrity contestants able to ask a panel of experts for help, present in the audience, all of whom had the question and possible answers visible to them.
  • Ask One of the Audience – Used in the German version of the show, this lifeline was designed for use as part of its "Risk Mode" format. When used, the contestant selects someone from the audience, whereupon the host rereads the question and the possible answers and asks them to choose one. If the contestant goes for the answer they chose and it is correct, the audience member is given a small cash prize in return. This lifeline was implemented as part of the Costa Rican version but was made available after passing the first safety net.
  • Ask Three of the Audience – This lifeline was designed for use as part of its original format. Used in the Vietnamese version of the show from episodes broadcast on 20 May 2008, later replaced by "Two Wise Men" due to the COVID-19 pandemic. When used, the contestant selects three from the audiences, whereupon the host re-reads the question and the possible answers and asks them to choose one. If the contestant goes for the answer they chose and it proves to be correct, the audience members are given a small cash prize in return (600,000 ₫ divided to members that answered correctly in the 3 audiences). This lifeline was implemented as part of the Vietnamese version but was made available after passing the first safety net. In the Philippine version, the lifeline is called "People Speak", which can be used at any point in the game.
  • Jump the Question – Used in the U.S. version of the show, as part of the "shuffle format", from the start of the ninth season to the end of the thirteenth season. When used, prior to giving a final answer, a contestant skipped the current question and moved on to the next one, but earned no money from the question they skipped; the lifeline could not be used if they have reached the final question. Unlike other lifelines, it could be used twice during a game, except for the thirteenth season – the introduction of "Plus One" led to the lifeline being modified as a result. The lifeline was removed following the 2014–2015 season.
  • Crystal Ball – Used in the US version of the show, as part of specially designated weeks that used the "shuffle format". When used during the first round, the contestant is allowed to see the cash amount that is designated to the question they are currently on.[25]
  • Plus One – Used in the US version of the show from 2015 to 2019 and since 2020. Based on "Ask One of the Audience", the lifeline allows a contestant to invite on a friend from the audience to come and help them answer the question. There is no time limit, but after that question has been answered the friend has to return to the audience.
  • Ask the Host – Used in the 20th anniversary revival of the original British version; the Danish, French and Italian revivals; Slovenia; Russia (January 2021 – June 2022) and the 2020 reboot of the American version. When used by the contestant, the host uses their knowledge of a question's subject, gives their thoughts about the question, and tries to assist them with finding the correct answer out of the choices given. The lifeline features no time limit, and the host reassures all they have no connection to the outside world and receive the question and possible answers for it at the same time as the contestant, and thus have no knowledge of what the correct answer is. After the contestant locks in their answer, the host still can't see what the correct answer is, so they must ask the computer to reveal the correct answer.

Top prize winners Edit

Out of all contestants who have played the game, relatively few have been able to win the top prize on any international version of the show. The first was John Carpenter, who won the top prize on the American version on 19 November 1999.[26] Carpenter famously did not use a lifeline until the final question, using his "Phone a Friend" to call his father, not for help, but to tell him he was about to become a millionaire.[27]

Other notable top-prize winners include Judith Keppel, the first winner of the original British version;[28] Kevin Olmstead from the US version, who won a progressive jackpot of $2.18 million;[29] Martin Flood from the Australian version, who was investigated by producers after suspicions that he had cheated, much like Charles Ingram, but was later cleared;[30] Sushil Kumar from the Indian version, who is often referred to in Western media as the "real-life Slumdog Millionaire";[31][32][33][34][35] Mana Ashida from the Japanese version, who is the youngest winner in the Millionaire franchise;[36] and David Chang, the first celebrity winner of the American version.[37][38]

Original version Edit

 
Chris Tarrant was host of the original British version, from its debut in September 1998, until its final episode in February 2014

Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? debuted in Britain on 4 September 1998, with episodes broadcast on the ITV network. When it began airing, the show was hosted by Chris Tarrant, and became an instant hit – at its peak in 1999, one edition of the show was watched by over 19 million viewers.[39] While most of the contestants were predominantly members of the general public who had applied to take part, the show later featured special celebrity editions during its later years, often coinciding with holidays and special events.

On 22 October 2013, Tarrant decided to leave the programme after hosting it for 15 years. His decision subsequently led ITV to make plans to cancel the programme at the end of his contract, with no further specials being made other than those that were already planned.[40][41] Tarrant's final episode was a special clip show entitled "Chris' Final Answer", which aired on 11 February 2014.

Four years later, ITV revived the programme for a special 7-episode series, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the British original.[42] This series of special episodes was hosted by Jeremy Clarkson and aired every evening between 5 and 11 May 2018. The revival received mostly positive reviews from critics and fans, and, as well as high viewing figures, led to ITV renewing the show for another series with Clarkson returning as host.[43]

International versions Edit

Since the British original debuted in 1998, several different versions of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? have been created across the world, including Australia, the United States and India. In total over 100 different international variations have been made.[44]

Australia Edit

On 18 April 1999, Nine Network launched an Australian version of the game show for its viewers.[45] This version ran until its final episode, aired on 3 April 2006.[46] After the first version ended, a second version was created, running for six episodes across October and November 2007,[47] before a third version, entitled Millionaire Hot Seat, made its debut on 20 April 2009.[48][49] The original version was hosted by Eddie McGuire, until he was forced to sacrifice his on-air commitments upon being made the CEO of the network;[50] after his resignation from this role,[51] he resumed his duties as host of subsequent versions of the programme.

United States Edit

On 16 August 1999, ABC launched an American version of the game show for its primetime viewers. Hosted by Regis Philbin,[52] it proved to be a ratings success, becoming the highest-rated television show during the 1999–2000 season, with its average audience figures reaching approximately 29 million viewers.[citation needed] After a drop in ratings, this version was cancelled, with its final episode aired on 27 June 2002.[53] On 16 September 2002, Meredith Vieira launched a daily syndicated version of the programme,[54] which she hosted for 11 seasons, until May 2013.[55] After her departure, the show was hosted by Cedric the Entertainer in 2013,[56] and Terry Crews in 2014,[57] before Chris Harrison took full hosting responsibilities in Autumn 2015.[58] On 17 May 2019, the American version was cancelled after a total of 17 seasons and 20 years encompassing both primetime and first-run syndication; the final episode of the series was broadcast on 31 May.[59] However, ABC reversed the cancellation of the programme on 8 January 2020, announcing plans for a twenty-first season, consisting of nine episodes, to be presented by Jimmy Kimmel starting 8 April.[60]

Russia Edit

On 1 October 1999, NTV launched a Russian version the game show, entitled О, счастливчик! ("Oh, how lucky!"). This version ran until its final episode on 28 January 2001,[61] whereupon a few weeks later it was relaunched under the Russian translation of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, on Channel One. The relaunched version was hosted by Maxim Galkin until 2008 and Dmitry Dibrov until 2022.[62]

India Edit

On 3 July 2000, an Indian version of the game show was launched. The show was hosted by Amitabh Bachchan in his first appearance on Indian television,[63] and received additional seasons in 2005–2006,[64] 2007, and then every year since 2010.[65] Subsequent Indian versions were also made. The original Indian version became immortalised in 2008, within the plot of Danny Boyle's award-winning drama film Slumdog Millionaire,[66] adapted from the 2005 Indian novel Q & A by Vikas Swarup.[67][68]

Language (version) Title Date of release
Bengali Ke Hobe Banglar Kotipoti 4 June 2011
Bhojpuri Ke Bani Crorepati 30 May 2011[69]
Hindi Kaun Banega Crorepati 3 July 2000
Kannada Kannadada Kotyadhipati 12 March 2012
Kashmiri Kus Bani Koshur Karorpaet 29 April 2019
Malayalam Ningalkkum Aakaam Kodeeshwaran 9 April 2012
Marathi Kon Hoeel Marathi Crorepati 6 May 2013
Tamil Neengalum Vellalaam Oru Kodi 27 February 2012[70]
Kodeeswari 23 December 2019
Telugu Meelo Evaru Koteeswarudu 9 June 2014[71]
Evaru Meelo Koteeswarulu 22 August 2021

Sri Lanka Edit

On 18 September 2010, a Sinhalese version called Obada lakshapathi mamada lakshapathi (ඔබද ලක්ෂපති මමද ලක්ෂපති) was launched by Sirasa TV of the Capital Maharaja Television Network. It is presented by Chandana Suriyabandara, a senior commentator in Sri Lanka. It offers 2 million Sri Lankan rupees as the ultimate prize. On its 10th anniversary, it was rebranded as Sirasa Lakshapathi, and the prize was changed to 3 million rupees.

In May 2011 a Tamil version called Ungalil Yaar Maha Latchathipathi (உங்களில் யார் மகா இலட்சாதிபதி) was launched by Shakthi TV. The show is hosted by Abarna Suthan and Balendran Kandeeban. The top prize is 2 million rupees.

Philippines Edit

In 2000, a Filipino version of the game show was launched by the government-sequestered Intercontinental Broadcasting Corporation. Hosted by Christopher de Leon and produced by Viva Television,[72][73] it ran for two years before being axed. On 23 May 2009, the show was relaunched on TV5 and produced by TVJ Productions,[74] with Vic Sotto as the new host.[75][76] The relaunched version was aired until 7 October 2012, when it was replaced by the Philippine version of The Million Pound Drop Live, but it returned the following year on 15 September 2013, following the success of Talentadong Pinoy that year.

Italy Edit

Chi vuol essere milionario? was first launched by Endemol on Canale 5 in 2000. In 2002, its name was changed from Chi vuol essere miliardario? after the Italian Lira was replaced with the Euro. In 2018, it relaunched with four special episodes for its 20th anniversary, followed by another eight special episodes in 2019,[77] and the new season is produced by Fremantle Italia's unit Wavy. The host was Gerry Scotti for every edition from 2000 to 2011 and from 2018 onward.

Nepal Edit

Ko Banchha Crorepati (Who Wants to Be a Millionare; also simply known as KBC Nepal, को बन्छ करोडपति) first premiered on 2 February 2019 on AP1 Television, scheduled to run for 52 episodes. It is hosted by Rajesh Hamal and produced by SRBN Media Pvt. Ltd. Contestants can win cash prizes up to 1 crore (10 million) Nepalese rupees.

Costa Rica Edit

¿Quién quiere ser millonario? (Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?) is the Costa Rican version, hosted by Ignacio Santos Pasamontes. There are four lifelines – "50:50", "Video Call", "Plus One" and "Switch the Question". The show was broadcast from 3 February 2009 to 3 September 2013 and from 27 April 2021 onwards. It is shown on the private TV station Teletica. If a contestant gets the fifth question correct, they leave with at least 500,000 Costa Rican colón. If a contestant gets the tenth question correct, they leave with at least ₡3,000,000. Two contestants have won the top prize of ₡30,000,000.

Other versions Edit

Other notable versions created in other countries, include the following:

  • In 1999, a Dutch version of the game show called Lotto Weekend Miljonairs, was launched on SBS 6. It was hosted by Robert ten Brink. In 2006, the show was moved to RTL 4 until it was cancelled in 2008. The show was later revived on SBS 6 in 2011 with Jeroen van der Boom as the host. In 2019, the show was relaunched on RTL 4 with a new name: Bankgiro Miljonairs, hosted again by Robert ten Brink.
  • On 3 September 1999, a German version was launched by RTL Television, with Günther Jauch as the host.
  • The Polish version is called Milionerzy (lit.'Millionaires') and is aired on TVN between years 1999–2003, 2008–2010 and since 2017.
  • On 12 November 1999, a Finnish version of the show called Haluatko miljonääriksi? (lit.'Do You Want to Be a Millionaire?'), was launched on Nelonen, hosted by Lasse Lehtinen. In 2005 the show was moved to MTV3, hosted by Ville Klinga, until it was cancelled in 2007. After almost ten years, the show relaunched on Nelonen in 2016, hosted by Jaajo Linnonmaa. There was a small break in 2021, but in 2022 the show was back on with a new host, Antti Holma.
  • In 2000, the Hungarian version of the show, Legyen Ön is milliomos! was launched on RTL. Its iconic host was István Vágó for 1,098 episodes, mainly weeknights, until 2008. It aired again in 2009, led by the famous stand-up comedian Sándor Fábry, fired after 6 normal and 3 Hot Seat shows, then in 2012–2013 by Sándor Friderikusz, two times a week. In 2019, the show relaunched again on TV2, hosted by experienced quizshow leader Gábor Gundel-Takács. Nevertheless, the revival aired only 42 times, thus it went off weeknights, which led to a radical decline from the start of 5% SHR in ratings. The host told the audience in a Facebook video that the show would have been needed to air earlier than 21:20 (CET) to avoid timeshift changes due to the popular reality show Exatlon Hungary.[78]
  • The unlicensed Taiwanese version of the show, 超級大富翁 (Chao Ji Da Fu Weng), was hosted by Hsieh Chen-wu, and ran until 2006. Unlike other versions, the Taiwanese version saw major differences: the contestant may not have walked away at any level, and there were no milestone levels; if the contestant missed a question, any winnings won up to that point were incorrect was cut by half. As the show was live broadcast, the "Ask the Audience" lifeline relied on the viewers across Taiwan. This was also one of the earliest versions to adopt the clock format, which would later be adopted in the American version starting in the 2009 season.
  • On 20 April 2000, a Japanese version called Quiz $ Millionaire was launched by Fuji Television.[79] Hosted by Monta Mino, it ran as a weekly programme for seven years, after which it aired as occasional specials; the final episode aired on 2 January 2013.[80]
  • On 3 July 2000, a French version, Qui veut gagner des millions ?, was launched on the TF1 network, hosted by Jean-Pierre Foucault and since 26 January 2019 by Camille Combal. In 2020, following the COVID-19 pandemic, a special "At Home" edition was introduced in order to comply with the national lockdown. Celebrities competed from home in order to win money for charity. The show was filmed from the host's house in the first episodes and saw the introduction of a new lifeline to replace "Ask the Audience", "l'Appel à la maison" ("Phone Home") which allowed the contestants to call a viewer of the show at home.
  • On 13–14 September 2000, a Canadian version called Who Wants to Be a Millionaire: Canadian Edition was broadcast in Canada on CTV. It was hosted by newscaster Pamela Wallin.[81]
  • On 15 September 2000, a Slovak version of the game show, entitled Milionár, was launched on Markíza. It was hosted by Martin Nikodým. In 2007, the show was moved to Jednotka until it was cancelled in 2008.
  • On 16 October 2000, a Czech version of the game show, Chcete být milionářem?, was launched on TV Nova, hosted by Vladimír Čech. The first million-winner was Zdeněk Jánský in 2002. Vladimír Čech was removed from the show and was replaced by Martin Preiss in 2003, who hosted for a year. In 2005, he was replaced by Czech musician Ondřej Hejma, who hosted the very last episodes of the original programme. In June 2005, the show on TV Nova was cancelled. In February 2008 was the show launched on FTV Prima as a syndicated version – on daily evening before the main TV News at 19:30. The show was entitled Milionář and hosted by Roman Šmucler. The show was cancelled in the same year. In 2016, TV Nova returned the show with the original name Chcete být milionářem? For now, the show was hosted by the Czech actor Marek Vašut, but it ran for only one season before it was cancelled. The main prize of Chcete být milionářem? was 10 million Czech crowns; in Milionář it was 2 million crowns.
  • In 2001, a Hong Kong version called Baak Maan Fu Yung was launched by Asia Television. It ran until 2005, and was hosted by actor Kenneth Chan.
  • Singapore hosted its own version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? in both English and Chinese versions dubbed Bai wan da ying jia, which ran from 2000 until 2004. It was hosted by Mark van Cuylenberg, known by the stage name of "The Flying Dutchman" in the English version, and Taiwanese actor Timothy Chao in the Chinese version. The series produced no top prize winners on either versions, but one contestant, Steven Tan, won $250,000 on 27 December 2001, and Tan remained as the biggest cash winner in Singaporean game show history since.[82]
  • Vietnam launched its own version in 2005.
  • In 2007, a Chinese version was launched, hosted by Lǐ Fán. It ran until April 2008.
  • On 6 May 2017, a Brazilian version entitled Quem quer ser um milionário, which is a segment of the variety show Domingão com Huck, premiered on Rede Globo. A similar show entitled Show do Milhão, hosted by Silvio Santos, aired on SBT between 1999 and 2003 with a further revival in 2009 and 2021, the latter with the sponsorship of the Brazilian fintech application PicPay and hosted by Celso Portiolli.
  • On 11 August 2018, a Mauritian version was launched on MBC 1 by the Mauritius Broadcasting Corporation.[83] The show is presented by Sandra Mayotte, the 14th female host in the Millionaire franchise.[84]
  • Стани Богат (lit.'Become rich') is the Bulgarian version of Who Wants to Be a Millionare?. It first aired on NOVA, later on BNT 1 and finally on BTV.

Hallmarks Edit

Music Edit

The musical score most commonly associated with the franchise was composed by father-and-son duo Keith and Matthew Strachan. The Strachans' score provides drama and tension, and unlike older game show musical scores, Millionaire's musical score was created to feature music playing almost throughout the entire show. The Strachans' main Millionaire theme song takes inspiration from the "Mars" movement of Gustav Holst's The Planets, and their cues from the 6th/3rd to 10th/7th question, and then from the 11th/8th question onwards, take the pitch up a semitone for each subsequent question, in order to increase tension as the contestant progressed through the game.[85] On Game Show Network (GSN)'s Gameshow Hall of Fame special, the narrator described the Strachan tracks as "mimicking the sound of a beating heart", and stated that as the contestant works their way up the money ladder, the music is "perfectly in tune with their ever-increasing pulse".[2]

The Strachans' Millionaire soundtrack was honoured by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers with numerous awards, the earliest of them awarded in 2000.[85] A British album of the musical stings was released in 2000, while a remix of the theme tune became a UK chart hit the same year.[86] The original music cues were given minor rearrangements for the U.S. version's clock format in 2008; for example, the question cues were synced to the "ticking" sounds of the game clock. Even later, the Strachan score was removed from the U.S. version altogether for the introduction of the "shuffle format" in 2010, in favour of a new musical score with cues written by Jeff Lippencott and Mark T. Williams, co-founders of the Los Angeles-based company Ah2 Music.[87]

Set Edit

 
TV studio of ¿Quién quiere ser millonario?, the Salvadorian version of the show.

The basic set design used in the Millionaire franchise was conceived by British production designer Andy Walmsley, and is the most reproduced scenic design in television history.[6] Unlike older game shows whose sets are or were designed to make the contestant(s) feel at ease, Millionaire's set was designed to make the contestant feel uncomfortable, so that the programme feels more like a thriller movie than a typical quiz show.[2] The floor is made of Plexiglas[6] beneath which lies a huge dish covered in mirror paper.[2] The main game typically has the contestant and host sit in "Hot Seats",[2] which are slightly modified, 3 foot (0.91 m)-high Pietranera Arco All chairs situated in the centre of the stage; an LG computer monitor directly facing each seat displays questions and other pertinent information.

The lighting system is programmed to darken the set as the contestant progresses further into the game. There are also spotlights situated at the bottom of the set area that zoom down on the contestant when they answer a major question; to increase the visibility of the light beams emitted by such spotlights, oil is vaporised, creating a haze effect. Media scholar Dr. Robert Thompson, a professor at Syracuse University, stated that the show's lighting system made the contestant feel as though they were outside a prison while an escape was in progress.[2]

When the U.S. Millionaire introduced its "shuffle format", the Hot Seats and corresponding monitors were replaced with a single podium and as a result, the contestant and host stand throughout the game and are also able to walk around the stage. According to Vieira, the Hot Seat was removed because it was decided that the seat, which was originally intended to make the contestant feel nervous, actually ended up having contestants feel so comfortable in it that it did not service the production team any longer.[88] Also, two video screens were installed – one that displays the current question in play, and another that displays the contestant's cumulative total and progress during the game. In September 2012, the redesigned set was improved with a modernised look and feel, in order to take into account the show's transition to high-definition broadcasting, which had just come about the previous year. The two video screens were replaced with two larger ones, having twice as many projectors as the previous screens; the previous contestant podium was replaced with a new one; and light-emitting diode (LED) technology was integrated into the lighting system to give the lights more vivid colours and the set and gameplay experience a more intimate feel.[89]

Catchphrase Edit

Millionaire has made catchphrases out of several lines used on the show. The most well-known of these catchphrases is the host's question "Is that your final answer?", asked whenever a contestant's answer needs to be verified.[90] The question is asked because the nature of the game allows contestants to ponder the options aloud before committing to an answer. Regularly on tier-three questions (and sometimes on tier-two), a dramatic pause occurs between the contestant's statement of their final answer and the host's acknowledgement of whether or not it is correct.

Many parodies of Millionaire have capitalised on the "final answer" catchphrase. In the United States, the phrase was popularised by Philbin during his tenure as the host of that country's version,[53] to the extent that TV Land listed it in its special 100 Greatest TV Quotes and Catchphrases, which aired in 2006.[91]

On the Australian versions, McGuire replaces the phrase with "Lock it in?"; likewise, the hosts of the Indian version have used varying "lock" catchphrases. There are also a number of other non-English versions of Millionaire where the host does not ask "[Is that your] final answer?" or a literal translation thereof.[92] Besides the "final answer" question, other catchphrases used on the show include the contestants' requests to use lifelines, such as "I'd like to phone a friend"; and a line that Tarrant spoke whenever a contestant was struggling with a particular question, "Some questions are only easy if you know the answer."[90] Another popular catchphrase heard throughout the show is spoke by Tarrant to encourage the player when he hands over the cheque, "But we don't want to give you that!"

Reception Edit

Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? has been credited with single-handedly reviving interest in, and breaking new ground for, the television game show.[2] It revolutionised the look and feel of game shows with its unique lighting system, dramatic music cues, and futuristic set. The show also became one of the most popular game shows in television history, and is credited by some with paving the way for the phenomenon of reality programming.[2]

Awards, accolades and honours Edit

In 2000, the British Film Institute honoured the UK version of Millionaire by ranking it number 23 on its "BFI TV 100" list, which compiled what British television industry professionals believed were the greatest programmes to have ever originated from that country.[93] The UK Millionaire also won the 1999 British Academy Television Award for Best Entertainment Programme, and seven National Television Awards for Most Popular Quiz Programme from 1999 to 2005.

The original primetime version of the U.S. Millionaire won two Daytime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Game/Audience Participation Show in 2000 and 2001. Philbin was honoured with a Daytime Emmy in the category of Outstanding Game Show Host in 2001, while Vieira received one in 2005 and another in 2009, making her the second woman to win an Emmy Award for hosting a game show, and the first to win multiple times.[94] TV Guide ranked the U.S. Millionaire No. 7 on its 2001 list of the 50 Greatest Game Shows of All Time,[95] and later ranked it No. 6 on its 2013 "60 Greatest Game Shows" list.[96] GSN ranked Millionaire No. 5 on its August 2006 list of the 50 Greatest Game Shows of All Time,[97] and later honoured the show in January 2007 on its first, and so far only, Gameshow Hall of Fame special.[2]

Charles Ingram cheating scandal Edit

 
Charles and Diana Ingram

In September 2001, British Army Major Charles Ingram apparently won the top prize in the UK Millionaire, but his flip-flopping on each of the final two questions raised suspicion of cheating. When the footage was reviewed, staff made a connection between Fastest Finger contestant Tecwen Whittock's coughing and Ingram's answers. The prize was withheld, and police were called in to investigate the matter further.

In March 2003, the Ingrams and Whittock were taken to court on the charge of using fraudulent means to win the top prize on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. During the trial, the defence claimed that Whittock had simply suffered from allergies during recording of the second episode, but the prosecution noted that his coughing stopped upon Ingram leaving the set and Whittock subsequently taking his turn on the main game. The trial concluded with all three being found guilty and receiving suspended sentences.[98] After the trial, ITV aired a documentary about the scandal, along with Ingram's entire game, with coughing sounds amplified. As a joke, Benylin cough syrup paid to have the first commercial shown during the programme's commercial break.[99]

In April 2020, ITV aired a three part drama titled Quiz based upon the scandal.[100]

Other media Edit

Merchandise Edit

Three board game adaptations of the UK Millionaire were released by Upstarts in 1998, and a junior edition recommended for younger players was introduced in 2001. The U.S. version also saw two board games of its own, released by Pressman Toy Corporation in 2000.[101][102] Other Millionaire board games have included a game based on the Australian version's Hot Seat format, which was released by UGames;[103] a game based on the Italian version released by Hasbro;[104] and a game based on the French version which was released by TF1's games division.[105]

An electronic tabletop version of the game was released by Tiger Electronics in 2000.[106] Six different DVD games based on the UK Millionaire, featuring Tarrant's likeness and voice, were released by Zoo Digital Publishing[107] and Universal Studios Home Entertainment between 2002 and 2008. In 2008, Imagination Games released a DVD game based on the U.S. version, based on the 2004–2008 format and coming complete with Vieira's likeness and voice,[108] as well as a quiz book[109] and a 2009 desktop calendar.[110]

Video game adaptations Edit

The UK Millionaire saw five video game adaptations for personal computers and Sony's PlayStation and Sega's Dreamcast consoles, as well as Nintendo's Game Boy Advance, produced by Hothouse Creations and Eidos Interactive. Between 1999 and 2001, Jellyvision produced five games based on the U.S. network version for PCs and the PlayStation, all of them featuring Philbin's likeness and voice. The first of these adaptations – Who Wants to Be a Millionaire was published by Disney Interactive, while the later four were published by Buena Vista Interactive which had just been spun off from DI when it reestablished itself in attempts to diversify its portfolio. Of the five games, three featured general trivia questions,[111][112][113] one was sports-themed,[114] and another was a "Kids Edition" featuring easier questions.[115] Eurocom ported the game to the Game Boy Color for the second edition. Two additional U.S. Millionaire games were released by Ludia in conjunction with Ubisoft in 2010 and 2011; the first of these was a game for Nintendo's Wii console and DS handheld system, as well as a PlayStation 3 port of the Wii version, based on the 2008–2010 clock format,[116] with the Wii version offered on the show as a consolation prize to audience contestants during the 2010–2011 season. The second, for Microsoft's Xbox 360, was based on the "shuffle format"[117] and was offered as a consolation prize during the next season (2011–2012).

Ludia also made a Facebook game based on Millionaire available to players in North America from 2011 to 2016. This game featured an altered version of the "shuffle format", condensing the number of questions to twelve – eight in round one and four in round two. Contestants competed against eight other Millionaire fans in round one, with the top three playing round two alone. There was no "final answer" rule; the contestant's responses were automatically locked in. Answering a question correctly earned a contestant the value of that question, multiplied by the number of people who responded incorrectly. Contestants were allowed to use two of their Facebook friends as "Jump the Question" lifelines in round one, and to use the "Ask the Audience" lifeline in round two to invite up to 50 such friends of theirs to answer a question for a portion of the prize money of the current question.[118]

On 29 October 2020, Microids published a video game under the same name and released it on Steam, PlayStation 4, Xbox One and Nintendo Switch.[119]

Scrapped animated spin-off Edit

In September 2001, Celador signed a deal with DIC Entertainment to produce a cartoon based on the show titled The Adventures of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? – The Animated Series.[120][121] The series was to follow fictional winners of the show, who would have used their prize money to take trips to various exotic locations, while the fictional host would keep in touch with them through the Millionaire Command Center.

The series was planned to be shown off at MIPCOM that year, however nothing else was confirmed for the series, and was silently scrapped without a formal announcement.

Disney Parks attraction Edit

 
The building housing the California version after its 2004 closure

A theme park attraction based on the show, known as Who Wants to Be a Millionaire – Play It!, appeared at Disney's Hollywood Studios (when it was known as Disney-MGM Studios) at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida and at Disney California Adventure Park in Anaheim, California. Both the Florida and California Play It! attractions opened in 2001; the California version closed in 2004,[122] and the Florida version closed in 2006 and was replaced by Toy Story Midway Mania!

The format in the Play It! attraction was very similar to that of the television show that inspired it. When a show started, a "Fastest Finger" question was given, and the audience was asked to put the four answers in order; the person with the fastest time was the first contestant in the Hot Seat for that show. However, the main game had some differences: for example, contestants competed for points rather than dollars, the questions were set to time limits, and the "Phone a Friend" lifeline became "Phone a Complete Stranger" which connected the contestant to a Disney cast member outside the attraction's theatre who would find a guest to help. After the contestant's game was over, they were awarded anything from a collectible pin, to clothing, to a Millionaire CD game, to a three-night Disney Cruise.[123]

Spin-off Edit

The Italian version worked in 2008 on a spin-off of the game show called 50–50 (Fifty Fifty).[124][125][when?] Such a spin-off aired in North Macedonia, Nepal, Albania, Kosovo, Spain, Sweden, Greece, Japan, Thailand, Turkey and Egypt.[126]

50–50 Edit

50–50
Original work50–50 (Italy)
Years2008 – mid-2010s
Miscellaneous
GenreGame show
First aired21 April 2008; 15 years ago (2008-04-21)
Distributor

50–50 was a television game show which offers large cash prizes for correctly answering a series of randomised multiple-choice questions of varying difficulty with two options. The format is a spin-off of the quiz show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? and was created by Intellygents, 2waytraffic, Endemol and RTI (Reti Televisive Italiane) company of Mediaset, moreover, was exported and aired in many countries around the world.[127]

Gameplay Edit

Unlike the traditional Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, this game is played by a team of two players.[128][129]

In round 1, the playing pair will answer ten questions. Each question is worth a different random amount, and all the money they win goes into their jackpot. If at any point they get an answer wrong, the value of the jackpot is halved. The team plays together but will answer each question separately.

Only one player in the couple (determined at random) sees the question and its two answers. They will have ten seconds to lock in their answer. After the first player selects an answer, the host turns to the second player and shows them the question and the answer that the first player chose. (They are not shown the answer that their partner turned down.) Player 2 must now decide whether to agree with Player 1's answer, or to switch the team's answer to the other answer, whatever it may be. If the question is ultimately answered correctly, the value of the question will be added to the bank. Otherwise, the current value of the bank is halved.

In round 2, the host poses five questions to one player of the team in succession. After playing them, the other player would have only seen one of the two choices. Now the second player will look at all five answers and determine how many questions the first player answered correctly. If the player guesses too few or too many, the winnings are reduced to zero.

In the final round, the host asks five questions to one of the two competitors, this will have 10 seconds to answer each question and her partner will on his electronic screen stand the answer. He or she will decide whether to confirm or choose the option that has not been seen. At the end of the questions the contestant who does not see both answers will have to make a prediction of the number of correct answers given. The total prize money can be won only if the forecast is 5 and proves correct, otherwise the part of the prize money that is won will be proportionately less. If the number of correct answers is guessed, the pair win the prize, otherwise they receive the consolation prize.

International versions Edit

Country Name Host Channel Year shown Prize
  Albania
  Kosovo[130]
Fifty Fifty Enkel Demi RTSH
Klan Kosova
April 14, 2013 – ? 25,000
  Egypt Fifty Fifty Ashraf Riad ERT 1 November 5, 2010 – 2011 ج.م250,000
  Greece[131][132][133] Fifty Fifty Giorgos Liagkas Mega Channel 2008–2009 30,000
  Italy (original format)[134][135] Fifty Fifty Gerry Scotti Canale 5 April 21, 2008 – May 25, 2008 300,000
  Japan クイズ 50-50
Quiz Fifty-Fifty
Toshihiro Itō BS Fuji May 7, 2008 – ? ¥3,000,000
    Nepal Fifty Fifty Madan Krishna Shrestha NTV 2008 Rs.500,000
  North Macedonia[136] Педесет-Педесет
Pedeset-Pedeset
Predrag Pavlovski
Žarko Dimitrioski
A1 June 30, 2008 – 2009 300,000 ден
  Spain[137][138][139] Fifty Fifty Silvia Jato Cuatro July 1, 2008 – September 6, 2008 50,000
  Sweden[140] Postkodlotteriets 50-50 Sofia Rågenklint TV4 September 22, 2008 – April 23, 2009 55,000 kr
  Thailand 50-50 Ṭhnạth Tạnnuchittikul TV3 November 2, 2009 – October 12, 2010 5,000 baht
  Turkey[141][142] Birimiz İkimiz İçin İlker Aksum TRT 1 October 10, 2010 – ? 100,000 TL

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External links Edit

  • Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? at the National Film and Sound Archive
Original United Kingdom version
  • Official website at itv.com
  • Who Wants to be a Millionaire? at UKGameshows.com
  • Major Charles Ingram affair in detail
Internet Movie Database pages
  • Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (UK) at IMDb
  • Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (US – 1999–2002) at IMDb
  • Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (US – current) at IMDb
  • Who Wants to Be a Super Millionaire (US) at IMDb
  • ¿Quién quiere ser millonario? (Argentina) at IMDb
  • Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (Australia) at IMDb
  • Die Millionenshow (Austria) at IMDb
  • Qui sera millionnaire? (Belgium – in French) at IMDb
  • Wie wordt multimiljonair? (Belgium – in Dutch) at IMDb
  • Tko želi biti milijunaš? (Croatia) at IMDb
  • Hvem vil være millionær? (Denmark) at IMDb
  • Haluatko miljonääriksi? (Finland) at IMDb
  • Qui veut gagner des millions? (France) at IMDb
  • Wer wird Millionär? (Germany) at IMDb
  • Ποιος Θέλει Να Γίνει Εκατομμυριούχος (Greece) at IMDb
  • 百萬富翁 (Hong Kong) at IMDb
  • Legyen ön is milliomos! (Hungary) at IMDb
  • Viltu vinna milljón? (Iceland) at IMDb
  • ?מי רוצה להיות מיליונר (Israel) at IMDb
  • Kaun Banega Crorepati (India) at IMDb
  • Chi vuol essere milionario? (Italy) at IMDb
  • クイズ$ミリオネア (Japan) at IMDb
  • Lotto Weekend Miljonairs (Netherlands) at IMDb
  • Vil du bli millionær? (Norway) at IMDb
  • Milionerzy (Poland) at IMDb
  • ¿Quiere ser millonario? (Spain) at IMDb
  • Vem vill bli miljonär? (Sweden) at IMDb

wants, millionaire, other, uses, wants, millionaire, disambiguation, this, article, about, franchise, original, version, british, game, show, other, versions, international, versions, international, television, game, show, franchise, british, origin, created, . For other uses see Who Wants to Be a Millionaire disambiguation This article is about the franchise For the original UK version see Who Wants to Be a Millionaire British game show For other versions see International versions of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Who Wants to Be a Millionaire is an international television game show franchise of British origin created by David Briggs Mike Whitehill and Steven Knight In its format currently owned and licensed by Sony Pictures Television contestants tackle a series of multiple choice questions to win large cash prizes in a format that twists on many game show genre conventions only one contestant plays at a time similar to radio quizzes contestants are given the question before deciding whether to answer and have no time limit to answer questions and the amount offered increases as they tackle questions that become increasingly difficult The maximum cash prize offered in most versions of the format is an aspirational value in local currency such as one million pounds in the UK or 75 million rupees 7 5 crore in India Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Created byDavid Briggs Mike Whitehill Steven KnightOriginal workWho Wants to Be a Millionaire British game show OwnerCelador 1998 2007 2waytraffic 2007 present in name only unit of Sony Pictures Television Sony Pictures Television 2008 present Years1998 presentFilms and televisionTelevision seriesWho Wants to Be a Millionaire see International versions AudioOriginal musicScores composed by Keith and Matthew StrachanMiscellaneousTheme park attraction s Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Play It U S GenreGame showFirst aired4 September 1998 25 years ago 1998 09 04 DistributorSony Pictures Television 1 The original British version debuted on 4 September 1998 on the ITV network hosted by Chris Tarrant who presented his final episode on 11 February 2014 after which the show was discontinued A revived series of seven episodes to commemorate its 20th anniversary aired from 5 to 11 May 2018 hosted by Jeremy Clarkson The revival received mostly positive reviews from critics and fans as well as high viewing figures leading ITV to renew the show for several more series Since its debut international variants of the game show have been aired in around 160 countries Contents 1 History 2 Gameplay 2 1 Rules 2 1 1 Original format 2 1 2 US format 2 1 2 1 Clock format 2 1 2 2 Shuffle format 2 1 3 Other international formats 2 1 3 1 Risk format 2 1 3 2 Hot Seat format 2 1 3 3 Gamblers Special format 2 2 Lifelines 2 2 1 Unique lifelines 2 3 Top prize winners 3 Original version 4 International versions 4 1 Australia 4 2 United States 4 3 Russia 4 4 India 4 5 Sri Lanka 4 6 Philippines 4 7 Italy 4 8 Nepal 4 9 Costa Rica 4 10 Other versions 5 Hallmarks 5 1 Music 5 2 Set 5 3 Catchphrase 6 Reception 6 1 Awards accolades and honours 7 Charles Ingram cheating scandal 8 Other media 8 1 Merchandise 8 2 Video game adaptations 8 3 Scrapped animated spin off 8 4 Disney Parks attraction 9 Spin off 9 1 50 50 9 1 1 Gameplay 9 1 2 International versions 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditThe format of the show was created by David Briggs Mike Whitehill and Steven Knight who had earlier created a number of the promotional games for Tarrant s morning show on Capital FM radio such as the bong game Tentatively known as Cash Mountain 2 the show took its finalised title from a song written by Cole Porter for the 1956 film High Society starring Frank Sinatra and Celeste Holm Since the original version launched several individuals have claimed that they originated the format and that Celador had breached their copyright While many pursued litigation they were all unsuccessful and each claim was later settled out of court on an agreement settlement 3 4 5 In March 2006 original producer Celador announced that it was seeking to sell the worldwide rights to Millionaire together with the rest of its British programme library as the first phase of a sell off of the company s format and production divisions British television producer Paul Smith first had the idea to franchise the UK programme internationally He developed a series of standards for international variants that ensured they mirrored the British original closely For example all hosts were required to appear on screen wearing Armani suits as Tarrant did in the UK producers were forbidden from hiring local composers to create original music instead using the same music cues used by the British version and the lighting system and set design were to adhere faithfully to the way they were presented on the British version 6 Some of Smith s rules have been slightly relaxed over the years as the franchise s development has progressed Dutch company 2waytraffic ultimately acquired Millionaire and all of Celador s other programmes Two years later Sony Pictures Entertainment purchased 2waytraffic for 137 5 million 7 Sony Pictures Television currently owns and licences the show s format while Disney ABC Domestic Television the Walt Disney Company s in home sales and content distribution firm controls the US version independently of Sony Gameplay EditRules Edit A group of contestants on each episode play a preliminary round called Fastest Finger First All are given a question by the host and four answers which must be placed within a particular order in the first season of the original version 1998 and the first four seasons of the Australian version 1999 2002 contestants have to answer a multiple choice question If any contestants are visually impaired the host reads the question and four choices all at once then repeats the choices after the music for the round begins The contestant who answers correctly in the fastest time goes on to play the main game In the event that no one gets the question right another question is given if two or more contestants answer correctly but with the same time they are given a tie breaker to determine who will move on This round is only used when a new contestant is being chosen to play the main round and can be played more than once in an episode among those remaining within the group seeking to play the main game In celebrity editions the round is not used celebrities automatically take part in the main game Once a contestant enters the main game they are asked increasingly difficult general knowledge questions by the host Each features four possible answers to which the contestant must give the correct answer Doing so wins them a certain amount of money with tackling more difficult questions increasing their prize fund During their game the player has a set of lifelines that they may use only once to help them with a question as well as two safety nets if a contestant gets a question wrong but had reached a designated cash value during their game they will leave with that amount as their prize While the first few questions are generally easy subsequent ones might prompt the host to ask if the answer they gave is their final answer if it is then it is locked in and cannot be changed If a contestant feels unsure about an answer and does not wish to play on they can walk away with the money they have won to which the host will ask them to confirm this as their final decision in such cases the host will usually ask them to state what answer they would have gone for and reveal if it would have been correct or incorrect Original format Edit During the British original between 1998 and 2007 the show s format focused on fifteen questions The payout structure was as follows questions at guaranteed levels are highlighted with a bolded text 8 Question number Question value1 1002 2003 3004 5005 1 0006 2 0007 4 0008 8 0009 16 00010 32 00011 64 00012 125 00013 250 00014 500 00015 1 000 000Between 2007 and 2014 the number of questions was reduced to twelve the overall change in format was later incorporated into a number of international markets over a period of four years including the Arab world Bulgaria the Netherlands France Poland Spain and Turkey The payout structure as a whole was subsequently changed as a result with the second safety net relocated to 50 000 at question 7 questions at guaranteed levels are highlighted with a bolded text 9 Question number Question value1 5002 1 0003 2 0004 5 0005 10 0006 20 0007 50 0008 75 0009 150 00010 250 00011 500 00012 1 000 000The game show s revival for British television in 2018 reverted to the original arrangement used before 2007 but with one notable difference in that the second safety net was made adjustable once a contestant reached 1 000 the host asked them before giving the next question if they wished to set the next cash prize amount as the second safety net with this allowing them to set up as high as 500 000 in their game as a result US format Edit The original US version premiered on ABC in August 1999 as part of a two week daily special event hosted by Regis Philbin After this and a second two week event aired in November 1999 ABC commissioned a regular series that launched in January 2000 and ran until June 2002 The syndication of the game show was conceived and debuting in September 2002 The only difference between it and the British version was that episodes were halved in length 30 minutes as opposed to the 60 minute length of the original version The change meant that the preliminary round of the show was eliminated and contestants had to pass a more conventional game show qualification test Exceptions to this arrangement in which it was used under the name Fastest Finger included primetime special editions of the programme the 2004 series that was dubbed Super Millionaire in which the final prize was increased to 10 000 000 10 and for the 10th anniversary special of the US edition which ran during August 2009 for eleven episodes The decision to remove this round later occurred in other international versions including the British original before its reinstatement in the renewed series Clock format Edit In 2008 the US version changed its format so that contestants were required to answer questions within a set time limit The limit varied depending on the difficulty of the question 11 Question number Time limit1 5 15 seconds6 10 30 seconds11 14 45 seconds15 45 seconds any accumulated remaining time from the previous 14 questions The clock started immediately after a question was given and the four possible answers appeared The clock paused when a lifeline was used If the clock ran out with no answer locked in the contestant walked away with any prize money won up to that point unless the Double Dip lifeline had been used in which case a failure to give a second answer was treated the same as a wrong answer This format change was later adopted into other international versions the British original for example adopted this change for episodes on 3 August 2010 12 The Indian version was introduced on 11 October 2010 Shuffle format Edit On 13 September 2010 the US version adopted another significant change to its format In this change the game featured two rounds The first round consisted of ten questions in which the cash prize associated to each value along with the category and difficulty for each question was randomised per game As such the difficulty of the question in this round was not tied to the value associated to it and a contestant did not know what amount they won unless they provided a correct answer or chose to walk away As part of this format the amount of money a contestant won in this round was banked but if they walked away before completing the round they left with half the amount that had been banked if they gave an incorrect answer during this round they left with just 1 000 13 If they answered all ten questions correctly they then moved on to the second round which stuck to the standard format of the game show the remaining questions were set to general knowledge and featured cash prizes of high non cumulative values The contestant could at this point walk away with the total amount banked from the first round otherwise an incorrect answer meant they left with 25 000 The format was later modified for the fourteenth season of the US version but retained the same arrangement for the last four questions In 2015 the so called shuffle format was scrapped and the show returned to a version that closely resembled the original format 14 Other international formats Edit Risk format Edit In 2007 the German version modified the show s format with the inclusion of a new feature called Risk Mode During the main game contestants are given the choice of choosing this feature in which if they choose to use it they gain the use of a fourth lifeline that allows them to discuss question with a member of the audience in exchange for having no second safety net if they get any question between the sixth and final cash prize amount wrong they would leave with the guaranteed amount given for correctly answering five questions This format became adopted in Austria Czech Republic Hungary Italy Philippines Poland Russia Switzerland and Venezuela A different variant has only one custom safety net before the start of the contestant s game The Taiwanese version did not have any safety nets or any option to quit the contestant s winnings won up until they were incorrect on any question was cut by half Hot Seat format Edit See also Millionaire Hot Seat In November 2008 the Italian version modified the format of the show under the title Edizione Straordinaria lit Extraordinary Edition In this variation of the game six contestants take part with each taking it in turns to answer questions and build up their prize fund 15 Utilising the time limit format introduced in the US version this variation on the format grants a contestant the right to pass the question on to another player who cannot pass it on themselves while eliminating both the option of walking away from a question and the use of lifelines 15 If a contestant cannot pass on or correctly answer a question they are eliminated and the highest cash value they made is removed 15 The game ends when all contestants are eliminated or the question for the highest cash value is answered if a contestant who answers the final question gives a correct answer they win that prize if the final question is answered incorrectly or the last contestant is eliminated they win a small prize provided they reach the fifth question safety net 15 This format was later introduced to various markets over the course of a four year period from 2009 to 2012 including Norway Hungary Spain Vietnam 16 Indonesia Australia and Chile 17 In 2009 the Australian version was modified to use the new Italian format and the name was also changed from Extraordinary Edition to Hot Seat In 2017 as part of new modification to the format the game incorporated the use of the Fastest Finger First round with the winner able to select a lifeline out of three that the show provided Gamblers Special format Edit In 2013 the German version modified the show s format which runs concurrent with the original format where only one guaranteed level exists at 1 000 and maximum prize is 2 000 000 Lifelines Edit During a standard play of the game a contestant is given a series of lifelines to aid them with questions In the standard format a contestant has access to three lifelines which each can be used only once per game More than one lifeline can be used on a single question The standard lifelines used in the original format of the game show include 50 50 Fifty Fifty the game s computer eliminates two wrong answers from the current question leaving behind the correct answer and one incorrect answer From 2000 the selection of two incorrect answers were random Phone a Friend the contestant is connected with a friend over a phone line and is given 30 seconds to read the question and answers and solicit assistance The time begins as soon as the contestant starts reading the question Ask the Audience the audience takes voting pads attached to their seats and votes for the answer that they believe is correct The computer tallies the results and displays them as percentages to the contestant This lifeline was removed on international versions with episodes taped without an audience due to the COVID 19 pandemic In the US Ask the Audience and Phone a Friend had corporate sponsorship at different periods The original AT amp T sponsored Phone a Friend during the original ABC primetime show and the syndicated version s first season the current AT amp T sponsored the 2009 primetime episodes From 2004 to 2006 AOL sponsored Ask the Audience and allowed users of Instant Messenger to participate in the lifeline by adding the screen name MillionaireIM to their contact list When a contestant used the lifeline during the show users received an instant message with the question and the four possible answers and voted for the correct answer The computer tallied these results alongside the results from the studio audience 18 Contestants pre select multiple friends for Phone a Friend As soon as the contestant begins to play producers alert the friends and ask them to keep their phone lines free and wait for three rings before answering 19 On 11 January 2010 the US version eliminated the use of Phone a Friend in response to an increasing trend of contestants friends using web search engines and other internet resources to assist them during the calls Producers came to feel that the lifeline was giving contestants who had friends with internet access an unfair advantage they also believed it was contrary to the original intent of the lifeline friends provided assistance based on what they knew 20 During recordings of the current British version security personnel from the production office stay with contestants friends at their homes to ensure integrity During The People Play specials in 2012 and 2013 friends travelled to the studio and stayed backstage When a contestant used the lifeline the friend they called appeared on a monitor in the studio and both the friend and contestant were able to see and communicate with each other 21 22 Unique lifelines Edit During the course of the game show s history there were a number of unique lifeline additions in various versions of the programme These include but are not limited to Switch the Question Used in the US version between 2004 and 2008 and in the UK original during celebrity specials between 2002 and 2003 and standard episodes between 2010 and 2014 this lifeline became available after a contestant answered the tenth question of the game The computer replaced the current question with another of the same difficulty The contestant could not reinstate any lifelines used on the original question 11 A variation of this lifeline for the US version called Cut the Question was brought into use in 2014 for a week long run of special episodes that featured child contestants in which it could only be used within the first ten questions This is also used in the Indian version as a permanent lifeline However it is available anytime in the game except for the highest cash prize question and participants can choose the topic from which the question is taken from The difficulty level depends on the cash prize for the question Double Dip One of two lifelines created for the Super Millionaire spin off of the US version When used this lifeline allowed contestants to have two guesses at a question but forbade them from using any other remaining lifelines or from walking away with their current winnings Contestants can first use 50 50 and then used Double Dip on the same question guaranteeing them the correct answer When the standard US format incorporated a time limit on questions the show retired 50 50 and replaced it with Double Dip 11 This lifeline was also used in the Russian version without a clock format but did not replace 50 50 23 Three Wise Men The other lifeline created for Super Millionaire When chosen a sequestered panel of three experts chosen by the producers appears via face to face audio and video feed to provide assistance Like Phone a Friend this lifeline incorporated a 30 second time limit for its use This lifeline was also used in the Russian version between 2006 and 2008 but did not feature experts Two Wise Men Used in the Vietnamese version of the show from episodes broadcast on 5 May 2020 replacing Ask Three of the Audience It has the same function as Three Wise Men however there are only two experts instead of three It becomes available after the fifth question Ask the Expert Inspired by Three Wise Men this lifeline provided the contestant with one person an expert selected for them to help with the question Unlike its predecessor this lifeline had no time limit on its use but was only available after the fifth question 24 after Phone a Friend was removed in 2010 it was made readily available at any time in the game In the US version the lifeline was sponsored by Skype for its live audio and video feeds 24 In the Hong Kong edition it replaced the Phone a Friend lifeline for a one off special in 2001 and for two celebrity specials in 2018 though with the celebrity contestants able to ask a panel of experts for help present in the audience all of whom had the question and possible answers visible to them Ask One of the Audience Used in the German version of the show this lifeline was designed for use as part of its Risk Mode format When used the contestant selects someone from the audience whereupon the host rereads the question and the possible answers and asks them to choose one If the contestant goes for the answer they chose and it is correct the audience member is given a small cash prize in return This lifeline was implemented as part of the Costa Rican version but was made available after passing the first safety net Ask Three of the Audience This lifeline was designed for use as part of its original format Used in the Vietnamese version of the show from episodes broadcast on 20 May 2008 later replaced by Two Wise Men due to the COVID 19 pandemic When used the contestant selects three from the audiences whereupon the host re reads the question and the possible answers and asks them to choose one If the contestant goes for the answer they chose and it proves to be correct the audience members are given a small cash prize in return 600 000 divided to members that answered correctly in the 3 audiences This lifeline was implemented as part of the Vietnamese version but was made available after passing the first safety net In the Philippine version the lifeline is called People Speak which can be used at any point in the game Jump the Question Used in the U S version of the show as part of the shuffle format from the start of the ninth season to the end of the thirteenth season When used prior to giving a final answer a contestant skipped the current question and moved on to the next one but earned no money from the question they skipped the lifeline could not be used if they have reached the final question Unlike other lifelines it could be used twice during a game except for the thirteenth season the introduction of Plus One led to the lifeline being modified as a result The lifeline was removed following the 2014 2015 season Crystal Ball Used in the US version of the show as part of specially designated weeks that used the shuffle format When used during the first round the contestant is allowed to see the cash amount that is designated to the question they are currently on 25 Plus One Used in the US version of the show from 2015 to 2019 and since 2020 Based on Ask One of the Audience the lifeline allows a contestant to invite on a friend from the audience to come and help them answer the question There is no time limit but after that question has been answered the friend has to return to the audience Ask the Host Used in the 20th anniversary revival of the original British version the Danish French and Italian revivals Slovenia Russia January 2021 June 2022 and the 2020 reboot of the American version When used by the contestant the host uses their knowledge of a question s subject gives their thoughts about the question and tries to assist them with finding the correct answer out of the choices given The lifeline features no time limit and the host reassures all they have no connection to the outside world and receive the question and possible answers for it at the same time as the contestant and thus have no knowledge of what the correct answer is After the contestant locks in their answer the host still can t see what the correct answer is so they must ask the computer to reveal the correct answer Top prize winners Edit Out of all contestants who have played the game relatively few have been able to win the top prize on any international version of the show The first was John Carpenter who won the top prize on the American version on 19 November 1999 26 Carpenter famously did not use a lifeline until the final question using his Phone a Friend to call his father not for help but to tell him he was about to become a millionaire 27 Other notable top prize winners include Judith Keppel the first winner of the original British version 28 Kevin Olmstead from the US version who won a progressive jackpot of 2 18 million 29 Martin Flood from the Australian version who was investigated by producers after suspicions that he had cheated much like Charles Ingram but was later cleared 30 Sushil Kumar from the Indian version who is often referred to in Western media as the real life Slumdog Millionaire 31 32 33 34 35 Mana Ashida from the Japanese version who is the youngest winner in the Millionaire franchise 36 and David Chang the first celebrity winner of the American version 37 38 Original version EditMain article Who Wants to Be a Millionaire British game show nbsp Chris Tarrant was host of the original British version from its debut in September 1998 until its final episode in February 2014Who Wants to Be a Millionaire debuted in Britain on 4 September 1998 with episodes broadcast on the ITV network When it began airing the show was hosted by Chris Tarrant and became an instant hit at its peak in 1999 one edition of the show was watched by over 19 million viewers 39 While most of the contestants were predominantly members of the general public who had applied to take part the show later featured special celebrity editions during its later years often coinciding with holidays and special events On 22 October 2013 Tarrant decided to leave the programme after hosting it for 15 years His decision subsequently led ITV to make plans to cancel the programme at the end of his contract with no further specials being made other than those that were already planned 40 41 Tarrant s final episode was a special clip show entitled Chris Final Answer which aired on 11 February 2014 Four years later ITV revived the programme for a special 7 episode series to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the British original 42 This series of special episodes was hosted by Jeremy Clarkson and aired every evening between 5 and 11 May 2018 The revival received mostly positive reviews from critics and fans and as well as high viewing figures led to ITV renewing the show for another series with Clarkson returning as host 43 International versions EditFurther information International versions of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Since the British original debuted in 1998 several different versions of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire have been created across the world including Australia the United States and India In total over 100 different international variations have been made 44 Australia Edit Main article Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Australian game show On 18 April 1999 Nine Network launched an Australian version of the game show for its viewers 45 This version ran until its final episode aired on 3 April 2006 46 After the first version ended a second version was created running for six episodes across October and November 2007 47 before a third version entitled Millionaire Hot Seat made its debut on 20 April 2009 48 49 The original version was hosted by Eddie McGuire until he was forced to sacrifice his on air commitments upon being made the CEO of the network 50 after his resignation from this role 51 he resumed his duties as host of subsequent versions of the programme United States Edit Main article Who Wants to Be a Millionaire American game show On 16 August 1999 ABC launched an American version of the game show for its primetime viewers Hosted by Regis Philbin 52 it proved to be a ratings success becoming the highest rated television show during the 1999 2000 season with its average audience figures reaching approximately 29 million viewers citation needed After a drop in ratings this version was cancelled with its final episode aired on 27 June 2002 53 On 16 September 2002 Meredith Vieira launched a daily syndicated version of the programme 54 which she hosted for 11 seasons until May 2013 55 After her departure the show was hosted by Cedric the Entertainer in 2013 56 and Terry Crews in 2014 57 before Chris Harrison took full hosting responsibilities in Autumn 2015 58 On 17 May 2019 the American version was cancelled after a total of 17 seasons and 20 years encompassing both primetime and first run syndication the final episode of the series was broadcast on 31 May 59 However ABC reversed the cancellation of the programme on 8 January 2020 announcing plans for a twenty first season consisting of nine episodes to be presented by Jimmy Kimmel starting 8 April 60 Russia Edit Main article Kto khochet stat millionerom On 1 October 1999 NTV launched a Russian version the game show entitled O schastlivchik Oh how lucky This version ran until its final episode on 28 January 2001 61 whereupon a few weeks later it was relaunched under the Russian translation of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire on Channel One The relaunched version was hosted by Maxim Galkin until 2008 and Dmitry Dibrov until 2022 62 India Edit Main article Kaun Banega Crorepati On 3 July 2000 an Indian version of the game show was launched The show was hosted by Amitabh Bachchan in his first appearance on Indian television 63 and received additional seasons in 2005 2006 64 2007 and then every year since 2010 65 Subsequent Indian versions were also made The original Indian version became immortalised in 2008 within the plot of Danny Boyle s award winning drama film Slumdog Millionaire 66 adapted from the 2005 Indian novel Q amp A by Vikas Swarup 67 68 Language version Title Date of releaseBengali Ke Hobe Banglar Kotipoti 4 June 2011Bhojpuri Ke Bani Crorepati 30 May 2011 69 Hindi Kaun Banega Crorepati 3 July 2000Kannada Kannadada Kotyadhipati 12 March 2012Kashmiri Kus Bani Koshur Karorpaet 29 April 2019Malayalam Ningalkkum Aakaam Kodeeshwaran 9 April 2012Marathi Kon Hoeel Marathi Crorepati 6 May 2013Tamil Neengalum Vellalaam Oru Kodi 27 February 2012 70 Kodeeswari 23 December 2019Telugu Meelo Evaru Koteeswarudu 9 June 2014 71 Evaru Meelo Koteeswarulu 22 August 2021Sri Lanka Edit On 18 September 2010 a Sinhalese version called Obada lakshapathi mamada lakshapathi ඔබද ලක ෂපත මමද ලක ෂපත was launched by Sirasa TV of the Capital Maharaja Television Network It is presented by Chandana Suriyabandara a senior commentator in Sri Lanka It offers 2 million Sri Lankan rupees as the ultimate prize On its 10th anniversary it was rebranded as Sirasa Lakshapathi and the prize was changed to 3 million rupees In May 2011 a Tamil version called Ungalil Yaar Maha Latchathipathi உங கள ல ய ர மக இலட ச த பத was launched by Shakthi TV The show is hosted by Abarna Suthan and Balendran Kandeeban The top prize is 2 million rupees Philippines Edit Main article Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Philippine game show In 2000 a Filipino version of the game show was launched by the government sequestered Intercontinental Broadcasting Corporation Hosted by Christopher de Leon and produced by Viva Television 72 73 it ran for two years before being axed On 23 May 2009 the show was relaunched on TV5 and produced by TVJ Productions 74 with Vic Sotto as the new host 75 76 The relaunched version was aired until 7 October 2012 when it was replaced by the Philippine version of The Million Pound Drop Live but it returned the following year on 15 September 2013 following the success of Talentadong Pinoy that year Italy Edit Main article Chi vuol essere milionario Chi vuol essere milionario was first launched by Endemol on Canale 5 in 2000 In 2002 its name was changed from Chi vuol essere miliardario after the Italian Lira was replaced with the Euro In 2018 it relaunched with four special episodes for its 20th anniversary followed by another eight special episodes in 2019 77 and the new season is produced by Fremantle Italia s unit Wavy The host was Gerry Scotti for every edition from 2000 to 2011 and from 2018 onward Nepal Edit Main article Ko Banchha Crorepati Ko Banchha Crorepati Who Wants to Be a Millionare also simply known as KBC Nepal क बन छ कर डपत first premiered on 2 February 2019 on AP1 Television scheduled to run for 52 episodes It is hosted by Rajesh Hamal and produced by SRBN Media Pvt Ltd Contestants can win cash prizes up to 1 crore 10 million Nepalese rupees Costa Rica Edit Main article Quien quiere ser millonario Costa Rican game show Quien quiere ser millonario Who Wants to Be a Millionaire is the Costa Rican version hosted by Ignacio Santos Pasamontes There are four lifelines 50 50 Video Call Plus One and Switch the Question The show was broadcast from 3 February 2009 to 3 September 2013 and from 27 April 2021 onwards It is shown on the private TV station Teletica If a contestant gets the fifth question correct they leave with at least 500 000 Costa Rican colon If a contestant gets the tenth question correct they leave with at least 3 000 000 Two contestants have won the top prize of 30 000 000 Other versions Edit Other notable versions created in other countries include the following In 1999 a Dutch version of the game show called Lotto Weekend Miljonairs was launched on SBS 6 It was hosted by Robert ten Brink In 2006 the show was moved to RTL 4 until it was cancelled in 2008 The show was later revived on SBS 6 in 2011 with Jeroen van der Boom as the host In 2019 the show was relaunched on RTL 4 with a new name Bankgiro Miljonairs hosted again by Robert ten Brink On 3 September 1999 a German version was launched by RTL Television with Gunther Jauch as the host The Polish version is called Milionerzy lit Millionaires and is aired on TVN between years 1999 2003 2008 2010 and since 2017 On 12 November 1999 a Finnish version of the show called Haluatko miljonaariksi lit Do You Want to Be a Millionaire was launched on Nelonen hosted by Lasse Lehtinen In 2005 the show was moved to MTV3 hosted by Ville Klinga until it was cancelled in 2007 After almost ten years the show relaunched on Nelonen in 2016 hosted by Jaajo Linnonmaa There was a small break in 2021 but in 2022 the show was back on with a new host Antti Holma In 2000 the Hungarian version of the show Legyen On is milliomos was launched on RTL Its iconic host was Istvan Vago for 1 098 episodes mainly weeknights until 2008 It aired again in 2009 led by the famous stand up comedian Sandor Fabry fired after 6 normal and 3 Hot Seat shows then in 2012 2013 by Sandor Friderikusz two times a week In 2019 the show relaunched again on TV2 hosted by experienced quizshow leader Gabor Gundel Takacs Nevertheless the revival aired only 42 times thus it went off weeknights which led to a radical decline from the start of 5 SHR in ratings The host told the audience in a Facebook video that the show would have been needed to air earlier than 21 20 CET to avoid timeshift changes due to the popular reality show Exatlon Hungary 78 The unlicensed Taiwanese version of the show 超級大富翁 Chao Ji Da Fu Weng was hosted by Hsieh Chen wu and ran until 2006 Unlike other versions the Taiwanese version saw major differences the contestant may not have walked away at any level and there were no milestone levels if the contestant missed a question any winnings won up to that point were incorrect was cut by half As the show was live broadcast the Ask the Audience lifeline relied on the viewers across Taiwan This was also one of the earliest versions to adopt the clock format which would later be adopted in the American version starting in the 2009 season On 20 April 2000 a Japanese version called Quiz Millionaire was launched by Fuji Television 79 Hosted by Monta Mino it ran as a weekly programme for seven years after which it aired as occasional specials the final episode aired on 2 January 2013 80 On 3 July 2000 a French version Qui veut gagner des millions was launched on the TF1 network hosted by Jean Pierre Foucault and since 26 January 2019 by Camille Combal In 2020 following the COVID 19 pandemic a special At Home edition was introduced in order to comply with the national lockdown Celebrities competed from home in order to win money for charity The show was filmed from the host s house in the first episodes and saw the introduction of a new lifeline to replace Ask the Audience l Appel a la maison Phone Home which allowed the contestants to call a viewer of the show at home On 13 14 September 2000 a Canadian version called Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Canadian Edition was broadcast in Canada on CTV It was hosted by newscaster Pamela Wallin 81 On 15 September 2000 a Slovak version of the game show entitled Milionar was launched on Markiza It was hosted by Martin Nikodym In 2007 the show was moved to Jednotka until it was cancelled in 2008 On 16 October 2000 a Czech version of the game show Chcete byt milionarem was launched on TV Nova hosted by Vladimir Cech The first million winner was Zdenek Jansky in 2002 Vladimir Cech was removed from the show and was replaced by Martin Preiss in 2003 who hosted for a year In 2005 he was replaced by Czech musician Ondrej Hejma who hosted the very last episodes of the original programme In June 2005 the show on TV Nova was cancelled In February 2008 was the show launched on FTV Prima as a syndicated version on daily evening before the main TV News at 19 30 The show was entitled Milionar and hosted by Roman Smucler The show was cancelled in the same year In 2016 TV Nova returned the show with the original name Chcete byt milionarem For now the show was hosted by the Czech actor Marek Vasut but it ran for only one season before it was cancelled The main prize of Chcete byt milionarem was 10 million Czech crowns in Milionar it was 2 million crowns In 2001 a Hong Kong version called Baak Maan Fu Yung was launched by Asia Television It ran until 2005 and was hosted by actor Kenneth Chan Singapore hosted its own version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire in both English and Chinese versions dubbed Bai wan da ying jia which ran from 2000 until 2004 It was hosted by Mark van Cuylenberg known by the stage name of The Flying Dutchman in the English version and Taiwanese actor Timothy Chao in the Chinese version The series produced no top prize winners on either versions but one contestant Steven Tan won 250 000 on 27 December 2001 and Tan remained as the biggest cash winner in Singaporean game show history since 82 Vietnam launched its own version in 2005 In 2007 a Chinese version was launched hosted by Lǐ Fan It ran until April 2008 On 6 May 2017 a Brazilian version entitled Quem quer ser um milionario which is a segment of the variety show Domingao com Huck premiered on Rede Globo A similar show entitled Show do Milhao hosted by Silvio Santos aired on SBT between 1999 and 2003 with a further revival in 2009 and 2021 the latter with the sponsorship of the Brazilian fintech application PicPay and hosted by Celso Portiolli On 11 August 2018 a Mauritian version was launched on MBC 1 by the Mauritius Broadcasting Corporation 83 The show is presented by Sandra Mayotte the 14th female host in the Millionaire franchise 84 Stani Bogat lit Become rich is the Bulgarian version of Who Wants to Be a Millionare It first aired on NOVA later on BNT 1 and finally on BTV Hallmarks EditMusic Edit The musical score most commonly associated with the franchise was composed by father and son duo Keith and Matthew Strachan The Strachans score provides drama and tension and unlike older game show musical scores Millionaire s musical score was created to feature music playing almost throughout the entire show The Strachans main Millionaire theme song takes inspiration from the Mars movement of Gustav Holst s The Planets and their cues from the 6th 3rd to 10th 7th question and then from the 11th 8th question onwards take the pitch up a semitone for each subsequent question in order to increase tension as the contestant progressed through the game 85 On Game Show Network GSN s Gameshow Hall of Fame special the narrator described the Strachan tracks as mimicking the sound of a beating heart and stated that as the contestant works their way up the money ladder the music is perfectly in tune with their ever increasing pulse 2 The Strachans Millionaire soundtrack was honoured by the American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers with numerous awards the earliest of them awarded in 2000 85 A British album of the musical stings was released in 2000 while a remix of the theme tune became a UK chart hit the same year 86 The original music cues were given minor rearrangements for the U S version s clock format in 2008 for example the question cues were synced to the ticking sounds of the game clock Even later the Strachan score was removed from the U S version altogether for the introduction of the shuffle format in 2010 in favour of a new musical score with cues written by Jeff Lippencott and Mark T Williams co founders of the Los Angeles based company Ah2 Music 87 Set Edit nbsp TV studio of Quien quiere ser millonario the Salvadorian version of the show The basic set design used in the Millionaire franchise was conceived by British production designer Andy Walmsley and is the most reproduced scenic design in television history 6 Unlike older game shows whose sets are or were designed to make the contestant s feel at ease Millionaire s set was designed to make the contestant feel uncomfortable so that the programme feels more like a thriller movie than a typical quiz show 2 The floor is made of Plexiglas 6 beneath which lies a huge dish covered in mirror paper 2 The main game typically has the contestant and host sit in Hot Seats 2 which are slightly modified 3 foot 0 91 m high Pietranera Arco All chairs situated in the centre of the stage an LG computer monitor directly facing each seat displays questions and other pertinent information The lighting system is programmed to darken the set as the contestant progresses further into the game There are also spotlights situated at the bottom of the set area that zoom down on the contestant when they answer a major question to increase the visibility of the light beams emitted by such spotlights oil is vaporised creating a haze effect Media scholar Dr Robert Thompson a professor at Syracuse University stated that the show s lighting system made the contestant feel as though they were outside a prison while an escape was in progress 2 When the U S Millionaire introduced its shuffle format the Hot Seats and corresponding monitors were replaced with a single podium and as a result the contestant and host stand throughout the game and are also able to walk around the stage According to Vieira the Hot Seat was removed because it was decided that the seat which was originally intended to make the contestant feel nervous actually ended up having contestants feel so comfortable in it that it did not service the production team any longer 88 Also two video screens were installed one that displays the current question in play and another that displays the contestant s cumulative total and progress during the game In September 2012 the redesigned set was improved with a modernised look and feel in order to take into account the show s transition to high definition broadcasting which had just come about the previous year The two video screens were replaced with two larger ones having twice as many projectors as the previous screens the previous contestant podium was replaced with a new one and light emitting diode LED technology was integrated into the lighting system to give the lights more vivid colours and the set and gameplay experience a more intimate feel 89 Catchphrase Edit Millionaire has made catchphrases out of several lines used on the show The most well known of these catchphrases is the host s question Is that your final answer asked whenever a contestant s answer needs to be verified 90 The question is asked because the nature of the game allows contestants to ponder the options aloud before committing to an answer Regularly on tier three questions and sometimes on tier two a dramatic pause occurs between the contestant s statement of their final answer and the host s acknowledgement of whether or not it is correct Many parodies of Millionaire have capitalised on the final answer catchphrase In the United States the phrase was popularised by Philbin during his tenure as the host of that country s version 53 to the extent that TV Land listed it in its special 100 Greatest TV Quotes and Catchphrases which aired in 2006 91 On the Australian versions McGuire replaces the phrase with Lock it in likewise the hosts of the Indian version have used varying lock catchphrases There are also a number of other non English versions of Millionaire where the host does not ask Is that your final answer or a literal translation thereof 92 Besides the final answer question other catchphrases used on the show include the contestants requests to use lifelines such as I d like to phone a friend and a line that Tarrant spoke whenever a contestant was struggling with a particular question Some questions are only easy if you know the answer 90 Another popular catchphrase heard throughout the show is spoke by Tarrant to encourage the player when he hands over the cheque But we don t want to give you that Reception EditWho Wants to Be a Millionaire has been credited with single handedly reviving interest in and breaking new ground for the television game show 2 It revolutionised the look and feel of game shows with its unique lighting system dramatic music cues and futuristic set The show also became one of the most popular game shows in television history and is credited by some with paving the way for the phenomenon of reality programming 2 Awards accolades and honours Edit In 2000 the British Film Institute honoured the UK version of Millionaire by ranking it number 23 on its BFI TV 100 list which compiled what British television industry professionals believed were the greatest programmes to have ever originated from that country 93 The UK Millionaire also won the 1999 British Academy Television Award for Best Entertainment Programme and seven National Television Awards for Most Popular Quiz Programme from 1999 to 2005 The original primetime version of the U S Millionaire won two Daytime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Game Audience Participation Show in 2000 and 2001 Philbin was honoured with a Daytime Emmy in the category of Outstanding Game Show Host in 2001 while Vieira received one in 2005 and another in 2009 making her the second woman to win an Emmy Award for hosting a game show and the first to win multiple times 94 TV Guide ranked the U S Millionaire No 7 on its 2001 list of the 50 Greatest Game Shows of All Time 95 and later ranked it No 6 on its 2013 60 Greatest Game Shows list 96 GSN ranked Millionaire No 5 on its August 2006 list of the 50 Greatest Game Shows of All Time 97 and later honoured the show in January 2007 on its first and so far only Gameshow Hall of Fame special 2 Charles Ingram cheating scandal EditMain article Charles Ingram nbsp Charles and Diana IngramIn September 2001 British Army Major Charles Ingram apparently won the top prize in the UK Millionaire but his flip flopping on each of the final two questions raised suspicion of cheating When the footage was reviewed staff made a connection between Fastest Finger contestant Tecwen Whittock s coughing and Ingram s answers The prize was withheld and police were called in to investigate the matter further In March 2003 the Ingrams and Whittock were taken to court on the charge of using fraudulent means to win the top prize on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire During the trial the defence claimed that Whittock had simply suffered from allergies during recording of the second episode but the prosecution noted that his coughing stopped upon Ingram leaving the set and Whittock subsequently taking his turn on the main game The trial concluded with all three being found guilty and receiving suspended sentences 98 After the trial ITV aired a documentary about the scandal along with Ingram s entire game with coughing sounds amplified As a joke Benylin cough syrup paid to have the first commercial shown during the programme s commercial break 99 In April 2020 ITV aired a three part drama titled Quiz based upon the scandal 100 Other media EditMerchandise Edit Three board game adaptations of the UK Millionaire were released by Upstarts in 1998 and a junior edition recommended for younger players was introduced in 2001 The U S version also saw two board games of its own released by Pressman Toy Corporation in 2000 101 102 Other Millionaire board games have included a game based on the Australian version s Hot Seat format which was released by UGames 103 a game based on the Italian version released by Hasbro 104 and a game based on the French version which was released by TF1 s games division 105 An electronic tabletop version of the game was released by Tiger Electronics in 2000 106 Six different DVD games based on the UK Millionaire featuring Tarrant s likeness and voice were released by Zoo Digital Publishing 107 and Universal Studios Home Entertainment between 2002 and 2008 In 2008 Imagination Games released a DVD game based on the U S version based on the 2004 2008 format and coming complete with Vieira s likeness and voice 108 as well as a quiz book 109 and a 2009 desktop calendar 110 Video game adaptations Edit The UK Millionaire saw five video game adaptations for personal computers and Sony s PlayStation and Sega s Dreamcast consoles as well as Nintendo s Game Boy Advance produced by Hothouse Creations and Eidos Interactive Between 1999 and 2001 Jellyvision produced five games based on the U S network version for PCs and the PlayStation all of them featuring Philbin s likeness and voice The first of these adaptations Who Wants to Be a Millionaire was published by Disney Interactive while the later four were published by Buena Vista Interactive which had just been spun off from DI when it reestablished itself in attempts to diversify its portfolio Of the five games three featured general trivia questions 111 112 113 one was sports themed 114 and another was a Kids Edition featuring easier questions 115 Eurocom ported the game to the Game Boy Color for the second edition Two additional U S Millionaire games were released by Ludia in conjunction with Ubisoft in 2010 and 2011 the first of these was a game for Nintendo s Wii console and DS handheld system as well as a PlayStation 3 port of the Wii version based on the 2008 2010 clock format 116 with the Wii version offered on the show as a consolation prize to audience contestants during the 2010 2011 season The second for Microsoft s Xbox 360 was based on the shuffle format 117 and was offered as a consolation prize during the next season 2011 2012 Ludia also made a Facebook game based on Millionaire available to players in North America from 2011 to 2016 This game featured an altered version of the shuffle format condensing the number of questions to twelve eight in round one and four in round two Contestants competed against eight other Millionaire fans in round one with the top three playing round two alone There was no final answer rule the contestant s responses were automatically locked in Answering a question correctly earned a contestant the value of that question multiplied by the number of people who responded incorrectly Contestants were allowed to use two of their Facebook friends as Jump the Question lifelines in round one and to use the Ask the Audience lifeline in round two to invite up to 50 such friends of theirs to answer a question for a portion of the prize money of the current question 118 On 29 October 2020 Microids published a video game under the same name and released it on Steam PlayStation 4 Xbox One and Nintendo Switch 119 Scrapped animated spin off Edit In September 2001 Celador signed a deal with DIC Entertainment to produce a cartoon based on the show titled The Adventures of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire The Animated Series 120 121 The series was to follow fictional winners of the show who would have used their prize money to take trips to various exotic locations while the fictional host would keep in touch with them through the Millionaire Command Center The series was planned to be shown off at MIPCOM that year however nothing else was confirmed for the series and was silently scrapped without a formal announcement Disney Parks attraction Edit Main article Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Play It nbsp The building housing the California version after its 2004 closureA theme park attraction based on the show known as Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Play It appeared at Disney s Hollywood Studios when it was known as Disney MGM Studios at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando Florida and at Disney California Adventure Park in Anaheim California Both the Florida and California Play It attractions opened in 2001 the California version closed in 2004 122 and the Florida version closed in 2006 and was replaced by Toy Story Midway Mania The format in the Play It attraction was very similar to that of the television show that inspired it When a show started a Fastest Finger question was given and the audience was asked to put the four answers in order the person with the fastest time was the first contestant in the Hot Seat for that show However the main game had some differences for example contestants competed for points rather than dollars the questions were set to time limits and the Phone a Friend lifeline became Phone a Complete Stranger which connected the contestant to a Disney cast member outside the attraction s theatre who would find a guest to help After the contestant s game was over they were awarded anything from a collectible pin to clothing to a Millionaire CD game to a three night Disney Cruise 123 Spin off EditThe Italian version worked in 2008 on a spin off of the game show called 50 50 Fifty Fifty 124 125 when Such a spin off aired in North Macedonia Nepal Albania Kosovo Spain Sweden Greece Japan Thailand Turkey and Egypt 126 50 50 Edit 50 50Original work50 50 Italy Years2008 mid 2010sMiscellaneousGenreGame showFirst aired21 April 2008 15 years ago 2008 04 21 Distributor2waytraffic Endemol50 50 was a television game show which offers large cash prizes for correctly answering a series of randomised multiple choice questions of varying difficulty with two options The format is a spin off of the quiz show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire and was created by Intellygents 2waytraffic Endemol and RTI Reti Televisive Italiane company of Mediaset moreover was exported and aired in many countries around the world 127 Gameplay Edit Unlike the traditional Who Wants to Be a Millionaire this game is played by a team of two players 128 129 In round 1 the playing pair will answer ten questions Each question is worth a different random amount and all the money they win goes into their jackpot If at any point they get an answer wrong the value of the jackpot is halved The team plays together but will answer each question separately Only one player in the couple determined at random sees the question and its two answers They will have ten seconds to lock in their answer After the first player selects an answer the host turns to the second player and shows them the question and the answer that the first player chose They are not shown the answer that their partner turned down Player 2 must now decide whether to agree with Player 1 s answer or to switch the team s answer to the other answer whatever it may be If the question is ultimately answered correctly the value of the question will be added to the bank Otherwise the current value of the bank is halved In round 2 the host poses five questions to one player of the team in succession After playing them the other player would have only seen one of the two choices Now the second player will look at all five answers and determine how many questions the first player answered correctly If the player guesses too few or too many the winnings are reduced to zero In the final round the host asks five questions to one of the two competitors this will have 10 seconds to answer each question and her partner will on his electronic screen stand the answer He or she will decide whether to confirm or choose the option that has not been seen At the end of the questions the contestant who does not see both answers will have to make a prediction of the number of correct answers given The total prize money can be won only if the forecast is 5 and proves correct otherwise the part of the prize money that is won will be proportionately less If the number of correct answers is guessed the pair win the prize otherwise they receive the consolation prize International versions Edit Country Name Host Channel Year shown Prize nbsp Albania nbsp Kosovo 130 Fifty Fifty Enkel Demi RTSHKlan Kosova April 14 2013 25 000 nbsp Egypt Fifty Fifty Ashraf Riad ERT 1 November 5 2010 2011 ج م250 000 nbsp Greece 131 132 133 Fifty Fifty Giorgos Liagkas Mega Channel 2008 2009 30 000 nbsp Italy original format 134 135 Fifty Fifty Gerry Scotti Canale 5 April 21 2008 May 25 2008 300 000 nbsp Japan クイズ 50 50Quiz Fifty Fifty Toshihiro Itō BS Fuji May 7 2008 3 000 000 nbsp Nepal Fifty Fifty Madan Krishna Shrestha NTV 2008 Rs 500 000 nbsp North Macedonia 136 Pedeset PedesetPedeset Pedeset Predrag PavlovskiZarko Dimitrioski A1 June 30 2008 2009 300 000 den nbsp Spain 137 138 139 Fifty Fifty Silvia Jato Cuatro July 1 2008 September 6 2008 50 000 nbsp Sweden 140 Postkodlotteriets 50 50 Sofia Ragenklint TV4 September 22 2008 April 23 2009 55 000 kr nbsp Thailand 50 50 Ṭhnạth Tạnnuchittikul TV3 November 2 2009 October 12 2010 5 000 baht nbsp Turkey 141 142 Birimiz Ikimiz Icin Ilker Aksum TRT 1 October 10 2010 100 000 TLReferences Edit Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Sony Formats formats sonypictures com a b c d e f g h i Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Gameshow Hall of Fame 21 January 2007 GSN Leonard John J 2005 Millionaire 2nd Edition qxd PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 August 2012 Retrieved 2 June 2010 Daniel Dasey 30 March 2003 The show that should have made me a million The Sydney Sun Herald Birmingham Sunday Mercury 28 August 2005 Archived from the original on 27 January 2007 a b c Millionaire Andy Walmsley Production Designer Archived from the original on 9 June 2009 Retrieved 24 September 2013 Tryhorn Chris 13 March 2008 Sony to buy Millionaire firm for 137 5m The Guardian London Fewer and Harder Questions on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Evening Standard Showbiz 13 August 2007 Retrieved 18 September 2015 Wilkes Neil 13 August 2007 New prize levels for Millionaire Digital Spy Hearst Magazines UK Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 5 September 2014 Super Millionaire Is Looking for a Few Fast Fingers Fox News 17 February 2004 Archived from the original on 30 January 2016 Retrieved 18 September 2015 a b c Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Kicks Off Seventh Season by Introducing New Changes to the Game Creating New Levels of Excitement Emotional Drama and Heart Pounding Tension for Both Viewers and Contestants The Futon Critic 18 August 2008 Retrieved 6 August 2014 Kilkelly Daniel 23 June 2010 Format changes ahead for Millionaire Digital Spy Hearst Magazines UK Retrieved 6 September 2014 The New Season of Millionaire is a Real Game Changer Disney ABC Domestic Television 16 August 2010 Retrieved 17 August 2010 via Facebook Teti John 31 August 2015 Who Wants To Be A Millionaire to feature new host new old format The A V Club Retrieved 14 July 2018 a b c d WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE HOT SEAT THE PROGRAM PDF Nine Network Australia Archived from the original PDF on 6 July 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Ai la triệu phu phien bản mới sẽ ra mắt vao ngay 7 9 VTV vn in Vietnamese 12 August 2008 Archived from the original on 15 August 2010 Canal13 cl Archived from the original on 16 July 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2011 America Online and Buena Vista Television Break New Ground by Expanding Ask the Audience Lifeline beyond the Millionaire Studio via Instant Messaging Business Wire 23 August 2004 Archived from the original on 8 July 2012 Retrieved 18 April 2010 Sweating Bullets on the Hot Seat as a Know It All Phone a Friend Los Angeles Times 25 April 2001 Retrieved 25 August 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire U S version Season 8 Episode 66 11 January 2010 Syndicated The Telegraph 20 December 2013 The day I was phone a friend on Who Wants to be a Millionaire Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 via YouTube james booker 5 February 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire The People Play 2012 Episode 1 via YouTube Kirill Hafizov 10 February 2015 Kto hochet stat millionerom 04 10 2014 Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 via YouTube a b Grosvenor Carrie Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Ask the Expert Lifeline about com Archived from the original on 25 January 2010 Retrieved 6 August 2014 Kondolojy Amanda 24 October 2012 Who Wants to be a Millionaire Celebrates Halloween With an Added Crystal Ball Lifeline A Spooky Set Makeover and a Contestant in Drag TV by the Numbers Zap2it Archived from the original on 29 October 2012 Retrieved 5 June 2014 Taxman scoops a million BBC News 21 November 1999 Archived from the original on 21 June 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2014 Duca Lauren 15 August 2014 The Final Answer On Who Wants To Be A Millionaire 15 Years After It Premiered Huffington Post Archived from the original on 22 August 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2015 Wilson Millionaire win planned BBC News 22 November 2000 Archived from the original on 10 November 2012 Retrieved 28 January 2007 Double jackpot winner on US Millionaire BBC News 11 April 2001 Archived from the original on 19 August 2003 Retrieved 29 July 2014 Second Aussie Millionaire winner emerges The Sydney Morning Herald 15 November 2005 Retrieved 22 March 2014 Burke Jason 27 October 2011 Real Slumdog Millionaire is first to win 1m on Indian gameshow The Guardian Retrieved 6 September 2014 Stanglin Douglas 3 November 2011 Real life Slumdog Millionaire wins 1M in India USA Today Archived from the original on 5 November 2011 Retrieved 20 November 2011 Indian man becomes real life Slumdog Millionaire as he wins game show The Telegraph 3 November 2011 Archived from the original on 3 November 2011 Retrieved 20 November 2011 Magnier Mark 28 October 2011 Indian from modest background becomes TV game show millionaire Los Angeles Times Retrieved 6 September 2014 Beard Lanford 27 October 2011 Slumdog Millionaire comes to life for Sushil Kumar Entertainment Weekly PopWatch Retrieved 7 March 2015 初春クイズ始め ファイナルアンサー大復活SP Quiz Millionaire in Japanese 2 January 2013 Fuji TV The Million Dollar Win Who Wants to Be a Millionaire 2020 Season 2 Episode 6 29 November 2020 ABC Celebrity Chef David Chang won 1 million He s giving it all to restaurant workers CNN Entertainment 30 November 2020 Retrieved 2 December 2020 Millionaire A TV phenomenon BBC News 3 March 2003 Archived from the original on 14 March 2003 Retrieved 24 July 2014 Leigh Rob 22 October 2013 Who Wants To Be A Millionaire axed as host Chris Tarrant decided it is time to take a break Daily Mirror Retrieved 22 October 2013 Millionaire axed as Tarrant quits u tv Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 Retrieved 22 October 2013 Who Wants To Be A Millionaire returns to ITV this Saturday with brand new twists Press Centre Archived from the original on 2 May 2018 Retrieved 13 May 2018 Who Wants To Be A Millionaire returns to ITV in 2019 www ITV com Archived from the original on 14 September 2018 Retrieved 14 September 2018 Millionaire dominates global TV BBC News 12 April 2005 Archived from the original on 13 April 2005 Retrieved 6 September 2014 Knox David 4 May 2019 Eddie celebrates 20 years of Millionaire TV Tonight Archived from the original on 4 May 2019 Retrieved 5 May 2019 Gibson Joel 4 April 2006 No McGuire no Millionaire The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on 5 August 2007 Retrieved 22 October 2007 Nine boss David Gyngell puts Eddie McGuire to work Herald Sun 5 October 2007 Archived from the original on 15 June 2011 Retrieved 22 October 2007 Knox David 7 April 2009 Game on It s Eddie v Andrew tvtonight com au Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Retrieved 11 June 2009 Devlyn Darren 8 April 2009 Eddie McGuire and Andrew O Keefe to go head to head Herald Sun Archived from the original on 30 December 2012 Retrieved 11 June 2009 Hogan Jesse 9 February 2006 McGuire CEO show live on air The Age Archived from the original on 27 April 2006 Retrieved 22 October 2007 Harrison Dan 18 May 2007 I wasn t given the flick The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 22 October 2007 Seidman Robert 9 August 2009 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Returns for its Ten Year Anniversary TV by the Numbers Zap2it Archived from the original on 25 June 2011 Retrieved 6 August 2014 a b Who Wants to Be a Millionaire ABC Game Show Returning to primetime TV Series Finale 22 April 2009 Retrieved 2 March 2010 Who Wants To Be A Millionaire Kicks Off Coast to Coast Bus Tour BusinessWire 23 July 2002 Retrieved 19 January 2012 permanent dead link Stelter Brian 11 January 2013 Vieira to leave Who Wants to Be a Millionaire The New York Times Media Decoder Archived from the original on 13 January 2013 Retrieved 17 July 2014 Cedric the Entertainer Will Host Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Replace Meredith Vieira The Huffington Post 20 March 2013 Retrieved 6 September 2014 Andreeva Nellie 7 May 2014 Terry Crews Named New Host of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on 6 June 2014 Retrieved 4 June 2014 Andreeva Nellie 13 April 2015 Chris Harrison Named New Host Of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire Replacing Terry Crews Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on 14 April 2015 Retrieved 13 April 2015 Calvario Liz 17 May 2019 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Canceled After Nearly 20 Years ETOnline com CBS Studios Inc Archived from the original on 18 May 2019 Retrieved 18 May 2019 Andreeva Nellie 8 January 2020 ABC Brings Back Who Wants To Be A Millionaire For Jimmy Kimmel Fronted Charity Specials TCA Deadline Hollywood United States Penske Media Corporation Retrieved 8 January 2020 The history of the game Who Wants to Be a Millionaire on Russian TV schastlivchik com in Russian Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Informaciya o proekte Kto hochet stat millionerom Kto khochet stat millionerom Information on the project in Russian Channel One official site Archived from the original on 30 August 2014 Saxena Poonam 19 November 2011 Five crore question What makes KBC work Hindustan Times Archived from the original Article Interview with Amitabh Bachchan on 22 November 2011 Retrieved 24 November 2011 India scraps millionaire TV show BBC News 25 January 2006 Archived from the original on 4 February 2006 Retrieved 7 May 2010 KBC 4 beats Bigg Boss 4 in its final episode One India Archived from the original on 14 July 2012 Retrieved 13 December 2010 Robinson Tasha 26 November 2008 Danny Boyle interview The A V Club Archived from the original on 2 December 2008 Retrieved 24 May 2009 The New York Times 11 November 2008 Danny Boyle s Slumdog Millionaire Captures Mumbai a City of Extremes NYTimes Somini Sengupta The 81st Academy Awards 2009 Nominees and Winners Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on 26 May 2011 Retrieved 22 November 2011 Shatrughan Sinha in Bhojpuri KBC Hindustan Times 14 April 2011 Retrieved 13 June 2020 Kaun Banega Crorepati to get Tamil adaptation on Vijay TV Media Campaign India Retrieved 13 June 2020 Mona Ramavat 30 August 2014 Incredible to host Telugu version of KBC Nagarjuna India Today Retrieved 13 June 2020 Who Wants to Be A Millionaire www viva com ph Archived from the original on 14 February 2012 Retrieved 4 May 2009 Who Wants To Be a Millionaire www telebisyon net Archived from the original on 8 September 2013 Retrieved 4 May 2009 Fragment of the old show www youtube com Retrieved 4 May 2009 Created With Knorr Vic Sotto hosts his first game show via Who Wants To Be A Millionaire PEP ph Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 4 July 2018 Who Wants to be a Millionaire on TV5 hosted by Vic Sotto www tv5 com ph Archived from the original on 25 January 2010 Retrieved 16 May 2009 Chi vuol essere milionario Gerry Scotti sfida la storia torna dopo 7 anni la spiazzante novita nel quiz liberoquotidiano it in Italian Retrieved 11 December 2018 Vegleg megszunt a Legyen On is Milliomos ReklamInvazio in Hungarian 2 March 2019 Tomoko Yamakawa Japan Power Exporter of Program Formats Webzine Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 8 July 2014 Visiware and Sony successfully launched the 2nd screen application for Fuji TV s Who Wants to Be A Millionaire in Japan Visiware Archived from the original on 4 May 2013 Retrieved 31 May 2014 Chiose Simona 30 August 2000 Meet Canada s millionaires in waiting The Globe and Mail 8 days 3 January 2002 8 days Issue 587 Singapore MediaCorp p 12 Qui veut gagner des millions millions mu Archived from the original on 15 August 2018 Retrieved 15 August 2018 Qui veut gagner des millions millions mu Archived from the original on 15 August 2018 Retrieved 15 August 2018 a b Smurthwaite Nick 21 March 2005 Million Pound Notes Keith Strachan The Stage Archived from the original on 12 June 2011 Masterton James 21 May 2000 Week Ending May 27th 2000 Chart Watch UK Retrieved 9 March 2023 Ah2 Music Marks 10th Anniversary TrailerMusicVibe 21 August 2014 Archived from the original on 21 August 2014 Retrieved 5 September 2014 Live with Regis and Kelly Season 23 Episode 8 15 September 2010 Syndicated Nordyke Kimberly 10 September 2012 Anderson Live Wendy Williams Rachael Ray Among Syndicated Shows Getting Set Makeovers Photos The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 12 September 2012 a b Commentary provided by Tarrant on the DVD Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Magic Moments and More The Star Ledger 11 December 2006 Certain non English Millionaire shows hosts in their final answer phrases translate these words as definitive answer final decision etc The BFI TV 100 at the BFI website British Film Institute Archived from the original on 24 May 2009 Meredith Vieira biography hollywood com Archived from the original on 21 March 2008 Retrieved 11 March 2010 TV Guide Names the 50 Greatest Game Shows of All Time TV Guide 2 February 2001 Fretts Bruce 17 June 2013 Eyes on the Prize TV Guide pp 14 15 The 50 Greatest Game Shows of All Time 31 August 2006 GSN Millionaire trio escape jail BBC News 8 April 2003 Archived from the original on 7 April 2003 Retrieved 6 September 2014 Day Julian 22 April 2003 The cough carries it off The Guardian Retrieved 6 September 2014 Michallon Clemence 15 April 2020 Quiz How Who Wants to Be a Millionaire became a huge hit in the US before burning out The Independent Retrieved 16 April 2020 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire BoardGameGeek Retrieved 17 July 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire 2nd Edition BoardGameGeek Retrieved 17 July 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Hot Seat Australia Board Game Millionaire Store Archived from the original on 18 September 2014 Retrieved 17 September 2014 Chi Vuol Essere Milionario Italy Board Game Millionaire Store Archived from the original on 18 September 2014 Retrieved 17 September 2014 Qui Veut Gagner des Millions France Board Game Millionaire Store Archived from the original on 18 September 2014 Retrieved 17 September 2014 Millionaire Tabletop instructions PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire DVD Game UK Myreviewer com Retrieved 17 September 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire DVD Game BoardGameGeek Retrieved 17 July 2014 Millionaire Quiz Book Barnes amp Noble Retrieved 22 July 2014 Millionaire 2009 Desktop Calendar Desk Calendar Pad Retrieved 22 July 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire 1999 IGN Retrieved 19 July 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Second Edition IGN Retrieved 19 July 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire 3rd Edition IGN Retrieved 19 July 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Sports Edition IGN Retrieved 19 July 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Kids Edition IGN Retrieved 19 July 2014 Ubisoft Releases Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Video Game for Wii and DS IGN 6 October 2010 Retrieved 17 July 2014 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire 2012 Edition GameFAQs Retrieved 17 July 2014 The rules of the Facebook game are sourced from the following page Who Wants to Be a Millionaire on Facebook Ludia Retrieved 15 February 2013 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Microids Microids 18 October 2020 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Celador amp DIC to make animated Millionaire C21media DIC Asks Celedor Is That Your Final Answer Shaffer Joshua C 2010 Discovering the Magic Kingdom An Unofficial Disneyland Vacation Guide Author House p 207 ISBN 9781452063133 Marx Jennifer and Dave 29 December 2006 Who Wants to Be a Winner Passport Tips for Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Play It PassPorter com Archived from the original on 21 August 2014 Retrieved 5 September 2014 2waytraffic unveils first Who Wants To Be A Millionaire spin off 2waytraffic com Archived from the original on 19 October 2007 Who Wants To Be a Millionaire spin off rolls out internationally onscreenasia com Archived from the original on 2 October 2011 Waller Ed 31 March 2008 Italian deal for 2way s 50 50 format C21Media Sbarca in Italia 50 50 il nuovo game show di Canale5 ad alto tasso di adrenalina Endemol Shine Italy 21 April 2008 Nuovi format Gerry Scotti fara scegliere tra 50 50 20 February 2008 Gerry Scotti e il suo 50 50 su Canale 5 22 April 2008 FIFTY FIFTY me Enkel Demi GAME SHOW via www youtube com Giorgos Liagas IMDb O Giwrgos Liagkas kai to 50 50 10 January 2010 Giwrgos Liagkas Kaname emeis sto Fifty Fifty 25 kai oi Radio Arbyla kanan 15 26 June 2014 Rossi Simone 2 April 2008 Fifty Fifty il nuovo quiz di Gerry Scotti accende la sfida del preserale Digital News it Rossi Simone 20 April 2008 Fifty Fifty 50 50 l unione fa la forza nel game show di Gerry Scotti Digital News it Pedeset Pedeset via www youtube com Silvia Jato ficha por Cuatro para presentar el concurso Fifty Fifty elcorreoweb es Silvia Jato ficha por Cuatro para presentar el concurso Fifty Fifty La Voz de Galicia 25 June 2008 Cuatro ficha a Silvia Jato para presentar Fifty Fifty FormulaTV PostkodLotteriets 50 50 Svenska PostkodLotteriet Archived from the original on 24 April 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link BIRIMIZ IKIMIZ ICIN Dailymotion Video Dailymotion 4 March 2011 Birimiz Ikimiz Icin bu aksam basliyor www haberturk com 14 July 2010 External links EditWho Wants to Be a Millionaire at the National Film and Sound ArchiveOriginal United Kingdom versionOfficial website at itv com Challenge TV Classic WWTBAM website Who Wants to be a Millionaire at UKGameshows com Major Charles Ingram affair in detailInternet Movie Database pagesWho Wants to Be a Millionaire UK at IMDb Who Wants to Be a Millionaire US 1999 2002 at IMDb Who Wants to Be a Millionaire US current at IMDb Who Wants to Be a Super Millionaire US at IMDb Quien quiere ser millonario Argentina at IMDb Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Australia at IMDb Die Millionenshow Austria at IMDb Qui sera millionnaire Belgium in French at IMDb Wie wordt multimiljonair Belgium in Dutch at IMDb Tko zeli biti milijunas Croatia at IMDb Hvem vil vaere millionaer Denmark at IMDb Haluatko miljonaariksi Finland at IMDb Qui veut gagner des millions France at IMDb Wer wird Millionar Germany at IMDb Poios 8elei Na Ginei Ekatommyrioyxos Greece at IMDb 百萬富翁 Hong Kong at IMDb Legyen on is milliomos Hungary at IMDb Viltu vinna milljon Iceland at IMDb מי רוצה להיות מיליונר Israel at IMDb Kaun Banega Crorepati India at IMDb Chi vuol essere milionario Italy at IMDb クイズ ミリオネア Japan at IMDb Lotto Weekend Miljonairs Netherlands at IMDb Vil du bli millionaer Norway at IMDb Milionerzy Poland at IMDb Quiere ser millonario Spain at IMDb Vem vill bli miljonar Sweden at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Who Wants to Be a Millionaire 3F amp oldid 1181059424, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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