It's Your Chance of a Lifetime
It's Your Chance of a Lifetime is an American game show that aired on Fox in June 2000. Gordon Elliott hosted the show, with Mark Thompson serving as announcer (only to do the opening intro and contestant call-in at the end).
It's Your Chance of a Lifetime | |
---|---|
Genre | Game show |
Created by | Stephen Leahy |
Directed by | Bob Levy |
Presented by | Gordon Elliott |
Narrated by | Mark Thompson |
Composer | Edgar Struble |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 5 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Brad Lachman Stephen Leahy |
Producers | Garry Bormet Bill Bracken |
Editors | David Harrison Mark Elmer |
Production companies | Brad Lachman Productions Carlton America Action Time |
Release | |
Original network | Fox |
Original release | June 5 – June 10, 2000 |
Broadcast information
It's Your Chance of a Lifetime aired from June 5 to June 10, 2000. but was canceled before it was to begin as a weekly series the following week. The show was supposed to have aired five nights in a row from June 5 to June 9; however, when ABC decided to put a special episode of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? opposite it on June 7, Fox opted to not air an episode that day and delayed the remaining episodes one day each. Had the show made it to a regular time slot, it would have aired on Wednesdays in the early (8 ET/7 CT) time slot.
It's Your Chance of a Lifetime was one of the last entries in a boom in million-dollar game shows, fueled by the success of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, that aired during the 1999–2000 season; others included CBS's Winning Lines, NBC's revival of Twenty One and Fox's own Greed, which was still airing at the time (concluding its run a month after Chance left the air). Most of the other million-dollar game shows had been canceled that May.
Rules of the game
A solo player competed for a chance to win over $1,000,000 by answering a series of 10 questions. The first of these was a "Credit Card Question"; if the player answered correctly, his/her entire credit card bills were paid off, to a maximum of $10,000. He/she was also invited to run the billing statement through an onstage paper shredder. An incorrect answer ended the game immediately.
A list of 10 categories was displayed, with each of the remaining questions drawn from a different category. The second question awarded $5,000 if answered correctly; if the player missed, the game ended but he/she still kept the credit card payoff. Beyond this point, if the player chose to continue in the game, he/she had to risk at least half of his/her winnings (not counting the payoff) on each new question. A correct answer added the value of the wager, while a miss subtracted it and ended the game, with the player keeping whatever remained of his/her total.
After each correct answer, the player was given the category for the next question and could either continue on, or end the game and keep all winnings. Once a question was asked, the player had two minutes to give a response and lock it in by pressing a button on the podium; failing to do so before time ran out counted as an automatic miss. The category list was always visible to the player and consisted of the following: Pop Culture, Famous Events, Movies, Famous Places, TV, Pop Music, Toys and Games, People, In the News, and Animal Kingdom. Each category was used only once, and unlike most categorized Q&A shows, the computer (not the player) chose the category for the next question (as stated above).
Two forms of assistance known as "Second Chances" were available to the player and could each be used once. One Second Chance gave the player three multiple-choice answers to select from (otherwise it was short-answer/open-ended), while the other discarded the current question and replaced it with one from the player's favorite category. Reaching the final three questions awarded a "Last Chance", which allowed him/her an extra use of either Second Chance. If the player answered all 10 questions correctly, he/she won all money accumulated during the game, for a potential prize of $1,290,000 including the credit card payoff. The show's biggest winner was Dr. Tim Hsieh, who collected $1,042,309 in his game.
All winnings totals over $200,000 were paid as an annuity.
International versions
Most of the versions were distributed by ITV Studios except for the Australian version.
Country | Name | Host | Network | Date premiered | Prize |
Australia[1] | The $1,000,000 Chance of a Lifetime | Frank Warrick Sandy Roberts |
Seven | 1999–2000 | A$1,280,000 |
Germany[2] | Die Quiz Show | Jörg Pilawa Christian Clerici Matthias Opdenhövel |
Sat.1 | 2000–2004 | DM512,000 €256,000 |
Hungary[3] | Multimilliomos - Most vagy soha! | Gabriella Jakupcsek | TV2 | 2000–2005 | HUF 51,200,000 |
Indonesia | Chance of a Lifetime | Dede Yusef | SCTV Bang Habib |
2004 2008 |
Rp 1,536,000,000 |
Italy[4] | Quiz Show | Amadeus | Rai Uno | 2000–2002 | IT₤512,000,000 €264,426 |
Lebanon | لمين الملايين؟ Lamin El malayin? |
Serge Zarqa | MTV | 2001–2002 | 100,000,000L.L |
لمين الملايين جونيور Lamin El malayin Junior |
Carole Sakr | 2002 | |||
Poland[5] | Życiowa szansa | Krzysztof Ibisz | Polsat | 2000–2002 | 1,000,000 zł |
Versions have also aired in Norway, France, Israel and other countries.
References
- Terrace, Vincent (2012). Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2010, 2d ed. McFarland. p. 518. ISBN 9780786486410.
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2X8o2W5olxE
- https://index.hu/kultur/media/jakupcsek/
- "Quiz Show - L'occasione di una vita". Archived from the original on 29 April 2014.
- "Życiowa szansa znika". Wirtualne Media (in Polish). www.wirtualnemedia.pl. 2002-09-24. Retrieved 2018-07-06.