Show Me the Money (American game show)

Show Me the Money is a television game show hosted by William Shatner which ran on ABC from November 14, 2006 to December 13, 2006. The show employed an aspect similar to Deal or No Deal, but with open-ended trivia questions.

Show Me the Money
Created byDick de Rijk
Directed byR. Brian DiPirro
Presented byWilliam Shatner
ComposersDoug DeAngelis
Kevin Haskins
Doug Beck
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes7 (2 unaired)
Production
Executive producerMike Nichols
EditorChip Brown
Running time60 minutes
Production companyEndemol USA
Release
Original networkABC
Original releaseNovember 14 (2006-11-14) 
December 13, 2006 (2006-12-13)
External links
Website

The show was taped at CBS Television City in Hollywood. It also aired in Canada on CH.

Game play

Before the game, scrolls were randomly distributed to thirteen female dancers known as the $1,000,000 Dancers. These scrolls show 12 different dollar amounts and a symbol representing the "killer card,” which is a yellow triangle. The dollar amounts were:

$20,000 $40,000 $60,000 $80,000
$100,000 $120,000 $140,000 $160,000
$180,000 $200,000 $220,000 $250,000

Each turn involved a set of three concealed questions (A, B, and C) with a common initial word or phrase. The player was shown this initial phrase, and picked A, B, or C. The question was read, and the player could either answer it or pass and pick another letter. The player could pass twice on a turn, but then had to answer the remaining question, a player could not return to a previously passed question. After giving an answer, the player picked a dancer who still had her scroll, which was opened, then the correct answer was revealed. If it showed a dollar amount, it was added to the player's pot for a correct answer or subtracted for an incorrect answer.

When the player had given either six correct answers (shown as plus signs on the scoreboard) or six wrong answers (minus signs), each for a dollar amount (killer-card turns were not counted), the game ended and the player won the total in the pot. Thus, the maximum amount that could have theoretically have been won (add signs the total of all six highest dollar amounts) would have been $1,150,000. The game could also end prematurely if the pot fell so far below zero that it could not become positive given the possible number of correct answers and dollar values remaining, this occurred at least once. The eliminated player who lost would have his/her final dance.

Killer Card

If the killer card was revealed, a "sudden-death" question was asked (with no option to pass). On the premiere episode only, only an incorrect answer on a regular question when the killer card was revealed would cause the player to face sudden death. The player had to answer correctly or else the game ended at once and the player won nothing. A correct answer on the sudden-death question, if asked, allowed the player to continue to the next turn with the pot unchanged. All the plus signs remained intact.

In actual practice during the show's brief run, everyone who picked the killer card did so on an incorrect answer, and none of them were able to answer the sudden-death question correctly.

Broadcast history

The show premiered on November 14, 2006 in the Tuesday 8:00 p.m. timeslot, with one episode airing per week for the next five weeks. On December 8, 2006, after the first seven episodes had been taped, an additional six-episode order as well as a planned move to a Tuesday night timeslot starting on January 2, 2007 were announced, which would have brought the total number of episodes to 13.

Cancellation

On December 15, 2006, ABC canceled the series after five episodes due to continually declining ratings, leaving two of the seven episodes that were produced unaired.[1] The show was replaced immediately with reruns of America's Funniest Home Videos. ABC had earlier decided to cease production of the series, but air the remaining episodes.[2]

Three of the $1,000,000 dancers have since appeared on other shows:

  • Julianne Hough began appearing as a professional dancer on Dancing with the Stars in 2007, she would leave that show in 2009 in order to focus on her acting career.
  • Yesenia Adame was the caller on the ABC version of National Bingo Night, which aired in the summer of 2007.
  • Eve Torres was the winner of World Wrestling Entertainment's 2007 diva search, and would work with the company for seven years before retiring as a professional wrestler in 2013.

GSN picked up the rights to the seven episodes of Show Me The Money in June 2007, which included the five that aired on ABC, plus the remaining two episodes that the network did not air.

The first episode aired on June 12, 2007 and the second episode aired on June 19, 2007. However, on June 26, 2007, GSN replaced the series with an episode of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. It is known that GSN pulled the show due to bad ratings for the first two weeks and it was replaced by Dog Eat Dog on the Tuesday nights for the remainder of July 2007. There is no indication that GSN will air the show again, thus the two episodes not broadcast by ABC remain unaired.

(However, GSN's webpage for the show included a photo that appeared to be from an unaired episode. The carryover contestant from the last episode aired by ABC (Bob Glouberman) is shown with the amount of $890,000 displayed on the scoreboard, he finished the episode with $882,000 and was paid despite the fact that the show did not air.)

International versions

Country Local Name Host Top prize Network Year Aired
 Spain Money, Money Josep Lobato 1,080,000 Cuatro 2007-08
 Italy Tutto Per Tutto Enzo Ghinazzi 3,700,000 Rai Uno 7 August – 21 September 2006
 United Kingdom (pilot) Show Me What You've Got Dale Winton £8,160,000 ITV1 2006 (pilot not picked up)
 Vietnam Khắc nhập khắc xuất Minh Tiệp (2008)
Hồng Phúc (2009–2010)
108,000,000 VNĐ VTV3

12 January 2008 – 30 January 2010

References

  1. Kimball, Trevor (18 December 2006). "Show Me the Money: ABC Shows Shatner Game Show the Door". TV Series Finale. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  2. http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA6400436.html
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