Information about 1 Vs. 100
1 vs. 100 is a game show created by Endemol that is aired in several countries. The game pits one person against 100 others for a chance to win a large cash prize. The game first aired in the Netherlands as Eén Tegen Honderd, sponsored by the National Postcode Lottery.
After having the opportunity to select a difficulty level or a category in some versions, a multiple-choice question with three options is revealed (on the American, Australian, Bulgarian, Philippine, French, Hungarian, Italian, Israeli, Korean, and Turkish versions, the player is given only the question, with no opportunity to select a difficulty and a category). The Mob is given a short amount of time to lock in their answer before The One is given the opportunity to answer the question. If the One is correct, all Mob members that answered the question incorrectly are eliminated from further play, bringing the lone contestant closer to winning the game. The amount of money in the contestant's bank also increases by an amount dependant on the number of mob members eliminated in that question. If the contestant eliminates all 100 mob members, he or she claims all the money in the bank or a fixed top prize. However, if the One is incorrect, the game ends and he or she leaves with nothing. In some versions, the remaining members of the Mob split the losing contestant's winnings.
The One can select from a limited number of "helps", "escapes" or "dodges" depending on the version; escapes or dodges exempt the player from having to answer the question, but part of the bank must be forfeited (except in France, see below). Alternatively, a player can obtain more information on the mob's answers by using one of the "helps". In some versions of the game, the contestant is given the opportunity to take the amount in the bank and leave the game in between questions.
The American version of 1 vs. 100 premiered on the NBC network on Friday, October 13, 2006 at 9:00 p.m,[1] but has since moved to a regular timeslot of Fridays at 8:00 p.m. The show is hosted by actor-comedian Bob Saget and narrated by Joe Cipriano, and the top prize is $1,000,000.
As in other versions of the game, a single player competes against one hundred contestants, nicknamed the "mob", in answering a series of trivia questions, each of which is presented in a multiple-choice format (A,B,C) with three possible answers. Each question is assigned a dollar value, as shown on the table, right. Each of the mob members individually answer the question pressing one of three buttons located in front of them. Then, the player must also answer the question. If the player answers incorrectly, then she or he is eliminated and receives none of the prize pool. The remaining mob members who answered correctly then will share the prize among themselves. If the player answers correctly, then any mob member who answers incorrectly is eliminated from the game. The prize pool then increases by the value of the question, multiplied by the number of mob members who have been eliminated. The player then has a choice to (1) risk his/her prize pool by continuing to play against the mob or to (2) exit the game and take home the money accumulated, unlike most other versions of the show, including the original Dutch version. (Usually presented as "The money...or the mob?") If the player eliminates all 100 members of the mob by the final question, the player receives the top prize of $1,000,000. The further along a player goes, the harder the questions get.
As of episode 6, a Deal or No Deal style stepladder format has been adopted where players must answer the first three consecutive questions before deciding to take the money or the mob. The player must then answer the next two consecutive questions before making the next decision. From there on, it's one question before making the next decision.
Unlike the European (and Hong Kong) versions of the show, there are no "escapes" or "doublers" on the show. Instead, each player receives two opportunities to receive assistance from the mob, known as "helps". They are "Poll The Mob" and "Ask The Mob", and they had to be used in that order. Starting with the sixth episode, a third option, "Trust The Mob," was added, and players could choose which option at any point in the game.
Top American game show champions have participated in the shows. In the first two episodes, legendary 74-time Jeopardy! champion Ken Jennings was prominently featured.[2] He was seated at podium number thirteen during the premiere episode.[3] Jennings was part of the first mob to defeat a contestant, winning about $700, before being eliminated on the question, "What color is the number 1 on a roulette wheel"? Jennings guessed black, but the answer was red. The man who defeated Jennings in the Jeopardy! Ultimate Tournament of Champions, Brad Rutter, joined the mob for episode 6, staying for more episodes, but was unable to defeat a contestant. Champions from Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, Nancy Christy, John Carpenter, and Kevin Olmstead were in another episode. All three were eliminated on one question, and won nothing.
Three models from Deal or No Deal (Endemol USA and NBC's brother show that aired before 1 vs. 100) were also in an early mob, which also features an eclectic mix of professors, valedictorians, schoolteachers, and athletes. Mob members remain in the game until they miss a question, and continue against subsequent contestants if they are not eliminated. Unlike other versions of the game, players are not selected from among the mob. (Producers intended the "last player standing" all-star match aired February 9 to be an exception. Under the rules of that match, upon the featured player's elimination, producers would choose a mob member at random to face whatever other members remained. However, Annie Duke, the all-star whom producers invited to compete first, missed a question which only one member answered correctly, giving that member the victory and bringing the match to a close before any randomly selected member could be featured.)
Musician and then-husband of Britney Spears, Kevin Federline, was a mob member in episode 6. Federline was eliminated on the third question. (The show was taped before divorce proceedings began.)
The debut of 1 vs. 100 performed well for NBC, delivering the network's highest rating in the Friday night 9 p.m. time slot since December 2002 (excluding coverage of the Olympics) in adults 18-49 and the highest overall viewer total in the time period since March 2004. The show won its time slot with 12.6 million viewers (adults 18-49), and was the night's number one show in 18-49, total viewers and other key ratings categories.[4]
On cable, NBC's brother business news channel CNBC re-airs the last week's episodes of 1 vs. 100 every Wednesday night at 10 p.m. and Thursday morning at 12 am EST. This will follow CNBC's success on re-running Deal or No Deal every week. The Wednesday evening re-airing also takes place on Global in Canada.
The Australian version of the show was officially launched on January 18, 2007 and premiered on January 29, 2007 on the Nine Network and is recorded in Studio 3 at the Melbourne Docklands Central City Studios. This version is based on the American version of the show, complete with a similar set, identical theme, and a similar prize structure with a AU$1,000,000 prize (US$800,000) for knocking out all 100 members of the mob. It is hosted by former Who Wants to Be a Millionaire host and CEO of the Nine Network, Eddie McGuire. The mob members like to egg on the contestant by shaking their fists and chanting mob, mob, mob.
A season of 15 episodes has been approved for production by the Nine Network. The first show was scheduled to be shot on Friday, January 19 and air from Monday, January 29. However, controversy reportedly arose before the cameras started rolling.
The controversy is said to have started amongst confirmed and potential contestants, when filming of the first episode was delayed less than 12 hours before it was scheduled to start. The official reason was a problem caused by Melbourne's power blackouts three days earlier. However, speculation is that producer Michael Healy was asked a question at the Thursday night launch party, which was assessed as incorrect, despite the fact that he was right. Producers were reportedly not willing to chance problems at their first taping, hence inconveniencing the players, many of whom had taken time off work to attend the show. It is alleged that around 30 contestants turned up to the taping on Friday, unaware that they were not required.
When filming did get under way on Sunday 21 January, a witness is quoted as saying that a contestant in the first episode answered a question incorrectly: What is the unit of time equivalent to 60 seconds? Due to a technical glitch, the question reportedly had to be reasked, and when it was reshot, the contestant gave the correct answer, robbing the Mob of a chance at just over $100,000. A spokesman for Nine Network denied this account, but admitted that there had been a problem in gameplay with some members of the Mob.[5]
The January 29 debut of 1 vs. 100 did extremely well in the ratings, and was the most-watched program of the night. A peak audience of 2.4 million viewers and an average audience of 1.95 million watched the show in Australia's capital cities.[6] The second episode went to air on 5 February and narrowly lost in viewers to the Season 3 premiere of Desperate Housewives in a competition for viewers against the Seven Network. With 1.43 million viewers, the second episode was well down on the premiere, but still a pleasing number for McGuire.[7]
The Australian show also airs in New Zealand with the New Zealand debut on 1 September2007 on TV One
During its first season, the show was aired three times a week - on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 21:00 with a top prize of 100,000 leva (US$68,000), as with all game shows aired on the channel. Like the Portuguese version, in this version, the player faces only 50 opponents.
There have been two winners.
Housemates from VIP Brother 2 played as mob members. They sat at podium #13 every time - Petya Pavlova, Kalin Velyov, Tihomir, Katerina Evro, Magi Jelyazkova, Azis and Kitaeca have appeared in the show.
A second season of 1 vs 50 is expected in the beginning of 2008.
Contestant Hans Christian Rørdam (known always by his first two initials) broke a number of records on the show aired 13 April 2007. He knocked out the record-breaking mob-member who had 75 correct answers on his resume. He also knocked out a total of 94 of the mob-members, quitting just after using his last help-option. "H.C." did not bring home the biggest prize, as the mob was reduced rather early on a question about the title of Madonna's 1998 album release - a question "H.C." used a help option to dodge.
19 May 2007 contestant Thomas Hansen sat new records. When only three members of the mob remained, he used his last help-option - follow the mob, and got knocked out(!) The question was about Danish literature, and tragicly enough Mr. Hansen mentioned that he had a gut feeling for what later showed to be the correct answer. This show left one mob-member with a prize of 399.000 DKK almost breaking the record for biggest prize on the show.
One person is selected to face the presenter. The person is given a series of questions based on varying topics, and is given the opportunity to select an 'Easy' or 'Difficult' question. Both the contestant and the other 100 players must answer the question, given in multiple choice format. If the contestant gets the question right, the presenter tallies how many of the 100 other players got the question wrong. The players who get the question wrong are eliminated from play, and the number of players eliminated is multiplied by a set amount, governed by the following formula (with the base value being €50,000):
where n is the number of players in the game. ntotal is the amount of players in the game prior to the question, and nmissed is the number of players who missed that question.
The contestant then has that amount of money placed into its money pool. For example, if there are 20 players left and 8 of them get the next question wrong, the lone contestant wins €20,000:
This continues round after round until one of two things happens:
The contestant also has a "doubler" — if he or she is confident of an answer and thinks that their opponents will get it wrong, the contestant can use it to double the money he or she earns. Like other lifelines in the game, the "doubler" can be used only once.
Should the lone contestant ever get a question wrong, one of the contestants who got the right answer from the group of 100 becomes the new lone contestant.
The French version of 1 vs. 100, called Un Contre 100, premiered on TF1 on January 8, 2007. It airs weekdays on the network at 18:20. The set and logo strongly resemble those on the first series of the US version. Benjamin Castaldi is the host of the show.
Money is awarded for each question answered incorrectly by Mob members ("le mur") using the prize table to the right. The contestant can leave after answering any number of questions correctly, although their winnings up to that point are split with a home viewer. If the contestant succeeds in eliminating all 100 players, he or she wins €200,000 (US$267,000), split with a home viewer. However, if the contestant answers a question incorrectly, he or she leaves with nothing; the remaining Mob members split half of the accumulated winnings, and a lucky home viewer wins the other half.
Contestants receive three helps ("jokers") along the way, of which the contestant can use up to two on a single question:
Nine people won €200,000 in this version.
P2,000,000. Those who want to join the game show as the main contestant or one of the hundred (the mob) may register through SMS. It is hosted by Edu Manzano, host of another ABS-CBN game-show Pilipinas, Game KNB? and formerly of the Philippine version of The Weakest Link. It is the fourth show ABS-CBN acquired from Endemol and one of the most expensive shows in the Philippines. In this version, if The One answers incorrectly, the remaining members of The Mob will equally split the money The One has accumulated since the first question amongst themselves and return in the following episode.
Later, the show was reformatted to conform to the American version. The set and music are now very similar to those on the US show. While it keeps the 50% escape and the doubler, contestants now choose from two categories rather than two difficulties from the same category in order to see the next question. In this version, contestants are selected from among the remaining Mob members of the previous game.
The Korean version of 1 vs. 100 is called 1 대 100 or il dae baek. The program started on May 1, 2007 and airs every Tuesday at 20:50 on KBS2. It is hosted by the comedian Kim Yong-Man and the top prize is 50,000,000 won.
There are three "helps" (called "Chance" in Korean) available to the contestant, but two of them are somewhat different from the US version of the program. The contestant can "Ask the Mob", where two Mob members explain why they chose different answers. There is a combination of "Trust the Mob" and "Poll the Mob" available to the contestant, where they can see the Mob's most popular answer, but don't have to choose it. The last help is the option of phoning a past winner for advice, a "help" that seems to have been adapted from the show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. On 5 June 2007 reporter Jeong Young-jin became the first person ever to win the top prize of 50,000,000 won.
Just after the first episode aired, the Korean Internet portal Daum, in cooperation with KBS, allowed Internet users to submit possible questions for future episodes. Due to a copyright agreement with Endemol, on-demand Internet viewing of this program is not available. (Most KBS programming can be accessed on the Internet for free.)
Special themed episodes have featured 100 former Miss Korea contestants and 100 male college bodybuilders.
After the first question they have 2 weapons at their disposal:
Dodges — which means they can skip a question if they do not think they know the answer. If they take this option they make no money on the members of the 100 who get this question wrong, and their current prize fund is halved. They are given three dodges throughout the game.
Double — if the contestant believes that there are many people in play who are likely to get the question wrong then they can play a double. This means that they win £2,000 for every contestant they knock out with this question.
After they have knocked out 75% of the audience they have one further choice:
Bonus Dodge — when the category choices come up, one of them is a Bonus Dodge. This comes in the form of a visual, audio clip or picture plus a question. If a contestant decides to take the Bonus Dodge they may not dodge the question and must answer correctly to stay in the game. This can be a risky option as if you do not know the answer you will be out of the game completely.
A contestant must either answer a question or dodge it, and if they get a question wrong they are out of the game with nothing. They cannot, in the UK version of the game, walk away with any of the prize fund unless they knock out all 100 opponents.
If a contestant eliminates all 100 opponents, they are given one opportunity to bail out of the game and take their money before finding out if their answer is correct. If they play on and have the correct answer, they get a £50,000 bonus. The next player is selected from the remaining 100 (usually of a different demographic profile from the previous player) and a new player takes the old players seat so that there are 100 opponents again.
If a contestant loses, the next player is selected from the remaining contestants still in play when the contestant lost. This is the incentive that the 100 have for getting the question right — a better chance of being the next contestant.
For the first series, four people went away with money: Geoff: £80,250 Brian: £67,125 Lynne: £59,000 Neil: £16,250
Starting October 2006, the first series consisted of 8 episodes on a Saturday evening. The second series began in January 2007.
For the second series: Neill: £62,500 Niall: £63,000
The competition features 100 players answering general knowledge, social and lifestyle based questions.
This game show is different from other game shows on Vietnamese TV, in that players can’t stop the game if they want (note in the French, US, and Australian versions, the players may stop the game after a correct question, since they are not affiliated with lotteries like the Dutch and UK versions are). To be the winner, they have to outsmart all of the other 99 contestants and answer every question. This version is similar to America's version of 1 vs 100's Last Man Standing version.
The rules of the game are simple; computers randomly select a player to answer questions. The points up for grabs total 100, with the winner being the player with the highest score. Whenever the front running player answers incorrectly, he/she is replaced by another player, who is selected from among secondary players who got the answer right. The game continues in this manner until it ends. However, if the front running player beats between 80 and 99 players before he/she is replaced, then there is a cash bonus of VND2mil (2,000,000 Vietnamese dong, which is about US$130).
The host is Lai Van Sam, host of the Vietnamese versions of The Price is Right, Wheel of Fortune, and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. As with most game shows hosted by Lai, it airs on VTV3.
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CNBC
Launched April 17, 1989
Owned by NBC Universal
Slogan "First in Business Worldwide"
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General Format
In all versions of 1 vs. 100, one player is selected to play the game as The One against 100 other people, collectively known as The Mob (or what "Mob" translates to in the local language, although the UK version doesn't call its group of 100 "The Mob"). Depending on the format of the game, the player can be selected randomly from the Mob, or selected independently. To win the game outright, the One must eliminate all 100 members of the Mob by answering questions correctly.After having the opportunity to select a difficulty level or a category in some versions, a multiple-choice question with three options is revealed (on the American, Australian, Bulgarian, Philippine, French, Hungarian, Italian, Israeli, Korean, and Turkish versions, the player is given only the question, with no opportunity to select a difficulty and a category). The Mob is given a short amount of time to lock in their answer before The One is given the opportunity to answer the question. If the One is correct, all Mob members that answered the question incorrectly are eliminated from further play, bringing the lone contestant closer to winning the game. The amount of money in the contestant's bank also increases by an amount dependant on the number of mob members eliminated in that question. If the contestant eliminates all 100 mob members, he or she claims all the money in the bank or a fixed top prize. However, if the One is incorrect, the game ends and he or she leaves with nothing. In some versions, the remaining members of the Mob split the losing contestant's winnings.
The One can select from a limited number of "helps", "escapes" or "dodges" depending on the version; escapes or dodges exempt the player from having to answer the question, but part of the bank must be forfeited (except in France, see below). Alternatively, a player can obtain more information on the mob's answers by using one of the "helps". In some versions of the game, the contestant is given the opportunity to take the amount in the bank and leave the game in between questions.
International Variants
American format
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The American version of 1 vs. 100 premiered on the NBC network on Friday, October 13, 2006 at 9:00 p.m,[1] but has since moved to a regular timeslot of Fridays at 8:00 p.m. The show is hosted by actor-comedian Bob Saget and narrated by Joe Cipriano, and the top prize is $1,000,000.
As in other versions of the game, a single player competes against one hundred contestants, nicknamed the "mob", in answering a series of trivia questions, each of which is presented in a multiple-choice format (A,B,C) with three possible answers. Each question is assigned a dollar value, as shown on the table, right. Each of the mob members individually answer the question pressing one of three buttons located in front of them. Then, the player must also answer the question. If the player answers incorrectly, then she or he is eliminated and receives none of the prize pool. The remaining mob members who answered correctly then will share the prize among themselves. If the player answers correctly, then any mob member who answers incorrectly is eliminated from the game. The prize pool then increases by the value of the question, multiplied by the number of mob members who have been eliminated. The player then has a choice to (1) risk his/her prize pool by continuing to play against the mob or to (2) exit the game and take home the money accumulated, unlike most other versions of the show, including the original Dutch version. (Usually presented as "The money...or the mob?") If the player eliminates all 100 members of the mob by the final question, the player receives the top prize of $1,000,000. The further along a player goes, the harder the questions get.
As of episode 6, a Deal or No Deal style stepladder format has been adopted where players must answer the first three consecutive questions before deciding to take the money or the mob. The player must then answer the next two consecutive questions before making the next decision. From there on, it's one question before making the next decision.
Unlike the European (and Hong Kong) versions of the show, there are no "escapes" or "doublers" on the show. Instead, each player receives two opportunities to receive assistance from the mob, known as "helps". They are "Poll The Mob" and "Ask The Mob", and they had to be used in that order. Starting with the sixth episode, a third option, "Trust The Mob," was added, and players could choose which option at any point in the game.
- During "Poll The Mob", the player selects one of the three answers about which to get more information — though this is not necessarily the contestant's answer. The number of "mob" players who chose that answer is revealed, and the contestant chooses one of the revealed mob members to discuss his or her response.
- For "Ask The Mob" two mob members are randomly selected: one who answered correctly and one who answered incorrectly. Each explains his or her decision to the contestant. This also eliminates the third choice from consideration.
- For "Trust The Mob" (added in episode 6) the most popular answer the mob gave is revealed. The contestant is then committed to this answer.
Top American game show champions have participated in the shows. In the first two episodes, legendary 74-time Jeopardy! champion Ken Jennings was prominently featured.[2] He was seated at podium number thirteen during the premiere episode.[3] Jennings was part of the first mob to defeat a contestant, winning about $700, before being eliminated on the question, "What color is the number 1 on a roulette wheel"? Jennings guessed black, but the answer was red. The man who defeated Jennings in the Jeopardy! Ultimate Tournament of Champions, Brad Rutter, joined the mob for episode 6, staying for more episodes, but was unable to defeat a contestant. Champions from Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, Nancy Christy, John Carpenter, and Kevin Olmstead were in another episode. All three were eliminated on one question, and won nothing.
Three models from Deal or No Deal (Endemol USA and NBC's brother show that aired before 1 vs. 100) were also in an early mob, which also features an eclectic mix of professors, valedictorians, schoolteachers, and athletes. Mob members remain in the game until they miss a question, and continue against subsequent contestants if they are not eliminated. Unlike other versions of the game, players are not selected from among the mob. (Producers intended the "last player standing" all-star match aired February 9 to be an exception. Under the rules of that match, upon the featured player's elimination, producers would choose a mob member at random to face whatever other members remained. However, Annie Duke, the all-star whom producers invited to compete first, missed a question which only one member answered correctly, giving that member the victory and bringing the match to a close before any randomly selected member could be featured.)
Musician and then-husband of Britney Spears, Kevin Federline, was a mob member in episode 6. Federline was eliminated on the third question. (The show was taped before divorce proceedings began.)
The debut of 1 vs. 100 performed well for NBC, delivering the network's highest rating in the Friday night 9 p.m. time slot since December 2002 (excluding coverage of the Olympics) in adults 18-49 and the highest overall viewer total in the time period since March 2004. The show won its time slot with 12.6 million viewers (adults 18-49), and was the night's number one show in 18-49, total viewers and other key ratings categories.[4]
On cable, NBC's brother business news channel CNBC re-airs the last week's episodes of 1 vs. 100 every Wednesday night at 10 p.m. and Thursday morning at 12 am EST. This will follow CNBC's success on re-running Deal or No Deal every week. The Wednesday evening re-airing also takes place on Global in Canada.
Australian format
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The Australian version of the show was officially launched on January 18, 2007 and premiered on January 29, 2007 on the Nine Network and is recorded in Studio 3 at the Melbourne Docklands Central City Studios. This version is based on the American version of the show, complete with a similar set, identical theme, and a similar prize structure with a AU$1,000,000 prize (US$800,000) for knocking out all 100 members of the mob. It is hosted by former Who Wants to Be a Millionaire host and CEO of the Nine Network, Eddie McGuire. The mob members like to egg on the contestant by shaking their fists and chanting mob, mob, mob.
A season of 15 episodes has been approved for production by the Nine Network. The first show was scheduled to be shot on Friday, January 19 and air from Monday, January 29. However, controversy reportedly arose before the cameras started rolling.
The controversy is said to have started amongst confirmed and potential contestants, when filming of the first episode was delayed less than 12 hours before it was scheduled to start. The official reason was a problem caused by Melbourne's power blackouts three days earlier. However, speculation is that producer Michael Healy was asked a question at the Thursday night launch party, which was assessed as incorrect, despite the fact that he was right. Producers were reportedly not willing to chance problems at their first taping, hence inconveniencing the players, many of whom had taken time off work to attend the show. It is alleged that around 30 contestants turned up to the taping on Friday, unaware that they were not required.
When filming did get under way on Sunday 21 January, a witness is quoted as saying that a contestant in the first episode answered a question incorrectly: What is the unit of time equivalent to 60 seconds? Due to a technical glitch, the question reportedly had to be reasked, and when it was reshot, the contestant gave the correct answer, robbing the Mob of a chance at just over $100,000. A spokesman for Nine Network denied this account, but admitted that there had been a problem in gameplay with some members of the Mob.[5]
The January 29 debut of 1 vs. 100 did extremely well in the ratings, and was the most-watched program of the night. A peak audience of 2.4 million viewers and an average audience of 1.95 million watched the show in Australia's capital cities.[6] The second episode went to air on 5 February and narrowly lost in viewers to the Season 3 premiere of Desperate Housewives in a competition for viewers against the Seven Network. With 1.43 million viewers, the second episode was well down on the premiere, but still a pleasing number for McGuire.[7]
The Australian show also airs in New Zealand with the New Zealand debut on 1 September2007 on TV One
Bulgarian format
The Bulgarian version of the show is aired on Nova Television. The host is Niki Kanchev, who also hosts Who Wants to be a Millionaire and Big Brother.During its first season, the show was aired three times a week - on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 21:00 with a top prize of 100,000 leva (US$68,000), as with all game shows aired on the channel. Like the Portuguese version, in this version, the player faces only 50 opponents.
There have been two winners.
Housemates from VIP Brother 2 played as mob members. They sat at podium #13 every time - Petya Pavlova, Kalin Velyov, Tihomir, Katerina Evro, Magi Jelyazkova, Azis and Kitaeca have appeared in the show.
A second season of 1 vs 50 is expected in the beginning of 2008.
Danish format
A Danish version launched on TV3 on February 27, 2007, called 1 mod 100.[8] Football goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel is the host. The format is approximately the same as the British, where the contestant is given a choice between two categories every time, and questions go from a value of 500 Danish kroner up to 20,000 DKK. The top prize, if the player can eliminate all 100 opponents, is 2,000,000 DKK (US$358,000).Contestant Hans Christian Rørdam (known always by his first two initials) broke a number of records on the show aired 13 April 2007. He knocked out the record-breaking mob-member who had 75 correct answers on his resume. He also knocked out a total of 94 of the mob-members, quitting just after using his last help-option. "H.C." did not bring home the biggest prize, as the mob was reduced rather early on a question about the title of Madonna's 1998 album release - a question "H.C." used a help option to dodge.
19 May 2007 contestant Thomas Hansen sat new records. When only three members of the mob remained, he used his last help-option - follow the mob, and got knocked out(!) The question was about Danish literature, and tragicly enough Mr. Hansen mentioned that he had a gut feeling for what later showed to be the correct answer. This show left one mob-member with a prize of 399.000 DKK almost breaking the record for biggest prize on the show.
Dutch format
This original version is hosted by former RTL 4 and TROS broadcaster Caroline Tensen. It airs on Tien. Due to the sale of Tien to RTL Nederland, the show will be aired on RTL 4 starting in the winter of 2007.One person is selected to face the presenter. The person is given a series of questions based on varying topics, and is given the opportunity to select an 'Easy' or 'Difficult' question. Both the contestant and the other 100 players must answer the question, given in multiple choice format. If the contestant gets the question right, the presenter tallies how many of the 100 other players got the question wrong. The players who get the question wrong are eliminated from play, and the number of players eliminated is multiplied by a set amount, governed by the following formula (with the base value being €50,000):
where n is the number of players in the game. ntotal is the amount of players in the game prior to the question, and nmissed is the number of players who missed that question.
The contestant then has that amount of money placed into its money pool. For example, if there are 20 players left and 8 of them get the next question wrong, the lone contestant wins €20,000:
This continues round after round until one of two things happens:
- If all of the 100 players are eliminated, the lone contestant wins whatever winnings are in the pool.
- If the lone contestant gets a question wrong at any time, he or she goes home with nothing. The lone contestant can never quit out.
The contestant also has a "doubler" — if he or she is confident of an answer and thinks that their opponents will get it wrong, the contestant can use it to double the money he or she earns. Like other lifelines in the game, the "doubler" can be used only once.
Should the lone contestant ever get a question wrong, one of the contestants who got the right answer from the group of 100 becomes the new lone contestant.
French format
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The French version of 1 vs. 100, called Un Contre 100, premiered on TF1 on January 8, 2007. It airs weekdays on the network at 18:20. The set and logo strongly resemble those on the first series of the US version. Benjamin Castaldi is the host of the show.
Money is awarded for each question answered incorrectly by Mob members ("le mur") using the prize table to the right. The contestant can leave after answering any number of questions correctly, although their winnings up to that point are split with a home viewer. If the contestant succeeds in eliminating all 100 players, he or she wins €200,000 (US$267,000), split with a home viewer. However, if the contestant answers a question incorrectly, he or she leaves with nothing; the remaining Mob members split half of the accumulated winnings, and a lucky home viewer wins the other half.
Contestants receive three helps ("jokers") along the way, of which the contestant can use up to two on a single question:
- Dodge ("Je Passe"): The contestant passes on the question, but still earns money for each Mob member that answers incorrectly. Unlike the traditional versions of the show where a contestant has three dodges, there is only one dodge in the French game.
- Second Chance ("La seconde chance"): If the contestant indicates he wants to use this help before answering the question and answers incorrectly, he or she will have a second chance to answer the question.
- Poll the Mob ("Qui pense comme moi?"): This is played like the US and Australian "Poll the Mob". The contestant will be told how many Mob members chose one particular answer of the contestant's choice. The contestant can then choose whether or not to lock in that answer.
Nine people won €200,000 in this version.
German format
The German version, called Einer gegen 100, aired in 2002 on RTL and was hosted by Linda de Mol, host of the Dutch show Miljoenenjacht. Like the Dutch version, it had the same three "escapes" as well as a "doubler".Hungarian format
The Hungarian version of the show premiered on TV2 on February 24, 2007. Sváby András is the host. The show is called Egy a 100 ellen. The top prize, if the player can eliminate all 100 opponents, is 50,000,000 Ft (US$271,000). The format is based on the original US version, with a progressive tree, but does not require a contestant to answer three questions correctly in the first round, and then two questions in the second round, before receiving the option to stop.
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Israeli format
The Israeli version, titled Echad Neged Me'ah (אחד נגד מאה), premiered on the Reshet programming lineup of Channel 2 on May 7, 2007. The show is hosted by Avri Gilad. The top prize for eliminating all opponents is 1,000,000 NIS (₪), slightly less than $250,000 USD.
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Italian format
The Italian version, called 1 contro 100, started on the 7th of May, 2007, on Canale 5, hosted by Amadeus. The set, music, and format are almost identical to the French version. The top prize is €200,000. The contestant has 3 "jollys" (jokers), which are the same as those on the French show: 1) refuse to answer the question, 2) double answer (like "Double Dip" lifeline in the US "Super Millionaire" show, 3) This Joker takes away one wrong answer. The progressive tree is below.
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Winners
- #Giorgio Cascini (15th May, 2007), won € 200.000
- #Marco Cito (28th May, 2007), won € 200.000
Norwegian format
The Norwegian version, called Alle mot En, premiered in April 2006 on TV 2. Øyvind Mund is the host. The first season consisted of twelve episodes. The second season premiered in March 2007, and airs Mondays at 20:00.Philippine format
Portuguese format
The Portuguese version, called Um Contra Todos, airs weekday evenings on RTP1. José Carlos Malato hosts. Unlike the other versions, the contestant faces only 50 opponents. Players have the same three escapes as in the Dutch version. The base value for questions is €12,500 (earlier €25,000), and winnings per question are calculated using the standard formula.Later, the show was reformatted to conform to the American version. The set and music are now very similar to those on the US show. While it keeps the 50% escape and the doubler, contestants now choose from two categories rather than two difficulties from the same category in order to see the next question. In this version, contestants are selected from among the remaining Mob members of the previous game.
Serbian format
The Serbian version, called 1 protiv 100, started in Spring 2007 on RTV Pink. The top prize is 3,000,000 RSD.South Korean format
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The Korean version of 1 vs. 100 is called 1 대 100 or il dae baek. The program started on May 1, 2007 and airs every Tuesday at 20:50 on KBS2. It is hosted by the comedian Kim Yong-Man and the top prize is 50,000,000 won.
There are three "helps" (called "Chance" in Korean) available to the contestant, but two of them are somewhat different from the US version of the program. The contestant can "Ask the Mob", where two Mob members explain why they chose different answers. There is a combination of "Trust the Mob" and "Poll the Mob" available to the contestant, where they can see the Mob's most popular answer, but don't have to choose it. The last help is the option of phoning a past winner for advice, a "help" that seems to have been adapted from the show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. On 5 June 2007 reporter Jeong Young-jin became the first person ever to win the top prize of 50,000,000 won.
Just after the first episode aired, the Korean Internet portal Daum, in cooperation with KBS, allowed Internet users to submit possible questions for future episodes. Due to a copyright agreement with Endemol, on-demand Internet viewing of this program is not available. (Most KBS programming can be accessed on the Internet for free.)
Special themed episodes have featured 100 former Miss Korea contestants and 100 male college bodybuilders.
Spanish format
The Spanish version of the show is named 1 contra 100 and is broadcasted on Antena 3. Hosted by Carlos Sobera, 1 contra 100 started December 23, 2006 and airs both Saturday and Sunday at 8:00 pm. Like other versions, if the contestant answers incorrectly, the game is over. Before each question, the contestant chooses one of two categories. This version has 3 escapes that players can use so that they can continue the game without answering incorrectly, with the downside that using them reduces the contestant's winnings. They can also "poll the mob" twice. In addition, contestants receive a "doubler" to use on one question, for which the contestant receives double the normal amount for each contestant eliminated. Normally, contestants earn €300 for each opponent eliminated. If they can win by eliminating all 100 opponents, they earn an additional €30,000 (US$40,000). The top potential prize is €60,000 (US$80,000) if the contestant can eliminate all 100 opponents without using the escapes.Turkish format
The Turkish version of the show will air on Cine 5. Tamer Karadagli will be the host. The top prize is YTL500,000 (as with all Turkish quizzes). The prizes for eliminating individual Mob members are as follows:
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UK format
The UK version of the show is produced in conjunction with the National Lottery. It is hosted by TV and radio host Dermot O'Leary, and airs on BBC One. In this version the first player is chosen apparently at random, but in truth by the production team, from the 101 contestants. First, the contestant gets to choose between two categories for each question. The 'one' and the 100 are given the question to which they must all decide between 3 answers. The 'one' wins £1000 for every one of the 100 that gets the question wrong. The top prize for this version of the show is £250,000. It works like the Dutch and German versions of the show.After the first question they have 2 weapons at their disposal:
Dodges — which means they can skip a question if they do not think they know the answer. If they take this option they make no money on the members of the 100 who get this question wrong, and their current prize fund is halved. They are given three dodges throughout the game.
Double — if the contestant believes that there are many people in play who are likely to get the question wrong then they can play a double. This means that they win £2,000 for every contestant they knock out with this question.
After they have knocked out 75% of the audience they have one further choice:
Bonus Dodge — when the category choices come up, one of them is a Bonus Dodge. This comes in the form of a visual, audio clip or picture plus a question. If a contestant decides to take the Bonus Dodge they may not dodge the question and must answer correctly to stay in the game. This can be a risky option as if you do not know the answer you will be out of the game completely.
A contestant must either answer a question or dodge it, and if they get a question wrong they are out of the game with nothing. They cannot, in the UK version of the game, walk away with any of the prize fund unless they knock out all 100 opponents.
If a contestant eliminates all 100 opponents, they are given one opportunity to bail out of the game and take their money before finding out if their answer is correct. If they play on and have the correct answer, they get a £50,000 bonus. The next player is selected from the remaining 100 (usually of a different demographic profile from the previous player) and a new player takes the old players seat so that there are 100 opponents again.
If a contestant loses, the next player is selected from the remaining contestants still in play when the contestant lost. This is the incentive that the 100 have for getting the question right — a better chance of being the next contestant.
For the first series, four people went away with money: Geoff: £80,250 Brian: £67,125 Lynne: £59,000 Neil: £16,250
Starting October 2006, the first series consisted of 8 episodes on a Saturday evening. The second series began in January 2007.
For the second series: Neill: £62,500 Niall: £63,000
Vietnamese format
This version in Vietnam is named “Arena 100,” and was listed in the Vietnam Record Book as the biggest show with the highest number of players, 100.The competition features 100 players answering general knowledge, social and lifestyle based questions.
This game show is different from other game shows on Vietnamese TV, in that players can’t stop the game if they want (note in the French, US, and Australian versions, the players may stop the game after a correct question, since they are not affiliated with lotteries like the Dutch and UK versions are). To be the winner, they have to outsmart all of the other 99 contestants and answer every question. This version is similar to America's version of 1 vs 100's Last Man Standing version.
The rules of the game are simple; computers randomly select a player to answer questions. The points up for grabs total 100, with the winner being the player with the highest score. Whenever the front running player answers incorrectly, he/she is replaced by another player, who is selected from among secondary players who got the answer right. The game continues in this manner until it ends. However, if the front running player beats between 80 and 99 players before he/she is replaced, then there is a cash bonus of VND2mil (2,000,000 Vietnamese dong, which is about US$130).
The host is Lai Van Sam, host of the Vietnamese versions of The Price is Right, Wheel of Fortune, and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. As with most game shows hosted by Lai, it airs on VTV3.
Other international formats
1 vs. 100 has also aired in Sweden (on TV4), Belgium (on VTM), Argentina (on Telefe), Greece (on Star Channel), and the Czech Republic (called 1 proti 100 on TV Nova, format presumed to be the same as the Dutch version) which were all mentioned in the promo for the US version. Asia Television Limited (specifically ATV Home) also has a version in Hong Kong with lyricist Wyman Wong as host, and their version plays similar to the Dutch format (base value for questions being HK$200,000, about US$25,000, each mob member knocked out is worth HK$2,000, with the value rising by that amount for every 20 opponents knocked out, and a player may take home a prize if he/she loses and does NOT use any "escape"). In 2007, a version in Canada (in French) on TVA was announced. In the fall of 2007, a version will premiere in Belarus on ONT. TVNZ, a New Zealand television broadcaster, is currently broadcasting the Australian version of the show. In 2007 it was announced that Televisa is planning its own Mexican version, to air in 2008.See also
References
1. ^ Zap2It, NBC Gets Its (Other) Game On, September 27, 2006.
2. ^ Ken Jennings' Blog, L.A. confidential, August 13, 2006.
3. ^ FlashGames², Preview of 1 vs. 100.
4. ^ NBC Universal Media Village, 1 vs. 100 debuts with NBC's highest slot result since December 2002 in 18-49, October 14, 2006.
5. ^ Game Eddie takes on fans. News.com.au. Retrieved on 2007-01-27.
6. ^ Michael Gadd (2007-01-30). McGuire makes Nine the one. News.com.au. Retrieved on 2007-01-31.
7. ^ Seven wins on TV ratings, The Australian, February 6, 2007. Retrieved on February 7, 2007.
8. ^ Tusindvis af deltagere søges: Vind millioner i "1 mod 100". Retrieved on 2007-01-23.
2. ^ Ken Jennings' Blog, L.A. confidential, August 13, 2006.
3. ^ FlashGames², Preview of 1 vs. 100.
4. ^ NBC Universal Media Village, 1 vs. 100 debuts with NBC's highest slot result since December 2002 in 18-49, October 14, 2006.
5. ^ Game Eddie takes on fans. News.com.au. Retrieved on 2007-01-27.
6. ^ Michael Gadd (2007-01-30). McGuire makes Nine the one. News.com.au. Retrieved on 2007-01-31.
7. ^ Seven wins on TV ratings, The Australian, February 6, 2007. Retrieved on February 7, 2007.
8. ^ Tusindvis af deltagere søges: Vind millioner i "1 mod 100". Retrieved on 2007-01-23.
External links
- Official site for the American version
- Official site for the Australian version
- Official site for the British version
- Official site for the Bulgarian version
- Official site for the Danish version
- Official site for the Dutch version
- Official site for the French version
- Official site for the Hong Kong version
- Official site for the Hungarian version
- Official site for the Israeli version
- Official site for the Italian version
- Official site for the Norwegian version
- Official site for the Philippine version
- Official site for the Portuguese version
- Official site for the South Korean version
- Official site for the Spanish version
- Official site for the Turkish version
game show involves members of the public or celebrities, sometimes as part of a team, playing a game, perhaps involving answering quiz questions, for points or prizes. In some shows contestants compete against other players or another team whilst other shows involve contestants
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Endemol N.V.
Publicly traded company
Genre Production company
Founded 1994
Founder Joop van den Ende
John de Mol
Headquarters Hilversum, Netherlands
Industry Television
Website www.endemol.
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Publicly traded company
Genre Production company
Founded 1994
Founder Joop van den Ende
John de Mol
Headquarters Hilversum, Netherlands
Industry Television
Website www.endemol.
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Motto
"Je maintiendrai" (French)
"Ik zal handhaven" (Dutch)
"I shall stand fast"1
Anthem
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"Je maintiendrai" (French)
"Ik zal handhaven" (Dutch)
"I shall stand fast"1
Anthem
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The UK Postcode Lottery is a lottery in the United Kingdom, launched in the north east of England on 31 August, 2005.
The lottery is in aid of charity, and works by using an entrant's postcode plus a unique three-digit number as their ticket number.
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The lottery is in aid of charity, and works by using an entrant's postcode plus a unique three-digit number as their ticket number.
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American version of 1 vs. 100 is broadcast by NBC. As in other formats, a single player (the 1) goes up against 100 other contestants (the mob). The 1 gains money for each mob member eliminated, but loses all winnings with an incorrect answer at any point.
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National Broadcasting Company
Type Broadcast television network
Country United States
Availability United States, also distributed in Canada, Mexico, Bermuda and the Caribbean
Founder David Sarnoff
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Type Broadcast television network
Country United States
Availability United States, also distributed in Canada, Mexico, Bermuda and the Caribbean
Founder David Sarnoff
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Bob Saget
Saget at the 2007 O&A Traveling Virus at PNC
Birth name Robert Lane Saget
Born May 17 1956
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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Saget at the 2007 O&A Traveling Virus at PNC
Birth name Robert Lane Saget
Born May 17 1956
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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Joe Cipriano (b. Waterbury, Connecticut, September 8 1954) is a US voice over actor.
Joe Cipriano began his career as a broadcaster in Waterbury, Connecticut, while still in high school. Since then he has worked for the NBC, ABC, FOX and CBS TV and radio networks.
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Joe Cipriano began his career as a broadcaster in Waterbury, Connecticut, while still in high school. Since then he has worked for the NBC, ABC, FOX and CBS TV and radio networks.
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Jeopardy! is an international television quiz game show, originally devised by Merv Griffin. The show originated in the United States, where it first ran on NBC from March 30, 1964 until January 3, 1975; in a weekly syndicated version from September 9, 1974 to September 7,
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Kenneth Wayne Jennings III (born May 23, 1974) holds the record for the longest winning streak on the U.S. syndicated game show Jeopardy! Jennings won 74 games before he was defeated by challenger Nancy Zerg on his 75th appearance.
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Roulette is a casino and gambling game named after the French word meaning "small wheel". In the game a croupier spins a wheel in one direction, then spins a ball in the opposite direction around a tilted circular surface running around the circumference of the wheel.
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Ultimate Tournament of Champions was a fifteen-week single-elimination tournament on the syndicated game show Jeopardy! that began airing on February 9, 2005 and concluded on May 25, 2005.
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Grand Slam History
First appearance: 2007 Grand Slam*
*first Grand Slam
Bradford "Brad" Rutter (born January 31, 1978) is a Pennsylvania quiz show host, most widely known as a contestant on the U.S. syndicated game show Jeopardy!.
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First appearance: 2007 Grand Slam*
*first Grand Slam
Bradford "Brad" Rutter (born January 31, 1978) is a Pennsylvania quiz show host, most widely known as a contestant on the U.S. syndicated game show Jeopardy!.
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Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? is a television game show which offers very large cash prizes for correctly answering successive multiple-choice questions of increasing difficulty. The format is owned and licensed by the British production company Celador.
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John Carpenter (born 24 December 1967) was the first $1,000,000 winner on the United States version of the game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. The historic event occurred on November 19, 1999.
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Dr. Kevin Olmstead (born March 20, 1959) is an environmental engineer from Ann Arbor, Michigan. He won $2.18 million on the TV game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire on April 10, 2001, at the time a record for highest total winnings on a game show.
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Deal or No Deal, (often shortened as Deal) hosted by Canadian actor-comedian Howie Mandel, premiered on December 19, 2005 on NBC. After an initial weeklong event and another in February 2006, the show aired multi-weekly from March to June 2006, typically on Mondays,
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Annie Duke
Annie Duke in the 2005 World Series of Poker
Nickname(s) Annie Legend, The Duke, The Duchess of Poker
Hometown Los Angeles, California
World Series of Poker
Bracelet(s) 1
Money finishes 33
Highest ITM main
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Annie Duke in the 2005 World Series of Poker
Nickname(s) Annie Legend, The Duke, The Duchess of Poker
Hometown Los Angeles, California
World Series of Poker
Bracelet(s) 1
Money finishes 33
Highest ITM main
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Britney Jean Spears (born December 2, 1981) is an American pop music singer, songwriter, dancer, actress, and author. Spears has sold over 83 million records worldwide according to Zomba Label Group,[1] and has sold over 75 million albums worldwide.
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Nielsen Ratings, a system developed by Nielsen Media Research to determine the audience size and composition of television programming. Nielsen Ratings are offered in over forty countries.
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Olympic Games (often referred to simply as The Olympics or The Games[1]) is an international multi-sport event subdivided into summer and winter sporting events. The summer and winter games are each held every four years (an Olympiad[2]).
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cable television into the house.]]
Cable television is a system of providing cocoy television to consumers via radio frequency signals transmitted to televisions through fixed optical fibers or coaxial cables as opposed to the over-the-air method used in traditional
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Cable television is a system of providing cocoy television to consumers via radio frequency signals transmitted to televisions through fixed optical fibers or coaxial cables as opposed to the over-the-air method used in traditional
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This article is about CNBC U.S., the business news channel in the U.S.. For other uses, see CNBC (disambiguation).
CNBC
Launched April 17, 1989
Owned by NBC Universal
Slogan "First in Business Worldwide"
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Global Television Network
Type Broadcast television network
Country Canada
Availability National, northern U.S. as well as national U.S.
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Type Broadcast television network
Country Canada
Availability National, northern U.S. as well as national U.S.
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This page is currently protected from editing until disputes have been resolved.
Protection is not an endorsement of the current [ version] ([ protection log]).
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Protection is not an endorsement of the current [ version] ([ protection log]).
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1 vs. 100 is an Australian game show that is based on the American version of the same name and the original Dutch version created by Endemol. The game pits one person against 100 others for a chance to win one million dollars.
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founded Lima, the capital of Peru. 1562 - Pope Pius IV reopens the Council of Trent for its third and final session. 1670 - Henry Morgan captures Panama. 1701 - Frederick I becomes King of Prussia.
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1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2004 2005 2006 - 2007 - 2008 2009 2010
2007 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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January 29 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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