Michael Larson

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Michael Larson

Michael Larson on Press Your Luck, 1984
Born May 10, 1949(1949-05-10)
Died February 16, 1999 (aged 49)

Paul Michael Larson (May 10, 1949February 16, 1999) was a contestant on the United States television game show Press Your Luck. Larson's claim to fame was his winning $110,237 in cash and prizes, which he was able to do by memorizing the patterns used on the Press Your Luck game board.

Contents

[edit] Preparations

Through a careful study of the "random" movements of the 18-square "Big Board" on the CBS game show Press Your Luck, Larson was able to determine that there were only five patterns used to determine the movements of the spinner used to award money on the show. He was able to discover this by using a VCR to pause a recorded episode of the game, and proceed frame by frame to learn the patterns. Armed with this knowledge, he found that it would be theoretically possible to go on the game show, watch the patterns carefully, and hit squares containing money consistently.

Two of the 18 squares on the game board (usually referred to as 4 and 8) always contained cash in round 1 (square 4 held $1,000, $1,250, and $1,500, while square 8 held $300, $450, and $550), as well as cash and an extra spin in round 2 (square 4 held $3,000 + ONE SPIN, $4,000 + ONE SPIN, and $5,000 + ONE SPIN, while square 8 held $500 + ONE SPIN, $750 + ONE SPIN, and $1,000 + ONE SPIN). They never contained the Whammy, the character in the show who takes away all cash and prizes a contestant has earned. Therefore, Larson reasoned, if he used his knowledge of the board patterns to stop on only those two squares, he could play on as long as he dared, never at risk of losing his money.

Larson arrived in Hollywood from Lebanon, Ohio for a contestant tryout on Press Your Luck, having virtually no money to his name and using most of what he had to make the trip. In his tryout interview, he described himself as unemployed, but an ice cream truck driver during the summer season, who wanted to be a contestant on the show. Two producers discussed whether to have him on the show after his tryout interview; one was suspicious of Larson and his reasons for trying out—the other was not. The final decision was to let Larson on the show. So Michael was booked for the show, for the fifth taping of the day, intended as a Friday episode.

While waiting, he met Ed Long, a Baptist preacher booked for the fourth taping. They struck up a conversation. When it was Ed's turn to go on, Michael said to him, "I hope we don't have to face each other on the show." His wish wouldn't come true, as Ed had won his game with $11,516. His other opponent was a dental assistant, Janie Litras (née Dakan).

[edit] The game

[edit] Round one

Before the start of the game, when host Peter Tomarken was learning about each player, he referenced the idea of overdosing on ice cream (a reference to Larson's occupation) with the soon-to-be-ironic statement, "Let's hope you don't O.D (overdose) on money."

As always, the game began with a question round, in which players answered questions in order to earn spins for the Big Board. Larson's memorization of the Big Board patterns could not help him here, and he seemed to struggle early on. On the second question, when asked "You've probably got President Franklin D. Roosevelt in your pocket or purse right now, because his likeness is on the head side--", Larson buzzed in early at this point, and answered "a 50 dollar bill". The rest of the question was "of what American coin?", and the answer was the dime. Perhaps rattled by this wild answer (and by Tomarken's comment about his early buzz), Larson did not even try to buzz in for the remaining two questions. Litras dominated this question round, and Larson finished it in last place with only three spins, behind Long's four and Litras's ten.

The game then entered the first Big Board round, where Larson could actually put his preparations to good use. On his first spin, Larson kept up a stream of verbal patter like contestants were encouraged to do; he stopped the board at a point one shuffle too early for one of the patterns he would use later, and he hit a Whammy (the cursor would go across the board next to the center of the right side). With his remaining two spins, he switched to his pattern play and began his winning streak, landing on the second highest dollar values of $1,250 each time for a total of $2,500. But he was out of spins, and Long and Litras managed to take their fourteen spins without a Whammy. Larson finished this round in last place -- normally a very disadvantageous position -- behind Ed's $4,080 and Janie's $4,608.

[edit] Round two

By the second question round, Larson seemed to have regained some of his confidence, and he gave two correct buzz-in answers, finishing this round with seven spins; Long earned only two spins, and Litras only three.

One game board pattern that Michael Larson memorized to win over $110,000; squares 4 and 8 would never have the Whammy
One game board pattern that Michael Larson memorized to win over $110,000; squares 4 and 8 would never have the Whammy

In the second and final Big Board round, Larson's demeanor and behavior changed dramatically. He was completely silent during spins, concentrating carefully, and leaving Tomarken to fill the silence with increasingly amazed chatter. He immediately celebrated after many of his spins, instead of waiting the fraction of a second that it would normally take for a player to see and respond to the space he or she had stopped on. All of these habits were extremely unusual for a Press Your Luck contestant.

Early on in the second round, perhaps due to nerves or inexperience, Larson's pattern play was irregular. On four of his first eleven spins, Larson stopped the board at a point not called for by his patterns; but luckily, he avoided the Whammy all four times, instead hitting a trip to Kauai (worth $1,636), $700 + ONE SPIN, PICK A CORNER (where he selected $2,250 out of THAT, $2,000, or $1,500 + ONE SPIN), and a Sailboat (worth $1,015). Then his play became deadly accurate. A player stopping the Press Your Luck board randomly would expect to hit a Whammy approximately once in each six spins. By contrast, in this second round alone, Larson took over forty spins without a Whammy. On thirty consecutive spins, his pattern play was perfect, and he consistently landed on the two "safe spots" that always awarded money and a spin. Peter Tomarken and the other contestants were increasingly amazed as Larson pressed on and on, never coming near a Whammy, never even using up one of his spins.

Finally, Larson reached $102,851, and he passed his remaining four spins (although some edited material from the show indicates that he actually considered going on after $100,000, but thought better of it). (Larson also got a standing ovation from the studio audience.) Long, who took the next spin, immediately hit a Whammy, leading Tomarken to wonder if Larson knew it was coming. Long then hit $5,000 + ONE SPIN twice, bringing him to $10,000, and briefly considered passing. Tomarken exclaimed, "What is goin' on!?" But Ed pressed on, hit the Whammy again, and lost the money and the last of his spins.

Litras, who had received the four passed spins from Larson, hit a whammy with her first spin as well. Then, in five successful spins, she built her total back to $9,385, and passed her three remaining spins back to Larson. Larson dealt with the first two spins correctly, hitting $4,000 + ONE SPIN and $750 + ONE SPIN. But he miscalculated on the last one, stopping the board a fraction of a second too early, just as the space he landed on was switching from $700 + ONE SPIN to a Bahamas Trip (worth $2,636). (Coincidentally, it was the same space he had hit a Whammy on with his first spin of the game.) But with his total now at $110,237, and with Tomarken joking that he could now buy the Bahamas, Larson could now legally pass once again, and he quickly did so. Litras took both spins safely, but earned no spins that she could pass back to Larson. Her last desperate spin ended with her landing on a Mexican Cruise in Square #15, and no Mexican Cruise was worth more than $4,500. Thus the game was over, and Michael had won $110,237; of this $104,950 was cash.

At the end of the show, host Peter Tomarken asked Larson why he did not pass his spins (like most contestants in his situation did) after he built up such an insurmountable lead. Larson sidestepped talking about the way he really won the game by answering, "Two things: One, it felt right, and second, I had seven spins and if I passed them, someone could have done what I did."

[edit] The aftermath

While Larson was running up the score, the producers contacted Michael Brockman, head of CBS's daytime programming department. In a 1994 TV Guide interview commemorating the Larson Sweep, conducted at the time the movie Quiz Show was released, he recalled "Something was very wrong. Here was this guy from nowhere, and he was hitting the bonus box every time. It was bedlam, I can tell you. And we couldn't stop this guy. He kept going around the board and hitting that box." Brockman contacted CBS lawyers to prove that he had cheated, but they failed. Larson won the argument, saying that what he had done was no different than if he had "[broken] the books to get on Jeopardy." When he threatened a lawsuit of his own, CBS finally gave in and awarded him his money. Because he had surpassed the CBS winnings cap (at the time) of $25,000, he was not allowed to return for the next show.

Part of his winnings went to taxes and part of his winnings were invested in real estate, with the remainder left in the bank. The real estate deal turned out to be a fraudulent ponzi scheme and Larson lost his investment entirely. Larson then learned about a get-rich-quick scheme involving matching a one dollar bill's serial number with a random number read out on a local radio game show that promised a $30,000 jackpot. Larson withdrew his remaining gameshow winnings in one dollar bills in hopes of winning the contest. He would examine each dollar carefully and upon discovering that he did not have the winning number, would place all the money back in his account, only to withdraw it again the next day and repeat the process all over again. Larson's wife at the time stated that this obsession consumed him.[citation needed]

Approximately USD $40,000-50,000 in the remaining cash was stolen from Larson and his common-law wife Teresa Dinwitty while the two attended a Christmas party shortly after giving up on the radio contest, according to a Game Show Network special. Larson and Dinwitty split up soon after. After losing all of his money, Larson called the producers of Press Your Luck, challenging them to put him back on the show and see if he could crack the board patterns again. The producers declined.

In 1994, Larson appeared on ABC's Good Morning America in an interview timed to the recent release of the movie Quiz Show.

Larson died of throat cancer in 1999 in Florida while on the run from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission[1].

[edit] Broadcasts of the shows

Larson's game was split into two episodes due to its exceptional running time, and these aired only once during the original run of the series, on June 8 and June 11, 1984. CBS then suppressed them for 19 years (As CBS and Bill Carruthers considered the episode at the time one of their worst embarrassments). When USA Network, and later Game Show Network, bought the rights to air Press Your Luck, CBS and Carruthers stipulated that the Larson episodes must not be aired.

On March 16, 2003, GSN was allowed to air the episodes as part of a two-hour documentary, called Big Bucks: The Press Your Luck Scandal. The documentary was produced by and aired on Game Show Network (in association with Lionsgate and FremantleMedia), and was hosted and narrated by Press Your Luck host Peter Tomarken. The original telecast was dedicated to the memory of Bill Carruthers, producer/creator of Press Your Luck, who had died prior to airing. He too was interviewed for the film, and it turned out to be his final TV appearance.

The show featured interviews with Press Your Luck producers, Larson's family, and the two contestants who lost to Larson that day, both of whom were allowed to try their hand at duplicating Larson's trick on a recreation of the original Big Board. The board replica used only one of the patterns that Larson had memorized, and Tomarken pointed out exactly what it was. Janie Litras-Dakan was unable to stop the board at square #4 consistently, but Ed Long managed to get the hang of it. He played for over an hour, beating Larson's total by a dollar. (However, as this game was only for show, he didn't actually win any money.)

As part of the commemoration, Larson's opponents from 1984 were invited back to be contestants on Whammy! The All-New Press Your Luck playing against Larson's brother James (because Michael Larson died by this time), with Peter Tomarken returning to host the question round. Despite the fact that the new board was now truly random due to advances in computer technology, and there was no way either Michael or James Larson could have pulled off the same trick, Larson's old opponents still lost. In fact, in the first round, when James Larson hit the Big Bank space, Ed Long proceeded to joke with host Todd Newton that he had seen this before. James Larson also imitated his brother during the first spin round with his "go on" gesture (hand in the air, pointing repeatedly at the board, or revolving both his arms), and his silent demeanor, only yelling "STOP!"

Currently, the two Larson episodes can be seen on the Game Show Network in regular rotation (after originally never being included in ANY syndication package due to embarrassment). However, the Big Bucks documentary included additional footage that had been edited out of the episodes for initial air – this additional footage is not seen when the episodes run in regular rotation.

On June 8, 2006, (exactly 22 years from their first run), clips from the Larson episodes were broadcast on CBS itself for the first time in over 20 years as part of a retrospective aired at the beginning of the Press Your Luck episode of Gameshow Marathon. The line by Peter Tomarken about Michael being "part owner of CBS" was included.

On January 31, 2007, TV Land broadcast "TV Shows Myths and Legends", which featured the Larson episodes with commentary from his brother, the past contestants, and Penn and Teller.

On Game Show Network's "50 Greatest Game Shows" series, Press Your Luck was ranked thirteenth, and the two Larson episodes were shown back-to-back.

[edit] Larson's Press Your Luck appearance statistics

[edit] Cash and prizes earned

Michael Larson's final score, a single-day daytime record which stood until 2006
Michael Larson's final score, a single-day daytime record which stood until 2006
  • $104,950 in cash
  • 1 sailboat worth $1,015
  • 1 trip to Kauai worth $1,636
  • 1 trip to the Bahamas worth $2,636

[edit] Larson's spin list

Spin Landed On Total Notes
1 WHAMMY
(Wielding a hammer)
$0 Hit early. The very next sequence would have put him in the safe spot. (#8)
2 $1,250 $1,250  
3 $1,250 $2,500  
4 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $6,500 Beginning of round 2
5 $5,000 + ONE SPIN $11,500  
6 $1,000 + ONE SPIN $12,500  
7 Trip to Kauai worth $1,636 $14,136 Larson stopped the board 1 space early, but missed the Whammy in this space
8 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $18,136  
9 $500 + ONE SPIN $18,636  
10 $700 + ONE SPIN $19,336 Larson again stopped the board 1 space early, and again missed the Whammy in this space
11 $1,000 + ONE SPIN $20,336 Thanks to a "Home Viewer Spin" contest, a random home viewer (Michael Landry of Jeanerette, Louisiana) won $1,000 as well
12 $750 + ONE SPIN $21,086 Longest spin of all 47 spins he took.
13 $5,000 + ONE SPIN $26,086  
14 PICK A CORNER ($2,250) $28,336 Larson stopped the board well after his pattern suggested to, but landed on a safe space anyway. He was offered a choice of $2,250, $2,000, or $1,500 + ONE SPIN, and without missing a beat took the $2,250.
15 Sailboat worth $1,015 $29,351 Larson again stopped the board 1 space early, and again missed the Whammy in this space
16 $3,000 + ONE SPIN $32,351 Larson's string of perfect pattern play finally began
17 $500 + ONE SPIN $32,851  
18 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $36,851 Part 1 of the episode ended here.
19 $750 + ONE SPIN $37,601 Part 2 of the episode started here.
20 $3,000 + ONE SPIN $40,601  
21 $1,000 + ONE SPIN $41,601 This spin was edited out for reasons unexplained; on the broadcast, Larson's score appears to jump by $1,000
22 $1,000 + ONE SPIN $42,601  
23 $1,000 + ONE SPIN $43,601  
24 $1,000 + ONE SPIN $44,601  
25 $3,000 + ONE SPIN $47,601  
26 $750 + ONE SPIN $48,351  
27 $3,000 + ONE SPIN $51,351  
28 $500 + ONE SPIN $51,851  
29 $500 + ONE SPIN $52,351 Board starts to go out of sync
30 $500 + ONE SPIN $52,851  
31 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $56,851  
32 $5,000 + ONE SPIN $61,851  
33 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $65,851  
34 $5,000 + ONE SPIN $70,851  
35 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $74,851  
36 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $78,851  
37 $500 + ONE SPIN $79,351  
38 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $83,351  
39 $3,000 + ONE SPIN $86,351  
40 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $90,351  
41 $500 + ONE SPIN $90,851  
42 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $94,851  
43 $5,000 + ONE SPIN $99,851  
44 $3,000 + ONE SPIN $102,851 The scoreboard, which could only display 6 characters, simply took the dollar sign out. Larson then passed his remaining spins
45 $4,000 + ONE SPIN $106,851 First of three spins passed back to Larson, which he had to take
46 $750 + ONE SPIN $107,601  
47 Trip to the Bahamas worth $2,636 $110,237 Larson finally made another mistake, stopping the board too early but luckily avoiding a Whammy; he passed his remaining spins

[edit] The game board patterns

At the time Larson made his famous appearance, there were only five sequences in which the squares could be highlighted. In each sequence, each of the eighteen spaces lights up exactly once. When a given sequence completed, the mainframe running the game board would immediately pick and begin another sequence. Larson would wait until Square 2 lit up, then see which square lit up next to determine which pattern the board was following. Spaces 4 and 8 were Larson's target "safe" spaces, which never had a Whammy and which always had money and a spin in the final Big Board round. The patterns were as follows (Numbering of slide squares in clockwise motion, starting with the top left hand slide square):

  • 3, 16, 13, 10, 18, 8, 6, 14, 7, 5, 15, 11, 17, 2, 12, 1, 9, 4
  • 5, 18, 11, 13, 3, 6, 15, 7, 1, 9, 14, 16, 10, 2, 4, 12, 17, 8
  • 11, 6, 10, 12, 1, 4, 14, 16, 2, 9, 17, 8, 13, 15, 3, 7, 18, 5
  • 17, 10, 15, 13, 2, 8, 18, 16, 12, 3, 5, 11, 7, 4, 1, 9, 14, 6
  • 18, 16, 10, 5, 11, 9, 2, 13, 17, 7, 4, 15, 12, 8, 6, 3, 1, 14

Larson would attempt to stop the board on the "safe" space shown in bold. (Sometimes Larson would fail to react to the first board pattern during a given spin, instead waiting for a different pattern to show up.) Larson never stopped the board when the second listed pattern came up; he always waited for a different pattern.

While squares 5 and 7 both held $750 slides, they rarely appeared at the same time during regular board operation. At the very end of the game, when Michael hits $110,237 and passes spins back to Janie, both squares do indeed show $750 when she subsequently stops the spinner.

The episode offers a good look at how the board operates when it goes out of sync, beginning with Michael's 29th spin. Half the slides change a split-second before the others, and if the situation does not correct itself, the slide projectors will work increasingly out of sync until finally half of them are changing exactly one second before the others, as was the case when Ed Long finally took his first spin of the second round.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Big Bucks: The Press Your Luck Scandal [television].

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Persondata
NAME Larson, Michael
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Press Your Luck contestant
DATE OF BIRTH May 10, 1949
PLACE OF BIRTH
DATE OF DEATH February 16, 1999
PLACE OF DEATH