National Bingo Night
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National Bingo Night | |
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Format | Game show |
Starring | Ed Sanders |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 6 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | ABC |
Original run | May 18, 2007 – June 22, 2007 |
External links | |
Official website | |
IMDb profile | |
TV.com summary |
National Bingo Night is an American game show hosted by Ed Sanders which premiered on ABC on May 18, 2007 with a six-episode order. Sanders is best known for his work on another ABC show, Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. The show was cancelled by ABC, and was repackaged into Bingo America on GSN, and hosted by Patrick Duffy.
The game is an interactive experience for both the studio audience and viewers at home. On NBN, members of the studio audience attempted to win a game of bingo while competing with a solo studio contestant. For Bingo America, it is played as a straight general knowledge quiz format with two players and a home viewer bingo game within.
Home viewers play along with pre-printed game cards that are available from the network website just before each episode airs, and are also eligible to win prizes. For example, on the premiere episode of NBN , prizes included gift cards from show sponsor Kmart, a trip to the Indianapolis 500, a seven-night cruise from Royal Caribbean, a visit to the set of fellow ABC series The View and Ugly Betty and a CD from the music group Rascal Flatts.
The show was expected to return for a five episode run during the week of December 17, 2007. [1][2] However on November 13, 2007, ABC decided to replace it instead with its new game show, Duel. Afterward, the show was shipped to other networks. Eventually, GSN won the rights, and the game was repackaged into a five-day-a-week 30-minute version with modifications listed below.
Contents |
[edit] General game play
[edit] National Bingo Night
Each hour-long episode of NBN was divided into three games, Red, White and Blue. Only cards with the correct designation were eligible to win prizes. Unlike the audience members, studio contestants did not actually have a bingo card. Instead, they participated in stunt games; for example, a simulated automobile race or a simulated wedding. During these games, they took guesses on what the next ball to be drawn from an over-sized bingo drum will be. On the premiere episode, the choices were: higher or lower than the one before it, odd or even, or with red or black decals (later changed to red or black numbers to avoid confusion) like a roulette wheel.
If the contestant successfully completed the stunt before anyone in the studio audience gets a bingo, the contestant wins one of various prizes. If not, then an audience member wins $5,000 (or a prize the studio contestant failed to win on at least one occasion). In case of a tie, the audience member wins. All games were winner-take-all; non-winning contestants did not even receive a consolation prize. The creator of this program, Andrew Glassman, also created the reality television game Average Joe.
[edit] Bingo America
The GSN format is still a bingo game, but now involves a quiz format. Two studio players play two games, with a "bank" that starts at a predetermined amount. After a ball is drawn, a question is asked. A correct answer earns the ball's letter, and cash equal to the number of the ball drawn (anywhere between 1 and 75) is added. The game ends when a studio player spells out "BINGO". Winning two games wins the bank. If both players win a game, then a best-of-five tiebreaker is played, with each answer starting with the letters "B-I-N-G-O". The winner then wins the money in the bank, and plays a bonus board worth up to US$100,000 by matching two like amounts of cash or a prize. At home players by matching two of the bonus numbers chosen by the player win $50.
[edit] Show notes
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- The premiere episode of this series drew a rating of 3.7 and share of 7, third behind a Dr. Phil special on CBS and Dateline NBC in its time slot.[3]
- On the premiere show, Michelle Slezak, a woman from Huntington Beach, California was the only studio winner, taking home $50,000. She guessed red or black correctly seven times in a row.
- The commissioner of National Bingo Night was Sunil Narkar, who is dressed in a referee's uniform and suit and tie. When a studio audience member thinks he/she has bingo, Narkar will check their card to see if it is an official bingo. This is a measure taken to prevent cheating. If no one in the audience has a bingo, Narkar will proclaim, "NOOOOOOO BINGO! Play is still on!" and the studio contestant continues the game.
- The callers have been Elizabeth Flores (May 18) and Yesenia Adame (remainder of the series). Yesenia was a dancer on ABC's short-lived Show Me the Money. On Bingo America, Laker Girl Crystal Wallasch serves as the bingo caller.
- The written disclaimer at the end NBN implied that some numbers are chosen for the studio audience game that are edited out of the televised version. Those numbers did not count for purposes of the home game. This is evident in the dubbing by the host throughout the broadcast, the absence of a display of the called balls in the studio, the statistical luck of audience members, and the common requests for bingo and one away from the audience when they are impossible from the given footage.
- The game is a seeded instant win sweepstakes. No matter what numbers are drawn or how many cards are printed, there will always be the pre-determined amount of winning cards in circulation.
- On the June 1 show, the White Card game played by Rebecca Johnson (which required drawing five balls with the number 5 in them, or four balls, provided G-55 is one of the balls drawn), lead to the highest prize given out on the show, $55,555. The game was also the quickest victory in the history of the show so far - so quick that the numbers that were drawn so far would be impossible to construct a Bingo with. To make things fair for home viewers, she drew one more ball from the machine (being a B1)