Wheel of Fortune | |
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Wheel of Fortune title card from Season 27 (2009-2010) |
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Format | Game show |
Created by | Merv Griffin |
Directed by | Dick Carson (1978–2000) Mark Corwin (2000–present) |
Presented by | Network Host Chuck Woolery (1975-1981) Pat Sajak (1981-1989) Rolf Benirschke (1989) Bob Goen (1989–1991) Hostess Susan Stafford (1975–1982) Vanna White (1982–1991) Syndication Host Pat Sajak (1983–present) Hostess Vanna White (1983–present) |
Narrated by | Charlie O'Donnell (1975–1980, 1989–present) Jack Clark (1980–1988) M. G. Kelly (1988–1989) |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | Network 4,215 Syndication 5,265 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Merv Griffin (1975–2000) Harry Friedman (1999–present) |
Producer(s) | John Reinhardt (1975-1980) Nancy Jones (1980–1997) Harry Friedman (1995–1999) Karen Griffith (1997–present) Steve Schwartz (1997–present) |
Location(s) | NBC Studios Burbank, California (1975–1989) CBS Television City Hollywood, California (1989–1995) Sony Pictures Studios Culver City, California (1995–present) |
Running time | 22 minutes |
Production company(s) | Merv Griffin Productions (1975–1984) Merv Griffin Enterprises (1984–1994) Columbia TriStar Television (1994–2002) Sony Pictures Television (2002–present) Califon Productions (1975–1991, 1983–present) |
Distributor | King World Productions (1983–2007) CBS Television Distribution (2007–present) |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | NBC (1975–1989, 1991) CBS (1989–1991) Syndicated (1983–present) |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV) 720p/1080i (HDTV) |
Original run | Network January 6, 1975 – September 20, 1991 Syndication September 19, 1983 – present |
External links | |
Official website |
Wheel of Fortune is an American television game show created by Merv Griffin. Contestants compete to solve word puzzles, similar to those used in Hangman, to win cash and prizes. The current broadcast syndicated version of the program premiered on September 19, 1983 and is hosted by Pat Sajak and Vanna White. In a 2008 article, TV Guide named Wheel of Fortune as the "top-rated syndicated series."[1]
The original network television version aired from 1975–1991 on NBC and CBS, and was hosted at different times by Chuck Woolery, Rolf Benirschke, Bob Goen, and Susan Stafford, in addition to Sajak and White. While retaining most of the elements from the daytime version, the syndicated version added many new gameplay elements and is the longest-running syndicated game show in United States television history, with over 5,000 episodes aired.[2]
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Wheel of Fortune premiered on January 6, 1975 at 10:30 AM (9:30 Central). Lin Bolen, then the head of Daytime Programming at NBC, purchased the show from Griffin to compensate him for canceling another creation of his, Jeopardy!, which had one year remaining on its contract and aired its final episode on the Friday before Wheel of Fortune's premiere. This version aired on NBC until June 30, 1989.
From December 1, 1975 to January 16, 1976, the program expanded each episode to 60 minutes. Two three-round games were played on each episode, with two different sets of three contestants in each game. The winners of each game played a head-to-head speed-up round, with the winner of that round playing the bonus round.
The program aired on CBS from July 17, 1989 until January 11, 1991, then moved back to NBC from January 14 to September 20, 1991.
The current syndicated version, airing in prime time access, premiered on September 19, 1983. The version's 28th season premiere was recorded at The Venetian and The Palazzo in Las Vegas and is scheduled to air on September 13, 2010.[3] The syndicated version, which is currently produced by Sony Pictures Television and distributed by CBS Television Distribution[4], is the longest-running syndicated game show in American television history and the second-longest in either network or syndication (behind the current version of The Price Is Right, which began airing in 1972). It is also the third longest-running first-run syndicated program in the United States, behind Entertainment Tonight (which began in 1981) and Soul Train (which aired new episodes from 1971–2006).
The syndicated version of Wheel of Fortune was offered to many of the stations that were already airing the network version, nearly all of whom passed on it due to commitments to other shows (including the NBC owned-and-operated stations, which all were running the hit Family Feud in the Prime Time Access slots). Although Wheel of Fortune did not debut on many stations upon its entrance into syndication, the series was offered to and picked up by most of the owned-and-operated stations held by CBS.
When it debuted, the syndicated version offered a larger prize budget than its daytime counterpart,[5] such as a $5,000 wedge on the Wheel. By 1986, the show had the highest ratings of any syndicated television series in history.[5]
The original Shopper's Bazaar pilot is held by GSN, but has not been aired by the network. A color promotional picture from that taping, showing Chuck Woolery standing in front of the wheel, was used in the A&E Biography "TV Game Shows". A Woolery episode from June 7, 1976 exists in the Library of Congress and in the GSN library. This was one of three daytime episodes shown on GSN as part of a memorial tribute to Merv Griffin in August 2007, the only time a Woolery episode has re-aired since his departure.
Clips of early daytime episodes hosted by Sajak, plus portions of White's audition tape, have been seen on the syndicated version's retrospective episodes.
The E! True Hollywood Story episode chronicling the show's history showed pictures of the 1973 pilot plus footage of a 1974 pilot, 1975 premiere, Stafford's last episode, McCarty making entrances as substitute hostess and White's audition tape.
A pilot was taped in late 1973, hosted by Chuck Woolery, followed by two additional pilots hosted by Edd Byrnes in late 1974. All three pilots contained game elements which were either retooled or dropped before the time production began in 1975. Woolery was eventually selected to host, the choice being made by Griffin after he reportedly heard Byrnes reciting "A-E-I-O-U" to himself in an effort to remember the vowels.[6] The original pilot did not include a hostess, but featured a mechanical puzzle board. When the program premiered, Susan Stafford was hired as the hostess because changes to the puzzle board could not be completed before production began.
After seven years as host, Woolery left Wheel of Fortune following a salary dispute with Griffin; his last episode aired on December 25, 1981.[7] Pat Sajak, a former weatherman,[5] replaced Woolery the following Monday on December 28, 1981.
Stafford left the program on October 22, 1982 to pursue humanitarian work. Vanna White became the program's permanent hostess on December 13, 1982. Substitute hostesses after Stafford's departure were Summer Bartholomew, Vicki McCarty and White.
Sajak left the daytime version on January 9, 1989, to host a late-night talk show for CBS, which failed to make ratings headway against Johnny Carson on NBC. He was replaced on that version by Rolf Benirschke, who had an 8-year career as a placekicker of the San Diego Chargers. Benirschke hosted the program for only six months, until NBC cancelled it on June 30. Bob Goen replaced Benirschke as the daytime version's host in July 1989, and remained host for the remainder of its run. Sajak and White have hosted the syndicated version since its premiere on September 19, 1983.
Charlie O'Donnell was the program's first announcer until his departure from the program in 1980 due to his obligations to other shows. Jack Clark, a veteran announcer and host whose credits include The Cross-Wits, Split Second, and The $25,000 Pyramid, replaced O'Donnell and announced for 8 years until his death in 1988. M. G. Kelly, a local disc-jockey from Los Angeles, announced for several months until O'Donnell became the permanent announcer in March 1989. Don Pardo, Don Morrow and Johnny Gilbert have occasionally served as substitute announcers.[8]
The core game is a variation of hangman. Word puzzles, with blank spaces representing the letters in the puzzle, are presented with an appropriate category. On their turn, a contestant can spin a giant wheel to determine a dollar value and guess a letter that they believe is in the puzzle, earning the value multiplied by how many times the guessed letter appears in the puzzle (if any). Before spinning, players can also buy a vowel for $250. The Wheel also contains special spaces which affect the course of gameplay, as well as special prizes. While other non-cash wedges have varied in the show's history, the Wheel has always featured Bankrupt and Lose a Turn, both of which forfeit the contestant's turn, with the former also eliminating any cash and/or prizes earned within that round.
Originally, after winning a round, players spent the money earned during the game while "shopping" for prizes. The prize showcases changed each round and only one player could buy a particular prize on each given episode. According to the E! True Hollywood Story episode on Wheel of Fortune, Lin Bolen is credited with implementing the shopping concept as well as the idea to have the wheel horizontally mounted. This story sometimes conflicts with other accounts; for example, on an A&E Biography episode, Merv Griffin said that his initial idea of the presentation of the show was "a stage full of prizes". The shopping element was eliminated from the syndicated version in 1987 and from the network version in 1989. Since that time, players receive their game winnings in cash.
At the end of the game, the highest-scoring contestant plays a bonus round. The contestant is given a smaller, partially filled-in puzzle and asked for additional letters to assist in solving it within a ten-second time limit. A correct solve earns a bonus prize which is determined by spinning a smaller wheel prior to the beginning of the bonus round.
The network version allowed champions to appear for up to three days (originally five). However, the winner on Rolf Benirschke's last episode, even though he had not yet won three games, was not brought back as returning champion on Bob Goen's first show when the program changed networks and formats.
On the daytime version, a tie game meant that no bonus round was played that day and all three players returned on the next show, even if one finished behind the other two. The cumulative scores from both days were used to determine which player became the champion.
On the syndicated version from 1983–1989 and again since 1998, contestants have been limited to one appearance, though some have been allowed to return under special circumstances. From 1996–1998, the top three winners (including contestants that had not played the bonus round from the week's first four shows) returned to compete in the "Friday Finals", with a Jackpot beginning at $10,000 instead of $5,000. From 1996–1997, the winner of the Friday episode received an additional prize package.
The current record for winnings on a Wheel of Fortune episode is Michelle Loewenstein. On October 14, 2008, Loewenstein became the first contestant to win $1,000,000[9] after the top prize was increased on September 8[10] of that year. Her total was $1,026,080.
The Wheel mechanism weighs two tons (4,000 lbs.)[11] and is surrounded by light extensions. From 1975 until 1997, the Wheel spun automatically during the show's opening and closing and featured alternating gold lights and panels. These were replaced by a metallic blue circle surrounded by gold panels, with several similar paneled spikes going around the Wheel and the Wheel no longer spun automatically during these segments. The current LED and glass light extension debuted in 2003.
The green inner circle that is part of the wheel was purposefully colored in that hue to allow chroma key shots upon the wheel itself, usually during the credit roll and prize descriptions. Specifically because of this, green-shaded wedges were excluded from the wheel until the chroma key use was later eliminated.
When the program premiered the minimum value on the wheel was $25 and the top dollar value was $500 in round one, $750 in round two and $1,000 for each round thereafter. In 1976, the minimum was raised to $100 and the top amounts were changed to $1,000 in round two and $1,500 for later rounds. In 1979, the top amounts were increased to $750 in round one, $1,000 in round two and $2,000 for the rest of the game, remaining at those values until the end of the first NBC run.
When the syndicated version of the program premiered in 1983, the values on the wheel were slightly higher than those used for the daytime version of the show. While the daytime top-dollar values in 1986 for rounds one, two and three were $750, $1,000 and $2,000, respectively, the top-dollar values on the syndicated version were $1,000 for both rounds one and two and $5,000 in round three. Prior to 1996, three different dollar value configurations were used during each show. There have never been amounts under $100 on the syndicated version. The current configuration is based on the one formerly used in round three (round two before 1987). In 2008, the configurations were revamped slightly, with the addition of a few new colors and dollar values.
When the network version moved to CBS and introduced an all-cash format in 1989, most spaces on the wheel had their values cut in half, making them an even smaller fraction of the analogous values on the syndicated version. The top values on the wheel were $500 for the first two rounds, $1,000 for round three and $1,250 for round four and beyond. $50 and $75 spaces appeared on the wheel for the first time since 1976, but those and some other spaces were eventually raised in value. To compensate for lower payouts, the price of vowels on this version was initially decreased to $200 and again to $100 in 1990.
Prizes placed on the wheel, similar to those on the syndicated version but smaller in value, were introduced at this time, beginning with a trip to Lake Tahoe valued at $916. The first prize was introduced at the beginning of round two, and additional prizes were placed on the wheel in rounds three and four, with new prizes added if previous ones had been claimed. By the time of the last CBS episode in 1991, the prizes were usually worth around $2,000-$4,000. However, payouts still paled in comparison to those offered on the syndicated version. When the show returned to NBC in 1991, a prize was introduced at the beginning of round one as well.
Bonus round prizes offered on the all-cash network version were considerably smaller as well, with a $5,000 cash prize instead of $25,000 and cars in the $10,000-$15,000 range instead of the more expensive prizes frequently offered on the syndicated version.
Various changes have been made to the basic set since the syndicated version's premiere in 1983, including changes to the color of the floor and various additions of lights/strobes to the puzzle board and contestant backdrops.
In 1996, a large video display was added center stage, which was then upgraded in 2003 as the show began the transition into high-definition broadcasting. The set decorations change with each weekly set of themed programs. Dick Stiles was the show's first art director, and the production is currently designed by Renee Hoss-Johnson.
The network and syndicated versions of Wheel of Fortune were originally taped at Studio 4 in NBC Studios. In 1989, the program moved its taping location to Studio 33 in CBS Television City. Since 1995, the syndicated version has been taped at Stage 11 in Sony Pictures Studios.
From 1975 until 1997, the show used a manually-operated puzzle board composed of 48 trilons in four rows (11, 13, 13 and 11, respectively). The board was surrounded by a double-arched border of lights which flashed at the beginning and end of the round. When a letter was placed in the puzzle, its space lit up and the hostess turned the trilon to reveal it. On February 24, 1997, the show adopted a computerized board composed of 52 monitors (adding one space to each row). To illuminate a letter during regular gameplay, the hostess simply touches the right edge of the monitor, although the board may be controlled remotely to reveal letters or solutions. The new puzzle board made Toss-Up puzzles possible and also facilitated an evolution of the hostess' role, which was originally justified by the need to turn letters. The original puzzle board was offered to the Smithsonian Institution, but was rejected as they did not have enough space.
The digital board also no longer requires taping to stop in segments that feature more than one puzzle. While the viewers at home saw a seamless transition to the next puzzle, what actually happened was a show stop down, during which the board was wheeled off stage while the new puzzle was loaded in by hand out of sight of the contestants, who typically stood in some place on the sound stage where they could not see the board. With the new board, no stop downs were necessary, meaning tapings could finish more quickly at a lower cost to the production company. In 2003, the gold panels were replaced with the current LED and glass light extension. In 2007, the current puzzle board was revamped with new flat screens.
The first puzzle board had three rows of trilons and a total of 39 spaces. A larger board with an additional row of trilons and 48 total spaces (11 on the top and bottom rows and 13 on the middle two rows) and decorative arched light border was adopted on December 21, 1981. The second board became popularly associated with the show and remained in place through February 21, 1997.
The contestants stand behind a large, padded railing that provides leverage when spinning the wheel. The area behind the contestants originally contained colored shapes (red for Player 1, yellow for Player 2, and blue for Player 3) that provided a backdrop as well as an additional scoreboard for displaying the amount a contestant had placed "on account" (see Shopping). In early 1997, the backdrops were removed in favor of a display that fit the theme for that week's set of tapings. In 1998, a video wall replaced the themed backdrops displayed behind the contestant. This video wall was upgraded in 2003.
Until 2002, the show used eggcrate displays to display scores. The eggcrate displays were replaced by LCD monitors in 2002 and again were replaced by flat-screen plasma displays in 2007. Also beginning in 2002, special animations play on these monitors if a contestant lands on "Bankrupt" or "Lose a Turn".
On the 1974 pilots, the prizes were placed behind the puzzle board. After a puzzle was solved, the board was quickly wheeled off stage to reveal the prizes. When the series began, the studio had individual podiums for each of the three main-game prize showcases which were placed center stage and in the area behind where the host stood. On December 21, 1981, a single large turntable was adopted, which displayed the prizes for each round as it was played. When the bonus round was instituted the following Monday, gold stars indicated the larger prizes that were also available in that round.
With the move to CBS and the adoption of the cash format in July 1989, the turntable was retired. Smaller turntables featuring replica wheel templates were used to display the prizes (mostly cars) available in the bonus round.
The theme heard on the 1974 pilots was "Give it One", composed by Maynard Ferguson. The song was released on the Columbia LP "M.F. Horn Two", which was re-released on CD by Wounded Bird[12] in 2006.
"Big Wheels", the theme used from 1975–1983, was written by Alan Thicke and credited to Stan Worth. Thicke also contributed all the prize cues including "Glorious Sax", "Hip Check", and "Lusherous". "Big Wheels" was replaced by the Merv Griffin-composed "Changing Keys" on August 8, 1983 (beginning an "Armed Forces Week") in anticipation of the syndicated version's launch, so that Griffin could derive royalties from its use on both versions. Griffin also wrote an entirely new set of prize cues for the show at that time. A remix of "Changing Keys" debuted in Summer 1984 during a week featuring Olympic athletes. "Changing Keys" was rearranged when the show moved to CBS. This included a jazzier arrangement of the original melody, featuring saxophones and updated percussion backings. This theme was used on both the daytime and syndicated versions after production moved to CBS, and was retained for the remainder of the daytime show.
Since 2000, the main theme of the show has been "Happy Wheels" by the late Steve Kaplan, which was remixed in 2002 and 2004 by Kaplan and in 2006 by Frankie Blue. Since 2006, a theme by John Hoke and Frankie Blue has been used.
Numerous board game versions of the game show have been released by different toy companies. The games are all similar, incorporating a wheel, puzzle display board, play money and various accessories like Free Spin tokens. Milton Bradley released the first board game in 1975. In addition to all the supplies mentioned above, the game included 20 prize cards (to simulate the "shopping" prizes of the show; the prizes ranged in value from $100 to $3,000). Two editions were released. Other home versions were released by Pressman Toy Corporation, Tyco/Mattel, Parker Brothers, Endless Games and Irwin Toys, each including and updating gameplay elements seen on the show at the time.
Additionally, several video game versions have also been released for computers, the internet, and various gaming consoles.
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