After the 2 contestants bid on the showcase there was a commercial break. I left the room briefly and when I came back I found that someone had turned the channel so I couldn’t go back and rewind like I intended to.
Cool, thanks. I had watched the entire episode up until the last 2 minutes.
Normally I don’t get to watch TPIR as I work nights and am sleeping when it’s on and it’s not important enough to record. But I had to burn off some comp time this week (before July 1st or I’d lose it) so I’ve been up in the morning and enjoying morning TV before checking in on a store I also own. I love game shows, btw!
I saw an episode of (the Wayne Brady version of) Let’s Make A Deal where the fake booby prize someone won was a cage full of Ring-tail Lemurs. I wondered what would have happened if someone actually wanted their “joke” prize? If I won a cage full of lemurs I damn sure would want to go home with a cage full of lemurs.
That reminds me of when I was a kid in the late 60’s. Mixed in the ads for crazy junk only a kid would want were ones for a pet monkey. It was like $25 which might as well been a million because I didn’t have that either in 1969.
And nobody ever thought they were going to actually get a real freaking monkey. Expected it to be bullshit like the cardboard submarine kids got that would have disintegrated if any water had touched it.
Except they did! The company sent out a live squirrel monkey in a cardboard box! Through the mail, yet!
I always longed for one of those comic book/Boy’s Life ad Squirrel monkeys. I still do! I knew they were real because the weird kid in my neighborhood got one. He took it to school one day for Show & Tell. The monkey bit some students, causing a notorious grade-school incident. That made me want one even more. But, $25 was out of my pre-adolescent price range.
I could however afford $1.00 for a tank full of sea monkeys!
I was particularly interested in seeing nude Mrs. Sea Monkey close up and personal (hey, cut me some slack, my hormones were just kicking in).
So, I mailed in the order form along with my hard-earned $1.00. 8-12 weeks later, I was the proud owner of (drum roll)…a glass full of crap.
Apparently sea monkeys are brine shrimp, which is disappointing enough, but I’m pretty sure they just sent me mosquito larva.
This happened on the old Monty Hall version. IIRC, one of the zonks was a cow or a bull - and the contestant had some idea how much one was really worth. Normally, after the episode ended, the producers would “trade” a normal prize of some sort for a zonk.
On the Wayne Brady version, all zonks are clearly marked “ZONK”; I assume that all contestants sign something that says, “You don’t actually win a prize that is marked as a Zonk.”