Dirty Money

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(Synopsis)
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The rules change slightly after the fourth contestant is eliminated. They can split their money between the remaining two players however they want, instead of being forced to give it all to one player and almost certainly creating a very uneven final round (though they can of course still do this if they wish). Also, each answer in the final wound was worth £100. Whoever had the most money in the final round gets to play for all £3,000 in the exciting and highly original answer-six-questions-in-sixty-seconds end game (although with 75 seconds instead, presumably as Marcus' reading style is hardly what you would characterize as 'quick-fire'). If they win they keep all the cash. If they lose however, they've got to give all the cash to the player of their choosing. So it's worth thinking about who you give your money to if you get eliminated.
The rules change slightly after the fourth contestant is eliminated. They can split their money between the remaining two players however they want, instead of being forced to give it all to one player and almost certainly creating a very uneven final round (though they can of course still do this if they wish). Also, each answer in the final wound was worth £100. Whoever had the most money in the final round gets to play for all £3,000 in the exciting and highly original answer-six-questions-in-sixty-seconds end game (although with 75 seconds instead, presumably as Marcus' reading style is hardly what you would characterize as 'quick-fire'). If they win they keep all the cash. If they lose however, they've got to give all the cash to the player of their choosing. So it's worth thinking about who you give your money to if you get eliminated.
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<div class="image">[[Image:Dirty_money_studio.jpg|400px]]
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''Contestants facing the shop window of Dixons''</div>
Not much in the way of music or set really. The players are sitting on stools in front of a blue screen with a videowall off to the left, which the camera pans and then zooms into for the opening of each round. With a round in progress viewers see each contestant in a window with the amount of cash on an electronic counter thing. The clock is all trendy (i.e. it updates every ten seconds).
Not much in the way of music or set really. The players are sitting on stools in front of a blue screen with a videowall off to the left, which the camera pans and then zooms into for the opening of each round. With a round in progress viewers see each contestant in a window with the amount of cash on an electronic counter thing. The clock is all trendy (i.e. it updates every ten seconds).

Revision as of 12:26, 26 June 2006

Contents

Host

Marcus Bentley (voiceover)

Broadcast

12 Yard for Sky 1, 2002

Synopsis

Marcus Bentley gives £500 to six people and challenges them to keep hold of it. Each round consists of 90 seconds of general knowledge questions on the buzzer. Get a question correct and you can nick £50 from any player. Get it wrong and you have to give £50 to any player. At the end of each round, the person with the lowest amount of cash is eliminated. But they don't get to keep the cash - oh no! Instead they have to give their "dirty money" to the player of their choosing. As you can well imagine this is of more importance as the eliminations progress.

The rules change slightly after the fourth contestant is eliminated. They can split their money between the remaining two players however they want, instead of being forced to give it all to one player and almost certainly creating a very uneven final round (though they can of course still do this if they wish). Also, each answer in the final wound was worth £100. Whoever had the most money in the final round gets to play for all £3,000 in the exciting and highly original answer-six-questions-in-sixty-seconds end game (although with 75 seconds instead, presumably as Marcus' reading style is hardly what you would characterize as 'quick-fire'). If they win they keep all the cash. If they lose however, they've got to give all the cash to the player of their choosing. So it's worth thinking about who you give your money to if you get eliminated.

Contestants facing the shop window of Dixons

Not much in the way of music or set really. The players are sitting on stools in front of a blue screen with a videowall off to the left, which the camera pans and then zooms into for the opening of each round. With a round in progress viewers see each contestant in a window with the amount of cash on an electronic counter thing. The clock is all trendy (i.e. it updates every ten seconds).

Marcus Bentley hosts in robotic voiceover form. Robotic because there was no variation of phrases used to control the game. Also, for some reason, rather than just let the player announce who they're going to give their money to when they lose, Bentley asks "are you going to give it to..." for each player until it's given away. Baffling.

Chalk another one up for the David Young No-one Can Get Too Confident Factory.

Catchphrases

"...and the clock... is ticking."

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