""RABID DOG" r0b cyph3r" <nospambalst32nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in
message news:d8cvj3tjddkko38adks85g8ogctnnf5jaf@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Fri, 16 Nov 2007 20:02:20 -0500, Barry Margolin
> <barmar@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>>In article
>><ANIM8Rfsk-8E7DAA.20314515112007@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
>> Anim8rFSK <ANIM8Rfsk@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>
>>> In article <barmar-17542D.21052415112007@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
>>> Barry Margolin <barmar@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>>
>>> > In article
>>> > <00b20893-3c59-42af-9198-f15a399e21f4@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
>>> > stonej <stonej@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>> >
>>> > > I'm sure this has happened before, do they kick the person out and
>>> > > start the show over again
>>> > > or what?
>>> >
>>> > In the case of Wheel of Fortune they can easily toss out just that
>>> > puzzle.
>>> >
>>> > On Jeopardy I guess they have substitute questions.
>>>
>>> I've always wondered that about Wheel, when Pat is so adamantly
telling
>>> the audience to hush during the big bonus round, like if they spoil it
>>> the contestant loses.
>>>
>>> Of course, there is a strategy to be played here. If you had a friend
>>> in the audience, and he saw you weren't gonna guess it, he could yell
>>> out the answer at the last second, and get you another chance at a new
>>> puzzle. Maybe?
>>
>>I'll bet they'd do an investigation. If they discover that one of the
>>contestants knows the audience member who interfered, they could
>>probably disqualify him and take back his winnings.
>
> Not if they get Alex Trebek to say his name backwards first!
That only works for 90 days.
> --
> robcypher.livejournal.com
> RABID DOG AND SLAYER OF ALT.DRUGS.HARD


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