[quote name=\'clemon79\' date=\'Mar 14 2006, 12:28 PM\']I liked it, personally, but if I were a betting man I would say they changed it because the players who WERE doing well in it were taking the money and bolting before they could get up to those ratings-grabbing later nights, and the players who were doing well in the front game but not in Ten Inna Row were putting together uninteresting bank accounts, which made the $500K in gold dwarf it and made it uninteresting.
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Case in point: the night one champion scampers to the top of the chain with ten correct answers. On night two, he decides to take the prize and leave, with roughly $120,000. Of the remaining champions of premiere week, the top cash account was $1,000. How many people would have gone all the way to win the advertised $1.2 million? Not many, I'd bet, because to get that far, you have to risk the cash account, and get $100,000 each night. And that compared to the night three Parisian holiday looks silly. For all the good things about Ten in a Row, the decision wasn't compelling television.