[quote name=\'Don Howard\' post=\'79123\' date=\'Mar 23 2005, 02:06 AM\']
[quote name=\'ChuckNet\' date=\'Mar 22 2005, 08:47 PM\']
Minor nit: Fortune Hunt did have a car space, usually a Ford Thunderbird. IIRC, you could take the car and leave, or keep playing.
(slaps forehead) Yeah, my bad...in fact, I think a contestant hit the car, then opted to take it and leave on one of the eps that's on the circuit.
Chuck Donegan (The Illustrious "Chuckie Baby")
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Ah, yes! The first host of that (I forget his name) at least twice botched that part of the show up. Instead of telling the player who selected that space what his/her options were, he went to the announcer and asked, "Bill Barber, what does this mean for our Fortune Hunter?" and both times Bill said, "Itttttttttt means our contestant has to make a choice". This memory came back to me later while watching
Beat The Clock when Sonny Fox asked Bern Bennett to "introduce the next two contestants" who were the same couple who had just competed sixty full seconds ago--good ol' short term memory.
Worst of the local shows I've seen on Cleveland TV: The original format to
Cash Explosion--up the ladder, down the ladder, up the ladder, down the ladder. Yawn!! The best? Hmmmmm. Can't beat the
Prize Movie (1975-93; 1994). Here's a mini-clip (the one featuring two kids looking at a tree and saying "Is that the tree?" comes to mind)--identify the movie.
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Oh I remember that show! "The $100,000 Fortune Hunt". And yup you're right, it was a dreary concept, but then again, since it was a lottery game show and you only needed a dollar (the cost of the scratcher), some luck, and the IQ of room temperature to be on it, stands to reason the format couldn't be all that complicated.
And I also remember the original host. His name was Jeff Coopwood. And frankly, he was the only reason to watch the show. He actually made it fun. His ad libs with the contestants, and good sense of timing and pacing actually made the thing fun. I remember his co-host was Linda Kollmeyer, who was a kewpie doll, Vanna-type who had a voice like sandpaper. She is still drawing balls for their Lotto contests! Wow! Talk about a career move! And I also remember that chick that ran the lottery back then. Her name was Sharon Sharpe, and she was a total camera hog. She couldn't read the teleprompter for squat and always had that "deer caught in the headlights" look! Too funny, and too sad. But yeah, as I recall, Coopwood bailed after the first year and they replaced him with some dude named Mike Jackson, who had been a local tv news guy, and he was so boring he made watching weeds grow more entertaining! Besides, I remember some news story that he got the job because his wife was some state government honcho! Too funny, and too lame! As I recall, another news report said that the ratings for the show nose-dived after Coopwood left -they were actually higher than "Wheel of Fortune" in Chicago when he was there, (and Pat Sajak is FROM Chicago!) - and they just died after Coopwood left. So apparently I'm not the only person who really liked him on that show.
And I remember that faux pas about him asking the announcer "what does the contestant win", at the wrong time, because that was the format of the show, to throw it to the announcer for a description of the prize. But I also remember that was the show's pilot episode! And they shot live-to-tape without stops, so I suppose only one mistake in the pilot isn't that bad. And he only did that once, not twice. Like I said, Coopwood was the only real reason to watch this dreck. And good for him that he got out when he did, because he might be stuck still drawing lotto balls with Linda Kollmeyer! LOL