Somehow doesn't surprise me in the least. Reminds me of a couple of moments I've seen on Press Your Luck where an audience member shouted an answer out, and the contestants heard it, and Peter responded by bellowing at the audience to "STOP IT!" in a manner I've never seen from any other host, before or since. I mean, he sounded legit pissed, like he was ready to stop tape right there, if he could've.
Maybe it wasn't the first time that taping session. If you have to stop tape and replace a question because some idiot says the answer aloud, it's time consuming, annoying, and costs the contestant who actually knew the answer. I'm pretty sure studio audiences are told not to shout out answers during the warmup to every show, but some people can't help themselves.
When I attended
The Money Maze, Alan Kalter made a point of telling the audience during the warmup we were allowed to physically root for the couples as they were running the maze... but we were not to make a sound. Sure enough, somebody said, "Go! Go!" during one of the runs for a prize; the contestants didn't win the prize, and Kalter made a point of saying that was why we had to be quiet.
*****
Getting back to the original subject, the Facebook thread I mentioned concerned Woolery's firing from
WoF, which Randy said only happened after Fred Silverman was bounced from NBC--I was confused because Silverman was let go six months before Woolery's departure.
Broadcasting had nothing about that one way or the other.
And the sources on the interwebs are so off--Wikipedia says in Sajak's entry that Merv told Silverman said he'd put a moratorium on taping
WoF until Sajak was the host, citing Merv's book
Merv: Making the Good Life Last as the source; the book says he gave NBC's daytime head ("who'd replaced Lin Bolen"--not mentioning Madeline David had been her actual replacement) that ultimatum instead, not Fred Silverman. (The book also says Chuck left on his own, and doesn't mention the salary dispute.) I'm not sure why NBC wouldn't have wanted Sajak as host given he'd done the
Puzzlers pilot for the network the year before, but whatever.
So all of the principals surrounding Chuck's exit are gone except Chuck, and he probably isn't talking about it. All I can ascertain is Chuck was looking to hold down a talk show gig in 1981.