[quote name=\'sotcfan2004\' date=\'May 24 2004, 01:04 PM\'] I'm sure many of us were thinking the same thing when WWTBAM first premiered in 1999. Since then, playing for millions on TV is no big thing. Take Dan Blonsky (Millionaire #2). At first glance, he didn't seem to sure of the answer. But, after talking it out, he finally decided on the right one, thus putting him in an entirely new tax bracket. It's happened before, and it can happen again.
[/quote]
I agree with the original poster, the million winners have all been certain of the answer before they went on.
My impression when watching Blonsky was that his reaction was "Whoa, that's a damn easy question. Ok, hold on here, check this through. Don't throw it away by doing something stupid. Is there some trick question I'm missing?" After pausing, double checking, he was certain when he went ahead. His facial expression and reaction during the final question is not one of doubt or uncertainty.
Same thing for Trela. As a computer geek, I'm sure he knew that moth question. That's standard beginning computer course stuff. He went through that same thought process, and I've always thought that he stretched out the tension intentionally. I always admired him for that, if it was me and that question had popped up I'd have been yelling "Moth, final answer" and jumping up and down before the four possible answers appeared.
With Joe needing the money, and his situation at the time, there's no way he risks $500K without being certan.
Carpenter we know that he was 100% sure. So, who does that leave us with? I don't remember these wins well enough to comment on exactly how confident they appeared:
Bob House (element named after scientists)
Kim Hunt (landlocked country)
David Goodman (Paddington country)
Bernie Cullen (airplane registration)
Kevin Olmstead (Sikorsky helicopter)
Ed Toutant (aerosol cans)