Last night, Australia saw the episode on which the contestant who was badly served by the \"high court\" question. Also last night, a current affairs program on a rival network aired its story about another contestant who, last November, had to suffer from a mistake made by that show.
In a nutshell, the story goes like this...
The contestant gets to the $125,000 question with his 50:50 and Ask The Audience still available to him. The question was:
The Rosetta Stone is a slab of what?
a) Alabaster b)Basalt
c) Granite d)Obsidian
The contestant was not too sure about the answer, so he asked the audience (it may seem odd using an Ask The Audience for the $125K question, but that's a different discussion), and a majority of them went for \"c\" (granite), which was the answer he was leaning towards anyway.
Since he still wasn't sure, he used his 50:50, and the remaining answers were \"b) Basalt\" and \"d) Obsidian\". Taking a punt, he locked in \"b\", but was told that the answer was \"d\", and he left with $32,000.
Then it started to get interesting...
It was believed for many years that the Rosetta Stone was made of Obsidian, but recent research (~1998, IIRC) indicated it was in fact Granite. Therefore, the correct answer was actually eliminated in the 50:50, and the show got it wrong again. The contestant, and a number of viewers tried to follow it up, but producers claimed that they stood by their research.
However, with this other network heavily promoting the story over the weekend, WWTBAM had to swallow its pride and invite the contestant to return, and he will be returning in about a fortnight.
I'm now watching to see what the side-effects are from a TV show overdosing on humble pie