[quote name=\'Ian Wallis\' date=\'Mar 10 2005, 08:11 AM\']
Sorry, folks, but I just never trusted The Joker's Wild. I know network standards and practices would have kept a tight rein on the show (ESPECIALLY with you-know-who involved) but it always seemed they could manipulate the way the reels came up.
If that's your opinion I respect it...however, I think once Barry got back on television, he learned a bit of a lesson and wouldn't risk throwing it away after what happened before. In the "Come on Down" book, Dan Enright even states something to the effect of "...I'll never lie again, it's not worth it. I'll simply tell the truth, and bear the consequences".
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I'm not saying I have any evidence, or that it happened. But in watching the show, it just seemed like the "slot machine" could have been fixed to providing exciting games or help one contestant. And I thought this even before knowing about Barry/Enright and their roles in the quiz scandals. Maybe it was because it was the early 70s. Richard Nixon inspired that sort of paranoia in people.