But in this specific case, after you see the first price in Ten Chances has been accidentally revealed, throwing up a curtain (or dropping the Race Game flat) while you double check the other 2 prizes would be far lest costly. I think Bob was making a statement to the staff.
As I had it explained to me some time ago, even when the sliding of the numbers became manual, Ten Chances still had electricity running through it. When the contestant wrote the correct number, they would engage the button, so when Bob pressed it, it would actually work. Apparently, a short had run through the game and dropped all the prices. Since it happened between when the game was set up and when the game was played, nobody caught it.
So, suffice it to say, this was likely nothing more than a technical error beyond anyone's control and, in his capacity as Grand Poobah Executive Producer, Barker decided to needlessly poke someone in the eye while costing CBS and the production company $20,000...
Thanks for injecting the logic and reality I was seeking...much appreciated...
JakeT
Jake, I'm pretty sure CBS wasn't out anything. The production company, on the other hand, was.
I'm also pretty sure you're simplifying things by calling it a "2-minute" stopdown. I'm not an expert on this, but I suspect that anything involving changing a game once a contestant is engaged in the game probably requires a standards and practices review to ensure that nothing improper is happening. Networks and production companies take that kind of thing VERY seriously. Given the cost of studio time, extra labor, etc., I can imagine that one quickly gets to where "just moving on" is the right move if more than a simple stopdown is required.
Plus, there is some likelihood that the contestant would have won the game if it had been played normally. So the cost to the production company ISN'T $20,000, it's a probabilistic amount based on the probability that the contestant would have won anyway. [EDIT: Sorry, Army - I didn't see your post when I wrote this. Full credit to you for this.]
Also, keep in mind that the show was pretty much done live to tape at the time, unlike now with more edits and stopdowns. So a stopdown would have been more out of the ordinary for an issue as opposed to just continuing on.
I think you're over-exaggerating the issue significantly with your word choice and tone.