25 reviews
It's a good show, but I've noticed that all of the contestants have been the same for the past 20 years i.e. middle class white men. It would be great to see more diversity. Something in their process should prioritise & enable a more diverse range of participants to be shown on the show. But I appreciate that it also depends on the type of people applying.
Chris Tarrant was a brilliant host. Initially I thought that Jeremy Clarkson was okay, but I've realised that he's really patronising - he has made a few contestants look demoralised.
Chris Tarrant was a brilliant host. Initially I thought that Jeremy Clarkson was okay, but I've realised that he's really patronising - he has made a few contestants look demoralised.
As a Bangladeshi born American living in California, where we are really friendly like Canadians, I initially found Jeremy Clarkson to be the embodiment of insufferable British smugness. He is repugnantly superior, patronizing, and dismissive of his fellow human beings. Just his presence makes the show offputting.
However I love how he used "volte-face" in a sentence and traveled the world and even relishing plane crashing in Mali. I love that in a person - intellect.
So once you get used to the British bluntness you may start to appreciate the show more.
The selection of questions are generally quite good.
However I love how he used "volte-face" in a sentence and traveled the world and even relishing plane crashing in Mali. I love that in a person - intellect.
So once you get used to the British bluntness you may start to appreciate the show more.
The selection of questions are generally quite good.
- TheManWhoKnewTooMuch1111
- Aug 28, 2024
- Permalink
When WWTBAM was first broadcast in Britian it was the main talking point in the country . What a brilliant but simple idea for a TV quiz , answer 15 consecutive multiple choice questions with the difficulty in questions going up alongside the money . The nation started copying Chris Tarrant`s catchphrases: " Phone a friend , 50-50 " etc and what a quiz master Tarrant was as he continually put the contestants off :
Nervous contestant : I think it`s B Chris . I`ll play . B
Tarrant : You sure ? You`ll lose 15, 000 pound if you`re wrong . You`ve still got two lifelines left . 15,000 pound . You`ll loose that . Two lifelines you can use them if you want
Then the nervous contestant would waste his last two life lines
Tarrant : Final answer ? The correct answer is B . So you were right all along
Cut to nervous contestant who`s just realised Tarrant has cost him his last two lifelines .
Yeah this was a great show as was its format of being on 8 consecutive nights then off air for about 6 weeks then on for another 8 consecutive nights but then ITV decided to put on 3 times a week from late Summer to late Spring WWTBAM never seemed to off the screens which meant a lot of people including myself became very fed up with it . The producers vainly tried to spice it up with charity editions and couples editions before switching to showing only one episode a week , but too late they`d milked the idea for what it was worth and that`s what killed the show along with Tarrant spending too much time talking to the contestants and it`s only a matter of time before it`s cancelled for good
R.I.P WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE
Nervous contestant : I think it`s B Chris . I`ll play . B
Tarrant : You sure ? You`ll lose 15, 000 pound if you`re wrong . You`ve still got two lifelines left . 15,000 pound . You`ll loose that . Two lifelines you can use them if you want
Then the nervous contestant would waste his last two life lines
Tarrant : Final answer ? The correct answer is B . So you were right all along
Cut to nervous contestant who`s just realised Tarrant has cost him his last two lifelines .
Yeah this was a great show as was its format of being on 8 consecutive nights then off air for about 6 weeks then on for another 8 consecutive nights but then ITV decided to put on 3 times a week from late Summer to late Spring WWTBAM never seemed to off the screens which meant a lot of people including myself became very fed up with it . The producers vainly tried to spice it up with charity editions and couples editions before switching to showing only one episode a week , but too late they`d milked the idea for what it was worth and that`s what killed the show along with Tarrant spending too much time talking to the contestants and it`s only a matter of time before it`s cancelled for good
R.I.P WHO WANTS TO BE A MILLIONAIRE
- Theo Robertson
- Dec 8, 2002
- Permalink
This is a good idea for a quiz show format, but it was a big mistake having Chris Tarrant as its presenter. He's at his worst here: very annoying and smug. He wastes a lot of time asking the contestants irrelevant things about their personal lives. When the actual quiz questions start, the first few are ridiculously easy. After those pointless starter questions, Tarrant often takes a ridiculously long time between the contestant giving his/her answer and revealing the answer.
Another problem is the lifelines. 50:50 just reduces the risk of being knocked out from 3 in 4 to 1 in 2. Ask the audience is only useful early on, because most of them have a severe lack of general knowledge. It's common for the majority of the audience to choose the wrong answer during that lifeline.
Another problem is the lifelines. 50:50 just reduces the risk of being knocked out from 3 in 4 to 1 in 2. Ask the audience is only useful early on, because most of them have a severe lack of general knowledge. It's common for the majority of the audience to choose the wrong answer during that lifeline.
It was a great show in the early years but lost alot of sparkle. Like him or not Clarkson is a great host in this show.
- ronbell-23984
- May 15, 2020
- Permalink
Who want to be a millionaire. Tonight's episode 5/5/24 was a shambolic effort by Clarkson. Im only writing this after he blatantly shafted the last contestant. When she "asked the host" regarding the cat question, he clearly knew some important details that would of come in very handy for her to answer the question. You could see in his face immediately that he messed up and then dithered around mumbling some incoherent rubbish. Complete disaster and an absolute SHAM! And ive been a huge Clarkson fan for years. Also a previous contestant on the same show let slip that he was in the present in the year 2022. Thats some delay imo. Thanks for reading.
- phplastering
- May 4, 2024
- Permalink
This was unmissable tv in the early 2000s, but got ruined by really tedious celebrity specials and Chris Tarrant's annoyingly matey style. However, after a much needed 5 year break i think Jeremy Clarkson was an inspired choice to revive its fortunes - love him or loathe him, the guy has breathed new life into the show, and for the first time since about 2005 Millionaire is watchable again.
- granty-95171
- Jan 4, 2020
- Permalink
- AzminandRowdy
- Jul 22, 2024
- Permalink
When visiting my grandmother my wife and I watch this show! My wife and grandmother find the show intriguing . Myself, I get bored half way through the show. All the um's and the contestant talking to himself becomes tedious. Just make a decision already! Like Homer says boring! I like the faster paced contestants, who stick with a decision. At least the viewers would not have to wait until tomorrow to see the results. The final sound to signify the end has to be redone. It has got to be the most annoying sound. Do they do that on purpose? the first questions are so easy and anyone that uses a life line on those questions should not even be on the show. My wife gets so mad when they do that. My grandmother can hardly wait to see the next winner. It is like a soap opera for her. 6 or 7/10
- bevo-13678
- Jun 15, 2020
- Permalink
Without doubt one of the greatest quiz shows of all time unfortunately ultimately spoilt by a combination of over-exposure, ITV's obsession with celebrity versions of every game show they have, and constant fiddling with the format in the final years. First reducing the number of questions from 15 to 12 smacked of dumbing down. Changing the amounts to win made some of the steps drastically uneven. Dumping the Fastest Finger Round in favour of off-screen auditions because it was thought older people were at a disadvantage robbed the show of the chance selection of contestant. Then finally, and in total contradiction to the earlier change, the introduction of time limits in the very next series which, more than any Fastest Finger, penalised the older contestants. In the end, it was these "improvements" and Chris Tarrant's increasingly irritating habits - the sharp intake of breath seemingly after every sentence, the repetitive "jokes" about people looking "frightened to death" - which killed the show off. That, and the suspicion that some contestants may not have been selected entirely at random as claimed. With the benefit of re-runs on "Challenge", it's surprising how many "randomly selected" contestants were veterans of other quiz shows. If you're not convinced, ask yourself how it was Charles Ingram followed not only his wife and brother-in-law into the hot seat but how he and his wife had featured in a married couples' special some months earlier. Maybe a change of host and a return to the old format would have been advisable. Who knows? Can I 'phone a friend?
I have watched Who Wants To Be a Millionaire since it first started in 1998 and is now usually shown only on Saturday evenings and is one of the very few things worth watching on Saturdays. The problem is that it usually clashes with the only decent Saturday evening programme, Casualty. What I normally do is set the video for Millionaire and watch it another evening.
Chris Tarrent has hosted it from the start and his catchphrases like "We don't want to give that" have become very well known.
Four people have won £1 million since it started and no doubt there will be more millionaires in the future.
Chris Tarrent has hosted it from the start and his catchphrases like "We don't want to give that" have become very well known.
Four people have won £1 million since it started and no doubt there will be more millionaires in the future.
- chris_gaskin123
- Feb 6, 2005
- Permalink
Part of me thinks this is legendary, but part of me would hope for more winners, but that makes it more legendary. I just don't know, but what I do now is that this show is amazing. ITV definitely did a good job snapping Jezza when BBC axed him. (Jeremy Clarkson not Jeremy Kyle obviously). :)
- jpbrandwood
- Mar 31, 2021
- Permalink
- jboothmillard
- Mar 27, 2006
- Permalink
From a group of ten contestants, the quickest to answer a simple question is selected to come to the middle of the studio and play for a million pounds. Starting off with a question worth £100 the money doubles (more or less) with each question but they also get progressively harder and harder. If the contestant gets a question wrong he drops back down to either £1000 or £32000, depending on which he has passed, however to help him he can select 50/50 (two of the four answers disappear), ask the audience (the audience chose the answer for him in percentage terms) or phone a friend (the contestant can ring someone to ask him the question). As if that wasn't tense enough, Chris Tarrant never lets it lie for a second.
I'm not a big fan of this show because, like many viewers I just saw it too many times. However, at its peak it was the show everyone wanted to be on and was the one everyone watched. The questions start with the obvious and build to the increasingly more difficult and the TV audience generally start out going 'well durr' before then entering the stage where they shout the right answer at the telly and then eventually taking guesses and muttering 'don't risk it, don't risk it' like some sort of mantra under their breath. It makes for riveting viewing even if the first 4 or 5 questions are always pretty dull. The formula is simple but the UK presenter Chris Tarrant is responsible for making it as successful as it was.
Tarrant may be a little smug for my personal tastes but here he found a vehicle that he could use his smarmy character to good effect. 'Are you sure' he repeatedly asks with a rather self-satisfied smirk on his face while the contestants suddenly suffer a crises of confidence and the audience holds its breath. Combined with the atmospheric music, low lighting and the constant heartbeat effect it made it an enjoyably tense quiz show even if it was hardly anything like Mastermind in terms of intellect. However, when ITV found they had a hit on their hands they made the decision to ride it as hard as they possibly could and in fairness I suppose that this was the best decision in the short term. It would be off for a few months while people rang in and sponsors jockeyed for position and then it would be everywhere for a few months on almost every night of the week, on several times a day at Christmas time etc and this continued for quite a while. But then viewers started to get too used to the formula and turned off. ITV countered with the twists of couples taking part, celebrities, father/son etc but eventually they dropped it down into a teatime slot and now it appears to occasionally turn up on a Saturday afternoon (but I think it is all repeats). I can understand why ITV did this it gave them a sudden massive boost in the ratings, they were selling advertising space for as high a price as they could and it looked like it would never end and then it did.
Overall this is not a great quiz show. The questions are not so hard that most people with a good general knowledge couldn't get to £32k without too much stress and really it is only the atmosphere created by the music, lighting and the host that really made this as successful as it was. It was easy to veg in front of this show and think 'I could do that' and also enjoy seeing people get stressed and a) risk it all and win, b) risk it all and lose, c) just take the money or d) cheat and get taken to court! Fun but basically killed off by ITV chasing as much cash as it could get as quickly as possible.
I'm not a big fan of this show because, like many viewers I just saw it too many times. However, at its peak it was the show everyone wanted to be on and was the one everyone watched. The questions start with the obvious and build to the increasingly more difficult and the TV audience generally start out going 'well durr' before then entering the stage where they shout the right answer at the telly and then eventually taking guesses and muttering 'don't risk it, don't risk it' like some sort of mantra under their breath. It makes for riveting viewing even if the first 4 or 5 questions are always pretty dull. The formula is simple but the UK presenter Chris Tarrant is responsible for making it as successful as it was.
Tarrant may be a little smug for my personal tastes but here he found a vehicle that he could use his smarmy character to good effect. 'Are you sure' he repeatedly asks with a rather self-satisfied smirk on his face while the contestants suddenly suffer a crises of confidence and the audience holds its breath. Combined with the atmospheric music, low lighting and the constant heartbeat effect it made it an enjoyably tense quiz show even if it was hardly anything like Mastermind in terms of intellect. However, when ITV found they had a hit on their hands they made the decision to ride it as hard as they possibly could and in fairness I suppose that this was the best decision in the short term. It would be off for a few months while people rang in and sponsors jockeyed for position and then it would be everywhere for a few months on almost every night of the week, on several times a day at Christmas time etc and this continued for quite a while. But then viewers started to get too used to the formula and turned off. ITV countered with the twists of couples taking part, celebrities, father/son etc but eventually they dropped it down into a teatime slot and now it appears to occasionally turn up on a Saturday afternoon (but I think it is all repeats). I can understand why ITV did this it gave them a sudden massive boost in the ratings, they were selling advertising space for as high a price as they could and it looked like it would never end and then it did.
Overall this is not a great quiz show. The questions are not so hard that most people with a good general knowledge couldn't get to £32k without too much stress and really it is only the atmosphere created by the music, lighting and the host that really made this as successful as it was. It was easy to veg in front of this show and think 'I could do that' and also enjoy seeing people get stressed and a) risk it all and win, b) risk it all and lose, c) just take the money or d) cheat and get taken to court! Fun but basically killed off by ITV chasing as much cash as it could get as quickly as possible.
- bob the moo
- Jul 9, 2004
- Permalink
'Who Wants to be a Millionaire?' was totally revolutionary when it first aired in September 1998. The opportunity for someone to become a millionaire by just answering 15 questions was really exciting.
The show originally aired for roughly 10 consecutive nights but later changed to a Saturday night slot.
For the first few years, it was fresh and good to watch, answering the questions along with the contestants was also quite a challenge but as time went on, the show lost some of its character. Underneath the exterior that promotes the chance to win a £million, is basically a bong-standard quiz show. The idea for the show is great but it could seriously do with a complete overall to last another ten years.
Other quiz shows such as 'Blockbusters' and 'Weakest Link' are more competitive and are more exciting to watch.
The show originally aired for roughly 10 consecutive nights but later changed to a Saturday night slot.
For the first few years, it was fresh and good to watch, answering the questions along with the contestants was also quite a challenge but as time went on, the show lost some of its character. Underneath the exterior that promotes the chance to win a £million, is basically a bong-standard quiz show. The idea for the show is great but it could seriously do with a complete overall to last another ten years.
Other quiz shows such as 'Blockbusters' and 'Weakest Link' are more competitive and are more exciting to watch.
When Millionaire first came on the scene in 1998, it was big, it was bold, it was something no-one had seen before. Stripped for two weeks bulldozing through ITV's schedule, the nation was gripped. Real people, with real decisions facing them.
Fast forward 10 years and it lost it a little. It could have gone off air any time between 2009 and 2014 and the public wouldn't have missed it too much. But, in 2018 - shock! It returned! This time with Jeremy Clarkson, of all people. Quite a surprise choice, but worked well. Soon, the drama was back. £1,000,000 wasn't as thrilling a prize anymore, but people were once more willing to gamble, and it became fun viewing again. 25 years since it's debut, it's still winning the timeslot by a country mile again; it freshened itself up and came back fit for the 21st century (even if the tensionless Fastest Finger First spin-off was a low point).
Fast forward 10 years and it lost it a little. It could have gone off air any time between 2009 and 2014 and the public wouldn't have missed it too much. But, in 2018 - shock! It returned! This time with Jeremy Clarkson, of all people. Quite a surprise choice, but worked well. Soon, the drama was back. £1,000,000 wasn't as thrilling a prize anymore, but people were once more willing to gamble, and it became fun viewing again. 25 years since it's debut, it's still winning the timeslot by a country mile again; it freshened itself up and came back fit for the 21st century (even if the tensionless Fastest Finger First spin-off was a low point).
- torkelsenmagnus
- May 13, 2023
- Permalink
This was a good show. It started off and for like the next 6 months it ROCKED! But, unfortunately ITV obviously milked this show too much by putting it on too often! The show became very monotonus and predictable (stand up Chris Tarrant! lol) My theory is that ITV should have sheduled this show at like once a week (maybe on a Saturday!) then people like me wouldn't have got so bored with it so easily. Shame. 8/10
- sixstringscouser
- Sep 6, 2001
- Permalink
- sumityoutubw
- Jun 22, 2022
- Permalink
When WWTBAM first came on to the scene, it was a great show; it had a simple idea that made everyone think, 'I'd love to have a go a that!', and the emphasis was on tension and suspense, rather than speed, which was what made the show. Chris Tarrant was the ideal host for the show, he was encouraging to the contestants whilst gently reminding them of how much they could potentially lose.
And then, for no great reason, they changed the format, by having the contestants answer less questions to win the big money, and then, later on, the contestants had to answer questions against the clock, which killed the show.
The show has been brought back, and reverted to the original format, with Jeremy Clarkson as host, and whilst it's nice to see it back, it's not the same show without Chris Tarrant.
And then, for no great reason, they changed the format, by having the contestants answer less questions to win the big money, and then, later on, the contestants had to answer questions against the clock, which killed the show.
The show has been brought back, and reverted to the original format, with Jeremy Clarkson as host, and whilst it's nice to see it back, it's not the same show without Chris Tarrant.
I watched this show from about it's third episode and from then on I've been transfixed. Of course now its gone on to America where it will probably become most famous but it started right here in the UK where its still the best, in the US the questions are far too easy. The worlds greatest game show ever !
I'm not going to talk about what the rules are for this show. Everyone knows it's about answering fifteen questions correctly to win £1,000,000.
This has been going in the UK since 1998 and it has spread all over the world. It is presented by the charismatic Chris Tarrant who has a great rapport with the contestants and provides plenty of entertainment. There have been some wonderful contestants over time. Some of them have been reckless gamblers, some of them have been cautious and some of them have just been damn strange.
I like the show because it's not easy. People really have to work for their money. The first few questions are easy but after, that, they are really hard.
There's several puzzling things about the show though. Why are the audience so stupid when a contestant 'Asks The Audience?' Why does 50/50 always leave the least obvious answers? And, why when Chris Tarrant phones the contestants friend, is the phone never engaged?
It is now 2003 and the show has been running for nearly five years. And it's set to get bigger thanks to the notorious 'Millionaire Fraud Trial' where British Army Major Charles Ingram, his wife and another contestant were found by a jury to be guilty of cheating to get to the million. Whether they did cheat or not will be debated for years to come? What we can be certain of is that the publicity arising from the trial will ensure Millionaire's continued success for years.
This has been going in the UK since 1998 and it has spread all over the world. It is presented by the charismatic Chris Tarrant who has a great rapport with the contestants and provides plenty of entertainment. There have been some wonderful contestants over time. Some of them have been reckless gamblers, some of them have been cautious and some of them have just been damn strange.
I like the show because it's not easy. People really have to work for their money. The first few questions are easy but after, that, they are really hard.
There's several puzzling things about the show though. Why are the audience so stupid when a contestant 'Asks The Audience?' Why does 50/50 always leave the least obvious answers? And, why when Chris Tarrant phones the contestants friend, is the phone never engaged?
It is now 2003 and the show has been running for nearly five years. And it's set to get bigger thanks to the notorious 'Millionaire Fraud Trial' where British Army Major Charles Ingram, his wife and another contestant were found by a jury to be guilty of cheating to get to the million. Whether they did cheat or not will be debated for years to come? What we can be certain of is that the publicity arising from the trial will ensure Millionaire's continued success for years.
- Big Movie Fan
- May 2, 2003
- Permalink
Buy a Casio Calculator - in 1981 for step-daughter - play with it for five minutes, multiply 1x2, 2x2, 4x2 and so on.., realize that got past one million quick - with just twenty multiplications, recheck, what a great idea for a board game, I'll call it 'Millionaire'. Start with a £ or a $ and become a Millionaire.
There will be Q&A., Chance it Cards, Bank it Cards, Risk it Cards and Lifelines at £1,000, £32,000 and £64,000 - in each corner of the board.
Why not create a format of the concept for TV. Add a few more additions like, Phone-in - to get on the show, FFF., in this case, Fastest Foot First, because there is a floor. Questions and Answers, a Hot Seat - one to one, etc. It's so simple everyone will love it, I'll send it to a couple of TV companies to see if they are interested, how about, Celador and ITV? No, no luck there. Oh! It looks like they did like it in the end, but my name is not on it, why is that? Oh! I see, someone else created it, in fact, three others known as the the 'Dream Team' created it, at the same time as me. What a Bummer! What a coincidence as well? They must have some real un-doctored documents to prove they created it BEFORE me surely, don't they? Lets' ask them. No. Well that is strange don't you think? Not even one credible document? No, you were told no, but, they did create it. Well, I suppose, three against one, and of course, Celador and ITV say it was them. Not a lot one can do because they now have all the money earned from it and some even have had awards bestowed upon them.
It wasn't such a bad idea in the end was it? Thank you John, lots of people did enjoy it... and thank you Casio.
Incidentally, the Celador and ITV TV Pilot started with One Pound exactly the same as my format. It was painfully slow and needed to change.
The great phrase, 'Phone a Friend', did not come from me. I wish it had.
The person who coined that phrase was Mr Tim Boone. It was taken from his TV format called 'Help' which was presented to ITV at the same time as my concept, 'Millionaire', ITV used it, without his say-so, I believe.
Thought I should try to put the record straight - as no one else will.
And life goes on...
There will be Q&A., Chance it Cards, Bank it Cards, Risk it Cards and Lifelines at £1,000, £32,000 and £64,000 - in each corner of the board.
Why not create a format of the concept for TV. Add a few more additions like, Phone-in - to get on the show, FFF., in this case, Fastest Foot First, because there is a floor. Questions and Answers, a Hot Seat - one to one, etc. It's so simple everyone will love it, I'll send it to a couple of TV companies to see if they are interested, how about, Celador and ITV? No, no luck there. Oh! It looks like they did like it in the end, but my name is not on it, why is that? Oh! I see, someone else created it, in fact, three others known as the the 'Dream Team' created it, at the same time as me. What a Bummer! What a coincidence as well? They must have some real un-doctored documents to prove they created it BEFORE me surely, don't they? Lets' ask them. No. Well that is strange don't you think? Not even one credible document? No, you were told no, but, they did create it. Well, I suppose, three against one, and of course, Celador and ITV say it was them. Not a lot one can do because they now have all the money earned from it and some even have had awards bestowed upon them.
It wasn't such a bad idea in the end was it? Thank you John, lots of people did enjoy it... and thank you Casio.
Incidentally, the Celador and ITV TV Pilot started with One Pound exactly the same as my format. It was painfully slow and needed to change.
The great phrase, 'Phone a Friend', did not come from me. I wish it had.
The person who coined that phrase was Mr Tim Boone. It was taken from his TV format called 'Help' which was presented to ITV at the same time as my concept, 'Millionaire', ITV used it, without his say-so, I believe.
Thought I should try to put the record straight - as no one else will.
And life goes on...