Milionerzy - Records and Faux Pas

Records and Faux Pas

  • During the Fastest Finger portion in the second season, all contestants correctly answered the question, which was "Put these Australian towns in the alphabetical order". It is rare to see all contestants get the correct order.
  • There has been an occasion similar to the American version where the audience unanimously voted on a single answer when asked for help via the Ask the Audience lifeline. The question, worth 40,000 złoty, was: "A small, golden gramophone is given away at what awards ceremony?" The correct answer was "Grammy."
  • The furthest a player has ever gone without using a lifeline was 125,000 złoty. The player went on to win 500,000 złoty.See the Questions for million zlotys and The highest prizes by episodes for more information
  • In Milionerzy there was three times a situation, when a player lost because of laxily said question and then he was restored to play. The first player made a mistake in the question for 32,000 zł: "Who invented the steam engine?". He answered "James Watt", but the correct answer was Charles Algernon Parsons. After a complaint to programme's producer, his answer was recognized as correct. The player won a guaranteed 32,000 zł, but he answered incorrectly in the next question for 64,000 zł. The second player made a mistake in the question for 500 zł: "How many cuts are on kaiser rolls?" He answered: "4" (the correct answer was "5") and he won nothing. After recognizing his answer, he answered incorrectly in the question for 1000 zł and he left the studio without nothing for the second time. Third on the question about the author of the picture "The Luncheon on the Grass" answered Claude Monet, but the correct answer was Édouard Manet. But Monet also painted a less known picture with the same title, so the player was allowed to continue playing.

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Famous quotes containing the word records:

    What a wonderful faculty is memory!—the most mysterious and inexplicable in the great riddle of life; that plastic tablet on which the Almighty registers with unerring fidelity the records of being, making it the depository of all our words, thoughts and deeds—this faithful witness against us for good or evil.
    Susanna Moodie (1803–1885)