The show was known for the 'Whammy', a red cartoon creature with a high-pitched, raspy voice. Landing on any Whammy space causes the player to go bankrupt and start over from $0, accompanied by an animation that showed the Whammy taking the loot, but frequently being blown up or otherwise humiliated in the process. Since then, the company has handled revivals and video game licenses, such as with Whammy! And the 2009 video game. On June 8, 2006, Press Your Luck was featured as the fourth round of Gameshow Marathon on CBS. Game Show Network (GSN) aired the show from September 2001 to March 2009, airing episodes from February 1984 to November 1985. James Holzhauer’s recent 33-game run on “Jeopardy!” has turned a focus back onto game shows, so the timing is fortuitous for “Press Your Luck,” hosted by Elizabeth Banks and airing in.
Big Bucks: The Press Your Luck Scandal (2003 TV Movie)
The bonus of this documentary was they showed both episodes documenting Michael's run at big bucks and no Whammies. These episodes had not been seen since the original broadcast in 1984. The incident obviously gave CBS a black eye. In between episodes, they analyze the episodes. You could see Michael was in his zone while he spun the big board.
The documentary also reunited Michael's opponents and got their point of view. Peter Tomarken is also on hand to provide narration. But it also showed the dark side of a game show contestant. Michael Larsen was a gambler from day one. He wanted that quick buck, and when Press Your Luck came by, he seized the opportunity. For years, we all thought he sunk all of his money into a housing deal gone bad, and lost everything. But as the documentary reveals, much of the money was stolen. He kept much of his money in his house, which made it easy for someone to take it. Larsen continued trying to make the quick buck by getting involved in 'get rich quick' schemes (which of course, never work). He died under a huge cloud of mystery while being investigated by the IRS and SEC.
Kudos to the Game Show Network for giving this moment in game show history the attention it deserves.
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Game Show Whammy Scandal 2017
The story gives some insight as to who Michael Larson was and then shifts its attention to an analyzed replay of the two episodes Michael was in. (Larson did so well, his turn could not fit into one 30 minute airing!) It was amazing to see just how this guy did it and got so much money from the board! I think that was the greatest part of this special.
Still, even knowing the pattern, Larson sure had to be quick.
Nice to see Peter hosting as well. He narrated the piece decently. Besides- he was a good choice to host this special since of course he hosted the original 'Press Your Luck.'
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It tells how Michael Larson, a self-employed ice-cream truck driver, changed from having almost nothing, ending up with a fortune, and then losing it all in the end.
It also provides a look back at how Press Your Luck producers did not realize that the game was fallible. Looking at this documentary, I realized it was very insightful. I do wish Game Show Network (now GSN) would release this as a video/DVD.
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Mr. Larson was a gambler with a Ralph Kramden zen for quick rich schemes. He stumbled upon PYL and studied the patterns until he cracked the code that would allow him to win unlimited money if he could hit the buzzer correctly. He managed to get himself on the show and walked away with a sailboat, two vacations, and over 100,000 in CBS's money.
This documentary on the once great GSN talks about the incident with PYL execs, Tomarken, relatives and friends of Larson, and the two contestants that were playing against Larson that day. They show the very patterns that Larson was able to exploit, the stress that was coming onto Larson as his pot grew bigger, and his facial expressions via a split-second camera that CBS happened to have on them during the tapings. It's very well done and very engrossing.
Sadly, you can see this documentary only when GSN airs it and you'll have to wade through the worst commercials ever made. Still, it's worth watching to learn about how greed can eventually do you in.
One funny thing. An exec who met with Michael Larson, who claimed he drove an ice cream truck, was leery about putting him on the show. He felt that there was something not quite right with him. Today, if Mr. Larson were alive and wanted to appear on GSN's 'Whammy:The All New Press Your Luck' in an attempt to break their bank he'd be brought in with open arms. There have been some very colourful looking people appearing on that game.
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Game Show Whammy Scandal Season
*** 1/2 (out of 4)
Highly entertaining documentary taking a look at Michael Larson, an out of work ice cream truck driver who made his way from Ohio to Los Angeles where he got on the Press Your Luck game show and ended up walking away with over $110,000. How did Larson do it? For months he studied the game at home and caught a pattern that would allow him to rack up the big bucks without hitting a whammy. To say this is the biggest scandal in game show history might be an understatement. There's certainly something interesting about what Larson did as some are going to call him a genius while others are going to call him a cheat. Personally speaking I can't help but call him a genius and I would never use the word cheat since there was a way to break the board and he found out how to do it. I think most of the blame has to go to the network for not having a plan in case something like this ever happened. The documentary does a very good job at telling the story of how a man from Ohio won a ton of cash from CBS who were pretty much dumbfounded by what was going on. The documentary features host Peter Tomarken talking about what was going on during the taping of the show but we also get interviews with the director, creator and others involved in the show including the two other contestants that Larson was going up against. The film also features the entire episode that was originally aired over two days but was never seen again until this documentary. Fans of the show or just scandals in general will certainly want to check this out as the entire thing is just bizarre to say the least.
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I just reviewed a documentary about a game show scandal (Perfect Bid: The Contestant Who Knew Too Much) and here I am on some sort of theme week or something. Though I gave both documentaries the same score they couldn't be more different.
Perfect Bid is about someone who broke the code in the Price is Right in the banalest way possible. He memorized all the prices of the items. In Big Bucks Michael Larson figured out that the game board had certain patterns and with the right amount of hand-eye coordination you could make a run for 'Big Bucks' and not lose.
If you are unfamiliar with Press Your Luck it is a very simple trivia contest followed by a combination video game/ slot machine with not just prizes but little cartoon whammies that if you landed on them would cost you all your winnings. The chance of landing on a whammy was one in six. It was an actually good game that was entertaining even without the most dynamic contestants or host. What Larson figured out is that there were spaces which never got a whammy and by learning the seemingly random patterns he could hit the button just so where he always landed on those spaces. In other words, he figured how to break the house.
I got the sense that director James P. Taylor Jr. was not looking forward to doing a documentary on a game show contestant cause he paints Michael Larson like he was the prime suspect on Unsolved Mysteries. Not for the game show stuff. Everyone agrees that was slick but otherwise on the up and up. His life is examined as if we will find out about the dead hookers in his basement after the next commercial break. Unfortunately for the director Michael made poor choices but was otherwise an unremarkable person.
So when your subject matter is more a loser than a serial killer how do you fill the rest of the hour and twenty odd minutes. Hope you like Press Your Luck cause we are showing the entire episode Michael was on and even slowing it down to appear scientific in places. They also recreate the episode on a cheap soundstage with the two other contestants fifteen years later and original host Peter Tomarken who also 'hosts' this documentary.
Is there enough material here for a full-length documentary? Not even close. The how he did it is fascinating but this is at best a half hour episode.
Do I feel bad for director James P. Taylor Jr.? A little bit. Your next job is directing a feature-length film for The Game Show Channel is not the news anyone wants to receive sober. When he found out his contestant was a former unemployed Ice Cream Truck driver who disappeared soon after his money was stolen he has to have had high hopes for a juicy Errol Morris expose. Unfortunately for both himself and the audience, it was not to be.
Any other takeaways? Host Peter Tomarken's outfit from the early eighties was actually pretty sharp with nice pastels and a tie sweater vest combo.
With way too much filler and reality TV tropes (this is the director of When Animals Attack 3 after all) the kernel of a good story gets buried by all the filler.
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Press Your Luck Cheating Scandal
Game Show Whammy Scandal Episodes
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