Who Wants to be a Millionaire? (lost unaired segments of American game show; 1999): Difference between revisions

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[[File:4e1a77ebc01f48ac28dc5d5015b93b87.png|290px|thumb|right|Brad shown in The Faster Finger opening]]
{{InfoboxLost
A lot of game shows have missing episodes and unaired episodes and although Who Wants to be a Millionaire? has no missing episodes (most likely) there are a few segments of the show that never aired. Particularly, contestants who were discovered to have a flawed question (Tim Shields and Lori Bailey) don't ever have their return segment air. (With the exception of David Honea and Ed Toutant, however, if Ed didn't win the top prize, his return segment would probably not have aired) However, there is actually one full game that didn't air at all. The contestant was Brad Bianucci, who was actually the last contestant in the November 1999 run and played after Neil Larrimore and won $125,000. It was said his game didn't air due to time constraints. The episode aired on November 24, 1999.
|title=<center>Brad Bianucci's unaired game on Who Wants to be a Millionaire?</center>
Links
|image=4e1a77ebc01f48ac28dc5d5015b93b87.png
|imagecaption=Brad shown in The Faster Finger opening
|status=<span style="color: red;">'''Lost'''</span>
}}
A lot of game shows have missing episodes and unaired episodes and although '''Who Wants to be a Millionaire?''' has no missing episodes (most likely) there are a few segments of the show that never aired. Particularly, contestants who were discovered to have a flawed question (Tim Shields, Pete Booker, and Lori Bailey) don't ever have their return segment air. (With the exception of David Honea and Ed Toutant, however, if Ed didn't win the top prize, his return segment would probably not have aired) However, there is actually one full game that didn't air at all. The contestant was Brad Bianucci, who was actually the last contestant in the November 1999 run and played after Neil Larrimore and won $125,000. It was said his game didn't air due to time constraints. The episode aired on November 24, 1999.


https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/alt.gossip.celebrities/VwBfiImGO7c
==External Links==
*[https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/alt.gossip.celebrities/VwBfiImGO7c A news article about the firing.] Retrieved 12 Jun '16
*[http://www.dmagazine.com/publications/d-magazine/2001/october/first-person-how-regis-philbin-changed-my-life An article about the person who lost his job when winning the game show and the show that he was apart of never getting aired.] Retrieved 12 Jun '16


http://www.dmagazine.com/publications/d-magazine/2001/october/first-person-how-regis-philbin-changed-my-life
==See Also==
*[[Who Wants To Be A Millionaire 10th Anniversary Primetime Celebration (found episodes of ABC game show; 2009)]]
*[[Tim Shields 2nd run on Who Wants to be a Millionaire (partially found American version of gameshow; 2000)]]
*[[Who Wants To Be a Millionaire? (partially lost episodes of British quiz show; 1998-present)]]
*[[Who Wants To Be a Millionaire? (partially found first season of Australian quiz show; 1999)]]


[[Category: Lost TV]]
[[Category: Lost TV]]
[[Category:Completely lost media]]

Latest revision as of 15:57, 13 May 2022

4e1a77ebc01f48ac28dc5d5015b93b87.png

Brad shown in The Faster Finger opening

Status: Lost

A lot of game shows have missing episodes and unaired episodes and although Who Wants to be a Millionaire? has no missing episodes (most likely) there are a few segments of the show that never aired. Particularly, contestants who were discovered to have a flawed question (Tim Shields, Pete Booker, and Lori Bailey) don't ever have their return segment air. (With the exception of David Honea and Ed Toutant, however, if Ed didn't win the top prize, his return segment would probably not have aired) However, there is actually one full game that didn't air at all. The contestant was Brad Bianucci, who was actually the last contestant in the November 1999 run and played after Neil Larrimore and won $125,000. It was said his game didn't air due to time constraints. The episode aired on November 24, 1999.

External Links

See Also