Log in to your IBTimes Account

close
ID
Password

Game show `Deal' goes daily with big money, Mandel



By LYNN ELBER, AP
21 July 2008 @ 08:36 am EST

LOS ANGELES - Howie Mandel, the models, the banker and the briefcases all will be in place when the syndicated version of "Deal or No Deal" premieres in September--along with cash for viewers as well as contestants.


TV DEAL OR NO DEAL
In this undated publicity photo released by NBC Universal, host Howie Mandel talks with a contestant on "Deal or No Deal," NBC's hit contest show. Models behind Mandel hold numbered brief cases that contain various amounts of money. Mandel, the models, the banker and the briefcases all will be in place when the syndicated version of "Deal or No Deal" premieres in September 2008 - along with cash for viewers as well as contestants. (AP Photo/...
1 of 1

Related Topic

Get stories by e-mail on this topic.

E-mail:
Quotes
GE 14.03 1.19

SYMBOL LOOKUP

Players on the new show won't have a shot at the top $1 million payoff that's possible on NBC's series, but the half-hour show airing each weekday will offer a still-hefty $500,000, the show's producer told The Associated Press Monday.

The TV audience will have their own chance to win as well as watch with a $10,000 weekly prize up for grabs via a companion Web site or a call-in number, series producer Endemol USA said.

Mandel will continue to host the hourlong NBC show, which is entering its fourth season next month and has proven a hit. "Deal or No Deal" was NBC's most-watched entertainment program of the 2007-08 TV season, averaging more than 11 million viewers per broadcast.

"My wife could not be more thrilled to have me out of the house and at work Monday through Friday," Mandel joked in a statement released by Endemol.

Based on a series that debuted in Holland in 2002 and became an international success, "Deal or No Deal" is about luck and playing the odds.

Contestants are faced with briefcases, each case with a hidden value ranging from a penny to the top prize. There are 22 cases on the syndicated show, versus 26 on the network version, and the new show's models won't have custody of the cases.

As the game progresses and briefcases cases are eliminated, a contestant weighs the chance of snaring a big prize against lesser but still tempting offers made by the show's "bank," represented by an anonymous, silhouetted figure.

The show, from GE unit NBC Universal Domestic Television Distribution and Endemol USA, debuts Sept. 8.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Click!
  • Rate this article:

Comments

Post Your Comment

You must be an IBTimes member to post a comment. Login | Register


advertisement
More Industries
General Motors Corp.'s board of directors does not consider bankruptcy protection a viable option to solve the company's financial troubles, but it has d...
As many as 2,444 employees at ArcelorMittal's steel plant could be laid off indefinitely in January, the company said. The company has notified the Unite...
Pressure intensified on Citigroup to sell part or all of itself as its stock fell below $4 a share on Friday and fears escalated about future loan losses...

Advertisement
Los angeles web design

Get your next web design project done with our los angeles web design team - Best web design with great price.

Reach emerging Latin American markets!

Baldwin Linguas:
Translations Interpreting Localization:
English French Portuguese Spanish

Buy Foreclosures & Use Our Money

Split Big Profits! You Find it & We Fund it! Co-Own Or Cash Out! Get Free Info Kit Now!

advertisement
 
IBTimes.com Web
Partners
International Business Times© 2008 The Ibtimes Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms of service | Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us | Contact Us | Archives