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By selecting seven numbers between 1 and 27, players could win anything from a free lucky dip to £30,000. The draw gave its players the chance to win a free daily play lucky-dip for not matching any numbers in the draw. The entry fee to the Daily Play draw was £1 per board. Daily Play draws were broadcast via a webcast.
John Lennon and Yoko Ono made an appearance on the show in 1969, sharing a bed with Eamonn Andrews. [4] The show is now most commonly remembered for Bill Grundy's 1976 interview with the Sex Pistols, which caused public outrage at the time. [5] Today was replaced in September 1977 by Thames at Six, a more conventional news magazine programme.
The Banker is the name given to the show's quasi-fictional antagonist. Notionally, the money on the game board is the Banker's own. As such, his role is to make cash offers (usually with the first few digits being odd [e.g., £5,900]) to buy the contestant's chosen box rather than allowing them to continue and risk them winning much more.
Carnal Knowledge (game show) Catchphrase (British game show) Catchword (game show) Celebrity Fifteen to One; Celebrity Squares; Chain Letters; Challenge Anneka; Cluedo (British game show) Concentration (British game show) Connections (game show) Countdown (game show) Counterpoint (radio programme) Crosswits; Cryer's Crackers; The Crystal Maze
Before long, everyone knew the Selbees. Marge, who for years had devoted herself to the role of supportive housewife, joined Jerry at the store. A practical woman who could clear a fallen tree with a chainsaw and sew a men’s suit from scratch without a pattern, Marge did the books, stocked the shelves, and handled impulse items like candy.
ITN had provided a short lunchtime news summary to start the ITV schedules on a Saturday since 1959, with an afternoon news summary on a Sunday starting in the mid-1960s, however it was the lifting of the restrictions on 16 October 1972 which helped ITN to launch a codified, more solid weekday lunchtime news programme as part of a raft of new ...
He presented Radio 4's lunchtime news programme, The World at One, from 1994 until his death. During the 1991 Gulf War he was a volunteer presenter on the BBC Radio 4 News FM service. [ 2 ] He also presented the Round Britain Quiz , the debate series Straw Poll and, when Jonathan Dimbleby was away, Any Questions?
The front of a used Mark Six ticket The back of a used Mark Six ticket. The game is a 6-out-of-49 lottery-style game, with seven prize levels. [2] The winning numbers are selected automatically from a lottery machine that contains balls with numbers 1 to 49.