Golden Balls

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''The Golden Bank delivers its payload.''</div>
''The Golden Bank delivers its payload.''</div>
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Four players are dealt out golden balls worth varying amounts of money (from a tenner to £75,000) and some "Killer" balls. Two of each player's golden balls are on show, the rest are known only to each player. The aim is to eliminate the players with the Killer balls whilst keeping the big money in play, with a [[The Weakest Link]] style vote. Obviously players dealt weak golden balls have to fast talk their way into the next round. The final two players aim to build as big a pot as possible and then inevitably go home with nothing because they're both very selfish.
+
Four players are dealt out golden balls worth varying amounts of money (from £10 to £75,000) and some "Killer" balls. Two of each player's golden balls are on show, the rest are known only to each player. The aim is to eliminate the players with the Killer balls whilst keeping the big money in play, with a [[The Weakest Link]] style vote. Obviously players dealt weak golden balls have to fast talk their way into the next round. The final two players aim to build as big a pot as possible and then inevitably go home with nothing because they're both very selfish.
<div class="image">[[Image:goldenballs set.jpg]]
<div class="image">[[Image:goldenballs set.jpg]]
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''The front two golden balls on show. This is a decent hand: two large cash amounts and no Killer balls, which pretty much immunises the contestant from elimination.''</div>
''The front two golden balls on show. This is a decent hand: two large cash amounts and no Killer balls, which pretty much immunises the contestant from elimination.''</div>
-
Then we have the vote, with some stylish cards that are put on stands that can be turned round for Jasper's "The first/second/next/final vote is for..." The player with the most votes is out of the game. (In case of a tie, the other players discuss which one to save and, if they still can't agree, the Golden Bank decides for them via a random draw - one player gets a solid golden ball, the other gets a Killer ball. The player who had the Killer ball is eliminated.)
+
Then we have the vote, with some stylish cards that are put on stands that can be turned round for Jasper Carrott's "The first/second/next/final vote is for..." The player with the most votes is out of the game. (In case of a tie, the other players discuss which one to save and, if they still can't agree, the Golden Bank decides for them via a random draw - one player gets a solid golden ball, the other gets a Killer ball. The player who had the Killer ball is eliminated.)
<div class="image">[[Image:goldenballs vote.jpg]]
<div class="image">[[Image:goldenballs vote.jpg]]
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''One player successfully sweet-talks his way into the second round.''</div>
''One player successfully sweet-talks his way into the second round.''</div>
-
The remaining players' golden balls go in to the massive roulette wheel thing, with two more cash balls from the ball machine and one more Killer ball, so we have 15 golden balls, 5 distributed to each player: 2 on the front row and 3 on the back row. Repeat the last round.
+
The remaining players' golden balls go back into the massive roulette wheel thing, with two more cash balls from the Golden Bank and one more Killer ball, so we have 15 golden balls, 5 distributed to each player: two on the front row and three on the back row. Repeat the last round.
-
The remaining two players bring their balls through to the money making round, along with another Killer ball, making 11 in play for "Bin or Win". Each person picks a golden ball to get rid of (Bin) and another to add to the jackpot (Win). If they pick up a Killer ball to win, then their total is divided by 10, so if they have £10,000, their total drops to £1,000.
+
The remaining two players bring their golden balls through to the money-making round, along with another Killer ball, making 11 golden balls in play for "Bin or Win". Each person picks a golden ball to get rid of (Bin) and another to add to the jackpot (Win). If they pick a Killer ball to win, then their total is divided by 10, so if they have £10,000, their total drops to £1,000.
<div class="image">[[Image:goldenballs binorwin.jpg]]
<div class="image">[[Image:goldenballs binorwin.jpg]]
-
''"Which of these completely identical-looking balls are you most drawn to?"''</div>
+
''"Which of these completely identical-looking golden balls are you most drawn to?"''</div>
-
After they make up their row of five winners, they are given two final golden balls each: Spilt and <s>[[Shafted|Shaft]]</s> Steal. If they both choose Spilt, they share the remaining cash. If one chooses Spilt and the other chooses Steal, the Stealer gets all the cash. If they both choose Steal, they both go home with nothing.
+
After they make up their row of five winners, they are given two final golden balls each: Spilt and Steal. If they both choose the Spilt ball, they share the remaining cash. If one chooses the Spilt ball and the other chooses the Steal ball, the Stealer gets all the cash. If they both choose the Steal ball, they both go home with nothing.
<div class="image">[[Image:goldenballs splitsteal.jpg]]
<div class="image">[[Image:goldenballs splitsteal.jpg]]
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== Trivia ==
== Trivia ==
-
In the unaired pilot, the top golden ball was worth £200,000 and there was a £100,000 golden ball also.
+
In the unaired pilot, the top golden ball was worth £200,000, and there was a £100,000 golden ball also.
-
Somehow, Golden Balls became ITV's surprise summer hit of 2007 (and they needed one after [[Tycoon]]!). Achieving audiences of up to around 2.1 million, it was ITV's first show since The Paul O' Grady Show to win the ratings battle at 5pm and the first show (other than World Cup football) to beat [[The Weakest Link]].
+
Somehow, Golden Balls became ITV's surprise summer hit of 2007 (and they needed one after [[Tycoon]]!). Achieving audiences of up to around 2,100,000, it was ITV's first show since The Paul O' Grady Show to win the ratings battle at 5pm and the first show (other than World Cup football) to beat [[The Weakest Link]].
The smallest win was £3, stolen by Robbie (who won £5,500 on [[Deal or No Deal]]) on the 12 July 2007 episode.
The smallest win was £3, stolen by Robbie (who won £5,500 on [[Deal or No Deal]]) on the 12 July 2007 episode.

Revision as of 16:24, 19 July 2008

Contents

Host

Jasper Carrott

Co-host

Amanda Grant

Broadcast

Endemol for ITV1, 18 June 2007 - present

Image:Golden Balls logo.jpg

Synopsis

What stud poker would be a bit like if there was a giant lottery machine involved, and the prisoner's dilemma.

Image:goldenballs machine.jpg The Golden Bank delivers its payload.

Four players are dealt out golden balls worth varying amounts of money (from £10 to £75,000) and some "Killer" balls. Two of each player's golden balls are on show, the rest are known only to each player. The aim is to eliminate the players with the Killer balls whilst keeping the big money in play, with a The Weakest Link style vote. Obviously players dealt weak golden balls have to fast talk their way into the next round. The final two players aim to build as big a pot as possible and then inevitably go home with nothing because they're both very selfish.

Image:goldenballs set.jpg The Golden Balls set, complete with 700 (fact!) programmable bulbs.

In round one, 12 cash balls come from the big machine and 4 Killer balls, and from these each player is distributed four each, two on the front row and two on the back row. They then open the front ones and leave them open for all to see. They then each get to peek at their back two golden balls and afterwards, they take it in turns to announce what they have on their back row, simultaneously trying to convince the others they're telling the truth whilst trying to convince the other two that someone else is a stinking liar (invariably by "shouting very loudly"). At this stage, golden balls on the back row can only be seen by the player who owns them.

Image:goldenballs front.jpg The front two golden balls on show. This is a decent hand: two large cash amounts and no Killer balls, which pretty much immunises the contestant from elimination.

Then we have the vote, with some stylish cards that are put on stands that can be turned round for Jasper Carrott's "The first/second/next/final vote is for..." The player with the most votes is out of the game. (In case of a tie, the other players discuss which one to save and, if they still can't agree, the Golden Bank decides for them via a random draw - one player gets a solid golden ball, the other gets a Killer ball. The player who had the Killer ball is eliminated.)

Image:goldenballs vote.jpg Get yer coat.

The as-yet unrevealed golden balls are then opened and, rather predictably, there are a lot of Killer balls and missing zeroes knocking about, which often leads to how-dare-you hilarity of epic proportions when it turns out they've kept in someone with a shocking hand. The player who is voted off then has to "bin" their golden balls (a.k.a. drop them down a chute) and do the Walk.

Image:goldenballs hand.jpg One player successfully sweet-talks his way into the second round.

The remaining players' golden balls go back into the massive roulette wheel thing, with two more cash balls from the Golden Bank and one more Killer ball, so we have 15 golden balls, 5 distributed to each player: two on the front row and three on the back row. Repeat the last round.

The remaining two players bring their golden balls through to the money-making round, along with another Killer ball, making 11 golden balls in play for "Bin or Win". Each person picks a golden ball to get rid of (Bin) and another to add to the jackpot (Win). If they pick a Killer ball to win, then their total is divided by 10, so if they have £10,000, their total drops to £1,000.

Image:goldenballs binorwin.jpg "Which of these completely identical-looking golden balls are you most drawn to?"

After they make up their row of five winners, they are given two final golden balls each: Spilt and Steal. If they both choose the Spilt ball, they share the remaining cash. If one chooses the Spilt ball and the other chooses the Steal ball, the Stealer gets all the cash. If they both choose the Steal ball, they both go home with nothing.

Image:goldenballs splitsteal.jpg Call Kilroy!

Trivia

In the unaired pilot, the top golden ball was worth £200,000, and there was a £100,000 golden ball also.

Somehow, Golden Balls became ITV's surprise summer hit of 2007 (and they needed one after Tycoon!). Achieving audiences of up to around 2,100,000, it was ITV's first show since The Paul O' Grady Show to win the ratings battle at 5pm and the first show (other than World Cup football) to beat The Weakest Link.

The smallest win was £3, stolen by Robbie (who won £5,500 on Deal or No Deal) on the 12 July 2007 episode.

The episode on 11 February 2008 had the largest possible potential jackpot to date - £168,100 - after the top two golden balls (£70,000 and £75,000) made it through to the final round.

A special episode on 14 March 2008 (the day Jasper Carrott turned 63) brought together four former victims of the Steal ball from the first series and gave them a second chance to play the game: Chloe (22 June 2007), Stephen (16 July 2007), Sarah (2 July 2007) and Darren (12 July 2007). At the show's climax, Sarah stole £100,150 from Stephen and became (somewhat ironically) the show's biggest winner to date. Sarah had previously appeared in a team of Accountants on series 2 of Codex - in the very same top, incidentally.

Ouch.

Sponsored by ITV Bingo (powered by Party Gaming) - except in Northern and Central Scotland, where it's sponsored by STV Bingo (powered by 888.com, if you must know).

Merchandise

Golden Balls board game

Music

Marc Sylvan

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