The Original Wheel Of Fortune Game Show

  1. The original Syndicated Prime time Wheel of Fortune broadcast was on September 19 1983. Pat Sajak and Vanna White were the original and first and only host and hostess of this show.
  2. For the Daytime Wheel of Fortune show Chuck Woolery started out hosting the show (1975-1981) with Susan Stafford (1975-1982) When Chuck Woolery left in 1981 Pat Sajak became the new host (1981-1989) Susan Stafford left the show in 1982 and substitute letter turners Summer Bartholmew and Vicki McCarthy preformed the role until Vanna White was made.
  1. Wheel Of Fortune Uk Game Show
  2. Wheel Fortune Tv Game Show

Jan 06, 1975  Wheel of Fortune (TV Series 1983) Family Game-Show Hosted by Pat Sajak, this game show features 3 contestants who try to solve a puzzle by spinning the wheel and guessing letters in a word or phrase. Stars: Pat Sajak, Vanna White, Charlie O'Donnell.

Wheel of Fortune
GenreGame Show
Created byMerv Griffin
Presented by
  • Phillip Leishman (1991-1990s)
  • Simon Barnett (1990s-1996)
  • Lana Coc-Kroft (1991-1996)
  • Jason Gunn (2008-2009)
  • Sonia Gray (2008-2009)
Narrated byGrant Walker
Country of originNew Zealand
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons8
Production
Running time24 minutes
Release
Original networkTV2 (1991-1996)
TV ONE (2008-2009)
Picture format4.3 PAL
16.9 576i (SDTV)
Original releaseFebruary 1991 – 1996
14 April 2008 –
June 2009

Wheel of Fortune was a long-running New Zealand television game show that was last hosted by television personalityJason Gunn and co-host Sonia Gray. It was broadcast on TV2 from 1991 to 1996 and on TV ONE from 2008 to 2009.

  • 1History

History[edit]

1991-1996 original[edit]

Wheel Of Fortune Uk Game Show

The original New Zealand version of the popular American game show Wheel of Fortune was first broadcast in February 1991, on TVNZ channel TV2, at 5:30pm. The show, which was heavily modeled after Australia's version, was originally hosted by Phillip Leishman with co-host Lana Coc-Kroft, along with Grant Walker (also doing New Zealand's version of Sale of the Century at the time) as announcer. The show was later hosted by Simon Barnett.During its time the show aired on various time slots and switched between TV ONE and TV2; at the show's peak it aired in prime time on TV ONE at 7:00pm, a time slot previously used to screen Sale of the Century, but moved off this slot in 1995 when TV ONE extended their news to a one-hour show followed by Holmes. After moving to TV2 in a 6:00pm time slot the show was ultimately axed in 1996 as the show could not compete with the 6pm news shows on TV ONE and TV3.

A recreation of the wheel used in New Zealand from 2008-2009. Note the similarity of the color scheme that was used on America's version from 2006-2008.

2008-2009 return[edit]

On 14 April 2008 the New Zealand version of Wheel of Fortune returned again to TVNZ channel TV ONE. The show returned with new hosts Jason Gunn and Sonia Gray. The show now airs at 5:30pm local time. At the conclusion of filming of the 2008 season TVNZ announced the show will return in 2009 bigger and better. Additionally Jason Gunn officially announced that his co-host Sonia Gray was pregnant with twins and that she would return to co-host the show after her pregnancy. Greer Robson temporarily took Sonia's role on the show until she returned in May, 2009.

It was announced on 2 May 2009 that the series was being cancelled after only one year on air. The reasons given by TVNZ for the cancellation were lower ratings than the previous season, decreased advertising revenue and the high cost of producing the show. Lower ratings may have resulted after reformatting of the show interrupted its flow due to an increased emphasis on 'Speed Digits'. The last show was screened in June 2009.

David Tua incident[edit]

One infamous episode which appears from time to time in blooper specials was boxer David Tua's game on October 10, 1992: at one point, he asked for P when buying a vowel; at another, he tried to buy a 'constonant'. He was also believed to have tried to call 'O for awesome', but in fact it was 'O for Olsen' (a reference to Olsen Filipaina), although the main problem is that he was supposed to call a consonant.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^Hunt, Tom (5 October 2013). ''O for...awesome''. Dominion Post.
Show

Wheel Fortune Tv Game Show

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