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Family Fortunes
Family Fortunes is a long-running British game show, based on an American game show Family Feud. The programme began on ITV and ran from 1979 until 2002 and revived four years later in 2006 - the game is still going strong and loved by the british viewers.
Two family teams, each with five members, would guess what "100 people surveyed" had said in response to a particular question (e.g. "we asked 100 people to name something associated with the country France" or "we asked 100 people to name something you'd associate with the british sea side"). For each different question, a different member of each family would come forward to give a first answer, and the family of the contestant who pressed the buzzer quickest would have the right to guess first, and the family whose member gave the highest answer would have the options to "play" try and find and all the answers or "pass" giving the other family the opportunity to find the answers (they would play more often than not). If a family managed to come up with all the answers given by the "100 people surveyed" (most commonly six in the early part of the show, reduced in number after the commercial break), they would win the pounds equivalent of the total number of people who had given the answers. Every time someone did not give an answer that was on the board, the family would receive a "strike", accompanied by a large "X" on the board with the infamous "uh-uhh" sound. (The host may not refer to these as "strikes," rather, he will say that a family has "two lives left" or "one life left.") If they came up with three strikes, the other family would have the chance to come up with one answer that might be among the missing answers. If this answer was among those given by the "100 people surveyed", the other family would "steal" the money; if not, the family who had given the three incorrect answers would win the money anyway.
Following three rounds prior to the commercial break, "Double Money" is played. Gameplay would be the same as the first rounds, but the money won would be double the precise equivalent of how many people had given the answers (1 = £2, 2 = £4 etc.), and there would be fewer possible answers. The family who passes £300 first would go on to play "Big Money" (known in other versions as "Fast Money") for the jackpot.
In the revived 2006 version, there were three rounds of the main game and two rounds of double money and then the family who the most money after this would go on to play Big Money, regardless whether they had £300 or more.
This involved two contestants (out of the five in the family team) answering five questions that fitted with those given by the "100 people surveyed", with the questions asked within a narrow time limit. The first contestant would give his/her answers to the five questions within 15 seconds; then the second contestant (who had been out of earshot of the first) would give his or her answers within 20 seconds (the extra time was available for the contestant to give another answer if he/she duplicated an answer given by the previous contestant). If they got 200 points or more from the ten answers (i.e. at least 200 people had agreed with all ten answers combined) they would win the top cash prize. From 1994 onwards a bonus star prize was available if all five top answers were found, in addition to reaching 200+ points. If the family could not earn 200 points, they won £2 per point, up to £398.
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