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Michael Larson, Game Show Legend Views: 118
Back on May 19, 1984, history was made at
CBS by a man who showed how successful you can be if you just pay
attention.
Having watched Press Your Luck since it
premiered, Michael Larson, then an unemployed ice cream truck
driver from Ohio, came to the conclusion that the swift,
seemingly random flashing lights that bounced around the Press
Your Luck board were hardly random at all. By taping the show
religiously and pausing the tapes, Larson discovered that there
were just six light patterns on the board. With this bit of
knowledge, he practiced at home while watching the show and
realized that he could stop the board wherever and whenever he
wanted, if he just had patience.
Armed with that knowledge, a fifty-cent
thrift store shirt on his back, and money borrowed for airfare to
Los Angeles, Michael tried out for the show and was booked. The
executive producer and head contestant coordinator disagreed over
whether or not Larson should be on the show--the coordinator
sensed something "off" with Larson. But the producer
overruled and Michael was allowed to play.
Competing against returning champion (and
winner of $11,000) Ed, a Baptist minister, and fellow newcomer
Janie, a dental assistant, Michael played it cool in round one.
He even hit a Whammy on his first spin! However, on his last two
spins he nailed the top amount, $1250. His $2500 total, however,
had him in last place, and the producers were none the wiser.
By earning seven spins in the second
round of questioning, however, Michael was able to go to town. On
the round two board, he focused mainly on two spaces, each of
which guaranteed money and an additional spin, which was crucial
for him to play and play and play. One space alternated between $500
+ Spin, $750 + Spin, and $1000 + Spin. The other was the "Big
Bucks" square, which alternated between $3000 + Spin, $4000
+ Spin, and $5000 + Spin.
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| Why is he grinning? Well, he knows that it's
only up from here! |
Given the opportunity to play first,
Michael quickly bumped his total up over $10,000. At the $18,000
mark, Michael's spin was designated the "Home Player Spin"
(a gimmick running to entice viewers to watch). At this point,
host Peter Tomarken astutely noted that "Michael is on a
roll."
Things first seemed awry when Michael
passed the $25,000 mark and continued to play. At this point, any
sane player would have passed his spins if he could, since the
odds of hitting a Whammy after not seeing one for that long would
be high. But Michael played on and on, and by the time he passed
$30,000, Tomarken seemed incredulous that he was still spinning.
The crowd was whipped into a frenzy.
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| Folks, we're nowhere near ending this
today. Tune in on Monday! Poor Ed looks like he needs a
drink. |
Although there was no disruption in
taping, the game was post-edited to end a "first half"
when Michael hit the $36,000 mark. In the eight months the show
had been on, the game had always completed in the allotted time.
Thirty minutes had already passed, and Michael was still spinning...and
his opponents had yet to touch the board.
Michael spun on and on, methodically
passing the $40,000, $50,000 and $60,000 marks. Tomarken grew
stunned and almost in shock as he watched Michael rack up more
money in one sitting than anyone had ever done in a five show run.
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| Peter begged and begged for Michael to
stop, thinking Larson would hit a Whammy and be
heartbroken... |
Around the $70,000 mark, however, Michael
began to falter. His spins grew longer as he struggled with
hitting the button at the exact moment. Despite knowing every
pattern, if Michael couldn't sync up his buzzer hitting with the
board, even if he was off by one cycle, he could unintentionally
hit a Whammy. Indeed, at a few points along the way, Michael
missed his pattern, but luckily landed on other cash amounts or
trips.
When Michael broke the $100,000 mark, he
passed his four remaining spins, and raised his hands up in the
air in triumph. The crowd leapt to its feet and gave him a
standing ovation, and Ed, who had $3,000 in his bank, was given
the daunting task of trying to catch up over $97,000 in four
spins. A Whammy ultimately ended his turn, and Janie was given a
shot at playing. In four spins, she racked up around $8,000 in
cash and prizes. With three spins left and a huge difference to
make up, Janie realized her only chance at winning was to pass
her three remaining spins to Michael, which she did.
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| Ed may be a minister, but Michael had the
higher calling today. |
Michael hit for cash on the first two of
the three passed spins, but the third was another story. Aiming
for the pattern where he would hit either $500+Spin, $750+Spin,
or $1000+Spin, Michael stopped the board one frame too early and
landed on...a trip to the Bahamas ("With that money you
could BUY the Bahamas," Peter said). What Peter didn't
notice is that the particular spot Michael had hit had just
switched from $700+Spin...the other two slides in that box? The
Bahamas trip...and a Whammy. After spinning over 40 times,
Michael nearly lost over $100,000.
But luck shined on him in that situation
and he passed the two spins that he'd earned back to Janie, who
could not earn an additional spin and lost the game by a huge
margin. Michael became the champ and won $110,237, over $100,000
of that in cash. In the post-game interview, Michael fudged when
asked why he continued to spin after he earned $30,000, an amount
that would have been insurmountable by his opponents. "Well
two things," he said. "One it just felt right, and two,
I had seven spins and I thought, someone could do what I did."
It was pretty lousy reasoning, but it passed for the taping.
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| Janie was the only contestant who walked
away from the show with no money. She was probably ready
to jab Michael with one of her dental tools! |
The producers tried in vain to disqualify
him after the show, but Michael hadn't really don't anything
illegal. He'd simply paid attention. In fact, had Michael been
ultra-cool and ultra-patient, he could have played on forever,
winning millions of dollars. That would have required hours and
hours of game play, but there was no stipulation in the rules
about how long a contestant could spin. However, Michael was
stifled by the CBS regulation that put a cap on $25,000 in
winnings. While Michael was allowed to keep all of his money, he
was not allowed to return as a champion on the next show.
Sixteen more random patterns were added
to the board after that taping, making it much more difficult to
figure out. Interestingly enough, contestant coordinators noted
that contestants who appeared immediately after Larson's episode
taped had also figured out the original pattern and were slightly
disappointed that they couldn't break the bank.
Larson's episodes aired only once, on a
Friday and Monday in June of 1984. The ratings for the second
episode of his reign were 2 1/2 times bigger than the ratings for
a "normal" episode of Press Your Luck. While USA Cable
did receive the entire 3-year run to be rerun, they were
forbidden from airing these episodes, so only people who were
smart enough to tape way back in 1984 were lucky enough to keep
them.
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| No Rice-a-Roni here, just a fat paycheck! |
A somewhat sad postscript to the story is
that Larson eventually wound up losing all his winnings in a bad
housing investment deal. In fact, he lost all the money before
the show was even cancelled, prompting a call to the network
asking if he could participate in a tournament of champions. Not
surprisingly, the show politely declined.
Larson's story was told in both a TV Guide interview and
a Good Morning America interview in 1994, around the release of the movie Quiz
Show. Both outlets compared Larson's legal genius with the rigging in which 21
contestant Charles Van Doren participated.
Larson's story was further immortalized in 2003, when
GSN produced a documentary on the event called "Big Bucks: The Press Your Luck
Scandal." The documentary showed never-before-seen clips of Michael's
episode, and featured interviews with producers Bill Carruthers and Bill
Mitchell, as well as other Press Your Luck staffers. The documentary also
featured interviews with Larsen's brother and common law wife, who presented a
different side of Michael's life that had never been heard before. Michael
lost of all of his money quickly, including $40,000 in one dollar bills that was
stolen from his home shortly after the episode aired. At the time of his
death in 1999, Michael was on the run from the law, and many members of his
family weren't speaking to him. But the world remembers him for his
accomplishment on Press Your Luck, and with his episodes finally airing for the
first time since 1984, a whole new generation can appreciate what he pulled off
that day in 1984.
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