Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Chain Letters

Encyclopedia : C : CH : CHA : Chain Letters



 

Chain Letters was a game show produced by Tyne Tees Television and broadcast on ITV in the United Kingdom from 1987 to 1997. Three contestants competed to win money by changing letters in words to form new words. Its original host was Jeremy Beadle, but later on it was hosted by Allan Stewart, Andrew O'Connor, Ted Robbins, Vince Henderson and Dave Spikey.

Game show structure

Round 1 - Chain Letters

The first round was Chain Letters. Each contestant was given a four-letter word and 45 seconds to make as many changes as possible, with £5 for each chain made. Any change was permissible if it gave a proper word (not a proper noun), except that contestants were not permitted to make two consecutive changes to the same position of the word (for example, BALL -> HALL -> HALF -> CALF was allowed, but BALL -> HALL -> CALL was not).

Round 2 - Booby Trap round

The next round is the Booby Trap round. Each contestant can choose one of 4 four-letter words and are invited to pick one of the letters in that word which will give them as much freedom as possible to make new words. Before changing the word however, their opponents secretly predict what the new word will be. If the contestant successfully changes the letter to form a new word, they win money - this amount is doubled for each subsequent change. However, if the contestant chooses one of the words written down by one of their opponents, said opponent wins the money instead.

Round 3 - Tie the Leader

The final round was the Tie the Leader round. An (initially) four-letter word was displayed, and general knowledge questions were asked whose answer could be obtained by changing a letter (highlighted by the game show computer "Wordsworth"), or by adding or subtracting a letter (with a "+" or "-" sign highlighted by Wordsworth). Contestants competed on the buzzer to answer these questions - depending on when the button was pressed, a correct answer could win £10, £20 or £40, or could "Tie the Leader" (the contestant's score would be increased to equal that of the highest-scoring contestant).

Superchain

Whoever had the most points at the end went through to the Superchain, the losers went home with however much money they had accumulated up into then, or a CD player in later series. In the Superchain, the winning contestant was given a 4 letter word and Wordsworth would highlight a letter to be changed to form a new word. Contestants had to make 10 changes within one minute to win the £1,000 jackpot. Otherwise, they would win £50 per successful change, plus the money accumulated in the previous three rounds.

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: