Quiz $ Millionaire

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
クイズ$ミリオネア
Quiz $ Millionaire
(Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?)
File:Quiz Millionaire.png
Directed by Keiichi Tanaka
Presented by Monta Mino
Narrated by Seigo M. Takei (2000)
Kyōya Kimura (2000–present)
Composer(s) Keith Strachan
Matthew Strachan
Country of origin Japan
Original language(s) Japanese
Production
Producer(s) Toshihiko Matsuo
Hanako Aso
Hiroyasu Hanazono
Running time 53 minutes–3 hours[1]
Release
Original network Fuji Television
Original release April 20, 2000 –
January 2, 2013

Quiz $ Millionaire (クイズ$ミリオネア Kuizu $ Mirionea?), sometimes referred to as Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?,[1] is a Japanese quiz show based on the original program of the latter title. It has been broadcast on Fuji Television since April 20, 2000, and is hosted by television personality Monta Mino (みの もんた Mino Monta?).[2]

The main goal of the game is to win ¥10,000,000 by answering fifteen multiple-choice questions correctly. There are three lifelines - Fifty-Fifty (フィフティ・フィフティ Fifuti Fifuti?), Phone-a-Friend (テレフォン Terefon?) (a phone call to four supporters who are in one place), and Ask The Audience (オーディエンス Ōdiensu?). Whenever a contestant answers the fifth question correct, he is guaranteed ¥100,000. When a contestant answers the tenth question correct, he is guaranteed ¥1,000,000.

This version has the distinction of having the most top prize winners in the worldwide Millionaire franchise,[3] and is the only version of Millionaire with a narrator. Seigo M. Takei (武居“M”征吾 Takei Emu Seigo?) was the first announcer of the show before being replaced by Kyōya Kimura (木村 匡也 Kimura Kyōya?) in August of that year.

Broadcasting

The show was broadcast every Thursday[4] regularly from April 20, 2000 to March 29, 2007. Since May 3, 2007, the show has been brought back for occasional specials, with the most recent one being broadcast January 2, 2013.[1][5]

Super Millionaire

Super Millionaire was a spin-off of Quiz $ Millionaire. The show was broadcast twice, with the first episode raising the grand prize to ¥20 million. The series also added four new rules:[6]

  • There were only 10 questions, as opposed to the normal 15.
  • Questions 1-5 had 4 choices, and 6-10 had 2 choices, meaning contestants could not use 50:50 after the 5th question.
  • Contestants could not walk away on the 9th or 10th questions.
  • There were no guaranteed sums.

Clock Format

In 2009, the series became the first international version of Millionaire to adopt the clock format from the US version of the show.[6] Contestants now have time limits for each question: 30 seconds each for questions 1 - 9, 1 minute each for questions 10 - 12, and 3 minutes each for questions 13 - 15. Usage of lifelines temporarily pauses the clock. However, unlike the US version, the remaining time after giving an answer for that question is void. Contestants who exceed the time limit on a given question without giving a "final answer" are forced to walk away with whatever winnings they have at they point.

Payout Structure

Answering a question correctly is worth a specific cash prize at each level. Contestants who successfully answer questions on levels with bolded amounts in the table below are guaranteed to leave with no less than the cash award at that level should they incorrectly answer a later question.

Question number Question value
15 ¥10,000,000
14 ¥7,500,000
13 ¥5,000,000
12 ¥2,500,000
11 ¥1,500,000
10 ¥1,000,000
9 ¥750,000
8 ¥500,000
7 ¥250,000
6 ¥150,000
5 ¥100,000
4 ¥50,000
3 ¥30,000
2 ¥20,000
1 ¥10,000

Super Millionaire

Question number December 23, 2007 March 27, 2008
10 ¥20,000,000 ¥10,000,000
9 ¥15,000,000 ¥7,500,000
8 ¥10,000,000 ¥5,000,000
7 ¥5,000,000 ¥2,500,000
6 ¥2,500,000 ¥1,500,000
5 ¥1,000,000
4 ¥500,000
3 ¥250,000
2 ¥100,000
1 ¥10,000

Top Prize Winners

Civilians

Name Transliteration Date
國光恭幸 Yasuyuki Kunimitsu[7] July 27, 2000
永田喜彰 Yoshiaki Nagata August 10, 2000
今尾奈緒子 Naoko Imao November 2, 2000
能勢一幸 Kazuyuki Nose February 15, 2001
坂本ひとみ Hitomi Sakamoto December 13, 2001
菊地晃史 Akifumi Kikuchi June 27, 2002
江口みち子 Michiko Eguchi August 1, 2002
長田直美 Naomi Nagata November 14, 2002
三島祥子 Shōko Mishima May 8, 2003
菊池友久 Tomohisa Kikuchi April 28, 2005
濱田敏彦 Toshihiko Hamada May 26, 2005
野添潤子 Junko Nozoe June 29, 2006
大井恵子 Keiko Ōi July 27, 2006

Celebrities

Name Transliteration Date
馳浩 Hiroshi Hase November 23, 2000
鈴木大地 Daichi Suzuki September 18, 2003
新庄剛志 Tsuyoshi Shinjo January 2, 2004
堀江貴文 Takafumi Horie December 30, 2004
細木数子 Kazuko Hosoki December 30, 2004
堺正章 Masaaki Sakai April 7, 2005
田中康夫 Yasuo Tanaka April 7, 2005
柏木由紀子 and 大島花子 Yukiko Kashiwagi and Hanako Oshima April 21, 2005
小泉孝太郎 Kotaro Koizumi January 2, 2006
浅野ゆう子 Yūko Asano March 23, 2006
為末大 Dai Tamesue September 14, 2006
坂東三津五郎 (10代目) Bandō Mitsugorō X October 5, 2006
デヴィ・スカルノ Dewi Sukarno[8] October 26, 2006
紺野美沙子 Misako Konno February 15, 2007
谷原章介 Shōsuke Tanihara July 5, 2007
富司純子 Sumiko Fuji March 27, 2008
徳光和夫 Kazuo Tokumitsu March 27, 2008
ビートたけし Takeshi Kitano January 30, 2009
太田光 Hikari Ōta[9] April 1, 2009
芦田 愛菜 Mana Ashida[1] January 2, 2013

Kids

Name Transliteration Date
小林宏太郎 Koutaro Kobayashi September 6, 2001
南川克博 Katsuhiro Minamigawa September 6, 2001
棚橋紗夕 Sayuu Tanabashi September 4, 2003
片岡菜摘 Natsumi Kataoka September 4, 2003
黄原暁 Jō Kihara August 26, 2004
芦田 愛菜 Mana Ashida January 2, 2013

Merchandise

Several home versions have been released based on the show. The first of these was a board game released in 2001 by Takara Tomy,[10] who later released another electronic version of the game.[11] A version for the PlayStation game console was released on December 20, 2001,[12] with an updated party version released for the same console in 2002.[13] A book entitled "Complete cheats! Quiz $ Millionaire" ("完全攻略! クイズ$ミリオネア", Kanzen kōryaku kuizu mirionea), was released by Fusosha on March 20, 2002.[14]

In addition, Visiware and Sony Pictures Television have released an app based on the program's format for iOS and Android devices. Mino introduced the app during the special that aired on January 2, 2013. The app allows home viewers to play the game simultaneously, being asked the same questions featured on the show.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  12. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  13. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links

Preceded by Asian versions of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? Succeeded by
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (Singaporean version. April 19, 2000)