Everybody's Equal

Everybody's Equal is a game show that originally aired on ITV from 7 June 1989 to 22 July 1991 and hosted by Chris Tarrant. It was later revived under the name Whittle and aired on Channel 5 from 31 March to 30 December 1997 with Tim Vine as host. Versions also existed in many European countries, plus Canada. Elements of the show resemble Tarrant's future hit Who Wants to be a Millionaire?, particularly its "Fastest Finger First" game.

Everybody's Equal
Also known asWhittle
GenreGame show
Created byChris Kwantes
Mitchell Symons
Presented byChris Tarrant (ITV)
Tim Vine (Channel 5)
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original language(s)English
No. of series2 (ITV)
2 (Channel 5)
No. of episodes16 (ITV)
130 (Channel 5)
Production
Running time30 minutes (inc. adverts)
Production company(s)Celador and Thames (1989-91)
Grundy (1997)
DistributorFremantle
Release
Original networkITV (1989-91)
Channel 5 (1997)
Picture format4:3
Original release7 June 1989 (1989-06-07) 
30 December 1997 (1997-12-30)
External links
Website

Format

200 contestants were asked a question with four options and those who got it right were asked another. This continued until less than ten players survived, at which point they face four questions which are worth £50 each. If more than ten players remained after the sixth question, the ten fastest players went through. The player who correctly answers the final question the fastest goes on to play the final round. The winning contestant must place four things into the correct order, to win £1,000. If they get it wrong, the money is divided equally between all the other contestants.

On the original version of the show, Chris Tarrant would routinely "name and shame" the contestants who voted for the most outlandish answers - most memorably the first game of the first show where all but one contestant voted for the correct answer.

Transmissions

ITV

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodes
17 June 198919 July 19896
230 July 199022 July 199110

Channel 5

SeriesStart dateEnd dateEpisodes
131 March 199727 June 199765
229 September 199730 December 199765

International versions

CountryNameHost(s)ChannelDates aired
 France Que le meilleur gagne Laurence Boccolini
Nagui
Laurent Petitguillaume
La Cinq (1991–1992)
France 2 (1992–1995; 2012–2015)
4 March 1991  1995,
2012 – 2015
 Italy Campionissimo Gerry Scotti Italia 1 1993
Vinca il migliore Canale 5
Italia 1
1996
 Japan クイズ!当たって25%
Quiz! Atatte 25%
Shinsuke Shimada
Wakako Shimazaki
TBS 1991–1992
オールスター感謝祭
All Star Thanksgiving Festival
Koji Imada
Shinsuke Shimada
Wakako Shimazaki
1991–present
オールスター後夜祭
All Star After Party
Hiroiki Ariyoshi
Kazumi Takayama
2018
 Canada (Quebec) Que le meilleur gagne Alain Dumas
Grégory Charles
Radio-Canada 1993–1996
May 2007
 Lebanon خليك معنا
Khalik Mana
Serge Zarqa MTV 1999–2002
 Hungary 100-ból egy Gálvölgyi RTL Klub ?
 Poland Sto plus jeden[1] ? Nasza TV late nineties
 Spain Aquí jugamos todos Miriam Díaz-Aroca TVE 1 1995–1996

References

  1. Anna Z. (24 July 2005). "Entertainment and Game Shows". euromediatv.com.pl. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
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