This week’s holiday prize is supplied by www.icelolly.com
Caribbean hoiday with thanks to www.sandals.co.uk
Hosted by Stephen Mulhern, Magic Numbers is a brand new fast paced, live entertainment show where viewers’ phones could win them a fortune. If you'd like the chance to win big money in our live phone-in competition you can call in on the night or alternatively enter online.
This week you could win up to £400,000 just by matching digits from their phone number - landline or mobile - with those numbers produced by the games in the show.
At the climax of the show, a viewer playing from home will be selected at random to play for the huge cash jackpot...
END CHALLENGE: MAGIC NUMBERS TELEPHONE CHALLENGE
For Magic Numbers Show 7, Saturday 28th August 2010
• The end challenge is played by the home viewer who has called in and matched two Magic Numbers to the last six digits of their landline or mobile phone number and been selected at random to play for £400,000.
• The challenge is played using ten cases. There are five empty cases and five pre-filled cases.
• Two of the pre-filled cases contain cash amounts of £20,000 and £40,000. Three of the pre-filled cases contain X signs.
• What goes in the five empty cases is determined by how well the caller does at answering a series of five questions.
• Question One is worth £60,000, Question Two = £70,000, Question Three = £80,000, Question Four = £90,000 and Question Five = £100,000.
• If the caller gives a correct answer, the corresponding amount of cash will be loaded into a case by the celebrity guest. For example, if they get the first answer correct, the celebrity will load the £60,000 into a case.
• If the caller gives an incorrect answer, the corresponding case will remain empty and we will move to the next case with the next amount of money.
• The caller will be given sufficient time to answer all five questions, but will be pushed for an answer should they take too long.
• Only the caller’s first answer will be accepted.
• After all five questions have been asked the cases will be closed and mixed up randomly by an independent adjudicator.
• The mixed up cases are then bought on stage and placed into a large grid configured like a telephone keypad (with 123 on the top row row, 456 on row two, 789 on the third row and 0 in the centre at the bottom).
• However many questions the caller gets right determines how many cases they must open. For example, if they correctly answered 3 questions, they will open 3 cases. The caller must choose the same amount of cases as questions they correctly answered. They cannot stick after 1 or 2 cases, and may not open more cases than questions correctly answered.
• If the caller chooses a case with a cash amount in it, it is added to their cumulative total.
• If the caller chooses a case with nothing in it, nothing is added or removed from their cumulative total.
• If the caller chooses a case with a bankrupt symbol (“X”) in it, their cumulative total up until that point will be zeroed.
• If a caller fails to answer any questions correctly, a standby caller (pre-selected at random) will be allowed to attempt the challenge.
• Should two callers both fail to get any questions correct we will not move on to any further callers.
· The end challenge is played by the home viewer who has called in and matched two Magic Numbers to the last six digits of their landline or mobile phone number and been selected at random to play for £350,000.
· The challenge is played using ten cases. There are five empty cases and five pre-filled cases.
· Two of the pre-filled cases contain cash amounts of £20,000 and £30,000. Three of the pre-filled cases contain X signs.
· What goes in the five empty cases is determined by how well the caller does at answering a series of five questions.
· Question One is worth £40,000, Question Two = £50,000, Question Three = £70,000, Question Four = £90,000 and Question Five = £100,000.
· If the caller gives a correct answer, the corresponding amount of cash will be loaded into a case by the celebrity guest. For example, if they get the first answer correct, the celebrity will load the £40,000 into a case.
· If the caller gives an incorrect answer, the corresponding case will remain empty and we will move to the next case with the next amount of money.
· The caller has ninety seconds to answer up to a maximum of five questions.
· After ninety seconds this part of the challenge stops. Any cases corresponding to unanswered questions will remain empty. If Stephen is part way through a question he will not finish it and the caller will not be given a chance to answer it.
· Only the caller’s first answer will be accepted.
· After all five questions have been asked the cases will be closed and mixed up randomly by an independent adjudicator.
· The mixed up cases are then bought on stage and placed into a large grid configured like a telephone keypad (with 123 on the top row row, 456 on row two, 789 on the third row and 0 in the centre at the bottom).
· However many questions the caller gets right determines how many cases they must open. For example, if they correctly answered 3 questions, they will open 3 cases. The caller must choose the same amount of cases as questions they correctly answered. They cannot stick after 1 or 2 cases, and may not open more cases than questions correctly answered.
· If the caller chooses a case with a cash amount in it, it is added to their cumulative total.
· If the caller chooses a case with nothing in it, nothing is added to their cumulative total.
· If the caller chooses a case with a bankrupt symbol (“X”) in it, their cumulative total up until that point will be zeroed.
· If a caller fails to answer any questions correctly, a standby caller (pre-selected at random) will be allowed to attempt the challenge.
· Should two callers both fail to get any questions correct we will not move on to any further callers.
· If the caller does not win any money, the prize fund will rise by £50,000 the following week. The current maximum prize is £350,000. The prize fund will be frozen at this week’s level for the following programme if a caller does win any prize amount.