What? Where? When?
What? Where? When? is an intellectual game show well known in Russian-language media and other CIS states since the mid-1970s. Today it is produced for television by TV Igra on the Russian Channel One and also exists as a competitive game played in clubs organized by the . Over 39,000 teams worldwide play the sport version of the game, based on the TV show.
Format
Throughout the game, a team of six experts attempts to answer questions sent in by viewers. For each question, the time limit is one minute. The questions require a combination of skills such as logical thinking, intuition, insight, etc. to find the correct answer. The person who sent in the question earns a prize if the experts cannot give the correct answer, while the team of experts earns points if they manage to get the correct answer.The basic rules of the game are:
- The game is played between a "team of TV viewers" and a team of six experts. Viewers ask questions to the experts, and the experts, during a one-minute discussion, try to find the answer to the given question.
- If the experts answer the question correctly, they earn a point. If their answer is wrong, the viewers' team gets a point, and the viewer who sent in this question receives a monetary prize. The experts do not receive monetary prizes, except for the best player in case that they win the final game of the series or the year.
- The experts sit around the round table divided into 13 sectors, 12 of which contain envelopes with questions mailed in by viewers and pre-checked for validity, while the 13th sector indicates a question randomly selected from questions submitted by Internet during the show. Questions from the 13th sector are not pre-checked thus their quality and validity are not guaranteed.
- The arrow on the spinning top selects the sector which will be played next. If the arrow points to a sector which has already been played, the next clockwise sector is selected.
- A question may involve material objects or media demonstrated to the players.
- Sometimes the subject of the question is placed inside a "black box" brought into the room and placed on the table but not opened until the correct answer is announced. In this case, the question usually ends with, "What is in the black box?"
- The experts may choose to answer the question immediately, before the minute starts. Then, if their answer is correct, they win an extra minute that can be used to discuss one question later in the game. They may also answer during the minute, but with no chance to win an extra minute.
- Usually, members of other teams of experts attend the game and informally discuss questions among themselves during the show. Once per game, but only if the viewers' team is in the lead, the playing team can ask for help from other experts present in the hall, who have 20 seconds to help. Surprisingly enough, despite the fact that teams actually compete with each other and have no material reasons to assist, the traditions of collaborative work in the club and the spirit of friendship—even between members of different teams—usually urge them to suggest the best answers they have to the playing team.
- The game continues up to 6 points scored by either side.
- When the experts get 5 points, they may declare "the final round" which means that only one expert remains to play the round. This clears the score, and this question "costs" 6 points. The expert must give the exact answer to win the game with the score 6:0.
- In the 2012 series, the rule of a "minute for loan" was added: if the viewers' team has 5 points, the experts' team may choose to have one extra minute for a particular question and answer one of the later questions without discussing it.
Special sectors
- Blitz: three easier questions with 20 seconds to discuss each one. The experts must answer all three questions correctly to win the point.
- Superblitz: same as blitz, but only one expert remains at the table. In recent years, the last expert to win a superblitz within a calendar year is awarded a prize.
- 13th sector: the computer randomly selects one of the questions received on the Internet during the game.
- 0 : questions by the game-makers. Host Vladimir Voroshilov entered the room, chose one of three questions placed in the sector, and asked it himself. This was the only time where the host could be seen in the show. In some series the zero sector had the special rule: it was played only if the arrow pointed at it directly, the clockwise rule did not apply. The sector could be played up to 3 times this way. After Voroshilov's death, the sector was replaced with the 13th sector.
Prizes (Russian version)
- The TV viewer gets 50000₽+10000₽*n where n is number of points the TV viewers have won if experts answer incorrectly, or request call the club or minute in loan
- The best question gets 150000₽ more
- In the final of the year team of tv viewers play for superprize: the deposit. This sum divides by each player that have won
- The best player of the year gets The Diamond Owl
Music pause
- In the USSR, it was a considered a sector. If the music sector arrives, the experts automatically win a point, and all viewers win the music.
- Later, the experts or Voroshilov could call once or twice per game. Is also a kind of mulligan to form a new group.
- From 2001 onward, music pauses are technical timeouts for advertisements and commercial pause in volleyball style. The second timeout is a tea or coffee pause.
Sample questions
Ordinary sector
Black box questions
Any question ending in "What is in the black box"? In some questions, it was another black box, or even a flight data recorder. There are three black boxes, but the large black box is usually the one used. The smaller and smallest boxes are used only if there are two or three boxes in the question, in blitz rounds, or if the item must be smaller in size.Other contents of the big black box have included the following:
- Barcode
- "[email protected]"
- Dust
- Laces
Musical questions
Video questions
Picture-based questions
Item-based questions
The experts are presented an item and usually asked how it is used.Blitz questions
Superblitz questions
13th sector
History
The game was developed between 1975 and 1977 by artist, television host and director Vladimir Voroshilov. The very first version of the game emphasized knowledge rather than logic; two families competed from their homes. In the next two years only two games were aired, the second of which, on 24 December 1977, already was close to today's format: a top spinning on the table selected a viewer's question which is discussed for one minute by a team of 6 persons; the host is "invisible" and present only as a voice. Since 1978 the game has been aired regularly. The final major change in rules, in 1982, established that the game continues until 6 points are scored by either side. Since 1986, the games have been broadcast live. Since 1990, TV broadcasting of the game takes place in the Okhotnichy domik that is located in the Neskuchny Garden. In 1991, the game became the first TV show in the USSR where TV viewers and experts could received monetary prizes. Since 2001, only TV viewers can received monetary prizes.The game quickly became popular, and a dozen or so of the best players from the TV version have become household names of the same magnitude as pop-music stars: Viktor Sidnev, Nurali Latypov, Alexander Drouz, Alexei Blinov, Fyodor Dvinyatin, Boris Burda, Anatoly Wasserman, Maxim Potashev, among others.
International versions
Licensed versions of the game are currently being aired throughout countries of the former Soviet Union. Notably, whilst the original show is aired live, licensed shows are usually recorded.In December 2009, it was announced that the U.S. production company Merv Griffin Entertainment would produce a pilot for ABC of an American version of the show tentatively titled The Six. The new show aimed to preserve the essence of the Russian original, although producers had stated that there would be "tweaks" to the format and feature an on-camera host. In April 2010 it was reported that the show would be hosted by Vernon Kay. Production of the show took place in the summer of 2010. The game title was changed first to Six Minds and finally to Million Dollar Mind Game.
The game premiered on Sunday, October 23, 2011 at 4:00 p.m. ET on ABC. In the U.S. version, a team of six friends competed together to answer a series of questions. Each correct answer increased their cash prize, starting at $6,000 and increasing to $1 million for the tenth answer. However, if the team missed a total of four questions, the game ended and they lost everything. They had 60 seconds to discuss each question, after which the team captain for that question gave a response. Three forms of assistance were available, each of which could be used once after the captain responded: an extra 30 seconds of discussion time, replacing the question with a different one at the same money level, or rejecting the captain's answer and giving a different one. After any correct answer, the team members secretly voted on whether to continue or stop the game; if all six voted to stop, the game ended and they split their winnings equally. Otherwise, the game continued and the captain's position rotated by one seat.
The originally produced episodes were burned off by ABC over a period of six weeks on Sunday afternoons as counterprogramming for NFL games on CBS and Fox after the October 2011 Las Vegas tragedy, and there was no indication that any new episodes would be produced in the future, despite critical acclaim by critics and game show fans alike.
In May 2012, a network spokesperson confirmed that Million Dollar Mind Game was canceled.
Legend:
Currently airing
No longer airing
Future version
Country | Title | Host | Channel | Date premiered | Language |
Ի՞նչ, որտե՞ղ, ե՞րբ | Karen Kocharyan | Armenia TV | February 2002 | Russian, Armenian | |
Nə? Harada? Nə zaman? | Balash Kasumov | Space, AzTV | 2006 | Russian, Azerbaijani | |
Что? Где? Когда? | Ales' Mukhin | ONT | March 2009 | Russian | |
Какво? Къде? Кога? | Vladimir Voroshilov | Intervision, Channel One | November 13–15, 1987 | Russian, Bulgarian | |
Mis? Kus? Millal? | TBA | Kanal 2 | March 17, 2013 | Estonian | |
რა? სად? როდის? | George Mosidze | Rustavi 2 | January, 2008 | Georgian | |
Million Dollar Mind Game | Teo Mammucari | Canale5 | 2012 | Italian | |
Что? Где? Когда? | Balash Kasumov | Channel 7 | September 30, 2011 | Russian | |
Билерман ордо | Talantbek Kanatbek uulu | ElTR | 2007 | Russian, Kyrgyz | |
Kas? Kur? Kada? | Robertas Petrauskas | TV3 | April 15, 2012 | Lithuanian | |
Что? Где? Когда? | Vladimir Voroshilov, Boris Kryuk | Channel One, NTV | September 4, 1975 | Russian | |
Aklın Yolu Bir | Oktay Kaynarca | TNT | April 2011 | Turkish | |
Що? Де? Коли? | Alexander Androsov | Pershyi Natsionalnyi, K1, Inter, 1+1 | February 2008 | Russian, Ukrainian | |
Million Dollar Mind Game | Vernon Kay | ABC | October 23, 2011 | English | |
Zakovat | Abdurasul Abdullayev | Uzbekiston | 2001 | Uzbek |
Competitive game
In addition to the original TV version, which to this date is one of the most popular TV programs in Russia, a competitive variant exists that is played by over 39,000 teams in all countries of the former USSR and in Russian-speaking diasporas around the world, most notably in Israel, Germany, Finland, United Kingdom, United States and Canada. Although Russian is the official language of most national and all international tournaments, there are some countries like Bulgaria, Moldova, Uzbekistan and Georgia where non-Russian-language teams are more numerous. Face-to-face World Championships have been held every year since 2002 with corporate sponsorship and under the aegis of TV Igra and the governments and National Olympic committees of Russia and Azerbaijan. The 2010 championship took place in Israel with sponsorship of Euro-Asian Jewish Congress.These competitions rely on logic rather than knowledge too, but usually require more erudition than the TV versions due to high educational level of gamers.