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词条 Kto khochet stat' millionerom?
释义

  1. Broadcast history

  2. Payout structure

  3. Old game's version

      Special Events  

  4. Notable contestants

      Top Prize Winners    Top Prize Losers    Top Prize Walkers  

  5. References

  6. External links

{{primary sources|date=June 2011}}{{Infobox television|
| show_name = Кто хочет стать миллионером?
| image = Who Wants to Become a Millionaire? (Russian edition) logo.png
| caption = Titles of Кто хочет стать миллионером?
| creator =
| director = Konstantin Ivanov and Tatyana Dmitrakova (1999—2008), Maxim Utkin (2008-)
| presenter = Maxim Galkin (2001–2008)
Dmitry Dibrov (2008–present)
| composer = Keith Strachan
Matthew Strachan
Ramon Covalo
| country = Russia
| producer = Sergey Kordo (1999—2008), Ilya Krivitsky (2008-)
| location = Ostankino
| camera = multi-camera
| runtime = 50 minutes (70 minutes with commercials)
| company = WMedia (1999—2008), Krasny Kvadrat (2008-)
| network = NTV (1999—2001), Channel One (2001-)
| picture_format = 3 (October 1, 1999-May 28, 2011), 9 (June 4, 2011-)
| audio_format = stereo
| first_aired = {{start date|2001|2|19|df=y}}
| last_aired = Present
| website = http://www.1tv.ru/million
}}Кто хочет стать миллионером? (English translation: Who wants to become a millionaire?, transliteration: Kto khochet stat' millionerom?) is a Russian game show based on the original British format of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. The show is hosted by Dmitry Dibrov (earlier by Maxim Galkin). The main goal of the game is to win 3 million Russian roubles (originally 1 million Russian roubles) by answering 15 multiple-choice questions correctly. There are four lifelines - Fifty Fifty (50 на 50, 50 na 50), Phone A Friend (звонок другу, zvonok drugu), Ask The Audience (помощь зала, pomoshch zala) and Double Dip (право на ошибку, pravo na oshibku). For some time there also was a fifth lifeline, Three Wise Men (три мудреца, tri mudretsa, help from free «wise» people). Кто хочет стать миллионером? is broadcast from February 19, 2001 to today. It is shown by on the Russian TV station Channel One on Saturdays at 6:45 PM. After getting the fifth question correct, a contestant will leave with at least 5,000 RUB. After getting the tenth question correct, he will leave with at least 100,000 RUB. An earlier version of the show was called O, schastlivchik!.[1]

Broadcast history

The Russian version of the series premiered on October 1, 1999 on NTV. Initially, the program was called, "O, schastlivchik!" ("Oh, Lucky Man!"), presented by Dmitry Dibrov. The game combines the simplicity of the rules to provide an opportunity to win the top prize of 1 million rubles. The series gained enormous popularity among Russian audiences, and in 2000, was awarded a Taffy award for Best Entertainment Program.[2]

On February 19, 2001, the program moved to channel ORT (Channel One) and was renamed to its current title to reflect the name of the franchise. Dibrov departed the show, and was succeeded by comedian Maxim Galkin. On September 17, 2005 the money tree was revised, with the top prize now worth 3 million rubles.[3]

On December 21, 2008 Dibrov returned to hosting the show once more.[3]

Payout structure

Question numberQuestion value (in Russian Rubles) (Yellow zones are the guaranteed levels)
Former: Classic format
(2001-2005)
Current: Classic format
(2005-present)
Risk format
(2010-present)
1100500500
22001,0001,000
33002,0002,000
45003,0003,000
51,0005,0005,000
62,00010,00010,000
74,00015,00015,000
88,00025,00025,000
916,00050,00050,000
1032,000100,000100,000
1164,000200,000200,000
12125,000400,000400,000
13250,000800,000800,000
14500,0001,500,0001,500,000
151,000,0003,000,0003,000,000

Old game's version

{{unreferenced section|date=June 2011}}

Earlier, the game was called О, счастливчик!(O Lucky Man!) and it was shown on NTV.

{{Infobox television|
| show_name = О, счастливчик!
| image = Titles of old Russian Millionaire.jpg
| caption = Logo of О, счастливчик!
| runtime = 39 minutes
| creator = Ways PRO
| presenter = Dmitry Dibrov
| country = Russia
| network = NTV, TNT
| first_aired = {{start date|1999|10|1|df=y}}
| last_aired = {{end date|2001|01|28|df=y}}
| website =
}}

It was broadcast from October 1, 1999 to January 27, 2001. It was shown on the Russian TV station NTV. In 2001, the show was superseded by a second adoption named Кто хочет стать миллионером? and aired on public Russian broadcaster Channel One.[2] For a while TNT broadcast reruns of О, счастливчик! episodes.

Special Events

  • The first game was shown a special project for a few days before the new year 2000. The game was attended by leading NTV journalists and Leonid Parfyonov, Andrey Norkin, Vladimir Kara-Murza, Victor Shenderovich, Lev Novozhenov, Yevgeny Kiselyov, Alexander Belyayev and others. In the same game was born the concept of «zone of Shenderovich» - questions after the sixth and the «zone of the Kara-Murza» - after the tenth question.
  • A month before the 2000 presidential election in a game attended by the four presidential candidates: Stanislav Govorukhin, Ella Pamfilova, Yevgeny Savostyanov and Umar Dzhabrailov.
  • At the end of the first season held a special issue devoted to the eighth birthday of the tax police in Moscow, which was attended by employees of departments.
  • A few months before the new program in 2001 conducted a poll among the audience, whom they would like to see in New Year's special edition of the game. The poll has won Russia's President Vladimir Putin, but for obvious reasons, he refused to participate, but sent a letter. In a New Year special edition was attended by prominent journalists, politicians and artists: Svetlana Sorokina, Shoigu, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, Decl, etc. After Svetlana Sorokina player in the chair sat himself Dibrov, which reached up to the eleventh issue, and won 32,000 rubles.

Notable contestants

Top Prize Winners

  • Igor Sazeev (Игорь Сазеев) from Saint Petersburg. (12 March 2001)[4]
  • Irina Chudinovskikh and Yuriy Chudinovskikh (Ирина Чудиновских и Юрий Чудиновских) from Kirov. (January 18, 2003)[5]
  • Svetlana Yaroslavtseva (Светлана Ярославцева) from Troitsk. (February 19, 2006)[6]
  • Timur Budayev (Тимур Будаев) from Pyatigorsk. (April 17, 2010)[7]
  • Bari Alibasov and Alexander «Danko» Fadeev (Бари Алибасов и Александр «Данко» Фадеев). (November 23, 2013)
  • Yulianna Karaulova and Timur Solovyov (Юлианна Караулова и Тимур Соловьев). (December 2, 2017)

Top Prize Losers

  • Galina Semyonova (Галина Семёнова) lost 468,000 roubles on January 22, 2005[8]
  • Vladimir Yefremov (Владимир Ефремов) lost 700,000 roubles on April 30, 2011[8]
  • Dušan Perović and Yekaterina Andreyeva (Душан Перович и Екатерина Андреева) lost 1,100,000 roubles on April 1, 2017
  • Viktor Verzhbitskiy and Andrey Burkovskiy (Виктор Вержбицкий и Андрей Бурковский) lost 1,300,000 roubles on May 27, 2017
  • Viktor Vasilyev and Gavriil Gordeyev (Виктор Васильев и Гавриил Гордеев) lost 1,100,000 roubles on November 11, 2017
  • Keti Topuria and Vladimir Miklosich (Кэти Топурия и Владимир Миклошич) lost 1,300,000 roubles on February 17, 2018
  • Alexander Druz and Viktor Sidnev (Александр Друзь и Виктор Сиднев) lost 1,300,000 roubles on December 22, 2018 (Alexander Druz was accused of cheating game and collusion with Ilya Ber, the chief editor of the show. They were later stripped of their 200,000 rouble winnings.)

Top Prize Walkers

  • Sergey Strokin (Сергей Строкин) from Moscow - June 10, 2000
  • Gennadiy Sostrovchuk - November 24, 2001
  • Konstantin Fedchenko - December 10, 2001
  • Olga Krayushkina - November 4, 2002
  • Leonid Agutin and Anzhelika Varum - January 8, 2005
  • Valentin Smirnitskiy (Валентин Смирни́тский) - March 6, 2005
  • Sergey Bobris (Сергей Бобрис) from Belgorod. (February 5, 2011)
  • Aleksandr Kuzin (Александр Кузин) from Oryol. (March 24, 2012)
  • Leonid Panyukov (Леонид Панюков) from Kostroma. (September 29, 2012)
  • Mikhail Boyarsky and Valentin Smirnitsky (Михаил Боярский и Валентин Смирни́тский). (May 16, 2015)
  • Dana Borisova and Alexander Gudkov (Дана Борисова и Александр Гудков). (June 24, 2018)
  • Anna Kamenkova and Yury Grymov (Анна Каменкова и Юрий Гримов). (August 18, 2018)

References

1. ^http://quizzies.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=57
2. ^The history of the game «Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?» on Russian TV schastlivchik.com {{ru icon}}
3. ^Kto khochet stat' millionerom?: Information on the project {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140830043348/http://www.1tv.ru/sprojects_in_detail/si%3D5811 |date=August 30, 2014 }} Channel One official site. {{ru icon}}
4. ^http://www.kp.ru/daily/22510/8169/
5. ^http://www.1tv.ru/owa/win/ort5_pressa.pressa?p_pr_title_id=16414&p_date=04.06.2003&p_list_pagenum=25&p_search=
6. ^http://www.kp.ru/daily/24259.3/455403/
7. ^http://www.khsm.ru/other/millionaires/
8. ^http://www.millioner.ru/history/facts/

External links

  • Official website of the new version
  • Behind the scenes of Russian Millionaire
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kto Hochyet Stat' Millionyerom?}}

6 : Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?|Russian game shows|Russian television series based on British television series|1999 Russian television series debuts|2001 Russian television series endings|2001 Russian television series debuts

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