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Introduced on the first Edd Byrnes pilot, Bankrupt is a black wedge on the Wheel that takes away the player's score for that round when landing on it (score from previous rounds is not affected, but all prize possessions are), and also costs the player their turn. Originally, the wedge had white outlines; these were removed sometime between January 6 and mid-October 1975. There was originally one Bankrupt in Round 1 and two for each round thereafter, but in 1987 this was changed to add the second Bankrupt in Round 3; from 1997-2005, in the event that a round began as a Speed-Up, the second Bankrupt was removed along with any remaining cardboard. From 2007-09, the second Bankrupt and remaining cardboard (except the Wild Card from 2006-2008) were always removed after Round 3 but, since the beginning of Season 27, both Bankrupts are present throughout the game, with a second one permanently replacing the purple 0 next to the top dollar value.
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Originally, the orange-yellow (changed to red in Season 24) $300 was replaced by a second Bankrupt for Rounds 2 from Seasons 14-19 (excluding the rest of the round where the $10,000 Wedge is picked up). The second Bankrupt in Round 3 moved to the purple $600 next to top dollar in Season 20, which then moved to the yellow $300 in Season 25 (purple $600 next to top dollar in Season 26) for use in Rounds 2 and 3 only. The wedge's symbolic slide whistle was added sometime between June 7, 1976 and July 5, 1977, and changed to the current sound on July 17, 1989.
Beginning in the late 1980s, the slide whistle sound was not heard if the host hit it on the Final Spin. For a brief period beginning on September 16, 1996, the second Bankrupt was "off model", using the Clarendon font with all letters the same size. This was fixed sometime between September 26 and October 2.
The single-round record for Bankrupt hits is believed to be six, occurring on March 27, 1979 (Round 2); October 11, 1994 (Round 3); December 30, 2008 (Round 3, one from the Mystery Wedge); October 4, 2011 (Round 2); November 28, 2013 (Round 3); and March 18, 2015 (Round 2). Wedges with a dollar amount on them, and essentially the "meat" of the show. A correct letter call credits that amount multiplied by how many times the called letter is in the puzzle. The minimum amount was
It also led to two games in 1997 where, due to time constraints, one of these games also had Round 3 begin as a Speed-Up, also meaning that the Jackpot was not used. During the Cash and Splash/Cruise and Cash Splash Sweepstakes in Season 7, Round 2 had both ,500 and ,500 (although only ,500 was shown on-camera when Pat announced the two spaces being on the Wheel in said round). The former was on the purple 0 near Lose A Turn.
in the Shopper's Bazaar pilot and in the 1974 pilots, which was quickly increased to 0 sometime in 1975 (before July 15), followed by 0 (late 1984-96), and 0 (in the final rounds until 1996), 0 (1996-99), 0 (1999-2014), and 0 (2014-present). was the minimum from July-September 1989 on the daytime show.Spin247 Free Spins 200 Free Spins+450% Deposit Bonus Online.
On the daytime show, the top amounts were originally $450/$500/$500/$1,000/$1,000 on Bazaar and $350/$500/$750/$1,000 in 1974. When the series debuted, the top amounts became $500 in Round 1 and $1,000 in Round 3 (it is believed, but not certain, that $750 was the top value in Round 2), which were altered to $500/$1,000/$1,000 by July 15, 1975 and $500/$1,000/$1,500 by January 19, 1976. Sometime between September 5 and November 13, 1979, it was altered for the remainder of the original NBC run to $750/$1,000/$2,000; when it moved to CBS in July 1989, the amounts were lowered to $500/$500/$1,000/$1,250, although for some episodes after Wheel returned to NBC in 1991 the format was $500/$1,000/$1,250 due to time constraints.
Nighttime top values were originally $750/$1,000/$5,000 on the premiere, with Round 1 quickly increased to $1,000 after at least five episodes (likely on the second taping day). When the show began playing for cash in October 1987, the sequence went $1,000/$2,500/$3,500/$5,000; in 2000, the configuration changed to its current $2,500/$3,500/$3,500/$5,000. Between 1987 and about 1990, if time permitted, some games played Rounds 3 and 4 in the same segment (both with $3,500 as the top value and still introducing the Round 4 Prize) and introduced $5,000 in Round 5.
Conversely, some shows in Season 13 played only one round in the first segment, with Round 2 (in its own segment) introducing $3,500, Round 3 introducing $5,000, and with an occasional second Wheel prize. This pacing was also used on early 1996 episodes during and preceding sweepstakes, to allocate time for Pat to explain them and to promote the 1996 Olympic games.
[BOLD]It also led to two games in 1997 where, due to time constraints, one of these games also had Round 3 begin as a Speed-Up, also meaning that the Jackpot was not used. During the Cash and Splash/Cruise and Cash Splash Sweepstakes in Season 7, Round 2 had both $2,500 and $3,500 (although only $3,500 was shown on-camera when Pat announced the two spaces being on the Wheel in said round). The former was on the purple $150 near Lose A Turn.
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The current Wheel values are $500, $550, $600, $650, $700, $800, $900, $1,000 (through the Mystery and Express Wedges), $2,500, $3,500, and $5,000. During the weeks of October 15 and 22 plus November 5 and 12, 2007, the $2,500 space was double-sized, extending counterclockwise over the purple $600. It had a Sony Card logo on it for the first week, Dawn for the second, Febreze for the third, and Maxwell House for the fourth. This was likely in honor of the show's 25th Anniversary. For the week of April 28, 2014, a $6,000 wedge replaced $5,000 in Rounds 4 . The $6,000 wedge had "WHEEL $6000" in two rows written horizontally on the top and colored dots on the rest, similar to the 25 Wedge, meaning the maximum Speed-Up value for that week was $7,000. $650 likely holds the record for longest time between appearances, not counting rug and turntable layouts: prior to its first nighttime appearance in Season 30, it had not been used in gameplay since 1979 (or 1998, if Wheel 2000 is counted).
From September 21, 2015 to April 1, 2019 (barring the week of October 5, 2015), the only non-top-dollar cash wedge that changed values as rounds progressed was the yellow wedge between green $500 and red $700, the yellow $600 increased to $900 in Round 3 only and back to $600 in Round 4. On April 1, 2019, it was increased to $900 for the whole game save for the week of April 8.