A game of wits, strategy and high stakes as contestants try to avoid the iconic WHAMMY for a chance at life-changing cash and prizes.A game of wits, strategy and high stakes as contestants try to avoid the iconic WHAMMY for a chance at life-changing cash and prizes.A game of wits, strategy and high stakes as contestants try to avoid the iconic WHAMMY for a chance at life-changing cash and prizes.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 nomination total
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The format is ok in the first couple rounds but I don't understand the final round at all. The show would have been better as a half hour show like the original. Also, Elizabeth Banks isn't a great host, would have been better with a different celebrity. As someone else said, her voice is very grating.
Press Your Luck, the 80s hit game show from CBS that's lived in reruns for years, has returned to TV with new episodes after almost 33 years. ABC, which has done a tremendous job in bringing back old game show and modernizing them while keeping the classic feel of the sets and rules, has done it again. So has does PYL hold up in this new era of TV?
The set looks like a brighter, more modern version of the 80s set. It's even taped in CBS Television City like the original! The main rules of the game are the same as before: contestants buzz in to answer trivia questions, with a correct buzz in answer getting 3 spins and correct multiple choices answers 1 spin. The first question round in this new version is three questions instead of four. This was likely due to the new bonus round and more commercials needing to air than they did in the 80s. Contestants take their spins to the board to win cash and prizes and avoid the Whammy, which acts a bankrupt and loses the contestant everything. Contestants play another question round, this time with four questions, and then another board round. The player with the highest total after all the spins wins and plays the bonus round. Like the original, four whammies eliminates you from the game.
The host: I think it's funny some people think Pete Tomarken was in the same category of host as Bob Barker or Alex Trebek. He was not. He was a good host, but not this amazing host. Elizabeth Banks I think does a great job. She's funny, she seems genuinely excited and she keeps the game moving. To those complaining she says "press your luck or pass?" too much, watch an 80s rerun and you'll see Peter doing the same thing.
The board: loaded with tons of cash and prizes. Nice cars, exotic trips, and squares with all the unique cash values like the older version.
The main game: I honestly started getting a little bored with the main game. I soon realized why this game was maybe always a smidge overrated compared to other game shows. It doesn't have the same excitement or pull to it that a game show like Pyramid, Jeopardy or Price is Right has. Maybe this was entertaining to watch in the 80s, but now just watching people hit a button over and over again gets kind of tiring.
The whammy animation: I like that the kept the old hand drawn style of whammy cartoons. I think for the most part they are good.
The bonus round: the best part of this new version and a great way to update a somewhat outdated format. Contestants risk taking a minimum number of spins to rack up cash and prizes, with the chance to win $1 million. Each round they must take the minimum number of spins. After they take them, they can quit with their winnings, or go to the next round, with more money on the board, but also more whammies. Four whammies ends the game. It's actually quite an exciting format and it's very neat that they put prizes on the board for the contestant.
I think adding the bonus round helped refresh a rather aging format of a game show. If it was just the main game, I think most people likely would have gotten bored with it quickly, but this new bonus round adds a wrinkle of excitement.
Overall, a pretty solid revival, but compared to the better game shows out there like Pyramid, Jeopardy and Price is Right, Press Your Luck falls a bit short.
The set looks like a brighter, more modern version of the 80s set. It's even taped in CBS Television City like the original! The main rules of the game are the same as before: contestants buzz in to answer trivia questions, with a correct buzz in answer getting 3 spins and correct multiple choices answers 1 spin. The first question round in this new version is three questions instead of four. This was likely due to the new bonus round and more commercials needing to air than they did in the 80s. Contestants take their spins to the board to win cash and prizes and avoid the Whammy, which acts a bankrupt and loses the contestant everything. Contestants play another question round, this time with four questions, and then another board round. The player with the highest total after all the spins wins and plays the bonus round. Like the original, four whammies eliminates you from the game.
The host: I think it's funny some people think Pete Tomarken was in the same category of host as Bob Barker or Alex Trebek. He was not. He was a good host, but not this amazing host. Elizabeth Banks I think does a great job. She's funny, she seems genuinely excited and she keeps the game moving. To those complaining she says "press your luck or pass?" too much, watch an 80s rerun and you'll see Peter doing the same thing.
The board: loaded with tons of cash and prizes. Nice cars, exotic trips, and squares with all the unique cash values like the older version.
The main game: I honestly started getting a little bored with the main game. I soon realized why this game was maybe always a smidge overrated compared to other game shows. It doesn't have the same excitement or pull to it that a game show like Pyramid, Jeopardy or Price is Right has. Maybe this was entertaining to watch in the 80s, but now just watching people hit a button over and over again gets kind of tiring.
The whammy animation: I like that the kept the old hand drawn style of whammy cartoons. I think for the most part they are good.
The bonus round: the best part of this new version and a great way to update a somewhat outdated format. Contestants risk taking a minimum number of spins to rack up cash and prizes, with the chance to win $1 million. Each round they must take the minimum number of spins. After they take them, they can quit with their winnings, or go to the next round, with more money on the board, but also more whammies. Four whammies ends the game. It's actually quite an exciting format and it's very neat that they put prizes on the board for the contestant.
I think adding the bonus round helped refresh a rather aging format of a game show. If it was just the main game, I think most people likely would have gotten bored with it quickly, but this new bonus round adds a wrinkle of excitement.
Overall, a pretty solid revival, but compared to the better game shows out there like Pyramid, Jeopardy and Price is Right, Press Your Luck falls a bit short.
With ABC bringing game shows back to their primetime lineup, they decided to revive this underrated 80s CBS daytime game show, and it's now my 2nd favorite game show revival as of recently.
It began in 1983 with the late Peter Tomarken as host, and it became a runaway hit for CBS, including the famous contestant that broke the bank and won the highest amount ever won in game show history at the time (You know which one). It ran for 3 years before it got cancelled in 1986 once the popularity and hype died down.
The objective of winning the game is to answer questions to earn spins at the big board, and to win big bucks while trying to avoid the whammies.
It did get revived in 2002 on GSN known as Whammy! The All-New Press Your Luck, with Tomarken hosting a test pilot episode before ultimately GSN deciding to give the hosting gig to Todd Newton.
It wouldn't be until 2019 when we finally get a proper PYL revival, with a brand-new set, airing on a brand-new network, has a brand-new host and the big bucks just got bigger, but the gameplay and those dreaded whammies remain the same.
This version is hosted by Elizabeth Banks, known for The Hunger Games and Pitch Perfect movies, and she is absolutely perfect in the role. She has a great amount of energy, keeps the game moving when necessary and she genuinely cares for the contestants, whether they win big bucks or lose it all to a whammy.
As mentioned before, the gameplay is the same as the original version and GSN's Whammy (apart from the Double Whammy spaces as those were exclusively to Whammy!.), but at the end, they have a bonus round which you can have a chance to win $1,000,000, and that is a great addition to a simple 80s game show that executes very well, and this revival executes in making OG PYL fans satisfied and new fans pumped!
With that said, ABC has a great game show revival on their hands, and I wish that it can go on for at least 7 more years because it's just that good, and with the lovely Elizabeth Banks as host, what more can you ask for?
If you haven't seen it before whether you remember the original PYL or not, do check it out when you do get the chance, you won't regret anything.
It began in 1983 with the late Peter Tomarken as host, and it became a runaway hit for CBS, including the famous contestant that broke the bank and won the highest amount ever won in game show history at the time (You know which one). It ran for 3 years before it got cancelled in 1986 once the popularity and hype died down.
The objective of winning the game is to answer questions to earn spins at the big board, and to win big bucks while trying to avoid the whammies.
It did get revived in 2002 on GSN known as Whammy! The All-New Press Your Luck, with Tomarken hosting a test pilot episode before ultimately GSN deciding to give the hosting gig to Todd Newton.
It wouldn't be until 2019 when we finally get a proper PYL revival, with a brand-new set, airing on a brand-new network, has a brand-new host and the big bucks just got bigger, but the gameplay and those dreaded whammies remain the same.
This version is hosted by Elizabeth Banks, known for The Hunger Games and Pitch Perfect movies, and she is absolutely perfect in the role. She has a great amount of energy, keeps the game moving when necessary and she genuinely cares for the contestants, whether they win big bucks or lose it all to a whammy.
As mentioned before, the gameplay is the same as the original version and GSN's Whammy (apart from the Double Whammy spaces as those were exclusively to Whammy!.), but at the end, they have a bonus round which you can have a chance to win $1,000,000, and that is a great addition to a simple 80s game show that executes very well, and this revival executes in making OG PYL fans satisfied and new fans pumped!
With that said, ABC has a great game show revival on their hands, and I wish that it can go on for at least 7 more years because it's just that good, and with the lovely Elizabeth Banks as host, what more can you ask for?
If you haven't seen it before whether you remember the original PYL or not, do check it out when you do get the chance, you won't regret anything.
This game show has always been a train wreck. It's basically just watching someone spin over and over again?!? Needs more dimensions or simply a couple more trivia questions? Regardless, I thought the host did a fine job considering what she's working with! Out of all the things to reboot abc felt that this was a good idea?
.....are the Whammies, those demonic little imps who show up to steal the money from the contestants if any one of them lands on a Whammy. Recently, my wife and I watched an episode where this lovely lady racked up the bucks and the prizes without getting a Whammy. And that's with the understanding that the more spins are taken by the contestants, the greater the chances of those little devils making their unwanted appearance. Elizabeth Banks is the perfect hostess for this show, so it's hard to believe that she had been in THE HUNGER GAMES movies. I know not who does the Whammy animation, but when PRESS YOUR LUCK aired on CBS from 1983 to,1986, the animation was done by Savage Steve Holland, who has also directed his share of comedy movies. Now, if you'll excuse me, I must get back to PRESS YOUR LUCK. Take care and be safe.
Did you know
- TriviaHosted by actress Elizabeth Banks.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Doctor J & Dangerous Dave Dog & Pony Show: Tattletales (2019)
July 2025 TV and Streaming Premiere Dates
July 2025 TV and Streaming Premiere Dates
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