

Keep scrolling to see some of the other biggest mistakes on the Price Is Right over the years:

Sign up for Us Weekly's free, daily newsletter and never miss breaking news or exclusive stories about your favorite celebrities, TV shows and more! The machine was rigged with a fishing line so the chips would land in the $10,000 spot every time.Ĭarey went on to explain that the contestant was awarded $30,000 behind the scenes that didn’t count towards her grand-prize total and gave her a new set of Plinko chips to try again. Before the season had begun filming, the game board was used to film a commercial for an upcoming Price Is Right-themed video game. While Carey worried the potential scandal was going to cost him his job, he learned the snafu was an honest mistake. She dropped the fourth chip, the floor director comes over, stops the chip, and leans into me and he goes, ‘The game is fixed.’” “People were on their feet, jumping up and down and cheering. “There’s a college girl that got to play Plinko, and she dropped her first three chips right down in the $10,000 spot,” he said, noting that she had beaten a previous record. While appearing on SiriusXM’s Jeff and Larry’s Comedy Roundup show in February 2021, the Drew Carey Show alum recalled an instance where one contestant got a little too lucky. In the game of Plinko, contestants try to drop chips down a maze-like board, hoping to land them in the coveted $10,000 slot. In order to view the video, please allow Manage Cookies In his second season of hosting, the former Whose Line Is It Anyway? host was faced with a near-scandal that never aired. You know it well enough, you knew that I was goofing.”Īfter Barker retired in 2007, Drew Carey was named his successor to the game show.

I’ve been here for all these years, playing this game. “Don’t stand there and laugh at me,” he quipped. Do you know how I know they’re $1.59?”Īfter realizing his mistake, Barker stopped himself and laughed, noting that Albert should have a “pretty good chance of winning” now, which made the audience chuckle. “Do you know which one of them is $1.59? The raisins,” Barker - who began hosting the game show in 1972 - said, not realizing his blunder. On his first attempt, he incorrectly guessed. While playing Pick-A-Pair, Albert was tasked with figuring out which products cost the same price as a can of chili, which ran for $1.59 at the time. The Price Is Right has been a morning TV staple for decades - and the iconic game show has had its fair share of hijinks (and scandals) over the years.įormer longtime host Bob Barker made a rookie mistake during a 1984 episode accidentally telling a contestant named Albert the correct answer before the game was even finished.
