One bad call. We were one bad call away from the worst possible playing in this game. However, this did wrest away the previous record of $2.25 to become the worst playing in the game's history.
I thought that she was going to guess that the last digit was "Lucky number 7" and still be wrong. And I thought that the last card was going to be $2.
@@jnd_jnd Let's look at the way the game is played. In the first round there are 5 digits to choose from, 1 is right, so 4 mistakes x 25c = $1.00 in the second round there are 4 digits to choose from, 1 is right, so 3 mistakes x 25c = 75c in the third round, there are 3 digits to choose from, 1 is right, so 2 mistakes x 25c = 50c in the final round, there are 2 digits to choose from, 1 is right, so 1 mistake x 25c = 25c That totals $2.50, plus the quarter that's the starting price. So the maximum the car can sell for is $2.75.
If Barbera was on Hell's Kitchen, I do not want to know how many profanities and insults Chef Gordon Ramsay would lash out at her during a dinner service that would go downhill.
Wow, Drew looks absolutely awful with blonde hair. P.S. Wow, what a shitty car. I'd walk off the stage if they offered me that. Maybe she was trying to lose?
It certainly does...And, It has, not one...but two cup holders. And, we must not forget about the roomy glove box that comes with it, at NO EXTRA CHARGE!!!
Check the video description. Had she picked the 7 on her last call, she would have maximized the number of guesses needed to get the price of the car as well as the price it could go for ($2.75). As it stood, it broke the previous record for futility in this game.
To be fair, it isn't natural for anybody to know the exact or even near exact price for a car. She did the best she could, and at least Pocket Change is a WAYYYYY better pricing game than fucking That's Too Much! That game is a complete mess of a crapshoot.
The contestant played the first half of the game (almost) as bad as it could possibly be played. She guessed incorrectly EVERY time until the end, generating a $2.50 price tag for the car -- just shy of the $2.75 maximum. Had she said 7 rather than 6 for her final guess, she would have maxed out the potential price of the car, making it impossible for her to win it without the $2 envelope.
This woman should never go to Las Vegas! She had ten guesses at the numbers in the car price and only got one, and that was when there were only two numbers left. To top it all off she picked three of the only four 25 cent cards, and there were 20 cards on the board. WOW, that is what I call baaaaaaad luck. There is a silver lining, it could have been worse. She could have picked the two 0 cent cards and two of the 5 cent cards.