All-Star Squares

http://dbpedia.org/resource/All-Star_Squares an entity of type: Thing

All-Star Squares is the Australian adaption of the American game show Hollywood Squares that aired on the Seven Network in 1999, hosted by Ian 'Danno' Rogerson. Like the American version, the object of the game was to get three stars in a row, either across, up-and-down or diagonally. The contestant in turn, chose a celebrity, to whom host Rogerson asked a question. After (usually) a joke answer, they gave a response, to which the contestant either agreed or disagreed. If correct in their judgement, they received their mark in that box; if wrong, their opponent got the square (unless it led to three in a row, in which case that player had to earn it him/herself). rdf:langString
rdf:langString All-Star Squares
xsd:integer 37097382
xsd:integer 1091964696
rdf:langString Stereo
rdf:langString Hollywood Squares
rdf:langString InternetArchiveBot
rdf:langString October 2018
xsd:date 1999-04-12
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString Game Show
rdf:langString English
xsd:date 1999-09-03
rdf:langString South Melbourne, Victoria
rdf:langString Gavin Wood
xsd:integer 1
xsd:double 4.3
rdf:langString Personality Squares
rdf:langString Ian Rogerson
<second> 1800.0
rdf:langString All-Star Squares is the Australian adaption of the American game show Hollywood Squares that aired on the Seven Network in 1999, hosted by Ian 'Danno' Rogerson. Like the American version, the object of the game was to get three stars in a row, either across, up-and-down or diagonally. The contestant in turn, chose a celebrity, to whom host Rogerson asked a question. After (usually) a joke answer, they gave a response, to which the contestant either agreed or disagreed. If correct in their judgement, they received their mark in that box; if wrong, their opponent got the square (unless it led to three in a row, in which case that player had to earn it him/herself). Each of the first two games scored $250, the third game scored $500 and each game thereafter scored $1,000. The second game featured a "secret square" which awarded a special prize to the first player to choose that square and correctly judge the celebrity's answer. If neither player found that celebrity, the "secret square" would be moved to another celebrity in the next game. If time expired during a game, each player scored $250 per square. If the match ended in a tie, the winner of the most games decided who chose a square for the $250 tie-breaker. The player with the most cash kept their winnings and chose a celebrity, each of whom held an envelope concealing a card with the description of a major prize which the champion would win by correctly judging that celebrity's answer. Win or lose, the carryover champion returned on the following show to face another opponent.
<minute> 30.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4607
xsd:date 1999-09-03
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 1
xsd:date 1999-04-12
xsd:double 1800.0

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