Flamingo Fortune

A lottery show for the state of Florida.

Rules (1995-1997)
Thirty contestants were in the contestant pool. Alexander/Stahl/Fields would spin a wheel that was hooked to a randomizer. When the wheel stopped, the player whose seat was lit would play a game, in addition to winning a set of lottery tickets. Three games were played each show and the player who has won the most money became the challenger and played against the champion for the final game "Treasure Island".

Beach Ball
12 sandcastles were placed on a rotating platform. An apparatus with the beach ball was nearby.

The contestant would turn his/her back to the platform and pull a lever to release the beach ball. The ball would swing through the platform 6 times, knocking over the sandcastles. Each sandcastle remaining after one round was worth $1,000 - each one remaining after round two was worth an additional $2,000.

The contestant could stop at this point or opt for one more round of six swings. Three sandcastles were placed on the platform, or if there were more than 3 still standing after round two, they were simply left alone. If at least two were left standing after this round, the contestant's winnings would be doubled. Otherwise, the contestant would lose half of his/her winnings. Plus, if the contestant can survive the first double round, then he/she would go play a second double or half round, only this time, there would be eight swings of the beach ball. Maximum payoff is $144,000.

Grand Prix
Contestants were shown a board with 3 racecars - red, yellow, and blue. They were then shown a board of 12 numbered boxes, and asked to call out numbers, one at a time. Finding three of a color ended up the game and awarded the contestant a cash prize -- $5,000 (for red), $25,000 (for yellow), or a cash prize of up to $100,000 (for blue). If blue reached the goal first, the contestant would choose from one of four letters (A, B, C, D), each of which hid $50,000 & $100,000 (two of each).

Splashdown
The player faces a board of 18 numbered rods, split into three rows (1-4 on top, 5-10 in the middle, and 11-18 on the bottom), each holding up a colored ball. Rods 1-4 held up two red's and a green, the rest held yellow balls. The player draws a number, and that number's rod gets removed from the playfield.

If a yellow ball splashes down into the water, the player wins $10,000. If no balls splash down, the player wins $1,000.

The only way the game ends (besides the player saying "I'll stop") is if a red ball or a green ball splashes down. If the red ball splashes down, either by itself or with other colored balls - even the green one - the player loses half their winnings. If the green ball splashes down with no red ball, the player's total is bumped to $100,000.

Steeple Chase
In the first round, the player set seven balls - four gold, two black - down a track of ramps. The balls could split up and collide until they reached the bottom of the track and crossed the finish line. If a black ball finished first, the player won $5,000; if a gold ball finished first, the player got $10,000.

For the second round, there were four gold and four black balls used. A black ball winning the race earned the player $50,000 more, while a gold ball won $25,000. After the third round, the player could either play the third round with three gold and four black balls, or with six gold and three black balls. The second set, however, would cost the player half his/her winnings at that point. A black ball coming in first added nothing, a gold ball finishing first added $50,000, but if the gold balls came in first, second, and third, the player won $100,000.

Freefall
The contestant pulls a lever that will launch a ping pong ball to the top of the board, through swinging paddles, through a series of pegs, and into one of eight slots at the bottom of the board. Landing in an empty slot was worth $5,000. Each empty slot accumulated an additional $5,000. If a ping pong ball landed in a slot that was already occupied, he/she would be issued a strike.

After two strikes, the contestant could stop and take their winnings, or opt for another pull. If a ping pong ball landed in an empty slot, the contestant would have his/her money doubled, and would be offered another pull. If the contestant earned their third strike, they would lose half of their winnings. Play would continue until all eight slots are filled, a third strike is issued, or the contestant chose to stop. The theoretical maximum payoff is $640,000, but this would require that each of a contestant's first three balls land in the same slot, followed by each following ball landing in a new slot. The odds of this happening were approximately 1 in 213,044.

Treasure Island
This is the final round, utilizing returning champions from previous weeks. The "trapper" (returning champion) would stand at the end of a path behind a keypad with three buttons and a red button. The "trappee" (opponent (player who won the most during the show)) stood at the front of the path, with 8 spaces between the two. The first 5 steps were numbered 1-5, the last three had cash prizes.

The opponent could take up to three steps at a time, but the champion was charged with predicting which step the opponent would pick (referred to as "locking in a booby-trap," at which point three blue lights representing the steps the opponent will choose from would flash and a "typewriter" sound effect occurred). After the opponent took his/her position (at which point the lights would turn off except the step chosen, accompanied by a G-note bell), the host would ask the champion to "spring the trap" (press the red button). If the opponent dodged the "trap", the game would continue. If not, the opponent had to return to their original position. Each step had a blue light that would turn to a flashing red (accompanied by an "explosion" sound effect) whenever the booby-trap was sprung. If the player avoided the trap, the blue light flashed (accompanied by a "harp" sound effect), and the red light would light up where the booby-trap was placed.

Opponents won and took over the championship if they landed on one of the last three spaces on the path; the first was worth $10,000, the second worth $25,000, and the last marked "Treasure Chest". If the opponent ended on this space, he/she could pick from a chest of coins worth from $50,000 to $500,000. The $500,000 was won at least once.

If the champion successfully "trapped" the newcomer twice, the game ended with the champion winning an additional $25,000.

Rules (1997-1999)
On 10/14/97 (the date Sony assumed production), the format was revamped, adding new games, and giving players a chance to win up to $1,000,000 prior to playing the game.

The contestant wheel was revamped; all thirty names were on the wheel, and increasing cash prizes were on the edge of the wheel. Stahl would spin the wheel, and one of the cash prizes would land on a name. Stahl would then throw balls into the center of the wheel; these balls would land in slots by each name. If one of those balls landed in a slot belonging to the name attached to the money, they would automatically win that money on the spot.

The first game has values of $10K, $25K, and $50K. The second doubles the top prize to $100,000. The final game increases the top prize to $1,000,000. The values for the first two games were selected at random prior to the show and during a commercial break.

Flamingo Diceway
Four contestants vied for a new car. They were given the first number of the car for free, then had to roll the next numbers by launching six dice using a catapult. If the next number landed face up when the dice settled, they were credited with that number. It doesn't matter whether any of them are cocked or rolled off, the key is to have at least one of the dice to have the right number. Rolling all four numbers won the car; a miss at any point ended the game for that player, and awarded them $500 for each correct number rolled (including the first number).

Break The Piggy Bank
Two players competed. The game offers two rounds, but only the first-round winner gets the option of continuing to the second round.

In the first round, each player begins with $1,000 and gets up to five turns to increase that prize. The players alternate in choosing from a set of ten piggy banks. When chosen, a piggy bank is opened to reveal its contents and remove it from further play. Seven of the piggy banks have amounts ranging from $1,000 to $20,000. The other three have the word "Oink". Players accumulate values until one of the players has chosen two "Oink"'s. That player leaves with half of his or her accumulated amount, or $500 if they hit two "Oink"'s on their first two turns. The other player receives a $5,000 bonus and the option to leave with the accumulated winnings or go to the second round. In the second round, the player chooses one piggy bank out of five. Three of those piggy banks will halve the player's winnings, but the other two will either double or triple the winnings.

Florida's Famous
Florida's Famous is a one-player game with up to four rounds and cash prizes ranging from $4,000 to $160,000. In each round, the player picks a number from one to five, to reveal a statement about Florida. The player gains money only when the choice reveals a true statement. After each round, the player may leave with the accumulated winnings or continue to the next round.

In the first round, the player wins $4,000 for each choice that reveals a true statement. The round begins with one play in which all five statements are true, ensuring a win. The game is reset with one false and four true statements, and the round continues until the player either picked all of the remaining four true statements or has picked the false statement. At the end of the first round, the player's accumulated winnings may range from $4,000 to $20,000.

For the remaining rounds, the payoff is either a doubling (for a true statement) or halving (for a false statement) of the winnings, with one play per round; the player electing to stop also ends the game. Round 2 has one false statement; another false statement is added in each successive round, so that there are only two true statements in round 4. A player who wins round 4 will have doubled the first-round winnings three times, resulting in total accumulated winnings ranging from $32,000 to $160,000.

Florida's Jackpot
Florida's Jackpot is basically Card Sharks, Flamingo Fortune style. For the final game, the remaining 23 players each drew a playing card from a deck during the final commercial break. Stahl (or Fields) drew a card from a duplicate deck, and the player holding that card got to play the final game. The player faces a board of eight cards, each under a letter in the word "FLORIDA's". After selecting the first card, which is then turned over, then another card, the player must guess whether the next card is higher or lower then the previous one. Two wrong calls end the game, but seven correct guesses win a jackpot starting at $25,000 and increasing by $5,000 each week until it's won.

Similar Shows & Spin-Offs
Illinois Instant Riches - Clone of this show for Illinois from 1994-1998

Illinois' Luckiest - Revamp of the show aired from 1998-2001

The Illinois Lottery 25th Anniversary Special - Spinoff of Illinois' Luckiest aired in 1999

Bonus Bonanza - Clone of this show for the state of Massachusetts from 1995-1998

NY Wired - Clone of this show for New York from 1997-1999

Pennsylvania Lottery 25th Anniversary Game Show - One-Time special clone of this show for the state of Pennsylvania in 1997

Make Me a Millionaire - Clone of this show for the state of California & replacement for The Big Spin from 2009-2010

Music
1995

Main - Michael Karp

Others - Killer Tracks

Contestant Selection Music - "Spike It" by Rick Braun

Prize Ticket Cue - "E Ticket" by Larry Wolff

1997

by Edd Kalehoff

Contestant Selection Music- Lottery Theme (Match Game Hollywood Squares Hour Theme Variant)

Car Prize Cue - "Top 10"

Links
Pictures of Michael Young & Lisa-Stahl Sullivan and Flamingo Fortune

Pictures of the Flamingo Fortune Set

YouTube Videos
Premiere Episode

Part 1

Part 2

January 1996

Part 1

Part 2

Michael & Lisa's First Show

Part 1

Part 2

From the Million Dollar Era from January 1999

Part 1

Part 2