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Bad
TPIR bids Part 1
What were they thinking?

Compilation Induction
The Price Is Right will never be
known for having the smartest contestants in the world. Infact, if
you look at the show currently, the amount of dim bulbs who populate the
Bob Barker Studios in hopes of winning a brand new car, a fabulous
vacation, or even that Big Green Egg they loved to give away for the
longest time far outweighs those who actually understand the rules to
some of the games, such as Secret X where you have to know the basic
rules of Tic Tac Toe, which someone recently didn't know how & not try
to cheat at the games by hitting the button that reveals the price.
But then there are those that
give us some of the most memorable bad bids in the show's history.
This induction is a compilation of some of those horrific bids. I
think it's best to get the most well known horrific bid out of the way.
The year is 1991 and here's our next Item Up for bids...

A Pair of Surfboards.
Contestant Iila has just come on
down and she has the first bid. She looks at her friends in the
audience and immediately said that she thought the price of those two
surfboards are.....

Nine-Thousand Dollars.

"WHAT, 9000?! THERE'S NO
WAY THAT CAN BE RIGHT!"
Yes, Nappa. That is right.
She bid $9,000 on a pair of surfboards. Bob Barker was shocked by
this, but continued to finish his rounds with the other bids before he
got back to Iila. He then proceeded to make light of the
situation.

He proceeded to tell Iila, "If
you think that a surfboard costs $4,500 then I'm going to give you the
bargain of your life. I'm going to sell you a surfboard, and I'm
only doing this for you. I'm gonna sell you a surfboard for
$3,900." I haven't seen the full episode, so I don't know if Iila
got on stage, but she did leave a memorable mark on Price history
anyways.
But there's more than just her.
I don't know whether the contestants are just dim, or honestly got
completely nervous and cracked under the pressure of the hot lights when
they make it up on stage and play for something big.

Enter Teresa. She got up
on stage and was shocked when she saw a brand new 1994 Mercury Tracer
rolling out on stage. That's right, she was playing for a car, and
she was playing the Lucky $even game.

Now, the rules for Lucky $even
are simple. You start off with 7 one dollar bills. Then you
have to try to guess the price of the car, one number at a time.
For each number that you're off each way, you lose a dollar. If
you fill the board and have one dollar remaining, you win the car.
She is given the first number for free and that's a one.

Now, the basic rule for Lucky
$even back then was that normally the second number was a low one, so
the highest you'd go was 5. At worst, you'd lose 5 but it'd still
be feasible to win the game, so a good pick would be 2 or 3. But
what does she go with?

Nine. The audience gives
out a very audible groan at her mistake. I think she thought the
car itself was $9,000 instead of it being over $10,000. Either
way, thinking a car was $19,000 back in those days on the Price Is Right
and you're not playing either 3 Strikes or Golden Road, was dumb to
begin with. We get the reveal and it's.....

an one. She flames out on
the first guess. I don't know how you do that, but she did it.

After a while she looked pained
that she actually guessed 9 and flamed out on it. Bob later on
asked Roger if that's the first time anybody has done that, and sure
enough, it was. So, she made some history. But not in the
good way.
Speaking of history, one of my
favorite games in all TPIR history is Cliffhangers. Whether it's
Hans, the Music or the great design & Simplistic gameplay, it's always
enjoyable to me. Now, recently some people have forgotten how to
play this simple game, but back in 1996, we had the worst player of this
game.

We're now introduced to Lane
Kiffin, a liar and a scumbag among scumbags. Nah, I'm kidding.
His name is Eric, but man, does he look like Lane Kiffin. Anyways,
he's playing for a dining room set and a nice set of dinnerware.

And there he is, staring at
Hans, hoping he doesn't screw up so he can eat in style, or at least as
much style an Ashley Dining Room can give him.

We see his first small item, and
it's this toy guitar. Now, since it's the first item, it should be
about $25. But he then says the most outrageous thing.
It's an answer so wrong, that Bob has to question him on it.

"$2,000." That's right, he
thought that a TOY GUITAR was worth $2,000. He then changed his
answer immediately, because he thought that was a violin. He then
comes up with yet another horrific answer of $450. Bob gives him
one last chance and he utters $850.

Bob gets so annoyed at that
horrific answer, he just wants the mountain climber to go up the hill in
the fastest way possible. Stating that he's got things to do and
there's games that need to be played, probably more adeptly than this
horrific experience.

And sure enough, Hans falls down
to his bloody demise. The Toy Guitar was $23. He missed it
by $827. That's just unexcusable, even from someone who looks as
dim as he is.
But alas, that's not the
stupidest bid in the show's history. In 2007, when Bob announced
his retirement from Price Is Right, the TV World was in shock.
They thought he'd host the show until he couldn't anymore or until a
light fell on him and he died. During the last week of the show,
we were treated to the stupidest bid in history. I mean, the clip
of this memorable bid has over 3.7 million views on Youtube. We
proceed to go to the Showcases and meet our last horrific bidder.

His name is Jose. A man of
the armed forces, so we know he's used to pressure situations out in the
field of armed combat against terror. We witness his showcase and
it contains....

A Living room set, carpeting, &
sweet HDTV...

And a pair of Vulcan
Motorcycles. His opponent, Gay decides to pass to Jose and he has
to remind himself that the showcase involves every single prize.
He then makes his first bid.

"$250,000". Hearing that,
my jaw dropped to the floor. I mean, not even on a Million Dollar
Spectacular did Showcases get over $120,000. He then decides to
change his bid, however it's not much better. He changes it from
$250,000 to....

$60,000. It then becomes
locked in and Gay sees her showcase and properly bids $1. Gay is
laughing her way to the bank because she knows she's getting some sweet
stuff to take home. In Jose's defense, he froze mentally probably.
In combat, that would get you killed. But alas, we'll let Bob do
the grilling. Actual Retail Price of his showcase...

$20,685. So he's over and
that means that this small compilation is over.
You could tell I have it labeled
as Part 1, because as long as The Price Is Right is on the air, we'll
always have memorable horrific bids to laugh back on. As long as
there's dimwits on TV, they'll find a place here.
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