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From 1996 to 1998, Monkhouse presented The National Lottery Live show on Saturday evenings on BBC1, for which he created the catchphrase: "I know I'm a sinner, but make me a winner!" The opening to each show would see him deliver several minutes of topical jokes and on one occasion, where his autocue failed, he improvised a new and topical routine.
The National Lottery 10th Birthday Celebration, which aired on 6 November 2004 was the only National Lottery gameshow to feature celebrity contestants who played for money to their chosen charities, and the show featured six celebrities playing the first round on Wright Around the World, the remaining five playing the In The Red round of Jet ...
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The National Lottery Live: Himself—presenter Opened the draw, 5 November 1997 English Express Language Skills: Himself—presenter Schools education series 1997–1998 Dick Whittington and His Wonderful Cat: Idle Jack Pantomime stage play 1998 Can't Smeg, Won't Smeg: Dave Lister—contestant Special edition of Can't Cook, Won't Cook, aired 14 ...
The first National Lottery show (entitled The National Lottery Live: The First Draw) was at 7 pm on Saturday 19 November 1994. Presented by Noel Edmonds , this was an hour long special, in which 49 contestants competed to become the first person to start the draw, the winner being 18-year-old Deborah Walsh.
Each episode during the series was pre-recorded in the preceding week, and shown in an 'as live' format. The National Lottery draw – which usually took place before the final round of the game – and the TV Home Play segments were broadcast in live inserts to again give the impression to the viewers that the entire episode was live.
Each episode featured the National Lottery Dream Number taking place live from Lottery HQ, and its results formed part of the end game where the contestants made the high, low or same number guesses to gain control of choosing a subject. The Thunderball and Lotto draws took place in a separate live broadcast later in the evening during this series.
Alan Dedicoat is a British announcer from Hollywood, England, for programmes on BBC One.He is known as the "Voice of the Balls" on the National Lottery programmes, providing a voiceover for the draws since 1995. [1]