Cash Explosion


Cash Explosion, known as Cash Explosion: Double Play from 1989 until 2012, is the official Ohio Lottery TV game show, which is broadcast on television stations throughout Ohio. The show originated in Cleveland and is now taped by Mills James Productions in Columbus, Ohio.
Cash Explosion originally aired from February 7, 1987, to September 30, 2006, at which point the Ohio Lottery replaced it with Make Me Famous, Make Me Rich. However, slumping ticket sales and poor ratings prompted the return of the Cash Explosion format a year later, on October 6, 2007, and it has remained on the air since.
Cash Explosion is the longest-running state lottery based game show, surpassing California's The Big Spin, which ended its run on January 10, 2009, after 23 years and 1,213 episodes. As of September 27, 2014, Cash Explosion has run for 26 years and 1,433 episodes.
As of 2016, Cash Explosion is the only weekly lottery game show airing in the United States.

Hosts

Bob Grossi was the original host, and was replaced in 1988 by Cleveland radio personality Paul Tapié. Tapié left the show for a few months in 2000. During this, Safe Auto spokesman Michael Armstrong took over. Sharon Bicknell was the co-host from the beginning until February 2004, returning in 2007 until the present. Michelle Duda and Leilani Barrett took over as hosts in February 2004, and remained through the end of the first run. Regular lottery drawing hosts Karen Harris and Bob Becker substituted on various occasions. John E. Douglas has the longest run as the "off stage announcer" from 1989 until 2006; Douglas died in July 2016. Beneatha Barkley joined the lottery host rotation in April 2003 which lasted until October in which she was replaced by Karen Kawolics. Cherie McClain joined the lottery drawing hosting team in 2006.
Following its October 2007 return, David McCreary, a comedy magician who had previously hosted Make Me Famous, Make Me Rich, became the new host with Bicknell returning, and McClain also joining the cast. Becker, Harris and Kawlolics served as rotating lottery drawing hosts until Harris and Becker’s retirements in 2008 and 2013 respectively. Eric Parks replaced the retired hosts at the beginning of 2014 and served until 2019.
Barb McCann was Cash Explosion's Special Correspondent from 2007–2008. McCann won a contest during the run of Make Me Famous, Make Me Rich in which viewers voted on their favorite co-host among those auditioning.
Following the 30th Anniversary Special, Alissa Henry became the new co-host, replacing both Bicknell and McClain which both move to rotating lottery drawing hosts. At the same time, the show is alternatively called C.E. McCreary became the shows announcer or in some cases Henry. David Saglila replaced Parks in 2020.

First format (1987–1989)

First round

Seven contestants, each of whom submitted a Cash Explosion scratchcard ticket with three matching "ENTRY" symbols, competed in a race to reach the top of an eleven-step pyramid in order to win $50,000. The losing contestants were each given $1,000.
Each contestant had a box of cards in front of them, numbered –2 to 3, with no zero cards. On their turn each contestant drew a card, then moved up or down the pyramid by the number of spaces indicated. The first person to land on the final square by exact count won $50,000. If a contestant returned to the start line at any point in the game, they were eliminated from the game.
In every contestant's track was a randomly designated bonus square. Landing on it gave the contestant the option to leave the game and take a new car or stay in the game. Regardless of their decision, once two bonus squares had been revealed, all other bonus squares were voided.
Toward the end of this format, each contestant was staked $1,000. For each legitimate move up or down the track, the contestant won/lost $50. Still later, moving up or down was worth $100 per move. Reaching the goal augmented the contestant's total to $50,000, while the others could keep their cash or trade it away for a spin of the wheel in the second round. Those eliminated by penalty still received $1,000.

Second round

The contestants who had not been eliminated during the course of the game, whether by choice or by penalty, were eligible to trade their winnings and spin a wheel containing various amounts of cash. The odds of spinning something worth more than $1,000 were high, so contestants often spun the wheel.

Second format (1989–2006; 2007–2017)

Semifinal game

Cash Explosion Double Play (1989–2009)

Four people competed in the Semifinal game. The contestants faced a 24-space game board with six columns of four rows. The columns were labeled D-O-U-B-L-E and the rows labeled P-L-A-Y. On a contestant's turn, the columns randomly flashed and the contestant pressed their button to stop the lights on a column, then picked one of the four rows in that column, winning whatever money was behind the space represented by that combination.
The values on the board ranged from $250 to $3,200. Early in the show’s run, the $250 amount was removed making the minimum $1,000. Also on the board were two spaces marked "DOUBLE". If chosen, the contestant received another turn and whatever they land on was doubled; if the second pick was also a double, the contestant received a third turn, quadrupling the money found. The third special square was a “BONUS” card, which not only contained a money amount, but also a bonus prize. Originally the contestant had to choose whether he or she wanted the bonus or the money. Under this rule, the show gained national coverage in August 1990 when contestant Pamela Richards turned down a $17,600 Honda Accord because she was a member of a labor union. She at the time worked at Toledo Precision Machining, a Chrysler Corporation subsidiary plant of Risingsun, for 23 years before appearing on the show. Ultimately enough, she immediately won $6,400 after her decision. However, by 1993 contestants were simply awarded both the car and the cash amount hidden behind it.
From 2000–2004, a second bonus prize was added to the board featuring four years of prepaid tuition at any four-year college or university in Ohio, along with extra cash added to make the prize worth $20,000. This was later replaced with Ohio Lottery tickets attached to a dollar amount. In all cases, like the standard Bonus card, the prize value was not added to the score, but the additional dollar amount hidden behind the bonus card was.
The contestant in the lead after each had three turns won the game, had their score doubled, and advanced to the Championship Game. All other contestants left the game with whatever they had won.
In the event of a tie for the lead after three rounds, a tiebreaker round was played. Originally, the tying contestants each picked a playing card from a set of eight, with the highest value card winning. These were later replaced by cash amounts from $100 to $800, again with the highest amount winning.
A second semifinal Game is played with four new contestants and a new board, exactly as before.

2009–2017

On October 3, 2009, the board was increased to 36 spaces and consisted of nine columns of four rows. The columns were labeled E-X-P-L-O-S-I-O-N and the rows labeled C-A-S-H. The cash amounts ranged from $1,500 to $5,000.
The number of special spaces increased from three to nine, with two $10,000 cash bonus squares, one $25,000 bonus square and six double squares. Every time a contestant hit a double square, as before, he or she received an extra turn. However, after finding a double card the contestant randomly stopped on one of the letters in E-X-P-L-O-S-I-O-N above the game board, revealing a dollar amount between $2,000 and $5,000, which was then doubled and added to their score. Later, a bonus prize was hidden in one of the spaces which contain the same rule as the cash bonuses.
The tiebreaker round had four amounts hidden behind the letters in the word "cash". As before, the highest score won and the contestant advanced to the Cash Challenge.

Championship Game/Cash Challenge

1989–1993

The two semifinal winners competed against the returning champion. To begin, a target number between 10 and 17 was selected from a randomizer. The contestants then spun a wheel containing numbers from one to nine and an additional space marked "double", attempting to come as close to the target number without going over. If two or three contestants tied, each contestant picked a playing card from a set of eight. The contestant with the highest card won. Originally, the contestants spun three individual wheels, one for each contestant. Later, this was changed to contestants spinning one wheel.
A first-time champion's winnings were augmented to $50,000, while a two-time champion earned another $50,000 for a total of $100,000. A three-time champion earned another $100,000 for a total of $200,000 and retired from the show.

1993–2017

From 1993–2009, the three contestants' names were each hidden three times behind a game board with nine squares total. The contestants took turns selecting squares, uncovering the names behind them. The person whose name was uncovered three times first won the game and the right to return the following week, with the same payout structure for returning champions used from 1989–1993.
Beginning October 3, 2009, three cash bonuses totaling $25,000 were added to the championship game board which now features a total of twelve spaces. If a contestant selects a bonus space they win that amount of money and control passes to the next contestant in line. Additionally, contestants no longer retire after winning their third game. First-time champions still win a total of $50,000, two-time winners $100,000, and three-time winners $200,000. However, a champion wins an additional $100,000 for every subsequent week they win thereafter. Champions can remain on the show until defeated, with no monetary limits or maximum number of appearances, mirroring Jeopardy!'s "skies the limit" rule. By 2012, the final round was renamed the "Cash Challenge". Under this format, the highest amount awarded was $520,000, which was reached by Terri Waddell on the October 20, 2012 episode, when she was defeated during her record-breaking seventh appearance on the show.
Because the first 2007 show did not have a returning champion, the two semifinal winners simply played against themselves, with the winner becoming the new returning champion.
As part of the 30th Anniversary season leading up to the XL format, bonus prizes such as vacations, laptops, and gasoline for a year are available under one square in each round.