Please note: entries for this are closed.
M-Net's announced that they're launching a second season of the game show Deal or No Deal and they're looking for contestants who'd like to play for the million as well sexy suitcase models.
The show - which first premiered in February last year - makes its comeback this April in a new timeslot of Saturdays at 19h00.
All the same suitcase twists and turns remain the same, Ed Jordan returns to host and the banker's still a mystery.
HOW TO ENTER
Contestants
To be a contestant you can enter online by going to the Deal or No Deal section of the M-Net website:
Levern Engel, Head of Entertainment and Infotainment at Endemol South Africa, producers of Deal or No Deal, says they are looking for “high-stakes players with nerves of steel and strong personalities. Contestants should also not be afraid of the camera and have to be at least 21 years old.”
Models
To audition to be one of the 26 suitcase models you can also enter online by visiting FHM's webite and entering right here:
Become an FHM Model of Deal Or No Deal!
HOW THE SHOW WORKS
If you didn't catch the first season, here's a rundown of how the show and competition works:
There is one contestant, one host, a banker and 26 cases, each containing a different amount of money between 1 cent and R1 Million. The cases are brought on set and opened by 26 models.
To start the game, the contestant must pick a case in which he or she hopes has the Million bucks – a 1 in 26 chance. This case is potentially the contestant's prize, i.e., what they can take home - if they don't take the banker’s offer.
But there’s a catch…
The show’s banker can buy back the contestant’s case, based on the amounts that are left in play - the banker decides what he feels the case is worth.
At predetermined intervals, the contestant is given a bank offer. The contestant then decides whether it is a ‘Deal or No Deal’ - ie. whether to take the banker’s offer or to continue opening cases.
If the contestant decides not to take the deal and then opens low value cases, the greater the chance that their sealed case has a lot of money inside it. The next bank offer is therefore likely to also go up.
If the contestant opens high value cases, then the lower the chance that the sealed case has a lot of money inside it. In this case, the banker may choose to lower his offer.
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