This category is for the USA game show not an Australian Game Show which does not recieve enough questions to have it's own category
The wedges on the Wheel are the size that you can see when they hold up the prize, wildcard, and million dollar cardboard wedges.
There have been 2 million-dollar winners. On October 14, 2008, Michelle Loewenstein became the first contestant to win the $1,000,000 prize . Her total winnings were $1,026,080. Many others have taken the Million Dollar Wedge into the Bonus Round and some have even solved the Final puzzle and won a lower prize because their spin did not land on the Million Dollar Space. Pat Sajak always shows how close the contestant came to landing on the prize. On May 30, 2013, Autumn Erhard of Laguna Niguel, CA became the second person on Wheel of Fortune to have won a million dollars in the Bonus Round. She is now the all-time money winner for the show. Erhard won an additional $30,000 in cash and prizes during the show's regular rounds, bringing her total winnings up to $1,030,340 and making her the new biggest winner for Wheel of Fortune.
The wheel has two bankrupts on it not including the bankrupt with the million dollar space in the middle. The space with the million dollar in the middle could be counted as two more bankrupts since the space is divided into thirds. However that divided space is not always present and then they have only two bankrupts.
16 last time it was announced and only a single million dollar winner. There was another $100,000 winner in mid December 2010
The largest winner was also in a single game and the total was over 1 million dollars. In fact on Oct 14 2008 a total of $1,026,080.00 was won by Michelle Loewenstein. The winning contestant was a 24 year old newlywed foral designer from Santa Monica, California. $146,529 in two days. was the largest amount won by a team of two people and was the largest amount ever won before the million dollar prize was won on 14 Oct 2008 when Michelle Loewenstein won 1,026,080.00 Michelle Loewenstein won $1,026,080 on 14 Oct 2008 the next biggest winner is for less than $150,00. In fact the next three highest winner totals were between 140 and 148 thousand dollars since only one person has won the million dollar prize. The 27th season which is to began on Sep 14 2009 will be the next time someone else even has a chance to win a million dollars again on Wheel of Fortune. One is the number of people who have won a million dollars on Wheel of Fortune. 16 is the number of 100,000 dollar bonus round winners since the 100,000 priize was offered.
No.
At current there is no One Million Dollar Austrialian Dollar. Australian dollar currency comes in one, two, five, 10, 20, 50, and 100 dollar varieties.
There are no Australian One Million Dollar banknotes. There are no collectible Australian banknotes that would get anything near One Million Dollars.
They had many hosts and hostesses over the twenty-five years Wheel of Fortune was on in Australia before it's cancellation in July 2006. Larry Emdur was the last host and Laura Csortan was the last hostess of the Australian Version of the Wheel of Fortune TV show. They tried to revive the show in May 2008 with a new name and format called Million Dollar Wheel off Fortune with Tim Campbell as host and Kelly Landry as hostess, however the show was cancelled by Jun 27 2008. In Sept 2008 the USA Wheel of Fortune did change to the Million Dollar format that had started with the short lived Australian version.
The 1 million Australian dollar does not exist and cannot be used as medium of exchange. The highest denomination in banknotes for Australia is the $100 note which was released in 1984.
According to http://www.ganeshaspeaks.com/blog_Tom_Cruise_may_turn_a_spendthrift_887.jsp, Tom Cruise's estimated fortune is 250 million dollar
The Royal Australian Mint advises that from 1984 to 2009, approximately 754.246 million Australian One Dollar coins have been minted for general circulation.
$300,000
No, and there is no multi-million-dollar fortune waiting for you in some African Bank.
The Australian Dollar (AUD). There are 100 cents in an Australian Dollar.
Since the 14th of February, 1966, Australia has used the Australian Dollar (AUD). There a 100 cents in an Australian Dollar.
The abbreviation for the Australian dollar is AUD or $A.