Neha Patil (Editor)

Cash Trapped

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Genre
  
Game show

Presented by
  
Bradley Walsh

Original language(s)
  
English

Created by
  
Bradley Walsh

Country of origin
  
United Kingdom

No. of series
  
1

Cash Trapped is a British game show that has aired on ITV since 1 August 2016. Created and presented by Bradley Walsh, the show pits contestants against one another in a contest to amass and win prize money by answering questions in various categories.

Contents

Background

The idea for the show came to Walsh roughly 10 years earlier, while he was in his dressing room between filming scenes for a drama. He took the idea to Helen Warner, Director of Daytime for ITV, who commissioned the show and arranged for producer Glenn Hugill and his firm, Possessed, to handle production. It is one of two summer replacements for The Chase, which is also hosted by Walsh, the other one being Alphabetical.

Format

Six contestants compete through four rounds on each episode. All six remain on the show until one of them successfully "escapes" in the final round.

Round 1: Knockout

The contestants answer a series of toss-up questions on the buzzer. Each correct response awards £100 and allows the contestant to temporarily freeze out one opponent; a miss freezes that contestant instead. The last remaining contestant chooses one category from a board of six and is asked a multiple-choice question with six answer options. A correct answer awards £1,000 and allows the contestant to "cash trap" one opponent, eliminating them from play for the rest of the round, but a miss results in the contestant being cash trapped instead.

Each category is removed from the board once it has been used, and the frozen contestants are then reinstated. The process continues until all six categories are gone.

Round 2: Head-to-Head

All six contestants are reinstated. A toss-up question is asked, worth £200; the contestant who wins it also chooses one category from a new board of six and challenges one opponent. The two alternate selecting answers to a question from a group of six, starting with the winner of the toss-up. The contestant who selects the correct answer wins £2,000 and cash traps the opponent. If a contestant misses a toss-up, a new one is asked and they must sit it out.

As in Round 1, each category is removed from play after being used. The last contestant standing receives a question in the final category alone and has one chance to choose the correct answer for an additional £2,000.

Round 3: Catch-Up

All six contestants are reinstated again, and each has 45 seconds to answer as many quick-fire questions as possible, receiving £500 per correct answer. They play in ascending order of their scores at the end of Round 2.

Round 4: Escape

The high scorer after Round 3 has a chance to win their total, consisting of both that day's winnings and any money they have banked (see below), and "escape" the show. The clock is set to 60 seconds, and the contestants are asked a series of quick-fire questions on the buzzer. Each correct answer by the high scorer allows them to cash trap one opponent, but a miss deducts 10 seconds from the clock. A correct answer by an opponent has no effect except for the time used to answer, but a miss causes them to become cash trapped.

If the high scorer cash traps all five opponents before time runs out, they win their total and the others receive nothing. All six leave the show, and six new contestants are brought in for the next episode. If time runs out, all six contestants return for the next episode, with the high scorer's total reset to zero. The totals of the opponents are banked; upon reaching the Escape Round, each contestant's banked total is added to their winnings from that day to determine the overall money they have at stake.

Critical reception

Upon its premiere, viewers criticised the complexity of the format, and noted a continuity error which revealed the outcome of the first episode at the start of the show. Chaser Paul Sinha took to social media shortly after the episode aired and described the first episode of Cash Trapped as "weird". Frances Taylor of BT said that the show was "somewhat enjoyable. And if nothing else, the concept was innovative and offered something different to the majority of quiz shows on television right now. But will Cash Trapped become as popular and well-loved as Bradley Walsh’s other quiz vehicle? We doubt it. The beauty of The Chase is not only the thrill of, well, the chase – but also in the interactions between the Chasers, the contestants and Walsh himself. Cash Trapped was certainly enjoyable, but it wasn’t a classic."

References

Cash Trapped Wikipedia