Game show enthusiasts hold a special place in their hearts for Wheel of Fortune. The iconic wheel has been spinning for almost 45 years, first airing in January 1975. Host Pat Sajak and letter-turner Vanna White are pillars of the program, but was Sajak always the prime puzzle master?
Talk about a great gig
- Created by Merv Griffin. With Susan Stafford, Charlie O'Donnell, Chuck Woolery, Vanna White. Daytime version of the game show in which contestants guess letters in order to complete a word, phrase or name.
- It’s big, yellow, and making its way through America’s hearts and heartland. Join us at the Wheelmobile’s next stop for puzzles, prizes and fun. You’ll even have the chance to meet our mobile Hosts and try your hand at America’s Game.
Wheel of Fortune remains a ratings winner, making Sajack and White two of the most renowned celebrities in game show history. The hosting gig sounds pretty sweet – Good Housekeeping reports that both Sajack and White shoot the show just four days a month, doing about six shows per day. Do the math, and that works out to approximately 26 days off per month.
Pat Sajak is in his 38 th year as Host of Wheel of Fortune. He joined America’s Game® in 1981, when the show aired on network daytime television. The top-ranked syndicated version made its debut in 1983, with Sajak at the helm. Since then, he has earned three Emmy® Awards, a People’s Choice Award and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Thenthere’s the salary. Turning letters has turned quite a profit for White, whoreportedly makes $4 million per year at the puzzle board post, according toGood Housekeeping. Even she marvels at her salary, telling Market Watch, “I’ll be the first person tomake fun of my job. I’m a letter toucher! They pay me to touch letters!”
Whiteadded that she has also worn upwards of 6,700 gowns on the show, which are onloan from designers. “Some of them are beautiful, long sequined gowns, but literallyyou feel like you’re sewn into the dress,” Whitetold USA Today. “You can’t breathe. But they’re beautiful, and they are fun towear.”
Wondering about Sajak’s paycheck? Celebrity Net Worth reports that Sajak makes almost four times more than White, earning a hefty $15 million per year as host. Not bad for a month and half’s work out of 365 days.
Sajak wasn’t the first to spin the wheel
First Host Of Wheel Of Fortune
Fans of the iconic game show may not know that Sajak was notWheel of Fortune’s original host, nor was White the first to turn thoseletters.
The host to first gaze upon the infamous wheel was Chuck Woolery, who was partnered with Susan Stafford at the board. According to Daily Press, Woolery was a singer and composer before being discovered by media mogul Merv Griffin and signed onto the Wheel. He left the show in 1981 after contract negotiations fell apart. Woolery’s exit was followed by Stafford’s departure in 1982.
Griffin then hired Sajak, a former Los Angeles weatherman,at the end of 1981. White beat out 200 applicants for the job of letter-turner.
Woolery went on to host other shows, with the original dating show Love Connection being the most memorable from 1983 to 1994. The show was known for live interaction, where audience members would vote on who the contestant should date out of three prospects.
Celebrating a milestone
In May, Sajak and White celebrated a mind-boggling 7,000 shows together, as reported by USA Today. White said she didn’t think she’d be “doing the show for more than five years. I thought, ‘Well, this is gonna be fun, but I can’t imagine it lasting that long,’ I remember sitting in the chair next to Pat saying, ‘I wonder where we’ll be in 10 years?’ … And here it’s been 36.”
Sajak earned a Guinness World Records title for the longest career of a game-show host for the same show. “When we went on, there were only three networks,” he said. “Cable was in its early days and streaming networks didn’t exist. We’re in such a different environment, and yet still succeeding. I think that’s the biggest accomplishment of the show.”
Sajakhas no intention of retiring anytime soon, though he’d like it to happen whilethe show is still a hit. “I’d like to leave while the show’s still popular, andI’d like to leave before people ask me to leave, and I’d like to leave beforepeople tune in and see me and go, ‘Ooh, what the hell happened to him?’” Sajaksaid.
White also has no plans to abandon the board. “I’m not planning to goanywhere soon. If I could do it forever, I would, because I do love my job.”
Vanna White, the longtime 'Wheel of Fortune' mainstay, was shown Monday hosting her first entire episode of the popular game show sans Pat Sajak.
White, 62, took over for Sajak for the show's two-week 'Secret Santa Holiday Giveaway' promotion. In her more than 35 years on the show, it was her first time stepping into the hosting role. White has long turned the letters on-screen as the players make guesses.
Who Hosts Wheel Of Fortune
The episodes were filmed in November while Sajak, 73, was recovering from emergency surgery for a blocked intestine. He's since thanked fans for their support, announcing the 'worst has passed' and he expects to return to work shortly.
Meanwhile, while White crossed over to stand with contestants, another entertainment icon filled in for her: Minnie Mouse, dressed in her holiday best.
'That wheel is heavy!' White remarked as she gave the wheel a final spin, before worrying she had read the wrong number. 'Oh no, I'm looking at the wrong arrow!
'How do you do this show?' she joked to laughter from the crowd.
'Wheel of Fortune' host Pat Sajak says the 'worst has passed' after emergency surgery
White will also host a third week of 'Wheel' in early January, after the show announced on Nov. 8 that a taping had been canceled due to Sajak's illness.
'Wheel of Fortune' has been Sajak's hosting home for the last 36 years, a Guinness World Record for the longest career as host of the same game show. White previously described the show without Sajak as 'a word without vowels.'
'I’ll fill in the blanks until you return,' White tweeted at the time, alongside a picture of the duo. 'Rest up and we’ll be solving puzzles in no time. (Don’t worry, your job is safe! Well, pretty safe.)'
She filled in once before for one segment of the show, when Sajak had laryngitis in 1996.
In May, Sajak and White celebrated their 7,000th episode of 'Wheel.' The dynamic duo renewed their contracts through 2022.
Contributing: Erin Jensen, Cydney Henderson, The Associated Press