October 21, 2003

$48,400 wasn't enough?

Oh please. And by the way, according to this, it's Sajak who fears bear hugs from contestants.

[rolls eyes]


Man Sues 'Wheel' Host Sajak Over Hug
Winner On Show Seeks $2M For Back Injury Claim

POSTED: 8:52 a.m. EDT October 21, 2003

A "Wheel of Fortune" contestant isn't feeling the love from a hug by Pat Sajak -- he said he's feeling the pain.

Will Wright is suing the show for $2 million claiming that Sajak wrecked his back when he gave him a bear hug and wrapped his arms and legs around him.

Wright tells the Washington Post that he stuck out his hand after winning $48,000, thinking Sajak would shake it.

Instead, he said, Sajak jumped onto him.

He says when Sajak did that he thought to himself, "Don't drop Pat Sajak!"

Wright says he's needed back surgery and months of rehab.


Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE:

Suing TV's 'Wheel' for a Fortune
Lorton Contestant Took Home Money and a Bad Back
By Carol D. Leonnig
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, October 18, 2003; Page B01


Contestant Will Wright had just won $48,400, and the "Wheel of Fortune" audience was cheering with abandon in a D.C. auditorium where the show was being taped. Suddenly, Wright says, host Pat Sajak leapt at his body and wrapped his arms and legs around him.



Sajak's midair bearhug that October 2000 night at Constitution Hall was edited out of the broadcast, Wright says. But Wright, who is no longer in the market for a vowel, remembers it well. This week, the 38-year-old puzzle-guessing champion from Lorton filed a $2 million lawsuit against the show's producers over the back injuries he says he suffered from Sajak's moment of unbridled enthusiasm.

"I stick out my hand thinking he's going to shake it," Wright recalled. "Instead, he jumps onto me, with his legs and arms. . . . All I remember thinking was: 'This is Pat Sajak. Don't drop Pat Sajak.' "

Wright, 5 feet 7 inches tall and 153 pounds, said he nearly buckled under Sajak's full-weight embrace. And despite having won nearly a year's salary by solving three word puzzles and receiving a warm hug from letter-turner Vanna White on the show, within minutes after the show wrapped, Wright said he began to feel sharp pains in his back.

Since then, the father of two and computer circuit designer said, he has had back surgery and months of pain and rehabilitation, for which he contends "Wheel of Fortune's" producers, Sony Pictures Entertainment, should be forced to pay.

The incident took place during a road trip the game show made for a special "Washington Week."

Wright won $13,000 for guessing the phrase "You've Got Everything Going for You," $17,400 for "Caught in the Act of Congress" and $18,000 for "Foreign Dignitaries." He lost the bonus round, "Toboggan." He had only three letters and 10 seconds left to guess that one, he said yesterday.

"They say I signed a release . . . but that was for things like if you hurt yourself spinning the wheel," Wright said. "It doesn't cover the host jumping on a contestant. If it did, Pat Sajak could pretty much do whatever he wants to you."

A spokeswoman for Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. would not comment on behalf of the show. The suit was filed in U.S. District Court in Washington.

"We don't comment on lawsuits we haven't seen," said Susan Tick, Sony's head of corporate communications.

Wright said Sajak "didn't act with malice. He just didn't think." In his legal papers, Wright's attorney accuses Sajak, as an agent of Sony, of "reckless disregard. . . . and reckless and negligent conduct."

Gregory Lattimer, Wright's attorney, said his client first approached the company, which has $6.7 billion in annual sales, about providing a five- to six-figure medical settlement when a neurosurgeon told Wright in January 2001 that he needed surgery for a herniated disc. But Sony was "adamant" that it wasn't responsible for Wright's injuries, Lattimer said, and that upset the longtime "Wheel" fan, who had watched since it went on the air in 1975.

"They just kind of blew me off," Wright said of Sony's legal offices. "I wondered if Pat was even aware that I had been injured."

Through a spokeswoman, Sajak declined to comment. The popular and voluble Sajak, a Chicago native who got his start as an Army radio announcer for troops in Vietnam, was doing the weather on Los Angeles television when he was hired by Merv Griffin to host "Wheel" in 1981. Original host Chuck Woolery had decided to leave the daytime program after a seven-year stint. Sajak has said that he expected the show's popularity to fade in a few years and was stunned when it gained steam and a nighttime slot.

In addition to the shows Sajak taped in Washington in 2000, he spent a year here in 1970 after his discharge from the Army. He tried without luck to find a job in radio or television and instead worked as a hotel desk clerk.

Wright said he and his wife, Casandra, continue to watch the show regularly. "I still love the game," Wright said. But they notice that Sajak now keeps his distance from contestants who show the slightest signs of excitement.

"My wife said that all those years we watched, Pat Sajak never jumped on any contestants," he said. "She asked me: 'Why you?' "


© 2003 The Washington Post Company

Posted by jozjozjoz at October 21, 2003 11:00 AM | TrackBack
Comments

that's just retarted

Posted by: skurdycat at October 21, 2003 11:33 AM

I was on Wheel of Fortune in March 2001.

During the pre-game orientation, they told us not to hug Pat too hard, pick him up, etc...he tapes 5 shows a day, and some people don't know their own strength when they're excited.

Pat is also about 5'7" or so, just like the guy here...I can't imagine him trying anything that physical.

Posted by: Michael Doss at October 21, 2003 01:08 PM

My guess is it probably falls under the catagory of someone who already had problems from being irresponsible with their health and decided they needed a way to pawn it off on someone else...then again, I can be cynical that way ;-p

Posted by: Drew at October 21, 2003 07:41 PM

"...it's Sajak who fears bear hugs from contestants."

And who could blame him?

Posted by: Jane at October 22, 2003 01:26 PM

hi i cant imagine pat hurting anyone. he is the most considerate man on t.v. very polite and just fun loving. there is always someone out there looking for an easy dollar but in the end they pay. easy money ruins people. and he will find out the hard way. cause what ever amt. this guy gets every time he spends it he will think he almost ruined someones career and thats not good. we all love pat &vanna and look forward to hte show each night thank you joanie

Posted by: joan rubadeau at October 28, 2003 10:03 AM

Although this case seems kinda silly, more than likely Sajak and sony will be liable b/c Pat jumping on the contestent is an extreme diviation of his actual and apparent authority. His actions were an extreme diviation from his authority that couldnt have been predicted by sony. So Pat Sajak himself could be liable all by himself.

Posted by: Christaine at November 13, 2003 03:45 PM
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