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This is Charles Ingram. In 2001, he performed the BIGGEST fraud in TV history. He cheated on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire & got away with £1 million and got caught. But the police investigation found a very different and sinister story (the story of Charles Ingram):


As you can see, Charles struggled from the start. After just 7 questions, he burned through 2 of his 3 help options. It seemed certain he would leave with little to show for his efforts. Then, something strange happened.


Ingram began pivoting to the correct answer, often seconds after appearing absolutely clueless. As he inched closer to the £1 million prize, suspicions grew behind the scenes. Producers noticed some unusual patterns coming from the audience whenever the right option was read

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Now for context, Charles wasn't the only Ingram obsessed with WWTBAM. His wife Diana and her brother Adrian were quiz show fanatics. Both had previously won £32,000 on the program.


The pattern? Coughing. 192 coughs were recorded during the taping, with many lining up perfectly with the correct answers. Statistician Liam Shaw calculated the odds of this happening by chance at just 8%. But the Ingrams insisted the coughs were purely coincidental.

In the aftermath, an even wilder story emerged. Police found a shadowy group called "The Consortium" had been gaming the WWTBAM system for years. Technically this wasn't illegal, they were just really smart. Here's how:

Led by quiz obsessive Paddy Spooner, they developed an underground operation to plant clients on the show and feed them answers.

The Consortium's tactics were clever and brazen: • Flooding the contestant hotline to secure spots • Using a mock Fastest Finger First • Setting up a phone bank with "The Voice" Between 2002-2007, they raked in 44% of the show's total prize money.

20 years later, opinions remain divided. Were the Ingrams the masterminds of the heist? Or the victims of a media witch-hunt fueled by a convincing yet flawed narrative? Journalist Bob Woffinden argued in his 2018 book Bad Show that the case against them was thin.

Wherever the truth lies, the scandal remains one of the most shocking in TV history. It's a tale of obsession, greed, and deception that revealed the surprising vulnerability of a TV institution. What do you think about this story? Who was to blame for this mess?


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