- published: 22 May 2014
- views: 1284023
Monte Halparin, OC OM (born August 25, 1921), better known by the stage name Monty Hall, is a Canadian-born MC, producer, actor, singer and sportscaster, best known as host of the television game show Let's Make a Deal.
Hall was born Monte Halparin in Winnipeg to Orthodox Jewish parents, Rose (née Rusen) and Maurice Harvey Halparin who owned a slaughterhouse. He was raised in Winnipeg's north end, where he attended Lord Selkirk School (Elmwood, Winnipeg), and, later St. John's High School. Hall graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Manitoba, where he majored in chemistry and zoology.
Hall started his career in Winnipeg in radio, moving to Toronto in 1946. Early in his career, Hall hosted game shows such as Bingo at Home on WABD-TV and guest-hosted more established game shows such as Strike It Rich on CBS. He was the host/performer of two local New York City TV film shows for children: Cowboy Theater for WRCA (Channel 4) in 1956 and Fun In the Morning for WNEW (Ch. 5) in the early 1960s. From 1956–60, along with NBC Radio newsman, Morgan Beatty, Hall co-hosted the Saturday night segment of the NBC Radio Network weekend program Monitor from 8 p.m. until midnight (EST). At least two recordings of Hall on Monitor are known to exist.
Monty Hall Problem - Numberphile
The Monty Hall Problem
The Monty Hall Problem - Explained
Let's Make a Deal -- Big Deal of the Day (Monty Hall) [with .59 cent trade in]
Monty Hall Problem From The Movie 21
The math problem that stumped thousands of mansplainers
21 Kevin Spacey Monty Hall Problem
Monty Hall Problem for Dummies - Numberphile
The Monty Hall Paradox
Testing out the Monty Hall problem
Extended math version: http://youtu.be/ugbWqWCcxrg?t=2m32s A version for Dummies: https://youtu.be/7u6kFlWZOWg This video features Lisa Goldberg, an adjunct professor in the Department of Statistics at University of California, Berkeley. Website: http://www.numberphile.com/ Numberphile on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/numberphile Numberphile tweets: https://twitter.com/numberphile Google Plus: http://bit.ly/numberGplus Tumblr: http://numberphile.tumblr.com Numberphile is supported by the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI): http://bit.ly/MSRINumberphile Videos by Brady Haran Brown papers: http://bit.ly/brownpapers A run-down of Brady's channels: http://bit.ly/bradychannels Rubik's Cube videos: http://bit.ly/rubiksvids Knight's Tour: http://youtu.be/ab_dY3dZFHM
The Monty Hall Problem is a famous (or rather infamous) probability puzzle. Ron Clarke takes you through the puzzle and explains the counter-intuitive answer. Put simply: If you pick a goat then swap you will always win the car. And you have a 2/3 probability of picking a goat. You can read more about this problem, and the controversy, on Marilyn Vos Savant's website www.marilynvossavant.com A lot of people have commented that I should have used 67% rather than 66%. When I made the video I made the choice to use 66% because I talk about "double the chance" and 66% is double 33%. I accept that 67% is more accurate, but I don't think it affects the explanation. Thanks for all your comments!
TWEET IT - http://clicktotweet.com/bo6XQ You've made it to the final round of a game show, and get to pick between 3 doors, one of which has a car behind it! You make your choice, and then the host decides to show you one of the wrong answers. He then offers you the chance to switch doors. Should you do it? Find out just how wrong human intuition can be in this classic Monty Hall Problem. Written and created by Mitchell Moffit (twitter @mitchellmoffit) and Gregory Brown (twitter @whalewatchmeplz). TWITTER: http://www.twitter.com/AsapSCIENCE FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/AsapSCIENCE Music by Mitchell Moffit http://www.mitchellmoffit.com http://www.twitter.com/mitchellmoffit http://www.facebook.com/mitchellmoffit Art by Gregory and Mitchell http://www.gregorybrownart.tumblr.com http...
Here is a segment from Let's Make a Deal where contestants able to trade in on what you got for a nicer prize. You also get to see an old Opel car. See who got the big deal of the day and see who trade in from .59 cents. Monty Hall hosts
The Monty Hall Problem went viral in 1990. Special thanks to Zachary Crockett at Priceonomics where this story came from: http://priceonomics.com/the-time-everyone-corrected-the-worlds-smartest/ Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out http://www.vox.com to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Check out our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on Twitter: http://goo.gl/XFrZ5H Or on Facebook: http://goo.gl/U2g06o
Another pass at the Monty Hall Problem - see the last video and a new "express explanation" at: http://bit.ly/MontyHallProb Website: http://www.numberphile.com/ Numberphile on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/numberphile Numberphile tweets: https://twitter.com/numberphile Google Plus: http://bit.ly/numberGplus Tumblr: http://numberphile.tumblr.com Numberphile is supported by the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI): http://bit.ly/MSRINumberphile Videos by Brady Haran Brown papers: http://bit.ly/brownpapers A run-down of Brady's channels: http://bit.ly/bradychannels
One of the best-known, yet commonly misunderstood logic problems: the monty hall paradox. Source: A Paradox that Fooled 1,000 PhDs! https://youtu.be/zODxrtj156I Scam School Remix Playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHprOf0KRyMSoSA9wsgaPEqRoNNsZ_D9z Modern Rogue: https://youtube.com/modernrogue Find Brian on social media: http://twitter.com/scamschool http://twitter.com/shwood http://facebook.com/shwood http://google.com/+shwood http://instagram.com/scamschoolbrian
Alan Davies and Oxford Mathematics Professor Marcus Du Sautoy test out the Monty Hall problem. I'm posting this with regards to the comment thread of the following video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mhlc7peGlGg Even with a clear explanation of the problem, many people still can't grasp its logic. Hopefully, after watching Alan and Professor Du Sautoy's demonstration, they get a better understanding of it.
Here is a segment from Let's Make a Deal where contestants able to trade in on what you got for a nicer prize. You also get to see an old Opel car. See who got the big deal of the day and see who trade in from .59 cents. Monty Hall hosts
Extended math version: http://youtu.be/ugbWqWCcxrg?t=2m32s A version for Dummies: https://youtu.be/7u6kFlWZOWg This video features Lisa Goldberg, an adjunct professor in the Department of Statistics at University of California, Berkeley. Website: http://www.numberphile.com/ Numberphile on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/numberphile Numberphile tweets: https://twitter.com/numberphile Google Plus: http://bit.ly/numberGplus Tumblr: http://numberphile.tumblr.com Numberphile is supported by the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI): http://bit.ly/MSRINumberphile Videos by Brady Haran Brown papers: http://bit.ly/brownpapers A run-down of Brady's channels: http://bit.ly/bradychannels Rubik's Cube videos: http://bit.ly/rubiksvids Knight's Tour: http://youtu.be/ab_dY3dZFHM
During the Syndicated era, taping of one of the episodes was done in a different studio. This episode is without the blue backdrop. Enjoy this rare find!
AsapSCIENCE kanalı tarafından hazırlanan bu keyifli videoda, belkide çoğumuzun farklı versiyonlarını duyduğu popüler bir olasılık sorusunun çözümü hakkında bilgi edinme fırsatı bulacağız. Soru kısaca şu şekilde : Elinizde üç tane kapı var ve birinin arkasında büyük bir ödül var. Seçiminizi yaptınız ve sonrasında seçmediğiniz kapılardan bir tanesi açıldı ve size yeni bir teklif sunuldu: Önceden seçtiğiniz kapı ile son durumda kapalı kalan kapıyı değiştirir misiniz ? Matematiksel olarak ilk seçiminiz ile devam etmek mi daha mantıklı yoksa kapınızı değiştirmek mi ? Herkese iyi seyirler dileriz. ODTÜ Matematik Topluluğu http://mathc.metu.edu.tr/ https://www.facebook.com/MetuMathClub https://twitter.com/MetuMathClub YouTube kanalı METU Math Club Kaynak: https://www.youtube.com/use...
One of the best-known, yet commonly misunderstood logic problems: the monty hall paradox. Source: A Paradox that Fooled 1,000 PhDs! https://youtu.be/zODxrtj156I Scam School Remix Playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHprOf0KRyMSoSA9wsgaPEqRoNNsZ_D9z Modern Rogue: https://youtube.com/modernrogue Find Brian on social media: http://twitter.com/scamschool http://twitter.com/shwood http://facebook.com/shwood http://google.com/+shwood http://instagram.com/scamschoolbrian
Monty Hall, yeah yeah, but with me. It's a mathematical curiosity and, in general, maths is intuitive - an important statement which we cut out of the video.
See the full interview at http://emmytvlegends.org/interviews/people/monty-hall
This is a follow-up to my original video on the Monty Hall Problem. Monty has realised we've worked it out and is tired of people always swapping doors and winning so often. So he has an idea... The original gameshow was called "Let's Make A Deal", hosted by Monty Hall. Monty didn't always offer a switch, and if he did it was for a lesser cash alternative. Monty himself understood 'The Monty Hall Problem'. Here's an interview with the man from 1991 http://www.nytimes.com/1991/07/21/us/behind-monty-hall-s-doors-puzzle-debate-and-answer.html
During the Syndicated era, taping of one of the episodes was done in a different studio. This episode is without the blue backdrop. Enjoy this rare find!
Vidéo du « quart d'heure insolite » consacré au paradoxe de Monty Hall. Mini-conférence donnée le 28 janvier 2015 à la bibliothèque universitaire du Bourget-du-Lac, à l'université Savoie Mont Blanc, par Richard Taillet, enseignant-chercheur en physique. Pour les nouvelles : https://www.facebook.com/LeQuartDheureInsolite.
The second episode of GSN's run of Let's Make A Deal with Monty Hall. This episode is older than the first episode in this syndicated run. During the Syndicated era, taping of one of the episodes was done in a different studio. This episode is without the blue backdrop. Enjoy this rare find!
We show how conditional probability sheds light on two of the most famous puzzles in statistics, both of which are often counterintuitive (at first): the Monty Hall problem and Simpson's paradox.
WTXF-DT4 Allentown/Philadelphia (UHF Channel 38) A Stefan Hatos-Monty Hall Production Courtesy: FremantleMedia North America Watch Let's Make a Deal
Happy Friday everyone! I know I named this series "Beating Monty Hall" I explain what that means in this vlog. It's a method I have used for 15 years and have been able to become successful and hard working in everything I do because of it. This vlog is a day vlog on what I'm eating, grocery haul, glute/hamstring workout & much more! Calories 2,145 | Macros Protein 199 | Carbohydrates 245 | Fat 40 Todays workout Glutes & Hamstrings Supersets Weight that should be used? You should be getting in 15 reps on your exercises so set the weight to where you at least hit those reps. Mine always vary and is not all the same. Warm up | Foamed rolled 10 minutes Smith machine step ups SS Bosu ball hamstring curls | 4 Sets | 12-15 reps Smith machine alternating jumps close/sumo stance SS Smith ...
Here we encounter a variant of a famous statistical problem and I try my best to explain it to you guys for your convenience. The hardest part to this room I'd have to say is the switchboard puzzle since you need to know the numbers are different on the poster than the actual board, and that is what the goggles correspond to. What was also refreshing was that the crane puzzle actually did have visual cues for the auditory noises that are taking place, so even the players that are hard on hearing or completely deaf are able to complete it. I was expecting this room to be able to send a message to D-Team to be honest since we have a camera inside of the manufacturing room and we even have to look at the Healing Room to get one of the solutions, but no, we just have to deal with the C-Team...
Starting fifty years ago, Monty Hall unwittingly turned the math world on its ear — students and professors alike — with a seemingly simple stunt on his game show, Let's Make a Deal. In the midst of a trademark giveaway, he'd show contestants that one of the doors hiding prizes was a dud, and then give them the chance to switch from their current choice to the remaining unopened door. Since then, the debate has raged over whether it's valuable to take Monty's deal. Professor and card sharp Jason Rosenhouse will help participants sort out the math and myth of whether to switch, and then give us the tools to tackle other fascinating and perplexing situations of choice in the face of incomplete knowledge.
this video courtesy WFMU. the bit of stage banter relates to how the bands of the night, pale lights, ghost gum and the new lines, in true indie-rock lack of ambition mode, wanted to open for each other... we drew the short straw tho' and were somehow shoehorned into top billing somehow, ulp!
See the full interview at http://emmytvlegends.org/interviews/people/monty-hall
See the full Monty Hall interview at http://www.emmytvlegends.org/interviews/people/monty-hall
Extended math version: http://youtu.be/ugbWqWCcxrg?t=2m32s A version for Dummies: https://youtu.be/7u6kFlWZOWg This video features Lisa Goldberg, an adjunct professor in the Department of Statistics at University of California, Berkeley. Website: http://www.numberphile.com/ Numberphile on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/numberphile Numberphile tweets: https://twitter.com/numberphile Google Plus: http://bit.ly/numberGplus Tumblr: http://numberphile.tumblr.com Numberphile is supported by the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI): http://bit.ly/MSRINumberphile Videos by Brady Haran Brown papers: http://bit.ly/brownpapers A run-down of Brady's channels: http://bit.ly/bradychannels Rubik's Cube videos: http://bit.ly/rubiksvids Knight's Tour: http://youtu.be/ab_dY3dZFHM
The Legendary Monty Hall sits down with current LET'S MAKE A DEAL host, Wayne Brady, for an intimate look back at the show in anticipation of the launch of BUZZR!
Game Show Reunion Starts with Monty Hall and an Interview
This is a clip from an interview of Monty Hall for the Jewish Journal. Monty shared entertaining and touching stories about his life and his family's history. Very special thanks to Jay Firestone and Rob Eshman of the Jewish Journal (www.jewishjournal.com) for choosing Ezra Productions to be a part of this experience! Copyright 2014 Tribe Media Corp www.ezraproductions.com
Here is a segment from Let's Make a Deal where contestants able to trade in on what you got for a nicer prize. You also get to see an old Opel car. See who got the big deal of the day and see who trade in from .59 cents. Monty Hall hosts
We show how conditional probability sheds light on two of the most famous puzzles in statistics, both of which are often counterintuitive (at first): the Monty Hall problem and Simpson's paradox.
Similar not the same
You will allow a low light
Will sunlight heal the core of your body
And the sound I hold so dear
Who wouldn't sing for love?
And who wouldn't do all of that?
Looks like I've been the sole nobody
And now I couldn't follow this
I believe, I believe now
See you a lot near the site
And to you I throw a low light
And the sight of you is so in my body
And the sight I hold so dear
Who wouldn't sing for me now
And who wouldn't have done all of that
Looks like I've been a friend to nobody
And now I couldn't lead you home
I believe, I believe now
I believe, I believe now
The sunlight heal the core of your body
And the sound I hold so dear
Looks like I've been a friend to nobody
And now I couldn't lead you home
(I believe, I believe)
The sunlight heal the core of your body
(I believe)
And the sound I hold so dear
(I believe)
I believe, I believe now