A PLAYER on The 1% Club has lost out on a huge £93K prize due to a tricky book question – but could you get it right?
The popular ITV game show tests the audience’s common sense and logic, rather than general knowledge.
On tonight’s episode, Lee Mack was back with more quiz questions aimed to stump the 100 players in the game.
By the final question, only one contestant remained and they won £10K for getting through – but decided to risk it all to face a question only a reported 1% of the UK would be able to answer.
However, if they got it right they would win the prize pot of a whopping £93k.
Host Lee asked: “In the image below, three volumes of a cookery book series are lined up in order, next to each other on a shelf.
“The total thickness of the pages of each volume is 5cm and each cover is 5mm thick.
“What is the distance in centimetres between the first page of volume one and the last page of volume three?
With time running against her, the remaining player, had to tell Lee out loud what her answer was.
The lovely Amena replied: “14.9cm”
Unfortunately, she didn’t get it right and Lee bid her goodbye after revealing the answer was 7.
He explained: “When stored upright, the first page of the book is on the right and the last page is on the left.
“So you only need to measure the pages of one book and four covers.”
Viewers rushed to social media and one wrote: “Feel sorry for Amena but she did great to get to 1% question”
A second said: “That 1% Q makes no sense whatsoever.”
While a third said: “That was a bl**dy dodgy last question.”
A fourth added: “That 1% question was a trick question bang out of order and in bad taste.”
Recently, a contestant made history on the show as the first contestant ever to walk away with the full £100,000 prize pot.
As Lee revealed she had taken home the win, Maccisha clapped her hand over her mouth in shock as the studio turned gold in celebration.
The question was: “What is the lowest number that replaces the question mark in this sequence?”
The three contestants then were shown:
- 1+2 = one
- 2+2 = four
- 3+2 = three
- 3+3 = eleven
- 4+3 = ??
School teacher Maccisha guessed correctly that the answer was fifteen.




