Stop at a Flokati Rug! Explanation Often considered the least desirable prize on the board, an opinion even mentioned within the show itself.Big bucks, no Whammys.STOP! Explanation The mantra of many a contestant on Second Chance, Press Your Luck, and Whammy! hitting a Devil/Whammy on the game board wiped out one's score.Explanation From the 1985/86 season of the same show when Jim Caldwell took over from Wink Martindale as host, Caldwell became obsessed with the red box Bonus Spaces.
He later confirmed in November that he was unfaithful in his marriage in an interview with the New York Times. On “4:44,” JAY-Z raps, “Look, I apologize, often womanize/Took for my child to be born/See through a woman's eyes." He goes on to express regret for his infidelity: "And if my children knew, I don't even know what I would do/ If they ain't look at me the same/ I would prob'ly die with all the shame." It seemed a genuine and heartfelt expression of remorse, but a large faction of the Beyhive really wasn't having it at all. The titular song, especially, is a pretty unmistakable confession. When JAY-Z dropped the album 4:44 back in June - right around when twins Rumi and Sir Carter came into the world - fans were quick to recognize that it seemed like an apology record and response to Beyoncé's Lemonade from the year before. It makes a whole lot of sense, then, that in this new video for “Family Feud,” which is set partially in a cathedral, Miss Knowles-Carter the priest is ready to hear all of Jay’s confessed sins and possibly absolve him of them.
The video is a long-awaited confrontation between Hova and Beyoncé, after Jay finally explicitly came clean in November about cheating on Beyoncé. Immediately, "Family Feud" memes and tweets rolled out in spades. And, as always when something happens in the Knowles-Carter household, people were ready, willing, and able to talk, theorize, and dissect every second of it. (naturally) on the last Friday of the year. JAY-Z dropped his video for “Family Feud” on Tidal at 4:44 p.m.