http://www.break.com/index/chick-loses-a-fortune-over-dumbest-question-ever-2261920
This is from a UK game show. The aim is to put the pile of money on the right answer, or if you're unsure you split it between multiple answers. Whatever money was on the right, you get to use for the next question - after 8 (I think) questions, you get to keep whatever you have left.
The girl here didn't listen to the complete question, so is answering a different question. The host of show repeats the question very clearly several times, but the girl still doesn't notice.
The combination of high stakes (£1,000,000 in this case) and time pressure are clearly too much for the couple. The girl will probably feel like it was her fault, but I found what the guy did quite interesting as well - he can see the answer makes no sense, and tries to point out the correct one. But the girls confidence in her answer makes him go along with that one, even though it makes no sense.
What's interesting is that studies which offered significant monetary incentives have seen less probability matching and some researchers have thought that it might simply be an artifact of bored undergrads who don't care about getting the answer right, pattern recency effects (like the gambler's fallacy since all the experiments use frequency over a sequence as their measure of probability). Here we have what looks like probability matching with monetary incentives 6-7 orders of magnitude greater than what is used in the lab and it is probability matching with subjective probability which would eliminate any gambler's fallacy effect.