Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Air Force spouse featured on 'Wheel of Fortune'
 
Photos 
Beale spouse featured on Wheel of Fortune
Rebecca Sander, (right) an Air Force spouse, and Hope Mazzeo, a Marine Corps spouse, joined military spouses from all branches of service to participate on “Wheel of Fortune” for Military Spouses Week in Culver City, Calif., Jan 12, 2012. This was the first time the game show highlighted military spouses. The show aired Feb. 6, 2012. Sander is the wife of Tech. Sgt. Jeffrey Sander, who is stationed at Beale Air Force Base, Calif. (U.S. Air Force photo/Joseph Juarez)
Download HiRes
Air Force spouse featured on 'Wheel of Fortune'

Posted 2/9/2012 Email story   Print story

    


by Staff Sgt. Sarah Brown
9th Reconnaissance Wing Public Affairs


2/9/2012 - BEALE AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AFNS) -- The spouse of an NCO stationed here made her national television debut as a "Wheel of Fortune" contestant Feb. 6.

Rebecca Sander, wife of Tech. Sgt Jeffery Sander, was on the show as part of its "Military Spouse Week."

After seeing an advertisement on Facebook for military spouse auditions for the show, Sander said she made a "spur-of-the-moment decision." She called the number in the advertisement, leaving her contact information. Two weeks later, she got a call that she'd been selected to audition.

"I thought it was a telemarketer calling at first," Sander said. "I was so excited, I called everyone I knew."

She made the drive to Southern California to participate in the five-hour tryout process.

"We got to play mock Wheel of Fortune games and had to take a test with puzzles, where you had to do as many as you could in five minutes," she explained.

After the tests were graded, they dismissed about three-quarters of the group.

"After that first round, we played another more intense round of games, where you pretend you're actually on the show, introduce yourselves and practice spinning the wheel," Sander said. "They were looking for someone who's upbeat and has a good personality."

Potential candidates were told to expect a letter in the mail. When a few months had gone by with no word, Sander thought she didn't make it. Then, in mid-December, she received a call that she had been selected.

The notice came about two days before her husband was scheduled to deploy.

"I was upset when I got the call because I wanted my husband to be there," she said. "My husband spent all day at the travel office trying to get his ticket switched so he could come with me to the taping."

The Sander family was able to make the trip together, and, on the day of the show taping, both Rebecca's mother and husband were in the live studio audience.

"Everything went so fast," she said. "I went through all the legalities, signed a contract, they explained the rules on cheating and we got a tour of the studio. We had make-up people and everything.

"I was really nervous to do my intro and I wanted to win enough money to help my mom with the cost of the trip," Sander continued. "I kept going through my head what I was going to say. We started playing and, all of a sudden, it was over. I won $3,000 and the first toss up and solved one of the puzzles."

The puzzle was song lyrics from the Star Spangled Banner.

Although Sander and her husband watch "Wheel of Fortune" regularly, she said there were still some surprises on the set.

"The wheel itself is very small, a lot smaller than it looks on TV," Sander said. "It's so funny ... This woman walked in, and she looked like a normal, pretty woman; she had on no makeup, hair in a ponytail, but it was Vanna White. If she had walked up to me on the street, I wouldn't have recognized her."

Despite her nerves, Sander said her family had a great time meeting the crew and hosts of the show.

"Pat is the nicest guy; he's a veteran, and he talked to us like were everyday people, making jokes and telling us not to be nervous," she said. "It was nice that he was so personable."

This is the first time "Wheel of Fortune" has dedicated the show to military spouses to honor their sacrifices in support of their loved one's service in the armed forces.



tabComments
No comments yet.  
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
First shuttle trainer introduced by NASA astronauts  |  VIDEO

Through Airmen's Eyes: Father, son reconnect after a year apart

Academy cadet dies  1

Through Airmen's Eyes: Keesler medic wins research award

4-wheelin' provides active therapy for wounded warriors

2012 Caring for People Forum addresses issues affecting Airmen, families  1

Wolfenbarger: AFMC 5-Center reorganization on track

Airman missing from WWII identified  1

Crew chiefs shine under dangerous conditions

Job reservation program continues through FY13

AF officials schedule downtime to upgrade myPers website

DADT repeal study reveals no loss in readiness, retention  8

Air Force Week in Photos  1

Former SAC commander dies  4

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Humbled with opportunity to lead the Air Force medical enlisted force  1

Cultural battlegrounds: Why culture matters in Global War on Terror  5


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing