Player 831, also known as Jeff Allen, accomplishes the seemingly impossible and selects the correct briefcase on the first try. “When you think back to the million-dollar money grab when we were ...
Jeffrey Randall Allen won the first season of Prime Video's "Beast Games," taking home $10 million. We caught up with the Columbus native this week.
This week, the Association for Creatine Deficiencies’ (ACD) Vice-Board Chair Jeffrey Randall Allen was crowned champion of ...
Jeffrey Randall Allen, a Columbus native competing in the Amazon Prime reality game show "Beast Games," won the game show's first season along with $10 million in an episode that premiered Thursday.
With 1,000 competitors gunning for a cash prize of $5 million, Beast Games was, by no surprise, dubbed the biggest reality TV ...
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Soap Central on MSNBeast Games: What is Creatine Transport Deficiency - the rare disease Player #831's son suffers from? ExplainedPrime Video's reality competition TV series, Beast Games (that took inspiration from the recent Netflix hit Squid Game) ...
In winning the competition, Player 831 hopes to fund critical research, drug development, clinical trials, and resources for ...
Top six Beast Games contestant Jeffrey Allen vowed to win the $5M to find a cure for his 7-year-old son’s rare brain disease.
Beast Games Player 831 explained why he needed to win the game show. He mentioned his younger son, Lucas, who had a brain disease, Creatine Transporter Deficiency, for whom he wanted to find a cure ...
Meanwhile, his youngest son Lucas has a rare brain disease called creatine transporter deficiency which is currently incurable. The genetic disorder prevents creatine from reaching the brain and ...
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