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5th September 2022
02:06pm BST

Black Mirror anybody? Credit: ITV[/caption]
Caller Alex from Enfield decided to go for the wheel, which featured £1,000 and £3,000 prizes as well as several chances to win energy bills paid for the rest of 2022.
Asked if he was worried about the rising cost of energy, Alex admitted: "Massively. I’ve got one of these prepayment meters and it’s absolutely murder."
When the wheel landed on 'energy bill' Alex reacted to the news: "Oh my God! Thank you! Fantastic, what a relief, thank you very much!"
Now, while many of us are happy for Alex, and probably wish we were him right now, many viewers pointed out that there didn't need to be such a spectacle on television.
https://twitter.com/scottygb/status/1566748685341425664
Viewers couldn’t believe what they were watching, with plenty of people blasting the need for such a "tone deaf" spectacle on television.
"Incredibly depressing. And the guy sounds so relived makes me sad", said one viewer, while another added, "#ThisMorning having ‘energy bills’ as a prize on their Spin To Win is the most dystopian and sad reflection on society right now… How did we get to this point? Madness."
https://twitter.com/estefipalacio/status/1566756959218548739
https://twitter.com/LewisTreleaven/status/1566726837241368576
https://twitter.com/Kirenk/status/1566726816013983744
Another social media user user wrote: "If this doesn’t perfectly showcase what a dire state this country is in. Tv shows like #ThisMorning are now having to help us pay energy bills, that’s what 12 years of tories has given us. (sic)"
This comes as Liz Truss was announced as the new Conservative party on Monday. The incoming Prime Minister is expected to unveil a package of support ‘on the scale of the furlough scheme’ to help Brits through the cost-0f-living crisis.
Both The Times and The Telegraph have reported that a bill freeze is on the cards to avoid energy ‘Armageddon’.
[caption id="attachment_357144" align="alignnone" width="2048"]
Liz Truss elected Prime Minister of the United Kingdom[/caption]
The average household spend currently stands at £3,549 a year, already too much for many, but grim warnings say it could soar to £6,616 in 2023.
Polling has shown nearly one in four Brits won't turn heating on this winter due to the price increases, with 'warm banks' being considered by several councils.
Calculations by the Financial Times show her tax cuts and defence spending pledges, coupled with spiralling inflation and the growing cost of government debt, will create a £60 billion hole in the public finances by 2026.
An energy bill price freeze will cost a similarly eye-watering amount.
This Morning airs weekdays at 10am on ITV.
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