Wheel Of Fortune-winning contestant’s son SHOCKER Ryan Seacrest and Vanna White with amazing feat

Thursday’s episode of Wheel of Fortune gave a glimpse of some very quick skill as the episode ended.

The new episode was won by Frank Mentesana of Brooklyn, New York, who took advantage of $6,000 per letter in the final round to sneak a win over Angela, who had a $1 million wedge at the time.

He solves the final puzzle – ‘Tough But Fair’ to win a cool $40,000, bringing his total for the night to $65,850.

He was bullied by his son Braden, his brother-in-law Michael and his brother Ciro after the big win, but Braden took the spotlight as the episode ended.

During his introduction earlier in the episode, Frank mentioned that his son Braden can solve a Rubik’s Cube in under 30 seconds.

After Frank’s win, Braden got the chance to show off his skills, doing a quick fix right before the show went off the air and stunning Ryan Seacrest and Vanna White.

Wheel Of Fortune-winning contestant’s son SHOCKER Ryan Seacrest and Vanna White with amazing feat

Thursday’s episode of Wheel of Fortune gave a glimpse of some very quick skill as the episode ended

The new episode was won by Frank Mentesana of Brooklyn, New York, who took advantage of $6,000 per letter in the final round to sneak a win over Angela, who had a $1 million wedge at the time.

The new episode was won by Frank Mentesana of Brooklyn, New York, who took advantage of $6,000 per letter in the final round to sneak a win over Angela, who had a $1 million wedge at the time.

After Frank's win, Braden got the chance to show off his skills, doing a quick fix right before the show went off the air and stunning Ryan Seacrest and Vanna White

After Frank’s win, Braden got the chance to show off his skills, doing a quick fix right before the show went off the air and stunning Ryan Seacrest and Vanna White

Frank said at the start of the episode that Braden “just said he was going to do it” a few years earlier.

‘A few days later he had pages of notes of algorithms and things I couldn’t understand,” Frank added.

The proud dad also joked: ‘I’m trying to get him to teach me how to do it but at the rate I’m going it should be about 30 years.’

When Ryan introduced Frank’s family before the bonus round, he asked Braden if he could solve a Rubik’s Cube faster than his dad could solve the puzzle, and he confidently said, ‘Yes.’

As the episode ended, Seacrest asked Braden what his personal record for solving a Rubik’s Cube was, and he said, ’18 seconds.’

Braden quickly went to work as Frank added, ‘He’s used to Speek Rubik’s Cube,’ adding the pieces, ‘move faster,’ but he insisted his son ‘got it.’

While Ryan began to finish the episode, Braden managed to solve it with seconds left before the game show went off the air, solving it in about 28 seconds.

The art of ‘speedcubing’ has been around for years, with the first speedcubing competition held in 1982, 12 years after engineer Erno Rubik created the Rubik’s Cube.

Frank said at the start of the episode that Braden “just said he was going to do it” a few years earlier

When Ryan introduced Frank's family before the bonus round, he asked Braden if he could solve a Rubik's Cube faster than his dad could solve the puzzle, and he confidently said, 'Yes.'

When Ryan introduced Frank’s family before the bonus round, he asked Braden if he could solve a Rubik’s Cube faster than his dad could solve the puzzle, and he confidently said, ‘Yes.’

As the episode ended, Seacrest asked Braden what his personal record for solving a Rubik's Cube was, and he said, '18 seconds.'

As the episode ended, Seacrest asked Braden what his personal record for solving a Rubik’s Cube was, and he said, ’18 seconds.’

While Ryan started to finish the episode, Braden managed to solve it with seconds left before the game show went off the air, solving it in about 28 seconds

While Ryan started to finish the episode, Braden managed to solve it with seconds left before the game show went off the air, solving it in about 28 seconds

The art of 'speedcubing' has been around for years, with the first speedcubing competition held in 1982, 12 years after engineer Erno Rubik created the Rubik's Cube

The art of ‘speedcubing’ has been around for years, with the first speedcubing competition held in 1982, 12 years after engineer Erno Rubik created the Rubik’s Cube

The first world record established at that event in 1982 was 22.95 seconds by Minh Thai, although there was not another competition for decades.

Now the World Cube Association (WCA) holds biannual World Championships with a number of other events during a given year.

The current world record is 3.134 seconds set by Max Park at an event in June 2023.

Park and other prominent solvers were even featured in a 2020 Netflix documentary dubbed The Speed ​​Cubers.