Posted on 07/24/2006 12:15:43 PM PDT by lainie
Dear Jeopardy!,
Hey, I hope you remember me. Its been a while since we talked. We were a bit of an item a couple years back, in all the papers, but I think we both know that was just a summer thing. The last time we saw each other well, the magic just wasnt there. Thats why I dont mind when I see you with a new special someone. Or two. Nearly every night! Im sorry, is this sounding passive-aggressive? I dont mean to badger you. I remember that, when we were together, it seems like all I ever did was nag you with questions.
Let me start again. What I really wanted to talk to you about was your image. Youve got a good twenty years on you now, and thats Trebek-era alone. Times have changed since your debut, but when I watch you, its the same-old same-old: the same format, the same patter, the same fonts, the same everything as when I first crushed out on you in fourth grade. Youre like the Dorian Gray of syndication. You seem to think change means replacing a blue polyethylene backdrop with a slightly different shade of blue polyethylene backdrop every presidential election or so. Would you mind a few suggestions on how you might really freshen up your act a bit?
First up, the categories. Maybe when Art Fleming was alive, America just couldnt get enough clues about Botany and Ballet and The Renaissance, but come on. Does every freaking category have to be some effete left-coast crap nobodys heard of, like Opera, or, um, U.S. History or whatever? I mean, wake me up when you come up with something that middle America actually cares about. I think it would rule if, just one time, Alex had to read off a board like:
Second, the Clue Crew. See, this is what Im talking about. You want to hip up the show, and Trebeks not getting any younger, so why not have five attractive young people reading some of the clues instead? Ill tell you why not: because they look like they beamed in from some 1970s PBS show. The van from Big Blue Marble got frozen in a glacier and suddenly here are these five wholesome, now-getting-creepily-old youngsters in 2006, driving around in a van solving mysteries and yammering on about Fort Sumter or the canals of freaking Venice. You know what would be awesome? Suddenly the Clue Crew is reporting from some dark forest. The Brain Bus or whatever ran out of gas and theyre looking wan and emaciated. Then, one show, one of them disappears (Im thinking Jon, but we should discuss) and the other four are looking a little better-fed. The clues they read are now like, This rugged, isolated forest stretches for miles somewhere in the eastern United States, with little game or fresh water. And then she looks at the camera and adds, No really! We dont know where we are! Alex, for the love of God, send help! Then the tape cuts out. Its Blair Witch, only, unlike Blair Witch, its not a hoax. You really drive them out somewhere and leave them.
Third, that damn electric blue everywhere in your decor. Was that hip in 1984? Was that the only electronic-age color that Solid Gold wasnt using in their set that season? Why do you want your show to remind me of my TV screen when theres no tape in the VCR? Heres what Im seeing instead: bright fire-engine red behind all the clues. If you start to get viewer letters (median age of Jeopardy!s viewership: 91) telling you that the new red clues angry up the blood then you have done well. If the same viewers are also outraged that Crankshaft has been replaced with The Boondocks, do not be alarmed. They have confused you with the comics page editor of their local newspaper.
Fourth, why are there no physical challenges? It doesnt have to be Nickelodeon déclassé, buckets of green ooze falling from the ceiling. It could be tasteful and restrained. Like, if you know the answer, you have to run from your podium to the gameboard, jump up to touch the clue in question, and give the answer. What is an Arby-Q? Then you run back to your podium to select again. Some of these contestants, frankly, could use the exercise. Oh, also, there are angry bees.
Fifth, this might seem like a minor detail, but why the exclamation point in Jeopardy! ? It just seems like youre trying too hard. Face it, its a sixties relic. Sure, all my parents favorite movies end with an exclamation point: Oliver! Hatari! Support Your Local Sheriff! But this is a subtler time. Do you really think that, today, Best Picture Oscars would have gone to Million Dollar Baby! and Crash! ? Certainly not. Change the punctuation and suddenly they look like Blake Edwards movies.
Finally, Alex. I know, I know, the old folks love him. Nobody knows he died in that fiery truck crash a few years back and was immediately replaced with the Trebektron 4000 (I see your engineers still cant get the mustache right, by the way.) But thats beside the point: Alex is the franchise. You cant just bring in Ryan Seacrest without warning, mores the pity. But I think a few little host tweaks would do a lot of good.
You and I have a lot of history, Jeopardy! You know I think the world of you youre putting my kids through college, for crying out loud! So I think I can be open with you in a way that others just cant. I hope you take this advice in the spirit in which it was offered. Remember, I only criticize because I
Love,
Ken
XOXOXO
Posted by Ken at 1:40 pm
I thought it was pretty funny.
But can he beat Sean Connery at Jeopardy?
I love everything about Jeopardy that I loved about it 20 years ago (watching it as a kid, keeping score for my dad)...except the stupid "Clue Crew."
Jeopardy doesn't need to get all fancy and 21st century. I think most of the people that watch it do so because they have fun testing their brains, not because they like some spiffy format.
Ken rocks, though.
Alright, show of hands. Who remembers watching Jeopardy! with the big board that had sliding cardboard signs, instead of little televisions?
Art Fleming, Rice-a-roni, and the home game!
Bonus question: Who remembers when Vanna White really had to turn the letters on the Wheel of Fortune board, instead of just touching the telvision screens?
Guilty on both counts
I remember Vanna as a contestant on "The Price is Right"
Love his sense of humor, and am looking forward to his book coming out in a couple months - Brainiac: Adventures in the Curious, Competitive, Compulsive World of Trivia Buffs
I remember when Don Pardo used to do the voiceovers and commercial breaks while Art was hosting. Yes, I'm old.
I want on the Ken Ping list!
"And TheBigB has run the category again!"
I remember being surprised to find her touching TV screens instead of turning the little boxes. And I'm not that old.
I remember Video Village...the most whacked out game show ever.
I also remember when Alex Trebek used to read the local news here in Toronto before he went Hollyweird and sideburns and did High Rollers with Ruta Lee.
Nah. The short-lived Fox series where the contestants answered trivia questions while strapped into a torture chamber was the most whacked out show ever. Nothing like answering "What's the capitol of Vermont?" while hanging upside down in 10-below-0 temperatures.
ok...lets says for the 1960s....even the most whacked out of that era has a tough time against an era which has shows about wife swapping.
One thing is certain. Ken Jennings doesn't know humor from a hole in the ground. This guy sounds like the Cindy Sheehan of game show contestants. Ken, you won your money, now just go away.
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