Getting on Jeopardy is No Trivial Matter

Steve Lee

Associated content quizical author Jennifer Cruz outlines How To Get On Jeopardy. In her excellent article she lists the requirements of appearing on the game show Jeopardy.

Many Stay-Home-Moms are the programs most enthussiastic fans and it is easy to see why. Jeopardy is a program that can be watched in segments and still be satisfied with the results. That is, you can take care of what needs to be done immediately while watching the show; the sibling dispute can broken-up and the bruised knee band-aided and when you return the show still makes sense.

Before we link to How To get On Jeopardy there is something you should know about the audition process: 30,250 people compete every year be one of the 400 contestants. But there are other outlets for trivia fans, writing for one of the ever-growing number of websites devoted to the collection of knowledge that was in the past considered just suitable for family-night games of Trivial Pursuit, which did become somewhat of a competitive "sport " for a time.

Ken Jennings won 74 consecutive games and $2,500,000 in 2004 to become the all-time champion of television's Jeopardy. He has just had his book published, Brainiac: Adventures in the Curious, Competive, Compulsive World of Trivia Buffs. Ken Jennings is also an historian of trivia and the story of how he became a Jeopardy celebrity is intertwined with his chronlogy of trivia.

Robert Ripley, believe it or not, was the first trivia buff to make use of a growing newspaper industry that was always on the lookout for unusual stories to amaze and shock readers, and sell newspapers that came in morning, afternoon, evening and Five-Star-Final Editions.

10,000 Answers: The Ultimate Trivia Encylopedia by Stanley Newman and Hal Fittipaldi will add to your trivia database.
Ken Jennings revealed one of his low-tech methods of preparation for his appearances on Jeopardy in Brainiac: Adventures, flash cards. Jennings made series of flashcards on college team mascots, the leaders of the nations represented in the United Nations, baseball's quaint expressions and cocktail ingredients. (Ken Jennings doesn't drink , so preparing for trivia questions in areas where he had no experience paid off.)

The informative article How to Get On Jeopardy! I'll Take Registration for $200, Alex by Jennifer Cruz is at this text link:
www.associatedcontent.com/article/36981/how_to_get_on_jeopardy.html

Jeopardy is produced by King's World Productions which also spins the Wheel Of Fortune for Sony Pictures Entertainment.

Published by Steve Lee

I have always been interested in the publishing business and now Associated Content is allowing me to experiment with the various ideas that come up while I am working on my writing projects.  View profile

  • Jeopardy's producers also tempt us with Wheel Of Fortune.
  • Ken Jennings says in his "Brainiac" book that trivia is social tool, a conversation
  • starter that connects people who otherwise have nothing in common.
More than 30,000 people apply for the only 400 appearances on the show each season. Is a trivial career possible? Homer Simpson's voice changed after the second year's series as he built the Fox Television Network making Ashton Kutcher's career possible.

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