Any thought of just letting the show end, with the lasting memory being of the host who made it iconic? Sitcoms and drama series often go out on top when key cast members are no longer interested in continuing them; why not a quiz show? Or is that unthinkable because of the money that would be left on the table and the fact that the production company doesn't have another concept in the pipeline to take its place? Would the show lose viewers if it were to continue with a much younger host? A female host? A funny host? A black host? A host from the sports broadcasting world?
Any thought of just letting the show end, with the lasting memory being of the host who made it iconic? Sitcoms and drama series often go out on top when key cast members are no longer interested in continuing them; why not a quiz show? Or is that unthinkable because of the money that would be left on the table and the fact that the production company doesn't have another concept in the pipeline to take its place? Would the show lose viewers if it were to continue with a much younger host? A female host? A funny host? A black host? A host from the sports broadcasting world?
As a long-shot, I wonder whether someone as different as Megyn Kelly would work: a woman, younger, intelligent and well known.
Still a pretty divisive figure. She could never shake the association with Fox during her brief stay at NBC. Maybe Chris Wallace could pull it off, but somehow I don't sense that he'd be interested in doing a game show for any price. Obviously, none of the other Fox, CNN or MSNBC anchors would be a good fit for a game show right now. I'm not even sure about the OTA network anchors, to be honest. Jeopardy may have to start looking for the right combination of smarts, gravitas, looks and personality in a local anchor with no previous national exposure.
All your reasons are correct. A new show would compete with all the other done-and-gone show ideas that did not last. This one is a franchise, and they will do anything they can to preserve it.
They will likely look for the what radio programmers seek if a morning show moves to a bigger market: same but different. Same in the sense of having the same sort of personality and fit, but different enough so viewers would not think the person was imitating the previous host. It would help if the person were known from another area of TV, which is why I like Crainbebo's idea of a TV anchor person.
As a long-shot, I wonder whether someone as different as Megyn Kelly would work: a woman, younger, intelligent and well known.
Any of the former Family Fued host that are still alive.
Any thought of just letting the show end, with the lasting memory being of the host who made it iconic? Sitcoms and drama series often go out on top when key cast members are no longer interested in continuing them; why not a quiz show? Or is that unthinkable because of the money that would be left on the table and the fact that the production company doesn't have another concept in the pipeline to take its place? Would the show lose viewers if it were to continue with a much younger host? A female host? A funny host? A black host? A host from the sports broadcasting world?
All good points. I do think that a woman would be right. There would be a change that is seen, first, as "woke" but then as on that does not invite direct comparisons with another man.
Who would be other female candidates? I'd love to see that happen!
David, since you know more about Hispanic media in this country than anyone on this board, are there any Hispanic women now doing English-language news that come to mind as a possible Trebek successor?
Interesting question.
I've never known a recent generation Hispanic person who was a follower of the show, so I came to the conclusion that it is culturally very focused on mostly white American culture. I don't enjoy the show because there are so many questions about cultural and sports subjects that I don't know. Popular English language TV shows, baseball and other American sports and cultural items seem to give an advantage to non-ethnic persons or members of minority groups that are very mainstream.
Fort that reason, I can't think of anyone who would be cross-cultural enough to handle that show unless we look at someone who is 5th or 6th generation American who is Hispanic in name and ancestry only.
Categories concerning black American history, arts, sports, education, etc., come up frequently, and the popular music categories contain R&B and hip-hop hits and artists. The last time I watched, a Grammy category was used and one of the answers led to the question "Who was Selena?" None of the panelists was identifiably Hispanic by name, and all were stumped. Selena, the late Tejano star, comes up a lot in Jeopardy. So do Selena Gomez and Gloria Estefan. The contestants usually come up with those two because both have had numerous hits in English.
Thinking about all this got me trying to remember whether I've ever seen any categories devoted to Hispanics in the United States, and if so, what were they called? You know, I can't recall a category with Hispanic, Latino, Latinx or any other catch-all term. "African American" is used for the plentiful categories about black people here, except for the "Historically black colleges and universities" category. (That last one is guaranteed to include Howard, Grambling or Tuskegee -- and sometimes all three! They are the Selena, Gomez and Estefan of Jeopardy's black cultural awareness.)
The closest Jeopardy ever gets to Hispanic, in the small sampling of shows I've seen, is with categories about specific places: "Puerto Rico," "South of the Border," "South American history." That last one, of course, will always include Bolivar, Peron, Pinochet/Allende and Chavez -- again, sometimes two or three of them! Oh, and if you want to ace the small-money answers in "South of the Border," be prepared to ring in and shout "Who was Pancho Villa?"
One last cultural-awareness anecdote: Not too long ago, a contestant of Asian descent came in for a few days of internet ridicule for missing a baseball answer perhaps even you would get right. It was about a certain event in 1947 in Brooklyn and the correct question, of course, was "Who was Jackie Robinson." Our clueless Asian-American guessed "Who was Babe Ruth?"
I remember that Alex Trebek was hired to Jeopardy after the show's creator/ director in the 1980's got the idea from the Al Yankovic Parody of Jeopardy.
What's wrong with Alec Baldwin? He's a great host. For that show.Match Game (Gene Rayburn was the one and only host of that show in all its incarnations).