
Those of us who have appreciated really hard trivia for the last 37 years are likely still mourning the Nov 8 passing of long-time âJeopardy!â host Alex Trebek.
Trebek somehow lived two full years following his pancreatic cancer diagnosis, something of a feat in itself (although Iâm no doctor, I have known several people who only lived a few months after receiving their diagnoses, depending upon the stage), but he was still taping his 37th season of âJeopardy!â episodes up until a few weeks before he passed.
Trebek is a role model for not only every game show host, but also for a certain news magazine editor who auditioned to be on the greatest game show of all time (but didnât make it) â twice â and who had what Iâm hoping is a unique exchange of words with the late âJeopardy!â host.
But First: A Little Background..

I donât remember what age I was when I first was flipping through my seven original TV channels (CBS, ABC, NBC, PBS and the New York independent stations â Channels 5, 9 and 11) and saw the late, also great Art Fleming hosting the original âJeopardy!,â which also featured the dulcet tones of announcer Don Pardo.
All I knew was that, as a youngster, I had finally found a place to unleash my truly âencyclopedicâ knowledge of…well, as close to everything as I could get (which wasnât very close, but still) â almost all of which was gleaned not so much from school, but from reading every individual letter edition and every yearâs Year Book (beginning around 1963) from our World Book Encyclopedia set. Imagine me as a little smarter version of Joey on âFriendsâ who loved that my parents purchased more than just the letter âVâ for us.
Most of my close friends were smarter and did better in school than I did, but I knew I was pretty good at writing and great at âJeopardy!â I also knew that someday, I would get on the show, win some money and impress the producers enough to have them grooming me to replace Fleming â who couldnât last forever, could he?
And, even though Flemingâs first run with the show ended when producer Merv Griffinâs original âJeopardy!â was shut down in Jan. 1975, Fleming was brought back for a couple of other revivals of the show, which again ended in 1979. In 1984, Trebekâs first year as the host of the new syndicated version of âJeopardy!,â I flew out to Los Angeles to audition for the show I knew I could win. âAll I have to do is study up on some British royalty and classical music and Iâll dominate,â I kept telling myself.
Well, that trip from NYC to Hollywood didnât have a Hollywood ending for me. At the 20-question test the producers give you during their regular L.A. âtalent searches,â I felt pretty good about myself. All of the questions would have been $800 or $1,000 questions at that time (those were the highest amounts during âDouble Jeopardyâ back then), and I was happy to get 15 of 20 correct.
I totally had no idea about a European history question that had to do with Prussia or another about a Pope from the Middle Ages, and I only got one wrong I really thought I had correct…in the (gulp) Sports category (my best back then) about a baseball pitcher from the Old Negro Leagues who wasnât named Satchel Paige (I think I said Don Newcombe). My 15 out of 20 correct missed by one to qualify me to get to play a mock version of the game. I think they selected 18 of about 120 people to do that.
Two or three years later, âJeopardyâ brought its talent search to Manhattanâs renowned Radio City Music Hall, where 400 or so people came to audition and they were going to limit the selection to only 50 or so people to advance to that mock game round.
This time, I got 16 of 20 questions correct but felt that the questions had something of a gender bias. Of the four $800 & $1,000 questions I missed, one was in the âFemale Poetsâ category (of course, it couldnât be Emily Dickinson), one was âWomen in Historyâ (and not Cleopatra, Helen of Troy, Amelia Earhardt or Golda Meir) and one was about tapestry making. Oh, and one that I got right was âFemale Olympiansâ (Wilma Rudolph).
I knew, as soon as they said it took 17 correct answers to be called on stage that I hadnât made it â and I was pissed. I called out to that super smooth, somewhat smug guy announcing those who had advanced âYo, Alex.â To my surprise, he looked right at me and said, âYes?â
âUmmm, do you notice anything similar about most of the people (more than 3/4 of which were women 40 & older, an apparently desired demo for the show) on stage? While other people yelled âSour grapes,â all Trebek said was, âBetter luck next time.â I donât think I said, âIâll have your job someday,â but I know I thought it.
So, even though I was never a contestant, much less a champ (like current interim host Ken Jennings) â really, who deserves the gig more?
Iâm just kidding. I admired Alex Trebek a lot and wish that I could have done what he did, but no one will ever be able to truly replace him.

