Toronto Star

I’ll take ‘Terrifying Experience­s’ for $200, Alex

Thousands of trivia hopefuls take part in intense auditions to appear on Jeopardy!

- NICOLE BRODEUR THE SEATTLE TIMES

SEATTLE— This wasn’t just a gameshow audition. This was a hallowed crowd.

Every season, some 70,000 people take an online test in the hopes of gripping a buzzer and asking a question of the silvery, stoic host Alex Trebek on Jeopardy!

But only 2,500 to 3,000 — just 3 per cent — make it this far: a windowless room at the bottom of the Westin Hotel in downtown Seattle, where Jeopardy! producers have set up for three days of formal, in-person testing and interviews with those who have made the cut.

They were young and old, men and women, teachers on summer break, programmer­s and planners. One woman flew in from Reno and another walked four blocks from her apartment.

The 34th season of “America’s Favourite Quiz Show” (it’s trademarke­d) is already underway and there is only room for 400 contestant­s.

But if chosen, the people summoned to the Westin last week are put into a contestant pool for 18 months and could get a call to appear on the show as soon as next week.

A successful Jeopardy! contestant has to be able to know “difficult material,” said Maggie Speak, a gregarious pistol of a producer who has been running Jeopardy! auditions for 20 years.

“It’s more recall than anything else,” Speak said. “Good players are usually well-read and interested in a wide variety of things.

“We’re also looking for people who play well and have something that people want to watch.

Most people who audition aren’t in it for the money.

“It’s a matter of pride,” Speak said, then paused. “They’re not going to turn down the money, but it’s a matter of pride.”

Each hopeful stood for a photograph and was given a Jeopardy! pen to fill out a questionna­ire that included “five interestin­g stories or lies.” (The pen’s oversized red clicker doubled as a practice buzzer).

They then completed a 50-question quiz (they had eight seconds for each answer) before participat­ing in a mock round of Jeopardy! Three at a time, just like on TV.

In between, Kelly Miyahara, a University of Washington graduate who is now part of the show’s “Clue Crew” — three show “ambassador­s” who deliver clues from around the world — opened the floor to questions.

They film a week’s worth of shows in one day: three in the morning, a break for lunch and then two in the afternoon. So contestant­s are encouraged to bring a few changes of clothes.

There isn’t really a dress code, Miyahara said, but be careful with patterns.

And for Pete’s sake, remember to eat.

“We had a fainter, years ago,” she said. “A man worried that the camera added 10 pounds, so he had been starving himself. We had to stop tape.”

The categories on this day: “Italy,” “Notable Birthdays,” “TV IQ Test,” “Ends in N,” “Student Aid” and “The Old Testament.” It wasn’t easy up there.

One man who said he was a science buff couldn’t remember the name of astronomer Neil deGrasse Tyson and, despite a clue that contained the word “crisp,” couldn’t come up with Sir Francis Bacon.

“Sir Francis . . . Toast?” he asked. The room groaned. Then Speak asked the contestant­s about themselves: what they did, hobbies, how they would spend the money if they got to the end of the game-show rainbow.

Donna Brown of Seattle told Speak that her mother had appeared on Sale of the Century when she was pregnant with her (she still uses the luggage she won on the show) and that her brother, Eric, was a Jeopardy! winner who took her on a trip to Mexico.

“I have to fulfil this destiny,” Brown said about why she auditioned.

 ?? ALAN BERNER/SEATTLE TIMES ?? With Alex Trebek onscreen, Kelly Miyahara, a member of Jeopardy’s “Clue Crew,” explains procedures to the tryout contestant­s.
ALAN BERNER/SEATTLE TIMES With Alex Trebek onscreen, Kelly Miyahara, a member of Jeopardy’s “Clue Crew,” explains procedures to the tryout contestant­s.

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