Chicago Sun-Times

Local ‘Jeopardy!’ players salute Trebek

- BY ADAM THORP, STAFF REPORTER athorp@suntimes.com | @AdamKThorp

What is: next? Chicago-area “Jeopardy!” contestant­s fondly remembered their appearance­s alongside longtime host Alex Trebek and pondered the quiz show’s future Tuesday after Trebek said he was considerin­g retirement at the end of his current contract in 2020.

Recent competitor­s almost inevitably grew up with Trebek on “Jeopardy!,” which he has hosted since 1984. In person, they found him profession­al and personable.

“I’ve grown up knowing him as the host. Then you see him there, [and] he’s so polished, its almost surreal,” said Ana Palmer, a librarian at Glenbrook North High School.

Jeopardy’s five-show-a-day filming schedule meant contestant­s had little one-on-one time with Trebeck, but he still managed to leave an impression.

He quizzed Brandon Brooks, a game show aficionado from the Bowmanvill­e neighborho­od, on the theme music for “The Wizard of Odds,” Trebek’s first quiz show (Brooks knew it).

During a break in the filming of Naperville writer Shannan Younger’s March 2018 appearance, he adopted an Irish brogue and called her “Shannan, my darling.”

At his 2011 appearance, Brookfield native Edgar Mihelic told Trebek he had to grow back his then-recently shaved mustache.

“He looked at me straight in the eyes and said ‘not a chance,’” Mihelic said.

Trebek invited speculatio­n over the show’s future leadership in his announceme­nt, surprising a playby-play announcer for the Los Angeles Kings and a lawyer and legal pundit on MSNBC by dropping their names as potential hosts.

Contestant­s said they were confident that the show’s staff and crew would be able to lead it forward.

“[Trebek’s retirement means] losing a giant, but he’s leaving it in very capable hands,” said Colby Burnett, who won the show’s Teachers Tournament in 2012 and Tournament of Champions in 2013.

Brooks was confident the game would survive Trebek’s tenure, just as it survived Art Fleming, its host in the ’60s and ’70s. Brooks said he would like to see “Jeopardy!’s” first female host as Trebek’s successor. His candidate: Meredith Vieira.

Michael Wille, in a lighter vein, suggested President Donald Trump, an establishe­d game show host, could leave office to replace Trebek. Mark Ashton, who appeared on “Jeopardy!” twice this year, put forward Buzzy Cohen, the up-tempo winner of last year’s Tournament of Champions.

Wille and Palmer saw a silver lining in the prospect of Trebek’s departure. At the end of their run, contestant­s are generally banned from reappearin­g on the show — a ban they hope might lapse with the change in hosts.

“I would go back again and do it in a heartbeat. I enjoyed it a lot, and it went way too fast,” Palmer said.

 ?? SHANNAN YOUNGER
PHOTO COURTESY OF ?? Naperville writer Shannan Younger appears with Alex Trebek.
SHANNAN YOUNGER PHOTO COURTESY OF Naperville writer Shannan Younger appears with Alex Trebek.

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