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Yes, You Have to Be Smart to Play Jeopardy

  

Category:  Entertainment

Via:  hallux  •  last year  •  4 comments

By:   Tom Nichols - The Atlantic

Yes, You Have to Be Smart to Play Jeopardy

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



A recent  Jeopardy  contestant lit into the show, claiming that it isn’t really all that good a measure of a player’s intelligence. He’s got a point—but not the one he thinks he’s making.

Passing the Test

A series of viral Facebook posts by a recent   Jeopardy   contestant named Yogesh Raut have caused something of a minor kerfuffle among watchers of the show. Raut, to put it mildly, is unimpressed by the intellectual level of America’s premier game show. He won three games, but after the episodes began to air, he went online to   argue   that the show’s status as “the Olympics of quizzing” is undeserved.

This all puts me in a bit of a pickle. I am a former   Jeopardy   champion (I made it to the 1994 Tournament of Champions and the 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions) who no longer likes the show very much. I   wrote a year ago   that   Jeopardy   has made some serious mistakes—chief among them ending the rule that winners step down after five victories—and should probably wrap up its legendary run. But Raut is wrong about what it takes to play   Jeopardy .

So though I think the show should be retired, let me suggest to you three ways in which   Jeopardy   really is a test of your brainpower.

1. You need to be well-read, not well-educated.

The one place where I think I can agree with Raut and other critics of the game is that you do not need a lot of formal education or deep knowledge of any particular area to succeed at   Jeopardy .   After all, one of the greatest players of all time was a   New York City cop . I have three graduate degrees, including a doctorate, and I got smoked by a librarian in my first tournament. (Some players theorize, in fact, that knowing too   much   about a subject can paralyze you; I have seen doctors and lawyers fumble questions in their area of expertise.)

You don’t need a Ph.D., but to do well at the game, you should be a voracious reader, which is how most people gain (and, more importantly,   retain ) facts and knowledge. My mom and I would watch the old daytime 1960s version on school snow days or when I was home sick, and she was a pretty sharp player—with a ninth-grade education. But my mom and dad were both readers; our house was full of books and magazines and newspapers.

Indeed, in my experience, people who approach   Jeopardy   as a test of formal smarts can really stink at playing the game. At my 1993 tryout in a big hotel in Burlington, Vermont, about 160 people walked in, as I recall, and about 15 of us walked out. The people who showed up with almanacs and atlases and fact books, the serious people whose eyes glared and nostrils flared at anyone who talked to them while they did some last-minute boning up … well, they all got turfed instantly. The rest of us had a grand old time, got our   i passed the   jeopardy   test!   buttons, and went home to wait for a call from Los Angeles.

Now, I will grant you that getting things right does not mean you know a lot about the subject; it only means you successfully associated a clue with a fact. In one of my games, I was behind, and so I went for some high-money clues in “The Violin.” I was a young professor in security studies, so this did not seem like a natural choice. My then-wife was in the audience, and she turned to a friend in panic: “What’s he doing?! He doesn’t know anything about violins! Did he think it said   Violence ?”

And yet, I’d learned in my high-school stage band what   pizzicato   meant, a lucky break that helped me rack up some cash. That’s how you play the game.

2. You need to understand clues and riddles.

Jeopardy   isn’t only about knowing stuff. You need to have a particular   kind   of intelligence to play the game, an agile mind that can not only recall factoids but also parse the game’s sneaky way of asking you for information.

One of   Jeopardy ’s favorite tricks is to firehose the player with a lot of extraneous and irrelevant detail while putting the answer   right in front of you . I am making this up as an example, but a typical snare would be something like this: “A giant ruby was given to the Black Prince by Pedro the Cruel in 1367 and sits near a river of stinky and cold water known for its unusually shallow depth of 20 meters in this British capital.”

If you’re a nerd who overthinks everything and wants to show off your smarts, you’re standing there trying to unravel who the hell Pedro the Cruel was and which river is shallow and …

If you’re a   Jeopardy   player, your brain filtered out everything except “this British capital,” and you buzzed in and said “What is London?” while Brainiac over there was still trying to figure out who was in charge of what in the 14th century. You might not think that’s a form of intelligence, but when two other people are slamming away at their clickers and you’ve got a fraction of a second to recognize the real answer, your mental hard drive better be solid-state and super fast.

3. You need to combine intelligence with presence of mind—and never panic.

Raut is   upset   that the producers choose people who are telegenic. Having watched the show for many years, I think that’s nonsense; there are plenty of contestants who are not, shall we say, camera-friendly. What the producers   do   guard against, I learned, are people who freeze in front of a camera. (In   Jeopardy   lore, this is called “going Bambi,” like a deer caught in the headlights.)

Good   Jeopardy   players never let anything get inside their head, and the best of them pay almost no attention to the other players or even to the host: They read the question and decide whether to buzz in. I disliked super-champ   James Holzhauer   for many reasons, but his background as a Vegas odds guy meant he played the game with ice-cold ease, and that matters—a lot.

Full disclosure: My first   Jeopardy   run ended when I made all of these mistakes at once. At the end of   the first game of the 1994 Tournament of Champions , the clue was “The last king of the Hellenes, he was the second to bear this name.”

Piece of cake. I’m part Greek, spent summers with my grandmother in Greece. Had a lot of drachmas in my pocket with the former king’s name on it:   Constantine II .

And then panic and doubt crept in as the   Final Jeopardy theme   began its death-clock countdown. King of the   Hellenes ? Did they mean the ancient Greek empire? The Athenian alliance at Delos, the one defeated by … no, wait, I think that was a democracy, but … it’s Alexander, maybe? Were there two?

We all went for the Alexander bait, and we all lost. But my opponent made a smaller and smarter bet than I did, and that was that.

Look, I think   Jeopardy   has become too professionalized and too soulless. It’s lost the charm that made it an American institution, and frankly, I don’t much care for Ken Jennings or Mayim Bialik as hosts. (The show should have closed out its run when Alex Trebek died.) But make no mistake: People who win at   Jeopardy   are, in fact, as smart as they look.


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Hallux
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Hallux    last year

Not being a fan of Game Shows and despite all the fuss, I have never watched a single episode; a winning streak I hope to maintain.

The one exception I made was the original Brit version of The Weakest Link … Anne Robinson was a delightful dominatrix of acerbic snark ... a Page 3 Female for the well read.

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
2  Ender    last year

Is it actually being smart or just having the ability to remember random facts...

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
3  Buzz of the Orient    last year

Think about AI and ChatGPT - with a tiny speaker in your ear and a partner on a computer, you could eat the cake and have it too.   That kind of makes me think of those fishing contest guys who planted lead sinkers in their catch in order to outwegh everyone else's catch.  It seems that with some people if there's a way to cheat, it will be tried. 

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Expert
4  Perrie Halpern R.A.    last year

Here is a little unkown fact.

My BIL Tom Halpern was a 5-time winner and on the Tournament of Champions. 

 
 

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