I saw an online discussion this week with game show historians and They were 
speculating about Ken Jennings as host because ofThe recent repeats of the 
tournament with him and the rumorThat the summer repeats may be his original 
appearances.




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  On Sun, May 17, 2020 at 11:43 AM, daniel 
anderson<[email protected]> wrote:   I have to agree with your 
assessment. People don't tune into a game show to see the host. Price is Right 
has done well with Drew Carey,  but people don't tune in to see him, they tune 
in to see the contestants win.  Same thing with Let's Make a Deal; people don't 
tune in to see Wayne Brady, they tune in to see the contestants win(and on 
both, sometimes they win big). ABC did the Pyramid  revival just right, with a 
host who stays pretty much out of the way, like Dick Clark or Bill Cullen did.

On Friday, May 15, 2020 at 10:06:04 AM UTC-4, Tom Wolper wrote:
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 1:18 AM 'Dave Sikula' via TVorNotTV 
<[email protected]> wrote:

The impression I got of Alex (who seemed to like me; YMMV) during the Q and A 
stuff with the audience was that, if he was asked a question he liked 
(something he hadn't been asked a lot or about his interests, charity work, 
etc.), he was personable and charming. If he was asked something he'd been 
asked a million times ("Do you really know all the answers?"), he could be 
something of a dick. 

KO's not a bad choice, but I'd think he's too polarizing. Snuffleupagus seems 
like too much of a lightweight, and I find Cooper to be just bland--and 
polarizing (and also someone who'd probably rather not leave New York). I'd 
expect to either see Ken Jennings or a woman.(If this were thirty years ago, 
I'd go with someone like Linda Ellerbee,)


Anybody from politics or news would be too polarizing. For all we think of 
Olbermann's positives, there is a substantial number of people who would choose 
not to watch or immediately turn off the show if they saw him host. He also has 
a reputation for not sticking in one job for too long. And the problem with any 
high profile host is that you don't want people to tune just to watch the host. 
Alex never distracts from the game. Choosing a high profile host who already 
has another job means paying top dollar and having a host who always has going 
back to the old job in the back of their mind.
In one of the many Jeopardy! articles I have read someone pointed out that 
Alex's best quality comes from how he acts at the end of the show. Of the three 
contestants, two people who have been through a process to show how good they 
are at playing the game have to go home. A lack of compassion at that moment or 
any condescension would be a host's undoing.



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