How can i be on jeopardy
Type keyword s to search. Today's Top Stories. Every 'Bond' Film Ever, Ranked. Leaving Afghanistan Behind. First, take the test. Related Stories. Adrienne Westenfeld Assistant Editor Adrienne Westenfeld is a writer and editor at Esquire, where she covers books and culture. This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses.
You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. More From TV. Check for scheduled testing dates. The online test is only given once per year and the dates are not flexible. You must take the test at the prescribed times or you will be disqualified.
Check your MyJeopardy account regularly for updates in the testing schedule. If you missed the test date for this year, you will need to wait until they announce a new test date and time.
Make sure your computer can handle the test. In order to take the online test, you will need to be on a computer that meets the technical requirements. The test is compatible with mobile or tablet devices, but it is not recommended that you use them. You will need a high-speed internet connection. You will need a screen resolution that meets or exceeds x You will need the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, or Safari. Internet Explorer is not compatible with the test.
Take the test. It is recommended that you take the test in your own time zone, however you are permitted to take it during the testing period for an alternate timezone if that better suits your schedule.
The test will take only about ten minutes and cannot be restarted. Part 3. Wait to hear from a Jeopardy contestant coordinator. If you are selected for an audition, a contestant coordinator will call you to set up a time. They have extremely limited audition availability, so contestants that performed well in the online test are placed in a pool and chosen randomly. People who do well on the online test are kept in the audition pool for 18 months. Do great at your audition.
If you passed the online and are selected from the contestant pool for an audition, you will need to conduct an screen test that approximates what it might be like to appear on the actual show. This audition involves taking a new test and playing a mock version of the game itself.
The new test will have 50 clues that are different from those you saw in the online test. You will play a mock version of Jeopardy to assess your ability to play the game. You must perform well on the second test and the mock game in order to be considered for the contestant pool. Ace your interview. After you play the game at your audition, you will be interviewed to see how well you can conduct yourself on camera.
When you receive your notification of the audition, you will be provided a card to complete and return that provides subjects for them to interview you about. Refine your stories so you can recite them quickly and easily. Focus on the material you suggested in the form you returned to Jeopardy prior to the audition. Think of some fun facts about yourself and be prepared to say them confidently when asked. Get placed in the contestant pool. If you pass your audition, there is still no guarantee that you will be chosen to appear on Jeopardy!
All of that hard work has put you in position to be chosen next, but you still may never get the call. There is still a bit more luck involved in being chosen. You will be placed in a contestant pool for 18 months, during which time you may be contacted to come on to the show. If you are not contacted to appear on the show by the time the next testing period begins, you are eligible to start the process over again. There are no specific books designed to help you prepare yourself for Jeopardy, but brushing up on things like states and capitals, U.
Presidents and Shakespearean literature are all advised. Yes No. It only looked like I was on Jeopardy! Actually, Jeopardy! Alex changes his tie and presto! America is fooled into thinking it's a whole new day on Jeopardy! Typically they shoot ten shows in two-day chunks a couple times a month, so I spent that whole spring commuting from Salt Lake to L. My first 48 shows were taped before any of my shows had aired, so the tricky part was keeping my regular L.
My boss told my co-workers a series of increasingly implausible lies about my whereabouts every other Tuesday and Wednesday. You think computer programmers are all geniuses? No one ever caught on. This was an accident. Obviously I had no idea I was going to be on Jeopardy! I would have been ecstatic with just a win or two. On a whim, I decided to switch up my name in the second show, as a shout-out to family members who had suggested various ways I should write my name on the podium.
I soon came to regret this little whim. There are only so many ways you can write a name like "Ken. Before each taping I'd be in the greenroom frantically trying to invent new "Ken" fonts on a cocktail napkin.
And some of my wilder typographical ideas would get vetoed by the show's producers. The Man doesn't want you writing your name backwards or in Cyrillic on the Jeopardy! That's how he keeps you down. I always hate getting asked this, because I feel like I don't have a very good answer. Or rather, there are lots of answers. I like to read. As I mentioned above, I studied up on some of the most frequently-recurring Jeopardy! I played quiz bowl in college, which is good practice for pulling random things you haven't thought about since high school from deep in the recesses of your brain at a moment's notice.
I had a lot more game-day practice and buzzer rehearsal time than most of my competitors, which gave me an unfair leg up that had nothing to do with knowledge.
I apparently have a pretty good memory for things I'm interested in—like everybody else I guess, but maybe I'm just interested in more subjects than is normal. Mostly, it comes down to curiosity. I think I'm a pretty inquisitive person about the world around me, so as a result I find myself learning new stuff no matter what I'm doing: watching an old movie on TV or doing a crossword puzzle or reading the back of a cereal box. There's information all around us, if we'd only pay attention to it.
It's a state of mind more than anything else. The longest-remembered thing about my Jeopardy! Here's the scoop: at the time I buzzed, I felt good about my answer.
By the time Alex called on me, though, I had realized that there was no way Jeopardy! During the next ad break, Al, the Minnesota pastor on the end who says, "What is a rake? Many people who ask me about this clue think that I was jobbed. I think Alex was right to rule against me, for one reason: the gardening tool is a "hoe," while the immoral person and is he or she necessarily a pleasure seeker?
It sure smells like a set-up. Many people have been kind enough to tell me how easy they thought my final question was. And it's true, this was the kind of question that many people, millions of people, would know instantly.
I lost on the humanizingly easy, "Can you believe he doesn't know this one?
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