[quote name=\'lobster\' post=\'181599\' date=\'Mar 15 2008, 10:33 PM\']
[quote name=\'MyronMMeyer\' post=\'181582\' date=\'Mar 15 2008, 08:54 PM\']
Wrong. Final Jeopardy is an outdated relic from the Art Fleming days, and has no legitimate place on the modern show.
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While I appreciate that you agree with my stance of the turd-idity of the Buffett question in question, Final Jeopardy is really the best part of the show and has to go down in history as one of the most revered and legendary bonus rounds in all of game shows.
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I disagree. You know how sometimes on "Crosswords" a player will answer one clue, right at the end, and end up taking the podium and the win from someone who's been dominating the game otherwise? People complain, right? Call it a "flaw".
Then why is it, when a player dominates on Jeopardy, but then ends up in 3rd place because he couldn't work out the correct response to 1 clue at the very end, that's "excitement"? That's also a "flaw", if we want the winner at the end to be the best player throughout the game. And I do.
I mentioned the Art Fleming version, and the dynamic there was different. AF Jeopardy was a quiz game with a gambling element. Everyone kept their money at the end. The Final Jeopardy "wager" was a true wager. How much money do you want to bet on a clue about, say, Rivers? Then whoever had the most money got to play tomorrow, but everyone got some cash (unless they gambled it away). Final Jeopardy made some sense, because it was literally the final "jeopardy" that people placed in a quiz that was littered with them.
In the Trebek version, FJ is the game. The first 2 rounds are just jockeying for position. That's why we can have all this dreary talk about wagering situations (which I hate), rather than discussion about clue difficulty and appropriateness (which I find much more interesting).
I'll go even further. The short-lived Art Fleming revival was the best setup of all three versions, in terms of rewarding the best player with the win. Yes, the Super Jeopardy bonus round was kind of slow paced (judging from the 2 episodes anyone was seen recently, anyway). But getting rid of the trailing contestant after the J! round meant that is was less likely a player could just dominate. Playing mano-a-mano makes for a more exciting, and I'd say "fairer" quiz.
No, I wouldn't say Final Jeopardy is "one of the most revered and legendary bonus rounds in all of game shows", the cultural ubiquitousness of the "Think Music" not withstanding. It's a relic. But the semi-annualy "What do you think is the best bonus round ever?" thread isn't scheduled until May, so I can't be sure.
-M
Extra quotation marks, in case I forgot any ----> """""""