[quote name=\'DoorNumberFour\' post=\'234934\' date=\'Jan 25 2010, 09:22 AM\']How did Mike Reilly go from Jeopardy contestant to Monopoly host? Or how did Mark DeCarlo get the job hosting Studs after his appearance on $ale of the Century?[/quote] Mike Reilly may have been in the wrong place at the right time, but Mark DeCarlo was a student when he won the Lot. From what I recall, he used the money he won on the show (at least $63,000 of his call was cash) to continue his studies.
Game show hosts do not spring fully armed from the head of Zeus with their microphone in one hand and answer cards in the other. They're newscasters, weathermen, actors, sportscasters, stand-up comedians, you name it, they did something before being a game show host. (For the most part.)
How does a contestant turn his appearance into a full-time gig? More importantly, how can I do it? Is this thinking unrealistically?
What are your qualifications? What makes you a better host than the other 99 people that a producer will look at. Or that guy who lost Half-Off, yet one of his friends thought that an appearance on TPIR was enough for him to secure a hosting gig on a talk show?
I enjoy game shows. I would host them in school as unit review projects. Most of the people who played enjoyed them, but maybe that's because it was more fun to play a game than to just recite facts. I might be a better host than your Chris Wylde, Ty Treadway, or Phil Moore, but I doubt that I could just walk onto a hot set ready to go.
If you want to host a show, see if you can do one for your local school or employer. It isn't just hold cards, read, tell joke, assign points and smile. When I was hosting Family Feud for a game night, I had to remember lots of things: who was up next, when to remind the opposing team that they should be ready to steal, if the bank is big enough for one of the teams to win...all those little things that the great hosts make so easy because they practiced at it. My performance was serviceable, but not polished at all.
Do some small scale shows to see if you'd be any good at it, and go from there.