Fun fact: Back in the era I played, if there was a category that required video (Clue Crew, celebrity readers, even still pictures) that category would be pointed out to the players in advance, and we were told that category HAD to be played top to bottom. Not necessarily consecutively, but in order. The video servers of the day were loaded that way and couldn't handle the skipping around. I'm sure that's changed today.
Indeed it has. I was at a taping in 2014 where there was a brief delay in one such clue being chosen in a non-consecutive order. In the momentary pause, Alex blurted, "Have to take them in order" when the video suddenly began to play. His remark was, of course, edited out.
The current production company is trying to massage Jeopardy into a sport.
This really hits the nail on the head and is one part of the problem. The other I would say is, at the same time, they are "stunt casting" to fit this mold. I don't watch anymore, so I'm not on the up-and-up with the contestants' occupations Johnny's listing off at the top of each episode; but as I saw more and more contestants were from occupations of a high-risk-tolerance nature (e.g., professional gambler or career stock trader, etc.), what do you see but more "breaking the game" style of play. They've got people wagering massive bucks as if they don't care because they're used to riding a lot of cash on one horse, and if this horse doesn't pay off, well, they've got others because they're not betting the whole farm.
Contrast that with the bookworm who is trying for the one-in-a-lifetime shot to make more money in a half hour than he'll ever make in the same timespan who is going to play at least conservatively enough to try to stay ahead in the game should he be playing well. The attitude seems to be the former type of contestant now tests better with the viewing audience than the latter, and the former is going to exploit the game to achieve his ends. There's also the attitude that seeing the same old top-down, organized, OCD-friendly style of play after 40 years has run its course, so actively putting contestants into the game who will not play that way and, well, spice added, I guess.
I don't know what the best solution is. We could try going back to Fleming-style and nix the wait time on buzzing in to see how many are jumping the gun and see how much that wrenches the gameplay. We could try the more relaxed style of gameplay that was the mid '80s where much of the board was still untouched by the time's up beeps. We could go back to the five-timers limit (what I personally think would be the best solution to maintain the integrity of the game, even though you're going to kill the Internet and media buzz by not giving birth to Ken Jennings, Julia Collins and James Holzhauer types that drive clicks, Tweets and views, which are supposedly measures of relevance).
If nothing else, I think Scott's got it when it comes to the casting: Go back to good-natured contestants familiar with the game than Olympic-style trained competitors. People who are just going to approach the game in a different way can change a lot about the end product.