[quote name=\'Matt Ottinger\' date=\'Oct 16 2004, 05:28 PM\'][quote name=\'starcade\' date=\'Oct 16 2004, 02:05 PM\']All I was asking Matt about is why people have been saying that J!'s mega-run has been rigged -- not that there's any evidence to the effect.[/quote]
Sorry, I'd lost sight of this thread. But this is a pretty easy one. People accuse Jeopardy of rigging, even though it isn't true and there's no evidence. You're accusing AI of rigging, even though it isn't true and there's no evidence. As I see it, it's pretty much the same thing.
People believe what they want to believe, that's why I've given up trying to convince you otherwise. The depth and breadth of the rigging you're accusing AI of is so monumentally removed from what the rest of us call "reality" as to not be arguable anymore. Connecting it to Bush's campaign is where you officially lost me.
As for the two Jeopardy books and the differences between them, my best guess has always been that the second book was the compromise that avoided a lawsuit. Friedman pulled the things he couldn't absolutely prove and Sony put what could have been a public relations nightmare behind them.
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I think, once again, it's plausible deniability. People don't *WANT TO THINK* it's rigged -- else, they then question whether anything is really on the up and up. (And, once you get past TPiR, Wheel, and J!, that would be a somewhat good question...)
I think the big problem is: How can a system which allows flood voting to the point where no hope of all the votes being registered be, in any degree, fair? Then, add that the voting system will not be changed (too convenient for the producers), and the fact that the producers can choose the winner in a FUBAR situation, and you get a scheme for rigging AI -- one that should be easy for anyone to figure out.
Of course, I'd like to ask one question of you and the others opposing me: Would you have said the same kind of thing to Herb Stempel after his loss to Charles van Doren?