I went into my J! audition in Chicago knowing that the last question they ask during the interview is "What would you do with the money if you won big?" (BTW, pro tip: they'll tell you that in the room, but they'll also tell you to answer anything
but "pay bills". That didn't stop at least three people in our group from answering "Oh, I've got some bills I need to pay...". Wanna get on a show? Show you can handle taking simple direction...)
Growing up, my grandparents had a pinball machine in the basement of their condo to give all the grandkids something to do while the adults sat upstairs and enjoyed various beverages. One day, Grandpa called and told me they were moving to a new place, didn't have room for the pinball machine, and wondered if I'd like it in my house. It took every last ounce of restraint I had to not say to him "I'm sorry, did you just call a 14 year old boy and ask him if he'd like his very own pinball machine? Because yes, please!" So the machine (Bally "Mata Hari" if you're scoring at home) was in my basement for several years after that, and I always told myself if I ever bought a house, I'd put a pinball machine in the basement. Flash forward 30 years: I own my own home with a large finished basement perfect for a pinball machine. So there's my answer for the audition.
Glenn Kagan was doing the interviews in my group, and I was the very first person in the room to be called upon. He asks me the "usual" questions, then hits me with the "What would you do" line. I immediately say "That's easy, I'm buyin' a pinball machine!". I tell the story, get a good laugh at the "yes, please" line, Glenn asks what machine I'd buy, and then drops an absolute non-sequitur of a question: "Have you ever been to Las Vegas?"
I have no idea why he's asked this question, but I say yes, I've been there a few times. Glenn says "Well they have this place--" and my brain finally makes the connection. I interrupt him and say "Oh--the Pinball Hall of Fame!". Turns out Glenn is something of an aficionado; we talk pinball for a minute before it's time for him to move on to the next person.
After the audition, we chat for a few minutes about pinball--favorite tables, phone apps for playing virtually, etc. And coincidentally, after the audition I'm heading down to Brookfield where the Galloping Ghost arcade has just opened a new dedicated pinball facility. But having made that connection made me feel awfully damned confident about my chances. (He was in the green room when I went back to change clothes after taping my first episode; I mentioned to him that I could now buy a pinball machine, then had to remind him how I knew he liked pinball. I guess when you interview 2,500 people every year, not every conversation sticks...
)
And for the record, I still haven't bought the pinball machine; still holding out for "Twilight Zone", but that runs into five figures...