[quote name=\'Robert Hutchinson\' date=\'Oct 1 2005, 01:15 PM\'][quote name=\'Matt Ottinger\' date=\'Oct 1 2005, 11:02 AM\']In seriousness, I get very annoyed at the common misconception that the original show was more difficult than the current one. With the handful of shows we have for comparison, it's easy to see that this is just not the case.[/quote]
Just curious--would you base that statement on "batting averages" being roughly the same then as now, or on the content of the material itself, or something else?
As a young whippersnapper, I can't really make a good judgment on what was common knowledge 30-40 years ago. I do think Jeopardy! has moved towards including more pop culture material in the last decade, but A) I'm better at pop culture material, and B) that makes it just as different from J! '85 as from J! '65.[/quote]
It's not based on any mathematical formula. It's simply the observation of someone who writes (and judges the relative difficulty of) trivia material semi-professionally.
Of course, you've also brought up my OTHER pet peeve about complaints regarding Jeopardy material. While it may be true that there is more of an emphasis on pop culture material now than there was in the past (and by no means am I conceding that point), I don't believe that inherently makes the game easier. Some people (myself -- and yourself -- included) would do better on pop culture material, others would do better on literature, or history, or some other subject. A well-written movie or TV category is just as valid as a well-written science or geography one, and it can have just as much challenging material.
Last season, they had a pop culture category of Oscar Ceremony Quotes and not one of the five clues was answered correctly. Just last week, they had a pure mathematics category that didn't fare much better. The key is balance, and I think the Jeopardy writers and producers are constantly making small tweaks to find that balance.