But the nature of the show itself figures in as well. It would not look good for the host to be mispronouncing words. So, if contestants mispronounce words, I will not correct them; I will just say, 'Yes,' and give the correct pronunciation right after," he told AskMen.
And if this sounds like stuffiness on his part, most argue it's not. A profile of the host in the "Washington Post" said that, "Even off-camera, he talks in his soothing-yet-stilted hosting voice, but endears himself to the audience with his affability and his sharing of personal mundanities. Have a question? Email us at questions tvtabloid.
Please include your name and town. More men try out. Men are more into competition then women. They grow up competing. Women grow up getting along. That was only in New York. New York had this wonderful programmer at that time.
It was stupid putting us on at in the morning. We have a dozen people. They go through anything and everything to find a question. You name it and it will become a source material for the show. We repeat the same thing. We try to phrase it differently. We approach it from a different angle. We have gone through thousands of topics.
I remember a sailing category that just bombed, and the next time we used the category, the contestants loved it. We do contestant searches in about 20 to 25 cities each year. Jake Winningham Monday, November 9, The answer: this Canadian philosophy student and aspiring broadcaster began hosting television shows in his native Ontario before shifting to and from short-lived NBC game shows for years.
Trebek was a nerd icon who nevertheless mercilessly bullied the nerds daring to mispronounce a single word on his show, an ageless fixture whose mustache was the only way to track the passage of time from season to season. He was at once inimitable and easily parodied.
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