Trivia World
Jerome Vered: the great Jeopardy
asterisk
On the very last
show of 2003-04 season, Ken Jennings finally broke a record
he had tied three times, the one-day total of $52,000 earned by Brian Wiekle
on April 13, 2003.
But in the process,
he also broke a record analogous to Roger Maris's
61 homers, the 52 grand
won by Wiekle in the
two seasons of doubled money values. Way back in 1992, in
the eighth season, Hollywood writer Jerome Vered set a
one-day record of $34,000. Double that and you see why
Vered’s record was almost unassailable. (Tellingly, when the
money values were doubled, Vered’s record fell soon after—in
a kids’ tournament.)
To his credit, Vered
isn’t bitter. When told that Jennings had earned $75,000, he
said, "To be fair, I am a little sad, but I'll be fine in about 30
minutes," adding, "Part of me is jealous of the opportunity to win
twice as much money or to keep going after five games, but
it’s just a TV show.”
Vered wasn’t even
upset about not being invited to the Super Millionaire
or Million Dollar Masters tournaments. “They picked a
geographically and ethnically mixed group of favourites. I
would have liked to have been on, but they went in a
different direction. I used to work in TV. That happens a
lot.” (But see below for our update!)
Vered joins the
ranks of Jeopardy superstars
The one-day record
itself came on Vered’s fourth show, when he hit a Daily
Double in the dying moments of the game, won big and brought
his score to about $25,000. At the time, Jeopardy
legend Frank Spangenberg, a New York City transit cop, held
the one-day record at $30,600. Vered realized he was within
range of the record and decided to go for it. The question
that put him over required him to know the first line of
Rip Van Winkle.
Spangenberg,
however, held on to his five-day record, of $102,597, which
Vered missed by just $5800. However, when Spangenberg won
his money, anything over $75,000 had to be donated to
charity. “Mine was the largest cheque they’d ever written to
a single individual, up until that time. My joke is that I
spent all the money on really nice shoes.”
However, Vered
doesn’t think much of Jeopardy records. “At the Tour
de France, they don’t keep records because it’s a different
course every time.”
Nor does he think
there is much special about Ken Jennings, who now holds
several records. “Many of us from the earlier seasons could
have gone on at least as long.”
Giving Jennings full
credit for his speed, Vered notes that he often uses that
speed simply to take educated guesses at the answer, often
getting it wrong, but prevailing over weaker competition.
Although Vered was
recognized as late as three years after the show aired, his
one-day record didn’t earn him the “cult following” that
grew up around Spangenberg or Chuck Forrest, who set records
in season three. Says Vered: “I don’t mind. I prefer to let
somebody like Frank have the publicity if I can have my
privacy.”
Why is Vered the
Roger Maris to the older champs’ Babe Ruths (or to Ken
Jennings’ Barry Bonds)? “People care about the major record,
which was the 5-day. The 1-day is like pitchers’ records as
opposed to hitters’ records. If I could have beaten
Spangenberg's record without endangering my win, I know I
would have done it without thinking twice.”
Interestingly,
neither Vered nor Spangenberg won their year’s Tournament of
Champions, despite having been the heavy favourite. In fact,
arguably, Vered’s Tournament of Champions offered a slat e of
the strongest players Jeopardy had ever seen, and the final
two-day game was one of the toughest the show had ever seen.
The
eventual winner, Leszek Pawlowicz
(depicted left of Vered in this picture, taken at Game Show
Congress 2004)
went on to become “the Michael Jordan of game shows,” in the
words of the New York Times. “At one point, and this
will tell you what a class-act Leszek is, he sent me a
handwritten note to say, ‘You know, at one point, I felt any
one of the three of us could have won that game.’”
Why a superstar
nearly never was
As it happens, Vered
indirectly credits Forrest with leading him to Jeopardy.
While still in film school, his friends were editing
some of the tape of Forrest’s Tournament of Champions
appearance, and Vered would mumble the answers. “I realized
I knew more of the answers than Chuck Forrest did. The
editors told me I had to go and try out but it took me a few
months to get up the gumption/courage/whatever to get up and
call the Jeopardy office”
Even so, he passed
the test four times before he got on. After the first few
times he passed, he realized that he wasn’t been picked
because he didn’t show enough telegenic enthusiasm. He also
had demographics working against him. “A lot of men from
Southern California pass the test, and they want geographic
and gender diversity.”
Ironically, Vered
nearly didn’t win his first game. The incoming champ was
quick on the buzzer and by the time of the first commercial
break, Vered had only rung in once. “I then started ringing
in on anything, just to see how I could get in. I got a
question in the category ‘XYZ’ asking for the two countries
in Africa, other than Zambia, that start with the letter Z.
I managed to get that and then I got a rhythm.”
From then on, to use
a cliché of the 1990s, Vered opened a huge can of whup-ass
and stomped the competition. “That was the biggest shocker,
that first game, more even than setting the record in Game
Four.”
Five years after
Jeopardy, Vered appeared on the first season of Win
Ben Stein’s Money, and he was one of the first people to
actually win all of Ben Stein’s money. The show was still
working the kinks out, and while in the isolation booth, a
problem with the clock led to a stop-tape and a conference
with Standards & Practices to decide what to do. “It took
five minutes and Ben was in his booth the whole time, with
no idea what was going on.”
Vered moves
behind the camera on Ben Stein
Not that it
mattered. Vered won 8 to 5. In fact, he was so impressive
that for the next couple of seasons, he was called in to be
Stein’s “sparring partner,” helping him to warm up by
playing mock games in the pre-season. When he heard that the
show needed writers and researchers, he applied and worked
as a researcher for five months, alongside comedy writers
and veteran writers from Who Wants to be a Millionaire.
“They’d do a
question and send it to research to be double checked,”
recalls Vered. “Meanwhile, the writers would get together
for a roundtable and pitch jokes to be used for the category
names.”
One of the
complications of the show is that the questions used for the
second round, in which Stein played, couldn’t be recycled
from other games, as he may have seen those. Likewise, the
questions used for the isolation booths had to be fresh as
well.
Unlike most game
shows, the writers on Ben Stein “knew” the strengths
and weaknesses of the star “contestant.” Vered says that
they kept anything they knew Stein would know out of his
round and the writers were kept far from Stein.
“But you know, we
didn’t want Ben to win. Screw Ben! He made ten times what we
made, so why would we want him to win,” jokes Vered. “Disney
isn’t famous for paying its people well, and we were way out
on their cable arm, so you can imagine what we got paid.”
Nevertheless, Stein
very much wanted to win, and he would be quite vocal when he
felt the question was wrong, even stopping tape to have
questions fact checked. “There was a budget for the prizes,
and if the prizes were below the budget, Ben got to keep the
difference, so a few hundred every show can really add up.”
After Ben Stein,
Vered went on to other game show projects, including one
that was a cross between Beat the Geeks and The
Weakest Link. That show would have put Vered in front of
the cameras as part of the cast. “The premise was flawed,
because they didn’t realize that, no matter how smart
somebody is, nobody knows everything.”
Even so, Vered has
managed to parlay his game show experiences into a career
behind the scenes at game shows. He may not know
“everything,” but he’s quietly made a name for himself with
what he does know.
UPDATE: Jerome
finishes #3 in UToC
It might be overly
dramatic to say that Jerome Vered was an underdog with
something to prove. But even so, he was an underdog with
something to prove. Going into the tournament, he was
dismissed as being too old, and his one-day record was
called a fluke.
“I had said that I wasn’t sure I could play at that level
anymore, because I hadn’t played in 12 years. But that got
out as ‘he says he can’t play at that level anymore,’ which
isn’t what I said at all. People had this idea of me and
adjusted their perceptions accordingly”
He was also surprised not to get a bye; many of the nine
players given byes were billed as “record holders” but in
fact were fan favourites who were either legendary in the
fan community, or who had played recently. “Of the nine,
only two advanced, which is less than the statistical
probability. But it actually worked out well for me. Since I
kept my winnings from every game I played, I won almost
$400,000.”
Dozens of
equally matched champs
Even so, the
round-two upsets among the nifty nine illustrate how evenly
matched the games were. “Hardly any of the games were
lock-outs, and at this level, if it’s not a lock-out, it
comes down to Final Jeopardy.”
And here, anything can happen. Jerome was watching the games
with Leah Grunewald, and was stumped by a Final Jeopardy
that required you to know that Alexander Selkirk inspired
Robinson Cruesoe. “I couldn't remember Selkirk's name. As
soon as Leah had said it, I knew she was right. And we
played each other. If that had been our game, she could have
won.”
For Jerome, there is an element of luck involved, not so
much in terms of the categories that come up, but of your
state of mind and that of the people you’re playing against.
A number of players, for example, experienced adrenalin
rushes the night before their games, even in the later
rounds. One heavily favoured player was ill in a later-round
game.
“Sometimes, you’re on your game and sometimes you’re not,”
he says. “There are a lot of factors, and a certain point,
it comes down to the buzzer.”
An under-appreciated element of the game is that the buzzer
is only activated when the system is “armed” by a person
backstage. Sometimes, the lag between Alex finishing the
question and the system being armed will vary, even within a
game. Some players had observed that a significant lag had
opened up between when they had played in the 1990s and
today.
“But that’s part of the game,” says Jerome. “You figure out
the timing and you adjust.”
Backstage at the UToC
Like many of the
players, Jerome was mostly having fun, staying focused on
his game and not thinking about the money. “There was a lot
of camaraderie backstage, because when you’re watching the
games with other players, you never know with whom you’ll be
playing. When Maggie [a contestant coordinator] called out
me and Leah, I thought she was asking us to be quiet.
Instead, she told us we were up.”
During the three-game final, for example, he and Brad Rutter
joked that they should play without their pants. Somehow,
Alex Trebek got wind of it, and emerged from behind the
scenes … without his pants. (To enhance security, the last
three rounds were played in a closed studio, with only
Jeopardy staff and alternate players in the audience. Frank
Spangenberg was the alternate for the final three-game
round.)
For Jerome, who was not invited to any of the many
tournaments, being back on the show was a chance to see a
lot of old friends. “About a dozen people from my season,
from my Tournament of Champions, were in the tournament and
I got to see most of them.”
And the LA-based writer also made a lot of new friends. Many
players have mentioned his little touches, leaving a message
of congratulations or condolence on their hotel phone,
showing them Venice Beach or going out for dinner with them.
“For me, it’s my Norma Desmond moment,” he says. “Nobody has
recognized me on the street in years, and now people are
coming up to me in the studio and welcoming me. And later, I
was being recognized on the street, at the airport, at the
TKTS booth in Times Square. All very fun and very odd.”
One Jeopardy fan predicted that the final three would be Ken
Jennings, Leszek Pawlowicz
and Jerome Vered. It turned out he
was 19. “This kid would have been five years old when Leszek
and I were on the show. He would never have seen us, but he
knew us from our stats.”
And now, as a finalist at the UToC, he has another
impressive stat and another contribution to Jeopardy lore.
July 2004
updated June 2004
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