LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA: Amid the Writers Guild of America (WGA) strike, ‘Jeopardy!’ executives fought back against claims of the game show being affected by it. While they addressed WGA's concerns, the executives spoke about the claims that their writers made some games difficult to comprehend.
‘Jeopardy!’ Is America’s most popular quiz show with people tuning in from around the nation for entertainment and education. When the sanctity of the show is challenged or threatened, the fans make their voice heard. Over the past few weeks, many fans felt that a few categories were intentionally made difficult, which made contestants suffer. But producer Sarah Whitcomb Foss recently clarified that the show was still written by a union writer and, on a better day, results would have been different for contestants.
What did Sarah Foss say?
Producer Sarah Whitcomb Foss opened up about these recent claims in one of the episodes of the 'Inside Jeopardy!' podcast. Sarah admitted, “I saw a lot of commentary about the difficulty of the boards in this game. Yes, difficult. People were also commenting, 'It's because the writers are on strike.’ No, everyone. We finished all of Season 39 with material written completely by our union WGA writers. And sometimes game boards seem more difficult based on contestants. Sometimes, a category does not play well as expected.”
She further added, "But it really is about the combination of the three people on that stage in that show, and their wealth of knowledge. You really could play those same boards on a different day and have a different result.” Foss concluded that no writer or executive engaged in foul play to make the game show any more difficult than what it already is at the moment.
Ben Goldstein and James Holzhauer question ‘Jeopardy!’s’ writing quality
Contestant Ben Goldstein spoke to The US Sun about those tricky questions and categories, "I personally thought my first three games were just hard. They were a higher level difficulty. The only criticism for the writers is that the movie mashup category was not fully thought through and would have tripped up most players. If the contestants are struggling, I hate to say it; it's not the contestant's fault.”
The ‘Jeopardy! Masters’ 2023 champion, James Holzhauer, also slammed the show’s writing team last month as he mentioned, “I think it’s still a great show, but it could use a little tweaking here and there. Some of the question writing could be a little sharper than it has been.”