

He posted a video in January 2018 announcing he’d undergone surgery for blood clots on the brain that followed a fall he’d taken. After what was described as a mild heart attack in 2007, he was back at work in just a month. He taped his daily “Jeopardy!” shows at a frenetic pace, recording as many as 10 episodes (two weeks’ worth) in just two days. In 2012, the show won a prestigious Peabody Award. He won five Emmys as its host, including one last June, and received stars on both the Hollywood and Canadian walks of fame. In the early 1990s, he was the host of three - “Jeopardy!”, “To Tell the Truth” and “Classic Concentration.” in 1973, he appeared on “The Wizard of Odds,” “High Rollers,” “The $128,000 Question” and “Double Dare.” Even during his run on “Jeopardy!”, Trebek worked on other shows.
WHO REPLACED ALEX TREBEK FULL
Long identified by a full head of hair and trim mustache (though in 2001 he startled viewers by shaving his mustache, “completely on a whim”), Trebek was more than qualified for the job, having started his game show career on “Reach for the Top” in his native country. It lasted until 1975, then was revived in syndication with Trebek. “Jeopardy!” debuted on NBC in 1964 with Art Fleming as emcee and was an immediate hit. The show was the brainstorm of Julann Griffin, wife of the late talk show host-entrepreneur Merv Griffin, who said she suggested to him one day that he create a game show where people were given the answers. “I don’t want to come off as a pompous ass and indicate that I know everything when I don’t.” “I try not to take myself too seriously,” he told an interviewer in 2004. He never pretended to know the answers himself if he really didn’t, deferring to the show’s experts to decide whether a somewhat vague answer had come close enough to be counted as correct. Trebek, who became its host in 1984, was a master of the format, engaging in friendly banter with contestants, appearing genuinely pleased when they answered correctly and, at the same time, moving the game along in a brisk no-nonsense fashion whenever people struggled for answers. “Jeopardy!” bills itself as “America’s favorite quiz show” and captivated the public with a unique format in which contestants were told the answers and had to provide the questions on a variety of subjects, including movies, politics, history and popular culture.

I’ve loved and revered Alex Trebek since I can remember. John Legend tweeted that he was “obsessed with Jeopardy as a nerdy kid growing up in Ohio.

You will never be replaced in our hearts, Alex,” James Holzhauer, another “Jeopardy!” star, posted on Twitter. “It was one of the great privileges of my life to spend time with this courageous man while he fought the battle of his life. “Thinking today about his family and his Jeopardy! family - which, in a way, included millions of us.” He was also a lovely and deeply decent man, and I’m grateful for every minute I got to spend with him,” tweeted “Jeopardy!” champion Ken Jennings. “Alex wasn’t just the best ever at what he did. Messages of grief and respect from former contestants, celebrities and the wider public quickly followed news of his loss. The program tapes weeks of shows in advance, and the remaining episodes with Trebek will air through Dec. “Thanks to the - believe it or not - hundreds of thousands of people who have sent in tweets, texts, emails, cards and letters wishing me well,” Trebek said. Less than a week later, he opened the show with a message acknowledging the outpouring of kind words and prayers he’d received. But Trebek said he intended to fight it and keep working, even joking that he needed to beat the disease because his “Jeopardy!” contract ran for three more years.
