I watched Jeopardy! with host Art Fleming as a kid in the late-60s / early-70s, it came on at noon on NBC when there wasn't really anything of interest on the other 2 channels.
I wasn't a big fan, the questions were really hard - I was 7 years old when the game show debuted in 1964 - even more difficult than today because people overall were more educated in the classical sense decades ago.
I remember watching the final episode in 1975 and thinking, 'This is the end of an era.' Jeopardy had always been on at noon for as long as I could remember; that jaunty theme song and Don Pardo's voiceover signaled high noon for me during the summers, like church bells chiming the hour.
Jeopardy! at 12:00 was like a national habit, a perfect timeslot for housewives on a break or students eating lunch.
I was attending high school when NBC switched the game from noon to 10:30 a.m. on January 7, 1974, to go up against CBS' hit show The $10,000 Pyramid. Away from that noon time slot, where the show was consistently doing well in the ratings, it didn't stand a chance and was canceled within a few months.
In the fall of 1978, NBC revived the game as The All-New Jeopardy!, returning to that 10:30 a.m. time slot (with even less success) before moving back to noon once again. The series was canceled within a few weeks. The public was drawn to more exciting daytime games like Pyramid, Match Game, and The Price Is Right.
Flash forward to 1984. I was attending a Hollywood cocktail party where I got into a conversation with a TV producer who worked for King World Productions. He told me they were developing a new version of Jeopardy! and I asked, "You're getting Art Fleming to come back as host?" Fleming was the original, one and only host of Jeopardy at that point.
He said no, they planned for this new syndicated version to run for many years, a younger guy was needed so they were going with Alex Trebek (High Rollers). I told him I thought it would never work, that Jeopardy! and Art Fleming were as one in the American psyche.
Just goes to show you how wrong a guy can be! Jeopardy with Alex Trebek remains one of the longest-running, most profitable game shows in TV history and holds the record as the most honored program in that Emmy award category. Doh!
In the mid-1990s, folks in the know told me that NBC had erased Jeopardy!'s 2,753 episodes, all but one. Fortunately, since then, collectors have come forward with a few 1970s shows they taped or somehow came into possession of. Including the final episode. Enjoy!
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Jeopardy!'s 2000th episode in 1972 with the 3 highest money winners in the show's history competing. Fleming states here that Jeopardy!'s audience was mostly female and almost 2 times as many women appeared on the show compared to men.
1974 episode of Jeopardy! with Art Fleming.
Last episode of the original run of Jeopardy!.
Jeopardy! 1984 pilot opening - note they (basically) brought over the original theme song ('Take Ten' by Julann Griffin, Merv's wife) and also the music written by Merv Griffin that played during the 30-second Final Jeopardy answer period.