(JTA) — Alex Trebek, the beloved baritone host of “Jeopardy!,” died of pancreatic cancer Sunday at 80.
In his 36 years as host of the immensely popular game show, Trebek encountered his share of Jewish moments. We’ve rounded up a few especially notable ones from the last decade here.
2011: Educators Educator Gitta Jaroslawicz-Neufeld of Far Rockaway
Gitta Jaroslawicz-Neufeld had some pretty good luck. On her first day in Jeopardy! she entered the Final Jeopardy round in second place, but upon seeing the category was “Old Testament”, she bet all but $100. The answer: “In the Book of Job, this name means “accuser,” & that was his role in God’s court.” Post your answer in the comments. Neufeld wrote the right question, finished the day on top, and $18,000 richer.
Tanach is one of Neufeld’s specialties. She is the program coordinator for Touro College’s new Masters program in Jewish Special Education. She is also an educational consultant, primarily serving Syrian schools and organizations. Neufeld is the co-chair of the Chevra Kadisha of the White Shul (where she is also heavily involved in programming and planning), an active Achiezer volunteer, and a proud and doting Savta. Neufeld also appeared in “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire,” where she walked away from the $100,000 dollar question with $53,000 in the bank.
Here’s what Neufeld had to say after her big win:
How does it feel to be the new Jeopardy! champion?
Feels awesome — almost as good as when the Yankees win the pennant!
Does your job give you an advantage when playing Jeopardy!?
When that category came up for me as a Judaic studies teacher trainer, I said, “Thank you, God, and thank you Mom!” [Laughs]
How did you prepare for your appearance on Jeopardy!?
Preparing to come out here involved a lot of studying–um, watching Jeopardy! a lot, which meant I didn’t do dishes because I was watching Jeopardy! [Laughs] And, uh, just reading the paper all the time.
Any messages to the folks back home?
I want to say thank you to my husband for not telling me that I was crazy, and to my kids for not telling anybody that I was going to be on the show ’til I embarrass myself.
2011: A rabbi appears on her ordination anniversary
Rabbi Joyce Newmark, a Conservative rabbi from Teaneck, New Jersey, won $29,200 during her appearance on the show, which aired on the 20th anniversary of her ordination. Trebek congratulated her on the milestone and asked her about her experience as a woman rabbi. See Newmark’s witty response, which Trebek deemed a “good answer,” in this clip.
2013: B’nai B’rith makes an appearance
A clue in the category “Service organizations” asked players to name “this Jewish club whose name means ‘children of the covenant.’” That might have stumped many, but one of the contestants that day was Joey Gutmann, at the time a law student, who was wearing a kippah. He got it right and won the $800.
2015: Former JTA intern pranks Trebek with ‘SNL’ reference
Talia Lavin, formerly a JTA intern and nowadays an author who writes about online antisemitism and white supremacy, had a particularly memorable appearance on the show — for “Saturday Night Live” fans, at least. Lavin didn’t know the answer to a question about a song in a movie, so she wrote in “What is the love ballad of turd ferguson ps hi mom.”
“SNL” fans will remember part of the phrase from the show’s famed “Celebrity Jeopardy” sketches. Burt Reynolds, played by Norm McDonald, took joy in getting Will Ferrell’s Alex Trebek to say his name was Turd Ferguson. Lavin’s moment was the first time anyone had tricked the real Trebek into saying the comic name.
2016: Buzzy Cohen makes a splash
A contestant with a pretty Jewish name became a sensation by trolling Trebek with some of his responses (such as “You aren’t rid of me yet, Trebek”). Vanity Fair called Buzzy Cohen “either the game show’s latest young, charismatic savior or an obnoxious millennial scourge we as a society did nothing to deserve.” He went on to win more than $164,603 over nine episodes and returned the following year to win the 2017 Tournament of Champions. Cohen’s Jewish cred extends to his love of deli, his marriage to a rabbi’s daughter and his upbringing in a Conservadox synagogue, as detailed in this interview with the now-defunct Arq website.
“Absolutely heartbreaking to lose someone who meant so much to so many. Even if this show hadn’t changed my life in so many ways, this loss would be immeasurable,” Cohen tweeted Sunday, before posting a picture of himself hugging Trebek with the words, “Gonna miss you.”
2018: Who is Jesus? … I’m Jewish!
In her first appearance on the show, Alexandra Henkoff and the other contestants left the category “Luther’s 95 Theses” for almost last in the first round. After she revealed the first clue, Henkoff seemed stuck but answered, “Who is Jesus?” When she learned she was right, she sighed with relief, then confessed, “I’m Jewish,” to laughs from her fellow contestants, the audience and Trebek, who said, “That’s no excuse.” Henkoff went on to win $17,300 that day and return for one more game.
2019: A former rabbi contestant holds an interfaith service for Trebek
After Reform Rabbi Geoffrey Mitelman heard the news about Trebek’s cancer diagnosis last year, he quickly hatched a plan for the show host: an interfaith “prayer service, for hope and healing and strength,” he told the New York Jewish Week.
In all, Jewish and Christian clergy representing “at least 11 different religious traditions” participated, reading prayers, and other participants sang songs. People from across the country tuned in via Zoom.
It shouldn’t have come as a big surprise: Mitelman — who appeared on the show in 2016 and runs a site called Sinai and Synapses, about the ties between religion and science — wrote an article on his “Jewish Approach to Being on Jeopardy!”
2020: A day school teacher wagers $18
Meggie Kwait, a teacher at Beit Rabban Day School in New York City, was part of this year’s Teachers Tournament, filmed shortly before the coronavirus pandemic descended on the United States. We interviewed Kwait about her experience and why she decided to wager $18 on a day when she couldn’t lose. (“That was when all the Jews realized I was Jewish,” she told JTA.) Here’s the official “Jeopardy!” interview with Kwait about her appearance and approach to teaching.