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  1. May 11, 2021 · Since the very first season, one of the joys of "The Magicians" has been the divide between the world of Earth, where our human characters are from, and the world of Fillory, a magical place that ...

  2. The Patrick Star Show. SpongeBob SquarePants is an American animated television series created by marine science educator and animator Stephen Hillenburg that aired on Nickelodeon as a sneak peek after the 1999 Kids' Choice Awards on May 1, 1999, and officially premiered on July 17, 1999.

    • May 1, 1999 –, present
    • Nickelodeon
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  4. Sep 21, 2012 · Wiese: During the first few years of SpongeBob, Steve had his hand in every part of production until it was finely tuned, altering the designs, storyboards, layouts and art direction some more until everyone knew what the vision of the show was. I seem to recall that by the end of second season the show he had really come to an end adjusting ...

    • Tom Heintjes
    • "). Since the first season, the show has also had an art director;1
    • "). Since the first season, the show has also had an art director;2
    • "). Since the first season, the show has also had an art director;3
    • "). Since the first season, the show has also had an art director;4
    • "). Since the first season, the show has also had an art director;5
  5. Helbing had served as a writer since the first season, and as co-showrunner, along with his brother Todd and Kreisberg, since the second. In 2019, Todd departed as showrunner, and Eric Wallace, who had been co-executive producer since the fourth season, was promoted to the sole showrunner, effective from season six.

    • October 7, 2014 –, May 24, 2023
    • The CW
    • Overview
    • Jeopardy! hosts
    • The super-champion era

    Jeopardy!, daily syndicated American television quiz show in which three contestants try to win money as they are quizzed on all types of trivia—history, science, math, geography, language, popular culture, and more. The long-running program, which has won dozens of Daytime Emmy Awards, is a cultural staple and consistently rates as one of the most popular shows in the country.

    The show was created in 1964 by television host Merv Griffin, who would also create Wheel of Fortune. Griffin wanted to launch a game show but found that networks were hesitant after the 1950s quiz show scandals. He landed on the idea of Jeopardy! during a conversation with his wife when she asked him, “Why don’t you give [the contestants] the answers? And make people come up with the questions?” Thus, Jeopardy!, in which a team of writers makes up clues given to contestants who must deliver responses in the form of questions, was born.

    In its modern form, the game show, filmed at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City, California, is played in three rounds. In the first two rounds, six categories with five clues (hidden behind dollar values) each appear on the iconic game board. After a category and dollar value are selected and the host reads the clue, each contestant uses a buzzer (one that is famously tricky to navigate, as it has to be pressed at exactly the right time) to try to chime in first and then answer with the correct question. In the Double Jeopardy! round, all dollar values are doubled. In the Final Jeopardy! round, each player with a positive dollar amount makes a wager on the final clue before knowing what it is. The contestant with the highest total after this round wins the money earned and the right to play the next game, while the second- and third-place finishers receive $2,000 and $1,000, respectively.

    In fall 2003, to shake things up and attract even more viewers after nearly 20 seasons, the show changed the long-standing rule that said no champion could win more than five games. Beginning in June 2004, Ken Jennings, a 29-year-old computer programmer from Salt Lake City, Utah, called the show’s bluff by becoming a nearly unstoppable force, winning 74 games in a row and racking up about $2.5 million in winnings, the highest earnings ever for a contestant in the regular season.

    The first Jeopardy! episode, hosted by Art Fleming, aired on March 30, 1964, during the day on NBC, with Don Pardo as announcer, and eventually went into syndication; it aired in various formats until 1979. The show relaunched in 1984 (considered the first season of the modern version of the show) with Canadian broadcaster Alex Trebek, who hosted until his death in 2020. Johnny Gilbert has been the announcer since 1984.

    Trebek became a cultural icon whose popularity nearly exceeded the show itself. The program and its iterations were parodied over the years, particularly Celebrity Jeopardy! on Saturday Night Live, where Will Ferrell had a delightful time playing a version of Trebek who is constantly stymied by various celebrity antics.

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    Viewers adored Trebek’s kind nature and deadpan humour as he guided contestants through the game. Contestants through the decades often said that meeting Trebek was the highlight of their experience. In 2013 a Reader’s Digest poll cited Trebek as number eight on a list of the 100 most-trusted people in America.

    In 2019 Trebek announced that he had been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer. His final season coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic. The show continued to be filmed, but, because of safety protocols, the studio was not allowed to have an audience—a decision that did not thrill Trebek, who craved the energy of a live crowd. Still, he kept filming until late October 2020. He died on November 8, 2020, at age 80, prompting an outpouring of grief from fans and viewers, many of whom had watched him on TV for 36 years.

    Jeopardy! viewers both love and hate when contestants go on long winning streaks—contestants such as Arthur Chu (11 games in 2014), who jumped around the game board searching for Daily Doubles, and James Holzhauer (32 games in 2019), a professional gambler whose aggressive wagering put him within $58,484 of beating Jennings’s all-time regular-season earnings record.

    During season 38, which began in September 2021, there was an unusual number of super-champions (winners of 10 or more games) who racked up long winning streaks, becoming eligible for the Tournament of Champions with five or more wins. Viewers noticed, and theories abounded for the large number of long streaks: YouTube and Reddit gave potential contestants more resources to prepare; the pandemic required auditions to be on Zoom instead of in person, which expanded the contestant pool; or maybe the questions were just getting easier. (Producers vehemently deny the last one.)

    Notable super-champions of season 38 include:

    •Matt Amodio, 38 games won, the third highest regular-season earnings with about $1.5 million

    •Amy Schneider, 40 games won, the fourth highest regular-season earnings with about $1.3 million, the first openly transgender contestant to make the 2022 Tournament of Champions, which she ultimately won

    •Mattea Roach, 23 games won, the fifth longest winning streak

  6. Sep 2, 2018 · Sept. 2, 2018. History suggests “Adventure Time” should have been a cult classic — the sort of show that ran for 30 episodes and found a second life online with a small, dedicated group of ...

  7. Jul 22, 2022 · For the past 20 years he has lived in Los Angeles, where he has worked steadily on movies (he produced 2018’s Eighth Grade), TV series (he has directed episodes of Ramy and Dickinson), and ...

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