Trans woman leaves ‘Jeopardy!’ top spot as record holder

Trans woman leaves ‘Jeopardy!’ top spot as record holder

Amy Schneider became the first woman to win US$1 mil on the trivia game show, though some have challenged this claim.

Amy Schneider became the first woman to win US$1 mil on the game show, though detractors challenge this claim as she is trans. (Instagram pic)
LOS ANGELES:
Amy Schneider yesterday slipped from her winning position on the iconic game show “Jeopardy!” where she had reached the second-highest spot in the programme’s 58-year history.

Schneider, who is transgender, in early January became the first woman to win a million dollars on the trivia show, during her 28th win.

The 42-year-old engineer from California left the game with 40 victories and $1.4 million (RM5.9 million).

She was stumped yesterday by a question asking the name of the only country in the world ending with the letter “H”.

Fellow contestant Rhone Talsma, a librarian from Chicago, became the new champion by answering Bangladesh.

Detractors have challenged Schneider’s position as the first woman to reach the game show’s million-dollar milestone because she is transgender.

In an interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America”, Schneider said “the best part for me has been being on television as my true self, expressing myself and representing the entire community of trans people”.

“And just kind of showing a different thing than maybe some people have seen of being just a smart, confident woman and just doing something super normal, like being on ‘Jeopardy!'” she added.

She attributed her success to being “curious” and “spending my life learning a lot of stuff”.

In the end, Schneider did not surpass the record set by Ken Jennings, who racked up 74 “Jeopardy!” victories in 2004 and who is currently one of the show’s interim hosts.

The show, in which contestants answer general knowledge trivia by giving the relevant question to a corresponding answer, debuted on United States TV in 1964.

Beloved Canadian presenter Alex Trebek hosted the show for 36 years before his death from cancer in 2020.

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