SUNY Fredonia Students Promote Professor as Jeopardy replacement

SUNY Fredonia Students Promote Professor as Jeopardy replacement 1

The TV Game show Jeopardy! Is once again looking for a host following the recent resignation of Mike Richards. Richards was supposed to replace longtime host Alex Trebek.

SUNY Fredonia students feel the program should audition one of their professors. So they’ve started a petition on change.org promoting Associate Professor of Journalism Mike Igoe.


In their petition, students wrote:
“Why not audition a real professor for Jeopardy?” Professor Mike Igoe of SUNY Fredonia has knowledge and charisma. Plus, he grew up watching the original Jeopardy with Art Fleming in the 1960s. Now that Jeopardy has tried Hollywood stars, prominent news personalities and sports figures among others, how about giving a genuine professor a shot?


Professor Mike is known on campus for his outgoing personality, his smooth, clear voice, his contagious sense of humor and his impeccable sense of style. He’s no stranger to the camera either, and has decades of experience in broadcast journalism. In fact, he will be inducted into the Buffalo Broadcasters Association Hall of Fame this year.

Professor Mike is the total package, and students of SUNY Fredonia want to share our community gem with the rest of America. We want Professor Mike Igoe to be a household name, and we know you’ll love him as much as we do.

When asked if he thought the campaign would be successful, Igoe commented, “I doubt it. But it’s a great exercise for students in learning how to promote a cause and reach an audience”

The petition can be found at:
change.org/p/sony-pictures-entertainment-get-professor-mike-igoe-a-jeopardy-host-audition.

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The shutdown has no end in sight, with Democrats demanding an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies that stabilize millions of people's insurance premiums as a condition of their votes, and Republicans refusing to negotiate on this matter until the government reopens.

According to Politico, "the unusual tactical disagreement between the two top congressional leaders played out in front of cameras Tuesday on Capitol Hill as the shutdown heads into its second week."

Johnson, who has not convened the House in days, told reporters this week, “I’m certainly open to that. We’ve done it in the past. We want to make sure that our troops are paid.”

Thune, however, disagreed, saying, “Honestly, you don’t need that.”

“Obviously, there are certain constituencies — many of them are going to be impacted in a very negative way by what’s happened here. But the simplest way to end it is not try to exempt this group or that one or that group. It’s to get the government open," he added.

In Thune's view, Republicans should hold firm and not even call the House back until Democrats in the Senate agree to pass the funding bill the House already passed.

Further complicating the issue is that House Republicans have avoided swearing in Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva (D-AZ). Grijalva is the final vote needed for a Trump-opposed bipartisan discharge petition for the House to compel the Trump administration to release the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking case files.

But as a consequence of the House's inaction, noted policy analyst Matthew Yglesias, this inaction is also to the GOP's detriment, as with the House gone, they are incapable of forcing messaging votes to try to shift blame for the shutdown onto Democrats.