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Jeopardy board maker with 4 columns
Jeopardy board maker with 4 columns




A redesigned Jeopardy! logo was crafted out of red neon tubes the lights on the logo flashed across one letter at a time (in this pilot, there would be one light going across the rest were darkened). Also, the contestants' scores were now in a vane display which would become standard until the end of season 7 in 1991. The contestant podiums now had monitors in the center displaying their names plus, there were separate name cards above the monitors. The game board was modernized, consisting of 30 television monitors, and the categories were backlit on cards above the monitors. Lickel, looking more like the current series' first season (1984-1985) set. The set was completely overhauled for the second and final unaired pilot, also by Henry C. For the weekly syndicated version, the set used flashing lights and a larger Jeopardy! logo behind the players the rest of the set remained the same. The contestant podiums, unlike the show today, had seats in which contestants could sit. Contestant scores were in slides similar to Password. A jumbled Jeopardy! logo was featured on the contestant backdrop. A smaller board was used to reveal the category and clue during the Final Jeopardy! segments were revealed using a pull-card. The game board was covered by a blue cloth-type curtain, which revealed the categories and dollar values at the start of each round. Originally designed by Tom Trimble with later alterations by Merrill Sindler, the set featured contestant desks on the left and a game board on the right. 13 Jeopardy! The Greatest of All-Time (2020).12 -present (Seasons 30-present) "30th Anniversary Set".






Jeopardy board maker with 4 columns