黑料社区网

Skip to main content

Looking for Truth in All the Right Places:

patty Limerick's signature

The Solution Lies in Jeopardy

鈥淭he show has become part of the fabric of American life. . . . Even if you are learning facts that you are not going to be able to use in your daily life, . . . the fact itself just enriches you as a human being and broadens your outlook on life and makes you a more understanding and better person.鈥

Alex Trebek, Host of听Jeopardy!听And author of听The Answer Is . . . .

鈥淚t is the task of a Jeopardy! researcher to never rest easy on previously found facts; the team lives by a 鈥榥o rubber stamping鈥 mantra.鈥

鈥淲hat It Takes to be a Jeopardy! Researcher鈥

Truth or Consequences on Trial

Our nation鈥檚 solemn courtroom custom for swearing in witnesses appears to be nearing obsolescence.

鈥淒o you swear,鈥 bailiffs ask witnesses, 鈥渢hat the evidence you shall give shall be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?鈥

In 2020, this is starting to present itself as a trick question.

No value, notion, quality, idea, or concept is in shakier condition than the truth. Distortions, data disputes, lies, hoaxes, fake news, conspiracy theory, and mass-produced disinformation crowd the world, pushing honesty, accuracy, and a consensus on facts to the edge of a distant cliff.

Under these circumstances, if asked to swear to tell 鈥渢he truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,鈥 a completely honest person might well feel compelled to answer, 鈥淚鈥檒l have to get back to you that.鈥

Has the time has come to rewrite the oath?

Do you swear that the evidence you give will be in some imaginable relationship to the truth or will be, at the least, an approximation of what a good share of the American people who are not overcome with bitterness and resentment might find convincing?听听听

Your honor, motion to adjourn until the court can come up with an oath that makes sense in these strange times.

There is, after all, a lot at stake with this oath. As every encounter in a courtroom makes clear, whatever stance we take toward听truth, there is no escape from the听consequences听of that stance.听The phrase really should be 鈥渢ruth听and听consequences,鈥 unless you are referring to the game show or the town named in its honor.

The Solution Lies in听Jeopardy!

In 2020, parties of every possible political persuasion claim to own the truth.

But nobody owns the solution or resolution to this unending contestation.

Or that鈥檚 what I thought until just a few days ago.

A week ago, when I settled on this topic for 鈥淣ot My First Rodeo,鈥 I had a complete 鈥淢other Hubbard鈥 experience. When I looked in the cupboard for a remedy for the troubles of truth, there was absolutely nothing there. I could not begin to think how we will ever find people who could rescue truth from its state of siege.

I might have been stuck in this gloomy state of mind if a good-natured public figure hadn鈥檛 come down with a mortal illness.

Stricken with pancreatic cancer, Alex Trebek, the host of the quiz show听Jeopardy!, wrote an autobiography. A good share of听The Answer Is . . . Reflections on My Life听is an immersion in the backstory of the show he has hosted for thirty-six years. Reading this book ended my sad reenactment of Old Mother Hubbard contemplating an empty cupboard.

I had good reasons to read Trebek鈥檚 book. The most compelling reason was that I spent a good share of my childhood watching quiz shows. Though the ridiculous burdens of a career brought a halt to that custom long before Trebek appeared on the scene, as a kid, I was devoted to听Jeopardy!听(as well as, I admit, to听Truth or Consequences).

Back then, quiz shows were daytime programs, so most of my 鈥渟creen time鈥 was confined to the summer. And yet, during the school year, staying home sick permitted me what we would now recognize as a form of 鈥渙nline education,鈥 delivered in the congenial format of hosts trying to stump contestants, and contestants refusing to be stumped. I won鈥檛 try to draw a direct line of causation, but it seems very likely that my state of enchantment when watching these quiz shows, and seeing people have fun with knowledge, played a part in the career choices I made later in the game (so to speak).

In the late 1950鈥檚, I somehow missed the fact that quiz shows were facing scandals at the very time that I was moving into the role of fan. And even now, rather than disavow my fanhood of the 1950s, I would make a counterclaim. Quiz shows acquired their greatest value to society precisely听becausetheir operations were exposed for bad behavior. The people who created and produced this form of entertainment simply had to disavow fraud and clean up their practices if they were going to regain credibility and survive. The history of quiz shows thus goes on record as a hybrid of cautionary tale and inspirational tale: how to scorn truth and honesty, but also how to change course for a better form of conduct.

In his book, Alex Trebek is quick to give credit to the writers and researchers at听Jeopardy! He refers to them as his 鈥淕reat Colleagues鈥 who 鈥渃an take a mundane fact and make it very entertaining,鈥 while never departing from accuracy. A particularly attractive feature of his job has been that he can always 鈥渢urn to our crack of team of researchers.鈥 And their work won and holds onto the loyalty, affection, and affiliation of millions of Americans. Trebek cites a telling example: the听Jeopardy!听custom of phrasing the contestant鈥檚 answer as a question has become, Trebek notes, 鈥減art of Americana. It鈥檚 something people recognize immediately.鈥

And now back to our question: how to relieve the embattled state of truth in our nation today?

Reading Trebek鈥檚 tributes to the听Jeopardy!听staff, I got it:听The writers, researchers, and judges at Jeopardy! are the champions and practitioners of truth who I have been yearning to find.听

The researchers, I learned on the show鈥檚 website, are assigned to 鈥渃onfirm that every bit of information in 14,000 clues prepared for each season is verified and double-sourced.鈥 With a shared character trait to warm a professor鈥檚 heart, every member of the team must have 鈥渁 passion for knowledge.鈥 Since 鈥渇acts [are] at the core of the game, sources are crucial to a听Jeopardy!听researcher,鈥 making every practitioner aware that 鈥測ou need to make sure your source 鈥 even your source鈥檚 source 鈥 is correct.鈥

To win, a contestant on a quiz show has to give the right response to the clue, and the 鈥渞ightness鈥 of that response must withstand the test of verification and confirmation by researchers and judges. If the writers, researchers, judges, and hosts of quiz shows with wide public followings were to slide downhill into an erratic relationship to truth and accuracy, this would unleash a widespread wave of dismay and disillusionment. If a pattern developed where contestants could win by giving responses that were factually wrong, the credibility of the show would plummet and might prove impossible to regain. And so, with a very strong sense of truth and its consequences, and with hard-wired memories of the quiz show scandals of the 1950s, people working at听Jeopardy!听are immunized against a casual and cavalier attitude toward accuracy and fact.

The people who work at听Jeopardy!听are, of course, a tiny sector of the national population. And yet, thanks to the popularity of the show, they are a group who carry an unusual degree of cultural power and, thereby, consequence.

So now, presented to the world for the first time, here is a plan for turning our worries over the unprotected status of truth into productive action:听听We must join together to demand that our national elected officials adopt the principles and practices of our quiz show researchers and hosts.听Perhaps this could be aided by having Alex Trebek, who is facing mortality and making the most of his remaining time on earth, host interventions where听Jeopardy!听staffers instruct denizens of Congress and the White House how to conduct themselves in the company of truth. These interventions will be opened and closed with each federal official reciting, at least ten times, the wonderful statement made by听Jeopardy!听researcher Margaret Choi: 鈥淚 can鈥檛 call it a fact until it鈥檚 verified.鈥

But here鈥檚 the only problem with this plan: it asks too much of the听Jeopardy!听staff who already have very demanding jobs.

Is there anyone else we can enlist to this cause?

Is there ever!

What I had learned about the professional commitments of Alex Trebek鈥檚 co-workers suddenly merged with what I had learned from several months of attempting to be a good homeowner. In other words, I became aware of a spectacular quality of this nation鈥檚 population that I had not noticed, even though it had long been right before my eyes.

Here鈥檚 what I finally saw.

Devotion to truth drives and guide the practices of thousands of Americans who we encounter in everyday life and who we already trust.

I repeat the point: 听wherever we look, we can see sectors of society where people are demonstrating a steady allegiance to truth and accuracy, generating an enormous national resource of insights and capabilities that await mobilization on behalf of the nation鈥檚 well-being.

Stay with me for just a little longer, and I will reveal the identity of the vast numbers of people who are constantly on a quest for truth and accuracy, and quick to direct their actions by the results of that quest.

But for now, we already have acquired sufficient reason for cheer:听 we know that Alex Trebek is a very visible and influential American at the moment. The time has come to lionize听闯别辞辫补谤诲测鈥檚!听writers, researchers, and judges and to celebrate their service as truth鈥檚 champions, advocates, and defenders. Even more important, given this good-hearted man鈥檚 state of health, this is the moment to grab Alex Trebek鈥檚 coattails and travel in his slipstream.

Why This Matters鈥擳he Bedrock

Currently, we have arranged ourselves as a fractured, divided, antagonistic, embittered bunch of citizens who are very reluctant to trust those with whom we disagree.

And so this is a safe prediction: 听pretty soon, our nation鈥檚 survival as a democratic republic is going to require the success of many brave initiatives in major-league, all-in reconciliation.

One of the areas in which our contemporary disagreement peaks is in the zone of contesting claims about historical truth, especially the accuracy of claims about the centrality of slavery and conquest in the nation鈥檚 past.

Thankfully, a number of other nations have set an example for us by creating Truth and Reconciliation Commissions. In our own country, some admirable and energetic historians are working to make it possible for the United States to follow that example.

But look at the words in the name of those commissions.

鈥淭ruth鈥 comes before 鈥淩econciliation.鈥

How will Americans ever be able to participate in Truth and Reconciliation Commissions if the matter that is most in need of 鈥渞econciliation鈥 is our capacity to recognize and agree on 鈥渢ruth鈥?

We will make no progress on reconciliation until we make some progress on truth.

Who among Us Could Get Truth on a Better Footing?

Let鈥檚 say that we have only a very limited amount of time (which might actually be the case!) to find a sizable number of people鈥攎uch bigger than the 听number of writers, researchers, and judges at听Jeopardy!鈥攖o persuade Americans to adopt a shared understanding of how to arrive at a consensus on truth and accuracy.

Where could we look 鈥攆ast!鈥攖o find these people?

Remember, we are looking for people who we trust and who are personally gifted and occupationally skilled at distinguishing accurate statements from inaccurate statements and at separating truth from falsehood, error, or misapprehension. Let鈥檚 add one further criterion or qualification:听 when they have themselves made an inaccurate assumption, the people we are seeking must be able to recognize their error quickly and to correct it fast, without wasting a moment on injured pride or stubborn defensiveness.

Got it?

A moment鈥檚 despair may be in order.

How will we ever find people like this? And how could we possibly find a sufficient number of them to get our troubled society back on track?

Time now to dismiss that despair.

These people exist in vast numbers, and they are everywhere we look. I can say this with authority because, in the last months, a parade of these people has come to my home to demonstrate their talents and capacities.

How could that possibly be true?

The people who came to my home were people who fix things. In the last months, they fixed the front door lock, the plumbing in two sinks, the air conditioning, and the overgrown tree that was getting ready to fall over and maybe hit the roof.

The intellectual methods that they used to fix these things rested on their very comfortable and familiar relationship to accuracy and truth. As they worked on the various problems that my house and property placed before them, these people were forever asking themselves, (particularly in observing the results of their own actions), 鈥淒id I get this right?鈥澨 If the answer came back (from the lock, sinks, air conditioning system, or tree), 鈥淣o, you got this wrong,鈥 then these people responded鈥攏ot by pitching into a contentious debate over the meaning of truth鈥攂ut by instantly designing and executing a correction of the error.

If these people are so effectively fixing locks, sinks, air conditioning, and tree branches (and this is only the start of the long list of the things that they can fix), they may just as well undertake just a little more exertion and fix our nation鈥檚 problem with truth.

Look in any part of the country and you will find millions of people who work in professions and occupations where they must be constantly attuned to truth and accuracy. In fact, in these enterprises, the difference between a successful practitioner and a failed practitioner is exactly that: the insistence on the presence truth and accuracy, or the acceptance of their absence.

Add in professionals like pilots, carpenters, surveyors, electricians, a wide range of mechanics, and providers of electronic and digital tech support, etc., etc., and at in any given moment of the day, thousands of professionals are either getting it right听or听initially getting it wrong and instantly moving to correct it.

They are not exercising wisdom so rare that none of the rest of us could mimic it.听They are paying attention and making things work.听They know that yielding to the temptation to avoid truth will yield unhappy consequences; things won鈥檛 get fixed. And, by the same token, they know that the choice of truth over misapprehension stands a good chance of leading to rewarding consequences. And鈥攖his is very important鈥攖hey are setting an example that is as pragmatic and down-to-earth as it is inspirational and uplifting.

So we have arrived at a clear course of action, ready for adoption by our truth-troubled nation. Let鈥檚 move fast to recognize, reflect on, and mobilize the capabilities of these people who, in everyday life, detect error and mistake and move fast to replace them with truth and accuracy. Let鈥檚 seize every opportunity to talk with these folks and to learn how they operate their minds and orchestrate their thinking. How does information come together to let them know that they have gotten something wrong, and how do they take this in without drama or agitation? And how do they design and execute a plan to correct their course when they see that they need to get better aligned with truth and accuracy?

And then, with gratitude and respect, and with full inclusion of the merriment and hilarity that often enters the picture when common sense comes to the aid of truth, let鈥檚 apply the lessons we have acquired from these folks to the heated disputes over truth that are now rattling our world.

Do I swear that the ideas that 听I have presented here convey the convictions that I genuinely hold, and that the premises, from which these ideas arise, rest on 鈥搕o the best of my knowledge鈥攖he truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?

I do. So help me God.

If you find this blog contains ideas worth sharing with friends, please forward this听to them. If you are reading this for the first time, join our听听to receive the听Not my First Rodeo听blog every Friday.

References to include on the听Jeopardy!听researchers

Photo banner credit:听