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Chuck Forrest

Charles “Chuck” Forrest (born June 3, 1961[1]) is an American attorney and game show contestant who at one time held the record for the largest non-tournament cash winnings total on the syndicated game show Jeopardy! The Los Angeles Times called him "the Alexander the Great of Jeopardy! players."[1] The producers of the show regarded Forrest as one of the best and most memorable contestants of the 1980s.[2] He is widely regarded by other elite Jeopardy! players to be one of the most formidable contestants ever to play.[3]

Chuck Forrest
Born (1961-06-03) June 3, 1961 (age 62)[1]
Known for5-time Jeopardy! champion and former record holder

Career edit

Appearances on Jeopardy! edit

Initial run edit

Forrest, who was described at the time as a law student[1] from Grand Blanc, Michigan, had a series of victories in Season 2 of Jeopardy!, starting on September 30, 1985. After four games, he set the regular play cash winnings record, with $60,000.[4][5] When Forrest went on to play his fifth game on October 4, 1985, he broke his own cash winnings record, with 5-day cash winnings of $72,800. Under the Jeopardy! rules in effect at the time of Forrest's victory, he retired undefeated. His record lasted until early in Season 6 of Jeopardy!, when Bob Blake won $82,501.[5] Blake's record lasted until the middle of Season 6, when Frank Spangenberg accumulated a 5-day total of $102,597.

Tournament of Champions edit

Forrest went on to win the 1986 Tournament of Champions. In the quarterfinals, which was the first round, he defeated Guy Tonti and Gary Palmer.[6] (Palmer advanced as a "wild card" high scoring nonwinner.) In the semi-finals, Forrest defeated Jay Rosenberg and Gary Giardina.[7] In the two-game final, Forrest defeated Paul Rouffa and Marvin Shinkman, adding another $100,000 to his total cash winnings.[8] That final series was featured in a July 29, 1989, PBS documentary called Wise Guys, a behind-the scenes look at the program.[9]

Super Jeopardy! edit

In the 1990 Super Jeopardy! tournament, Forrest was defeated in the quarterfinals, or the first round, by Dave Traini. That appearance added $5,000 to Forrest's total winnings.[10] Traini would eventually become the third-place finalist.[11] In the 2002 Million Dollar Masters tournament, Forrest lost his semi-final to Bob Verini, picking up another $25,000 in the process.[12] Verini placed third in the finals.[13] In the 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions, Forrest received a bye into Round 2 in recognition of his former regular-play cash winnings record. However, Forrest came in third in his Round 2 game and received another $25,000 ($10,000 as a runner-up and another $15,000 for the 2nd round bye). The scores were $0 for Forrest, $28,200 for the winner Phil Yellman, and $12,999 for Lara Robillard.[14] There were no "wild card" spots for nonwinners in the Ultimate Tournament of Champions, meaning neither Robillard nor Forrest had a chance of advancing to Round 3. Yellman, coming in second in round 3, lost to Pam Mueller along with Brian Moore.[15] At the end of Super Jeopardy, Forrest's total cash winnings totaled $227,800.

Battle of the Decades edit

Forrest returned for the Battle of the Decades tournament on February 3, 2014. He became a quarterfinalist, defeating India Cooper and Jim Scott. Cooper returned for the quarterfinals as a standby contestant. On May 9, Forrest competed against 1990s champion Mark Dawson and 2000s champion Colby Burnett. Forrest won the game by $900, while Burnett in second place, moved on as a wildcard. Forrest competed against Ken Jennings and Russ Schumacher in the semi-finals on May 12 and briefly led in the Double Jeopardy! round, but ultimately finished in second place to Jennings, who moved on to the finals.[16] Forrest earned $25,000 in that appearance[17] bringing his all-time cash winnings on Jeopardy to a grand total of $252,800.

"Forrest Bounce" edit

Forrest implemented a strategy known as the "Forrest Bounce" in his play to potentially confuse opponents.[18] (Forrest referred to the technique as the "Rubin Bounce" after a law school friend, Donn Rubin, who first suggested it.[19]) The Forrest Bounce is applied in the Jeopardy! and Double Jeopardy! rounds with the player in control of the board "bouncing" between different categories rather than continuing through individual categories in sequence. According to Forrest, "The basic point is, you know where you're going next and [your competitors] don't."[19] Host Alex Trebek has expressed aggravation with people who use the Forrest Bounce, noting that the show's writers purposely set up the clues in each category to flow when picked sequentially; he noted in a 2018 interview that Forrest failed to win the Tournament of Champions using the Forrest Bounce, vindicating Trebek's feelings on the topic and his suspicion that Forrest was "trying to disrupt" the game.[20]

Personal life edit

Forrest is from Livonia, Michigan. He attended Birmingham Seaholm High School, Yale University, and University of Michigan Law School.[21] Forrest and Mark Lowenthal, a five-time champion in Season 4, co-wrote the 1992 book Secrets of the Jeopardy Champions.[19] Like Forrest, Lowenthal won his Tournament of Champions.[22] A revised edition of the book was released in 2017 as an Amazon Kindle book.[23]

In 1992, Forrest was a candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives, entering the Republican primary for Michigan's 9th congressional district, which at the time included his home town of Grand Blanc.[24] He finished third, with 9,875 votes.[25] As of 2014, Forrest is a lawyer with the International Fund for Agricultural Development.[26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Biederman, Patricia Ward (January 29, 1989). "Backstage At Jeopardy!; Tune in for the nervous hopefuls, the hard-working researchers, the well-dressed host and the amazing winners on the smart set's favorite game show". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  2. ^ Alex Trebek and Peter Barsocchini, The Jeopardy! Book (HarperPerennial, 1990), p. 129: "When you survey Jeopardy! contestants, fans, producers, and staff on the subject of the best players ever seen on the show, two names continually emerge: Burns Cameron from the original show and Chuck Forrest from the new show."
  3. ^ Trebek & Barsocchini, p. 68: "The contestant everyone still remembers from the new version of the game is Chuck Forrest, the 1985 Tournament of Champions winner. He was so good that he basically intimidated the other contestants in the tournament; you could hear them backstage talking about who might take second place, because they just about assumed Chuck would win it all." See also Michael Dupée, How to Get on Jeopardy! and Win! (Citadel Press, 1998), p. 36: "Mr. Forrest was so brilliant that he did not need to use much strategy to crush his opponents."
  4. ^ "Show #279 – Thursday, October 3, 1985". J! Archive. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  5. ^ a b . jeopardy.com. Archived from the original on March 14, 2014. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  6. ^ 1986 Tournament of Champions
  7. ^ Oddchange-1986 Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions Archived September 18, 2012, at archive.today
  8. ^ "Chuck Forrest's Tournament of Champions Final". J! Archive. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  9. ^ Kogan, Rick (July 28, 1989). "A Peek Backstage". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 25, 2015.
  10. ^ "Chuck Forrest's Super Jeopardy! Quarterfinal". J! Archive. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  11. ^ "Super Jeopardy! Final". J! Archive. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  12. ^ "Chuck Forrest's Million Dollar Masters Semifinal". J! Archive. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  13. ^ "Million Dollar Masters final". J! Archive. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  14. ^ "Chuck Forrest's Round 2 Game". J! Archive. Retrieved August 24, 2010.
  15. ^ Phil Yellman's Round 3 UToC game
  16. ^ "The CEO who devised a winning 'Jeopardy' strategy". thedailyworld.com. June 11, 2019. Retrieved February 25, 2020.
  17. ^ "Show #6836 – Monday, May 12, 2014. Battle of the Decades semifinal game 1". j-archive.com/. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  18. ^ Harris, Bob (2006). Prisoner of Trebekistan. Crown Publishers. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-307-33956-0. In September of 1985 [Forrest] pioneered a technique (still called the 'Forrest Bounce') in which he selected clues not in simple vertical lines but by hopscotching back and forth across the game board, continually changing categories. See also Dupée, op. cit., p. 69.
  19. ^ a b c Forrest, Chuck and Lowenthal, Mark (1992). Secrets of the Jeopardy Champions. Grand Central Publishing. ISBN 978-0-446-39352-2, ISBN 0-446-39352-5.
  20. ^ Marchese, David (November 12, 2018). . Vulture. New York. Archived from the original on November 13, 2018. Retrieved April 8, 2023. What bothers me is when contestants jump all over the board even after the Daily Doubles have been dealt with. Why are they doing that? They're doing themselves a disservice. When the show's writers construct categories they do it so that there's a flow in terms of difficulty, and if you jump to the bottom of the category you may get a clue that would be easier to understand if you'd begun at the top of the category and saw how the clues worked.
  21. ^ Vela, Susan (August 3, 2021). "Campaign supports Birmingham Seaholm grad, big Jeopardy! champ as future guest host". Hometown Life. Retrieved December 12, 2022.
  22. ^ Brennan, Patricia (November 2, 1988). "Man Wins Jackpot on Game Show". The Washington Post. p. y.05.
  23. ^ [https://www.amazon.com/Secrets-Jeopardy-Champions-Mark-Lowenthal-ebook/dp/B073HYVHZ6/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8>
  24. ^ "House banking scandal give newcomers a chance". April 17, 1992. CNN. {{cite episode}}: Missing or empty |series= (help)
  25. ^ "MI District 09- R Primary". Our Campaigns.
  26. ^ Vinay Menon (February 2, 2014). "Arthur Chu's dangerous game of Jeopardy!". Toronto Star. Retrieved May 23, 2014.

External links edit

  • Chuck Forrest at IMDb
Preceded by
Paul Boymel
Biggest regular play winners on Jeopardy! by season
1985–1986
Succeeded by
John Ryan
Preceded by Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner
1986
Succeeded by
Bob Verini
Preceded by
Paul Boymel
Jerry Frankel
All-time Jeopardy! biggest winner
1985
1986–1990
Succeeded by
Jerry Frankel
Bruce Seymour
Preceded by
Paul Boymel
All-time Jeopardy! regular play winnings leader
1985–1989
Succeeded by
Bob Blake

chuck, forrest, charles, chuck, forrest, born, june, 1961, american, attorney, game, show, contestant, time, held, record, largest, tournament, cash, winnings, total, syndicated, game, show, jeopardy, angeles, times, called, alexander, great, jeopardy, players. Charles Chuck Forrest born June 3 1961 1 is an American attorney and game show contestant who at one time held the record for the largest non tournament cash winnings total on the syndicated game show Jeopardy The Los Angeles Times called him the Alexander the Great of Jeopardy players 1 The producers of the show regarded Forrest as one of the best and most memorable contestants of the 1980s 2 He is widely regarded by other elite Jeopardy players to be one of the most formidable contestants ever to play 3 Chuck ForrestBorn 1961 06 03 June 3 1961 age 62 1 Known for5 time Jeopardy champion and former record holder Contents 1 Career 1 1 Appearances on Jeopardy 1 1 1 Initial run 1 1 2 Tournament of Champions 1 1 3 Super Jeopardy 1 1 4 Battle of the Decades 1 2 Forrest Bounce 2 Personal life 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksCareer editAppearances on Jeopardy edit Initial run edit Forrest who was described at the time as a law student 1 from Grand Blanc Michigan had a series of victories in Season 2 of Jeopardy starting on September 30 1985 After four games he set the regular play cash winnings record with 60 000 4 5 When Forrest went on to play his fifth game on October 4 1985 he broke his own cash winnings record with 5 day cash winnings of 72 800 Under the Jeopardy rules in effect at the time of Forrest s victory he retired undefeated His record lasted until early in Season 6 of Jeopardy when Bob Blake won 82 501 5 Blake s record lasted until the middle of Season 6 when Frank Spangenberg accumulated a 5 day total of 102 597 Tournament of Champions edit Forrest went on to win the 1986 Tournament of Champions In the quarterfinals which was the first round he defeated Guy Tonti and Gary Palmer 6 Palmer advanced as a wild card high scoring nonwinner In the semi finals Forrest defeated Jay Rosenberg and Gary Giardina 7 In the two game final Forrest defeated Paul Rouffa and Marvin Shinkman adding another 100 000 to his total cash winnings 8 That final series was featured in a July 29 1989 PBS documentary called Wise Guys a behind the scenes look at the program 9 Super Jeopardy edit In the 1990 Super Jeopardy tournament Forrest was defeated in the quarterfinals or the first round by Dave Traini That appearance added 5 000 to Forrest s total winnings 10 Traini would eventually become the third place finalist 11 In the 2002 Million Dollar Masters tournament Forrest lost his semi final to Bob Verini picking up another 25 000 in the process 12 Verini placed third in the finals 13 In the 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Forrest received a bye into Round 2 in recognition of his former regular play cash winnings record However Forrest came in third in his Round 2 game and received another 25 000 10 000 as a runner up and another 15 000 for the 2nd round bye The scores were 0 for Forrest 28 200 for the winner Phil Yellman and 12 999 for Lara Robillard 14 There were no wild card spots for nonwinners in the Ultimate Tournament of Champions meaning neither Robillard nor Forrest had a chance of advancing to Round 3 Yellman coming in second in round 3 lost to Pam Mueller along with Brian Moore 15 At the end of Super Jeopardy Forrest s total cash winnings totaled 227 800 Battle of the Decades edit Forrest returned for the Battle of the Decades tournament on February 3 2014 He became a quarterfinalist defeating India Cooper and Jim Scott Cooper returned for the quarterfinals as a standby contestant On May 9 Forrest competed against 1990s champion Mark Dawson and 2000s champion Colby Burnett Forrest won the game by 900 while Burnett in second place moved on as a wildcard Forrest competed against Ken Jennings and Russ Schumacher in the semi finals on May 12 and briefly led in the Double Jeopardy round but ultimately finished in second place to Jennings who moved on to the finals 16 Forrest earned 25 000 in that appearance 17 bringing his all time cash winnings on Jeopardy to a grand total of 252 800 Forrest Bounce edit Forrest implemented a strategy known as the Forrest Bounce in his play to potentially confuse opponents 18 Forrest referred to the technique as the Rubin Bounce after a law school friend Donn Rubin who first suggested it 19 The Forrest Bounce is applied in the Jeopardy and Double Jeopardy rounds with the player in control of the board bouncing between different categories rather than continuing through individual categories in sequence According to Forrest The basic point is you know where you re going next and your competitors don t 19 Host Alex Trebek has expressed aggravation with people who use the Forrest Bounce noting that the show s writers purposely set up the clues in each category to flow when picked sequentially he noted in a 2018 interview that Forrest failed to win the Tournament of Champions using the Forrest Bounce vindicating Trebek s feelings on the topic and his suspicion that Forrest was trying to disrupt the game 20 Personal life editForrest is from Livonia Michigan He attended Birmingham Seaholm High School Yale University and University of Michigan Law School 21 Forrest and Mark Lowenthal a five time champion in Season 4 co wrote the 1992 book Secrets of theJeopardyChampions 19 Like Forrest Lowenthal won his Tournament of Champions 22 A revised edition of the book was released in 2017 as an Amazon Kindle book 23 In 1992 Forrest was a candidate for the U S House of Representatives entering the Republican primary for Michigan s 9th congressional district which at the time included his home town of Grand Blanc 24 He finished third with 9 875 votes 25 As of 2014 Forrest is a lawyer with the International Fund for Agricultural Development 26 See also editStrategies and skills of Jeopardy championsReferences edit a b c d Biederman Patricia Ward January 29 1989 Backstage At Jeopardy Tune in for the nervous hopefuls the hard working researchers the well dressed host and the amazing winners on the smart set s favorite game show Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 24 2010 Alex Trebek and Peter Barsocchini The Jeopardy Book HarperPerennial 1990 p 129 When you survey Jeopardy contestants fans producers and staff on the subject of the best players ever seen on the show two names continually emerge Burns Cameron from the original show and Chuck Forrest from the new show Trebek amp Barsocchini p 68 The contestant everyone still remembers from the new version of the game is Chuck Forrest the 1985 Tournament of Champions winner He was so good that he basically intimidated the other contestants in the tournament you could hear them backstage talking about who might take second place because they just about assumed Chuck would win it all See also Michael Dupee How to Get on Jeopardy and Win Citadel Press 1998 p 36 Mr Forrest was so brilliant that he did not need to use much strategy to crush his opponents Show 279 Thursday October 3 1985 J Archive Retrieved August 24 2010 a b 50 000 Plus Winners jeopardy com Archived from the original on March 14 2014 Retrieved August 22 2010 1986 Tournament of Champions Oddchange 1986 Jeopardy Tournament of Champions Archived September 18 2012 at archive today Chuck Forrest s Tournament of Champions Final J Archive Retrieved August 24 2010 Kogan Rick July 28 1989 A Peek Backstage Chicago Tribune Retrieved April 25 2015 Chuck Forrest s Super Jeopardy Quarterfinal J Archive Retrieved August 24 2010 Super Jeopardy Final J Archive Retrieved August 24 2010 Chuck Forrest s Million Dollar Masters Semifinal J Archive Retrieved August 24 2010 Million Dollar Masters final J Archive Retrieved August 24 2010 Chuck Forrest s Round 2 Game J Archive Retrieved August 24 2010 Phil Yellman s Round 3 UToC game The CEO who devised a winning Jeopardy strategy thedailyworld com June 11 2019 Retrieved February 25 2020 Show 6836 Monday May 12 2014 Battle of the Decades semifinal game 1 j archive com Retrieved July 22 2020 Harris Bob 2006 Prisoner of Trebekistan Crown Publishers p 85 ISBN 978 0 307 33956 0 In September of 1985 Forrest pioneered a technique still called the Forrest Bounce in which he selected clues not in simple vertical lines but by hopscotching back and forth across the game board continually changing categories See also Dupee op cit p 69 a b c Forrest Chuck and Lowenthal Mark 1992 Secrets of the Jeopardy Champions Grand Central Publishing ISBN 978 0 446 39352 2 ISBN 0 446 39352 5 Marchese David November 12 2018 In Conversation Alex Trebek The Jeopardy icon on retirement his legacy and why knowledge matters Vulture New York Archived from the original on November 13 2018 Retrieved April 8 2023 What bothers me is when contestants jump all over the board even after the Daily Doubles have been dealt with Why are they doing that They re doing themselves a disservice When the show s writers construct categories they do it so that there s a flow in terms of difficulty and if you jump to the bottom of the category you may get a clue that would be easier to understand if you d begun at the top of the category and saw how the clues worked Vela Susan August 3 2021 Campaign supports Birmingham Seaholm grad big Jeopardy champ as future guest host Hometown Life Retrieved December 12 2022 Brennan Patricia November 2 1988 Man Wins Jackpot on Game Show The Washington Post p y 05 https www amazon com Secrets Jeopardy Champions Mark Lowenthal ebook dp B073HYVHZ6 ref asap bc ie UTF8 gt House banking scandal give newcomers a chance April 17 1992 CNN a href Template Cite episode html title Template Cite episode cite episode a Missing or empty series help MI District 09 R Primary Our Campaigns Vinay Menon February 2 2014 Arthur Chu s dangerous game of Jeopardy Toronto Star Retrieved May 23 2014 External links editChuck Forrest at IMDbPreceded byPaul Boymel Biggest regular play winners on Jeopardy by season1985 1986 Succeeded byJohn RyanPreceded byJerry Frankel Jeopardy Tournament of Champions winner1986 Succeeded byBob VeriniPreceded byPaul BoymelJerry Frankel All time Jeopardy biggest winner19851986 1990 Succeeded byJerry FrankelBruce SeymourPreceded byPaul Boymel All time Jeopardy regular play winnings leader1985 1989 Succeeded byBob Blake Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chuck Forrest amp oldid 1199302461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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