A "Jeopardy!" contestant is addressing the "problematic" clue given on the Oct. 28 episode of the show, for which host Ken Jennings then apologized.
Heather Ryan, who came in second place by just $1, spoke to Binghamton University’s student-run newspaper Pipe Dream on Wednesday to share her thoughts on the clue.
From the category "Complete the Rhyming Phrase," it read, "Men seldom make passes at..." To which the correct answer was, "Girls who wear glasses."
Get top local stories in Philly delivered to you every morning. >Sign up for NBC Philadelphia's News Headlines newsletter.
Ryan, the only female competitor on the episode, happened to be wearing glasses.
Jennings read the clue with a slightly awkward tone, then immediately apologized to Heather after it was answered.
"Yeah, a little problematic," he said. "Sorry, Heather."
Entertainment News
Contestant Will Wallace, who buzzed in first, agreed that it was "very" problematic.
"I think it made everybody in the audience and onstage, and Ken Jennings too, a little uncomfortable," Ryan told the paper. "It was like, 'Oh, that was unexpected.'"
She went on to suggest, "Maybe we choose better rhyming phrases in 2024."
"Unfortunately, there are still girls who are [in] middle school and they don’t want to wear their glasses and they’re losing out on their education," she said. "So, I think it’s much better to be able to see than anything else."
Other than that awkward moment, Ryan said the show was "very fun" to be a part of.
"I had a great time," she said. "Everybody there was very welcoming. It’s such a part of American culture that I definitely wanted to go on when I got the call for it."
"It’s just a very special thing to play a small role in this big part," she added. "It’s been running for 40 years, and so I got to play my part in it."
This story first appeared on NBCNews.com. More from NBC News:
- Warner Bros. Discovery adds 7.2 million Max subscribers, the streamer's largest single-quarter jump
- Questions about sexual orientation and gender ID on track to be on U.S. Census Bureau survey by 2027
- Kirk Herbstreit announces the death of his service dog Ben, beloved for crashing football broadcasts