The “Danger!” universe continues to expand, with a new sports edition currently in production for Disney+ and Hulu. “ESPN Crisis!” will be picked up by the Disney streamer, with a release date to be announced later. “Monday Night Football” broadcaster Joe Buck will be the host.
Sony Pictures TV will produce “ESPN Jeopardy!,” with Michael Davis serving as executive producer. Reproducing the latest “Jeopardy!” Franchise Lands in Disney World: Original Recipe “Jeopardy!” has been cleared on ABC-owned television stations in major markets nationwide, and prime time “Celebrity Jeopardy!” will air. It will air on ABC (and on Hulu the next day).
On “ESPN Jeopardy!,” ESPN talent will face off on stage with Alex Trebek and play for the charity of their choice. The tournament-style event will award $500,000 in prize money and the title of “ESPN Jeopardy!” champion.
The questions will focus on what producers call “ESPN content.” They called it “‘Danger!'” “For Sports Enthusiasts”, but this is actually the second iteration of “Jeopardy!”. I went to All Sports. Ten years ago, it was “Sports Jeopardy!” and ran from 2014 to 2016 on the now-defunct Sony-owned Crackle streamer.
‘Jeopardy!’ Recent Brand Extensions The one-time ‘Jeopardy! YouTube Edition’ aired on March 31st and featured host Ken Jennings and contestants from the YouTube creator world, including Monet X Change, Rebecca Black and Brennan Leigh Mulligan.
In addition to “Sports Jeopardy!”, it also includes “Rock & Roll Jeopardy!” (VH1, 1998-2001) “Jep!” (Game Show Network, 1998-2000) and “Pop Culture Jeopardy!” debuted on Prime Video in 2024, then moved to Netflix for season two. The original daytime “Jeopardy!” In recent years, the series has also produced prime-time repeats such as “Jeopardy! All-Time Greatest,” “Jeopardy! National Collegiate Championships” and “Celebrity Jeopardy!.” And “Danger! Masters”.
Buck’s involvement in “ESPN Jeopardy!” comes as part of his ongoing agreement with ESPN. He signed on as the play-by-play announcer for “Monday Night Football” in March 2022. He was called to NFL games for 33 consecutive seasons, starting in 1994-1995 on Fox Sports. Buck also called the World Series 24 times, the MLB All-Star Game 22 times, golf’s U.S. Open five times, and hosted his own studio shows (HBO Sports’ “Joe Buck Live” and DirecTV’s “Undeniable with Joe Buck”).
