Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek gets first-class tribute with U.S. Postal Service stamp - Action News
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Sudbury

Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek gets first-class tribute with U.S. Postal Service stamp

Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek is being posthumouslyhonoured with a U.S. postage stamp.

Stamp release coincides with what would've been quiz show host's 84th birthday

a white and blue stamp is on an envelope
The U.S. Postal Service released a new stamp on Monday in Alex Trebek's honour. It would've been his 84th birthday. (Submitted by the U.S. Postal Service)

Jeopardy!host Alex Trebek is being posthumouslyhonoured with a U.S. postage stamp.

A sheet of stamps featuring the legendary quiz showhost from Sudbury, Ont., was unveiled this week, timed for what would've been his 84thbirthday.

It's designed to evoke the TV studio of Jeopardy!with anarchival photograph of Trebek standing beside a wall of the gameshow's trademark screens, with headers that read "Entertainment,""Game Show Hosts," and "Famous Alexes."

Underneath each header is a row of stamps resembling the show'sfamed blue screens offering the same clue: "This naturalized U.S.citizen hosted the quiz show 'Jeopardy!' for 37 seasons."

The answer is written upside down across the bottom of thestamps: "Who is Alex Trebek?"

Biff Pilon is President of the Sudbury Stamp Club, and has about 50,000 stamps in his collection. He says this stamp is a great representation of Alex Trebek's tenure on Jeopardy!

"[These stamps] are for anybody who is familiar with the show Jeopardy! and those of us who have a thirst for knowledge would know all about this show," he says. "This is a very good representation of who Alex Trebek was and what he meant to our evening television in 2024."

The United States Postal Service launched the stamp to honour theshow's 60th anniversary during an event at theSony Pictures Studioslot in Culver City, Calif.

For collecting purposes

Although stamps are rarely used anymore, other than to send the occasional letter, there seems to be more stamps than ever in circulation.

Pilon says Canada Post isn't releasing new stamps necessarily for use as postage, but more for collecting purposes.

"They are hoping that there are still people collecting stamps out there who are interested in commemoratives and digital stamps," he says.

In today's digital world, stamps are becoming less valuable. Pilon says most stamps are only worth between five to 10 per cent of their original catalogue value, unless they're really old and in exceptional condition.

"We've had people come to our stamp meetings and they have a whole box full of stamps that their father or their grandfather had," he says. "[They're] hoping to get a small fortune by selling them. And there's [just] not a big market."

Despite calling stamp collectinga "dying hobby," Pilon says he'll still probably buy the Alex Trebek stamps.

"I probably would, just to say that I have a stamp put out by the U.S. Post Office that has something to do with the Sudbury native. We all watched himon Jeopardy for 37 years, and he was a very generous man and a philanthropist."

With files from CBC added