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Mattea Roach
Mattea Roach
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Mattea Roach (born October 26, 1998) is a Canadian broadcaster and game show contestant who held a 23-game winning streak on the game show Jeopardy! from April 5, 2022, to May 6, 2022. Roach was the most successful Canadian to play Jeopardy! and is placed in sixth for all-time regular season wins.[2] Roach won US$560,983 throughout their run, getting the correct response to 93 percent of buzzed-in clues. During their 24th game, they lost to Danielle Maurer by just US$1. With their streak, Roach qualified for the season's Tournament of Champions.[3] Roach placed second in the first season of Jeopardy! Masters, which aired in 2023.[4]

Key Information

In August 2024, Roach was announced as the host of Bookends, a new CBC Radio show about books and literature, debuting September 8, 2024.[5]

Early life

[edit]

Roach graduated from Sacred Heart School of Halifax and has family residing in Halifax and Cape Breton. They were raised for the first six years of their life and part of their adolescence in Halifax.[6] They maintain some traditions from Sacred Heart's Catholic curriculum and frequently prayed the Hail Mary during their Jeopardy! introductions.[7] They graduated from the University of Toronto with a bachelor's degree in sexual diversity studies, political science, and women and gender studies.[8] At the time of their run, they worked as a Law School Admission Test (LSAT) tutor and lived in Toronto.[9]

Career

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Jeopardy!

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Throughout their run, Roach won 23 games and US$560,983,[10] equivalent to over 700,000 Canadian dollars.[11] At 23 years of age at the time of their winning streak, they were the youngest contestant to reach this total.[7] At the time of the end of their run on May 6, 2022, they were fifth in total all-time regular season earnings and fifth in total regular-season wins.[11][10] They are ranked sixth in total all-time regular season earnings, fifth in total regular-season wins, and tenth in all-time winnings (including tournaments) as of January 18, 2023.[2] After winning their first game with $32,001, Roach proclaimed "My student loan is paid off."[12][13]

Roach has said that when they arrived for their first game, they had expected to face off with Amy Schneider, whose 40-day streak had ended, unbeknownst to most, a few months before Roach started competing.[14] The season in which they competed also included 10-plus-game winning streaks from Schneider, Matt Amodio, and Jonathan Fisher.[15]

As the most successful Canadian, Roach lamented that the late former host and Canadian Alex Trebek was not still hosting the game. Of their game strategy, Roach has talked about focusing on the things that are controllable.[16] They also called their strategy "bad", saying it was about minimizing loss versus gain maximization.[17] Roach has stated that their favourite game show growing up was Wheel of Fortune but that they also grew up watching Jeopardy![18] In a May 2022 interview published in Vulture, Roach said that they would prefer Ken Jennings, who hosted the majority of their Jeopardy! episodes, to become the show's permanent host.[19]

Roach was the only person on stage for Final Jeopardy! for their 12th game on April 20, 2022, the first time that scenario had occurred since October 13, 2020.[20] Later, in their 17th appearance on April 27, 2022, Roach had exactly double the score of the second-place opponent, Ben Hsia, at the start of Final Jeopardy! Hsia bet all his earnings and responded to the clue correctly, tying him with Roach. Roach also responded correctly, betting only $1, winning the game by $1.[21]

Roach lost their 24th game on May 6, 2022, bringing a close to their winning streak after they failed to provide the correct response in Final Jeopardy! The contestant who dethroned Roach was Danielle Maurer, a digital marketing manager from Peachtree Corners, Georgia, who finished with a winning total of $15,600, beating Roach by $1.[22][23]

Roach appeared in the Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions that aired in November 2022 but lost to Andrew He.[24]

Roach competed in the first season of Jeopardy! Masters, which aired in May 2023. In the finals, they finished second to James Holzhauer, winning $250,000 and an invitation to the next Masters competition.[4]

Post-Jeopardy!

[edit]

In September 2022, Roach was named as the new host of The Backbench, a biweekly political interview podcast from the Canadaland network of political and media analysis podcasts.[25]

In 2023, they were a panelist on Canada Reads, championing the eventual winner, Kate Beaton's graphic novel Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands.[26]

In August 2024, CBC Radio announced Bookends, a program about books and literature to be hosted by Roach, which will replace Writers & Company on the schedule.[5]

In April 2025, Roach appeared on Top Chef alongside Jeopardy! champion Amy Schneider and actor Michael Cera (who competed on Celebrity Jeopardy! in January 2023).[27]

Personal life

[edit]

Roach is a lesbian[28] and queer.[29] They have tattoos of Talking Heads quotes and have met Bill Gates.[30]

In their May 4, 2022 episode of Jeopardy!, they spoke of having participated in Choir! Choir! Choir!'s 2018 show performing Rick Astley's 1987 hit "Never Gonna Give You Up" with Astley himself in attendance.[31]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Mattea Roach (born October 26, 1998) is a Canadian tutor and quiz show contestant renowned for securing a on the American television program Jeopardy! during its 2021–22 season, amassing $560,983 in regular-play earnings and establishing records as the youngest superchampion and the most successful Canadian competitor in the show's history. Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and later residing in Toronto, Ontario, Roach worked as a tutor specializing in test preparation while competing on Jeopardy!, where her broad knowledge across categories like history, literature, and science propelled her to the fifth-longest regular-play streak ever recorded on the program. Following her run, Roach advanced to the Jeopardy! Masters tournament in 2023, competing against other top all-time players and ranking among the program's elite earners with combined regular-season and tournament prizes exceeding $800,000, though she did not claim the overall title. Her success highlighted strategic advantages such as consistent performance in Final Jeopardy! and adaptability to the show's clue formats, contributing to a brief uptick in viewership ratings during her episodes. Post-Jeopardy!, Roach has pursued writing and podcasting ventures, including contributions to public broadcasting and literary advocacy, while maintaining visibility through appearances on Canadian media discussing trivia and education. Minor public discussions arose around network coverage of her identity and casting decisions for specials, but these did not overshadow her empirical achievements in quiz competition, which remain her defining legacy.

Early life and education

Upbringing in Halifax

Mattea Roach was born on October 26, 1998, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, to parents who emphasized intellectual curiosity from infancy. Her father, Philip Henry Roach, originally from New Waterford in Cape Breton, and her mother resided in Halifax during her early years, fostering an environment conducive to learning amid the city's modest, community-oriented setting. Roach spent her first six years in Halifax, where her family noted precocious abilities, including recognizing letters and performing basic addition and subtraction by 18 months of age, signaling an innate drive for independent of formal schooling. This early aptitude was nurtured through parental encouragement of self-directed exploration rather than structured programs, reflecting a household priority on empirical skill-building over external validations. Following a family relocation to from 2004 to 2007, Roach returned to Halifax for her adolescent years, attending Sacred Heart School and graduating in 2015, which reinforced her foundational exposure to Nova Scotia's regional emphasis on resilience and practical education. These experiences in Halifax's stable, working-class milieu contributed to her independent intellectual habits, unencumbered by later narratives of institutional obstacles.

Academic background and early interests

Roach graduated from School of Halifax, an independent for girls, in 2015. During their time there from grades 8 through 12, Roach competed on the school's debate team, coached by Brian Casey, which cultivated skills in rapid information processing and logical argumentation essential for performance. Prior to attending , Roach resided in , , from 2004 to 2007 and enrolled at Webber Academy, a private institution emphasizing academic rigor. Roach subsequently enrolled at the University of Toronto's Trinity College, completing a in 2020 with concentrations in sexual diversity studies, , and women and . These humanities-focused programs involved extensive reading and analysis of historical, social, and political texts, fostering the broad factual retention that underpinned Roach's later competitive success through deliberate, self-directed study rather than innate aptitude alone. Roach's early engagement with debate demonstrated an aptitude for merit-based knowledge contests, where consistent preparation and recall under pressure directly correlated with proficiency, as evidenced by their sustained participation and the transferable skills to high-stakes quizzing.

Pre-Jeopardy career

Tutoring role and financial circumstances

Prior to appearing on Jeopardy!, Mattea Roach worked as a specializing in preparation for the (LSAT) while based in , . This role followed her 2020 graduation from the and provided modest earnings amid post-graduation job market challenges, including those exacerbated by the . Roach relied on Employment Insurance (EI) benefits to supplement her tutoring income, as she later disclosed in a 2024 interview on CBC's Q with Tom Power, stating she was "not financially comfortable" and receiving government assistance even while taping early Jeopardy! episodes in 2021. These circumstances highlighted the economic pressures facing recent graduates in high-cost urban centers like Toronto, where she noted homeownership in one's 20s was unrealistic without a windfall. Her decision to audition for Jeopardy! in late 2021 stemmed from these financial constraints, with Roach citing the need to address —approximately CAD $20,000–$30,000 typical for Canadian undergraduates in her field—as a key motivator, which she fully repaid after her first win in April 2022. This pre-fame period underscored a pattern of self-supported effort through despite reliance on temporary public assistance, rather than long-term dependency.

Jeopardy! career

2022 regular-season streak

Mattea Roach made her Jeopardy! debut on April 5, 2022, securing victory in her first game and initiating a streak of 23 consecutive wins that spanned from early April to early May. During this run, she defeated a series of challengers, including notable close victories such as her 17th win on April 27, 2022, where she edged out her opponent by $1 after correctly answering the Final Jeopardy clue. Roach's performances highlighted her command of diverse categories, with high accuracy rates in attempted clues—such as 91% correct in her debut episode—and dominance in running entire categories like "Theatrical Happening." By the end of her streak, Roach had amassed $560,983 in regular-season winnings, placing her among the top earners in Jeopardy! history at that point. Her streak concluded on May 6, 2022, during her 24th game against Danielle Maurer, a digital marketing manager from Georgia, and one other contestant. Roach entered Final Jeopardy in the category of American Historians with a lead of $19,200 to Maurer's $11,000 and the third contestant's $1,000; however, she incorrectly wagered $3,601 on the clue ("This 19th-century Massachusetts historian was described by his friend Emerson as a 'corpse in a coat'"), dropping to $15,599. Maurer correctly identified the historian (William Ellery Channing) without wagering, finishing with $15,600 to win by $1.

Tournament of Champions

Roach qualified for the 2022 Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions (TOC) based on her 23-game regular-season winning streak, which ranked her among the top performers eligible for the event featuring 21 high-stakes contestants. The tournament, held in November 2022, pitted her against other elite players, including Amy Schneider (40-game streak) and Matt Amodio (38-game streak), with selection determined solely by regular-season performance metrics rather than external factors like diversity considerations. Roach advanced from her quarterfinal match, demonstrating sustained competitiveness in a field where empirical success—measured by buzzer efficiency, Daily Double wagering accuracy, and Final Jeopardy performance—dictated progression. In the semifinal on November 11, 2022, Roach competed against Andrew He and Eric Ahasic, ending with $7,200 in third place after struggling with key Daily Doubles and Final Jeopardy. She received $10,000 for her semifinal appearance, adding to her earnings from the quarterfinal win, though exact quarterfinal scores were not publicly detailed beyond her advancement. This elimination highlighted the challenges of sustaining streak-level performance against a concentrated pool of top-tier opponents, where variance in clue difficulty and buzzing precision amplified small errors; Roach's semifinal score reflected lower-than-streak-average Daily Double success, underscoring the tournament's role in empirically testing long-term viability beyond regular play. The finals, to which Roach did not advance, were won by Schneider on November 14, 2022, over He and Sam Buttrey, with Schneider securing the $100,000 grand prize. Roach's TOC participation contributed modestly to her career totals, pushing them past $570,000 at that point when combined with her $562,983 regular-season haul, though subsequent events like Jeopardy! Masters elevated her overall winnings beyond $800,000. Following the official TOC, Roach participated in a non-prize exhibition super-champions game on November 8, 2022, defeating Schneider ($904) and Amodio ($3,600) with a score of $17,600, providing an informal gauge of her adaptability in head-to-head formats against the same rivals.

Gameplay strategy and analysis

Roach employed a notably conservative wagering strategy on Daily Doubles, often betting modest amounts such as $2,000 to $5,000 even when leading substantially, which contrasted with the aggressive high-stakes approaches of predecessors like Matt Amodio and Amy Schneider. This approach stemmed directly from Roach's pre-Jeopardy financial constraints, including reliance on government benefits and tutoring income that left little buffer for risk; as Roach explained, "I was not in a position where I felt comfortable taking big risks." Specific episodes illustrate this: on April 22, 2022, Roach wagered only $3,000 on a Daily Double despite a commanding lead, prioritizing capital preservation over maximization. Such decisions minimized variance, allowing steady accumulation over 23 games totaling $560,983 in regular-season earnings, though they drew host Ken Jennings' on-air prompts for larger bets. Roach's buzzer performance demonstrated disciplined efficiency, with a 60% success rate in buzzing in first on clues and a 93% accuracy on those responses across the streak. Category selection favored breadth over specialization, avoiding over-reliance on high-risk niches while targeting accessible topics like history and , which aligned with Roach's academic background and contributed to consistent Coryat scores averaging around 27 correct responses per game. An observable wrist movement—frequently twitching or flexing during —served as a preparatory signal for buzzing, honing timing without constituting a ; Roach noted it drew fan scrutiny but reflected ingrained from practice. Statistically, Roach's 23-game streak places fifth among Jeopardy! super-champions, with an 88% Daily Double success rate surpassing many peers and affirming knowledge depth over luck; for instance, while James Holzhauer's explosive style yielded higher per-game earnings, Roach's lower variance (fewer misses at 2.6 per game) sustained longevity against variable opponents. Compared to Amy Schneider's 40 wins, Roach's metrics—92% overall clue accuracy post-buzz—highlight adaptive risk calibration as causal to success, not mere fortune, evidenced by progression from early-game leads built on buzzer locks to endgame stability.

Public reception and controversies

Fan and viewer reactions

Fans praised Roach's trivia knowledge and buzzer timing during her 23-game winning streak from April 5 to May 6, 2022, with many highlighting her high clue accuracy rate of 93% and ability to execute dramatic comebacks, such as wagering aggressively in Final Jeopardy to secure victories by narrow margins like $1. Her engaging on-air presence, including consistent wardrobe choices like blazers, drew positive social media attention and contributed to fan-formed groups dedicated to supporting her gameplay. Roach's run correlated with elevated Jeopardy! viewership, as part of a series of super-champions including Amy Schneider and Matt Amodio that revitalized the show's popularity amid hosting transitions; episodes following her May 6, 2022, defeat experienced a 10% syndication ratings drop, the largest non-pandemic decline in recent history. Trivia enthusiasts on platforms like Reddit expressed admiration for her strategic Daily Double hunting, with 88% accuracy, viewing her as a skilled competitor who elevated contest quality. Some viewers criticized Roach for perceived cockiness or poor attitude, particularly in episodes where she voiced frustration over clue interpretations, leading to complaints of overexposure during her streak and fatigue among long-time fans wary of the show's shift toward prolonged champion runs. Roach herself acknowledged in interviews that her style divided audiences, with traditionalists questioning the emphasis on buzzer speed over pure recall in sustaining streaks like hers. Social media discussions reflected this split, balancing excitement over her earnings of $560,983 with skepticism about hype inflating her legacy relative to historical greats. Media coverage of Mattea Roach's Jeopardy! streak frequently foregrounded identity markers over competitive accomplishments, prompting criticism for prioritizing demographic narratives. An April 25, 2022, NBC News article titled "Mattea Roach becomes latest LGBTQ 'Jeopardy!' phenom" described Roach as a "lesbian" based on social media self-identification, framing the success within a sequence of LGBTQ contestants rather than detailing buzzer speed, Daily Double hunting, or wager strategies that secured victories. This approach drew backlash, with outlets reporting viewer accusations of reductive labeling; for instance, NBC's accompanying social media post referred to Roach as "the 23-year-old lesbian tutor from Toronto" without naming the contestant or highlighting the then-ongoing streak's statistical dominance, such as leading scores in 20 of 23 games. Critics argued this reflected institutional tendencies in mainstream media to emphasize identity affiliations, potentially sidelining causal factors like preparation and skill in merit-based contests. Allegations of production favoritism surfaced amid Roach's streak, particularly around high-stakes final wagers in May 2022 games, where narrow margins fueled speculation of rigging to extend runs for diversity optics. In the May 6, 2022, episode ending the streak, Roach entered Final Jeopardy with $19,200, wagered $3,601 on an incorrect response, finishing at $15,599; opponent Megan Maurer, with $21,200, correctly answered and adjusted to $15,600 via a conservative wager, winning by $1. Some online discourse questioned wager transparency or clue selection as engineered to favor prolonged streaks by underrepresented contestants, echoing broader skepticism toward Jeopardy!'s post-Mike Richards era shifts toward inclusive contestant pools. However, these claims lack substantiation, as game rules mandate public wagers pre-clue reveal and independent verification of responses, with no evidence of deviation; Roach's empirical record—23 consecutive wins totaling $560,983, ranking fifth all-time for regular-season earnings—demonstrates sustained outperformance against randomized opponents, not preferential treatment. Debates extended to Jeopardy!'s diversity initiatives, with some attributing Roach's prominence to deliberate programming biases rather than unaided merit, amid perceptions of left-leaning influences in entertainment production favoring identity-driven stories. Coverage in outlets like NBC positioned Roach as a "trailblazing" figure in a lineage of LGBTQ winners, implying systemic boosts despite the show's audition process selecting from thousands via blind trivia tests. Counter-evidence underscores organic achievement: Roach's streak surpassed prior benchmarks through consistent category breadth and risk calibration, as quantified by official tallies placing the Canadian tutor among top earners without rule alterations. Such narratives highlight tensions between empirical success metrics and interpretive frames that attribute outcomes to engineered representation, where source biases in progressive-leaning media may inflate identity's causal role over verifiable performance data.

Post-Jeopardy pursuits

Broadcasting and hosting gigs

In August 2024, Mattea Roach was announced as host of Bookends, a new CBC Radio program dedicated to in-depth interviews with authors discussing their works, contemporary issues, and human experiences. The series premiered on September 8, 2024, airing weekly on Sundays at 1 p.m. ET (1:30 p.m. NT, 3 p.m. PT) on CBC Radio One, with episodes also available as a podcast on platforms including Apple Podcasts. Bookends succeeded the long-running Writers & Company, leveraging Roach's demonstrated analytical skills from competitive quizzing to facilitate literary discourse. Roach also appeared as a panelist on CBC's Canada Reads in 2023, championing Kate Beaton's graphic memoir Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands, which explores the author's experiences in Alberta's oil industry. On March 30, 2023, during the finale debates, Roach's defended selection prevailed, securing the competition's win for Ducks among five shortlisted titles. This role highlighted Roach's trivia-honed ability to advocate for nonfiction narratives under competitive scrutiny, drawing on post-Jeopardy! visibility.

Writing and literary engagements

Following her Jeopardy! success, Mattea Roach has engaged in literary activities primarily through hosting and advocacy roles that leverage her analytical background in trivia and culture. In September 2024, she launched Bookends with Mattea Roach, a CBC Radio program and podcast dedicated to in-depth interviews with Canadian and international authors about their fiction and nonfiction works, exploring themes of creativity, context, and societal impact. The show, airing Sundays and available on platforms like Apple Podcasts and YouTube, has featured discussions on over 50 fiction titles and 20 nonfiction books by mid-2025, including titles like One Golden Summer by Carley Fortune and memoirs addressing grief and family trauma. Roach's literary involvement extends to award ceremonies and contests. She hosted the 2025 Writers' Trust Awards gala, which honors recipients across seven Canadian literary prizes valued at more than $330,000 in total, announced on October 20, 2025. Earlier, in 2023, she championed Kate Beaton's graphic memoir Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands as defender on CBC's Canada Reads, a national book debate where the title ultimately won, highlighting themes of resource industry labor and personal resilience. While described as a in professional profiles, Roach has not published standalone essays, columns, or as of late 2025, though her bio notes ongoing writing amid these engagements. Her contributions emphasize facilitation of literary discourse rather than original authorship, drawing on Jeopardy!-refined skills in dissecting across genres.

Personal life

Gender identity and public persona

Mattea Roach, born female on October 26, 1998, uses both she and they pronouns in public communications. This dual usage appears in media profiles and her own statements, though Jeopardy! host Ken Jennings has occasionally employed they/them when referring to her on air. Despite such pronoun preferences, Roach's self-identification aligns with lesbian orientation rather than a departure from female sex-based categories, as evidenced by her consistent description of herself as a "local lesbian" in her X (formerly Twitter) biography since at least 2022. Biological sex in humans remains empirically binary, determined by reproductive anatomy, chromosomes (XX for females), and gamete production, with no verifiable third category supported by causal mechanisms in mammalian physiology. Roach's public persona, while incorporating they pronouns, does not extend to explicit claims of non-binary gender identity in primary sources such as interviews; secondary media characterizations as non-binary appear to stem from pronoun usage alone, without direct attribution to her statements. This distinction underscores a separation between subjective pronoun choices and objective sex dimorphism, where lesbian self-identification presupposes female biology for definitional coherence in orientation terms. Post-Jeopardy fame has not altered Roach's core public expressions of identity, maintaining the "local lesbian" descriptor alongside her professional highlights in broadcasting and writing. Her social media presence emphasizes personal trivia enthusiasm and queer visibility without shifting focus from achievement-driven narratives to identity-centric ones, as seen in consistent bio framing through 2024.

Relationships and current residence

Roach relocated from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Toronto, Ontario, to pursue postsecondary education at Trinity College, University of Toronto, and has continued residing there following her Jeopardy! appearances. In interviews, Roach has discussed leveraging her quiz show winnings—totaling over $500,000 from regular-season play—to achieve homeownership in Toronto by her late 20s, a goal described as unattainable without the financial windfall amid Canada's housing market challenges. Details on Roach's romantic relationships remain private, with no confirmed partner publicly identified or discussed in available sources. The earnings from Jeopardy! have enabled a degree of financial self-sufficiency, supporting Roach's independent lifestyle in Toronto while pursuing broadcasting and writing opportunities.

References

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