I’ll hear something and if I don’t like it, and if I don’t like it I won’t do it. It’s more of a feeling and confidence with how I feel about things. Yeah, and I still have a hard time describing it. Even though songs like “Ova,” “Vibrations” and Own Man,” all have varying vibes, there’s definitely a unified, unique sonic approach. Yeah, it seems like you’ve found your sound in Village Party. It all kind of clicked for me all at once, and I made like seven songs in three days and they’re all on the project. Also, really figuring out what I wanted to say, how I wanted to come across and deciding what my whole point of making music even was. Would you say that came from you being able to do it everyday for a couple years now? I still come of my flows first a lot of times, but I’ve gotten a lot better with saying what I needs to say in those rhyme schemes without comprising anything. Sonically it was working for me, but the lyrics became kind of an afterthought. It used to be that I came up with my flows first, and would fill in the words into the flows. It’s not really like I’ve changed as a person since then, though I’ve gotten to see and to more shit, but I’m really able to say what I want the way that I want now. I feel like I can say what I’m trying to say a lot easier now. I’ve just gotten better with writing and have developed a better command over the language now. We were so moved that we had to applaud.I think I refined my sound a little more, but the main growth happened content wise. And you don’t see it on camera, but as he’s going to the categories, he sees us start to applaud, and he kind of looked at us, like, ‘What are you guys doing?’. “Well, there’s not very many people in the studio because of COVID, and we all burst into applause. “There are specific moments in ‘Jeopardy!’ when you clap, and then there are moments when you’re quiet,” he added. “He comes out and gives this absolutely amazing speech about the tough times that we’re in and the importance of us, as a country - as a community, humanity - coming together and being there for each other,” Richards said. But at the top of Monday’s episode, Richards said, the host does something that gave everyone “chills” before unveiling the day’s categories. VCiPERxKgt- TODAY January 4, 2021įor nearly 40 years, Trebek has opened each installment of “Jeopardy!” with a brief monologue about current events or what unfolded in the show’s latest game. “Jeopardy!” executive producer Mike Richards reflects on Alex Trebek’s legacy and final episodes. I think he really understood the importance of the show and what it meant to people. So I think there was a level of professionalism. “I mean, he was getting chemotherapy once a week. “I think a normal person would have said, ‘I’m not gonna show up’ a year and a half before those final episodes,” Richards said. The Canadian entertainer’s victory lap as longtime emcee of the hit quiz show airs this week, starting Monday and ending Friday. Richards spoke with “Today” anchors Hoda Kotb and Savannah Guthrie about Trebek’s tireless spirit during his last days on set. He is strong, he sounds great, he’s funny, and he’s amazing.” And you will not sense any of that in these episodes.
We didn’t know it was going to be his final episodes, and neither did he - but it was Herculean,” executive producer Mike Richards told NBC’s “Today” on Monday. “He was a warrior, and what he was able to do by getting himself back to the set to tape those final episodes.
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Late TV legend Alex Trebek was hospitalized shortly before filming his final episodes of “Jeopardy!,” but despite his executive producer’s protests, the host was on the job days before he died of pancreatic cancer.