Conner Kemmsies entered the bonus round with confidence, carrying momentum, prize money, and his family’s hopes. As the puzzle appeared, he quickly solved part of it, saying **“I DID MY,”** then suddenly froze as the final blanks stayed unsolved and the clock kept moving.
For a moment, the pressure was clear. He stared at the board, searching for the missing words while time slipped away. When the answer was finally revealed as **“I DID MY HOMEWORK,”** his reaction was a stunned laugh that captured the disbelief of many watching at home.
Viewers quickly reacted online, and opinions were sharply divided. Some felt the phrase was fair and obvious enough for a contestant to solve under pressure. Others argued it was awkward and unnatural, questioning whether **“I DID MY HOMEWORK”** truly fit as a common “phrase.”
The frustration grew because the missed solve cost Kemmsies **$40,000**, a bonus amount some fans have seen appear often enough to spark suspicion. For critics, the repeated high-dollar losses make the game’s suspense feel less like chance and more like carefully staged television drama.
Still, the debate revealed something bigger. Fans continue to care deeply enough to argue over every puzzle, every reveal, and every missed opportunity. That lasting passion explains why *Wheel of Fortune* remains such a powerful TV tradition—sometimes unfair, often frustrating, but still impossible for many viewers to stop watching.