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Transcript
00:00From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:14Today's contestants are a communications director, originally from Middletown, Connecticut, Alan Pike.
00:22A professor from New York, New York, Molly Murray.
00:26And our returning champion, a Ph.D. candidate from New Brunswick, New Jersey, Allegra Cuny,
00:35whose one-day cash winnings totaled $26,600.
00:41And now, here is the host of Jeopardy! Ken Jennings.
00:49Thank you, Johnny Gilbert. Welcome to Jeopardy!
00:51Following a very convincing win in yesterday's game, I asked our new champion, Allegra Cuny, how she was feeling.
00:57She said, it feels insane. In a good way, that's good.
01:01Allegra's back today to test her case of Jeopardy! mania against Molly and Alan.
01:05Best of luck to you three. Here are the categories we have for you in the Jeopardy! round.
01:09First up, what a pleasure!
01:13Then, TV characters, followed by suiting you to a middle T, because the letter T is in the exact center of each correct response.
01:21After that, it's travels by twain, following the equator, and roughing it.
01:27Allegra, you start us off today.
01:29What a pleasure for 600.
01:31As the name suggests, evaporated milk, condensed milk, and whole milk go into this Latin American treat.
01:38Allegra.
01:38What is Tres Leche's cake?
01:40Yes.
01:40What a pleasure, 800.
01:42Pure perfume, or parfum, contains up to 40% scent and ingredients.
01:47EDP, this, contains 15% to 20%.
01:50Molly.
01:51What is eau de parfum?
01:52That's right.
01:53Um, suiting you to a middle T for 600.
01:57A house of ill repute also goes by this shorter synonym.
02:01Alan.
02:01Was it brothel?
02:02I guess, yeah, I wouldn't know.
02:04Middle T, 800.
02:05It's the lowest rank of a British police officer.
02:08What is constable?
02:13Back to you, Alan.
02:15Middle T, 1,000.
02:16A wolf?
02:17Where?
02:18It's the delusion of one who believes they're a wolf.
02:21Molly.
02:22What is lycanthropy?
02:23Correct, for 1,000.
02:24Suiting you to a middle T for 400.
02:27Nationality of one from Port-au-Prince.
02:29Molly.
02:30What is Haitian?
02:31Yes.
02:32Travels by Twain for 600.
02:34An Italian chapter wonders what people see in them, the honored painters of centuries past.
02:40All the horses look like bladders on legs.
02:42Molly.
02:44What are the old masters?
02:45You got it.
02:46Travels by Twain for 800.
02:48Twain saw Lohengrin in Germany and wrote of a woman saying, you must get to know this composer's work.
02:53No sale.
02:55Allegra.
02:55Who is Wagner?
02:56Right.
02:57Travels by Twain, 1,000.
02:58The forts and mosques at Delhi are great, but pale beside this, the most celebrated construction in the earth.
03:06Allen.
03:07What is it, the Taj Mahal?
03:07Twain also went to the Taj Mahal, yes.
03:09Middle T, 200.
03:11Proverbial place you don't want to be left at on your wedding day.
03:15Allegra.
03:15What is the altar?
03:16Yes.
03:17TV characters for 600.
03:2060s character with many memorable lines like, I'm trying to thank you, you pointed-eared hobgoblin.
03:26Allen.
03:27Who's Captain Kirk?
03:27No.
03:29Allegra or Molly?
03:31It is a very racist thing to say about Mr. Spock, but it's actually Dr. McCoy in this case.
03:36Back to you, Allegra.
03:38TV characters for 800.
03:40Sister Knight, played by Regina King, was a masked hero on this HBO show.
03:45Allegra.
03:45What is Watchmen?
03:46Right.
03:47Roughing it for 600.
03:49For overnight hikes, take along one of these, MREs for short.
03:53Sherpak sells vegetarian options.
03:55Allen.
03:56What are meals ready to eat?
03:57Correct.
03:57TV characters for four.
04:00She's tormented by infertility and ends up adopting.
04:03Molly.
04:04Who is Betty Rubble?
04:05Right.
04:06Roughing it for 800.
04:07A non-profit organization dedicated to this three-word practice includes, as one of its core principles, dispose of waste properly.
04:18That three-word practice is Leave No Trace.
04:21All three of you are off to a great start, so we're going to take a commercial break, but we'll be back right after this.
04:25Alan Pike, originally from Middletown, Connecticut, is a communications director and a soccer fan, I'm told.
04:38Yes, indeed.
04:38To what degree?
04:39You see a lot of games.
04:40We once, two friends of mine and I took a trip where we saw nine matches in nine days in nine countries.
04:45Wow.
04:46There are vacations and then there's realizing you accidentally booked yourself work.
04:49By about day three, all of us were sick and injured, but it had a happy ending.
04:54A little overbooked, but what was the happy ending?
04:55We got to see our favorite team, Arsenal, beat our hated rivals Tottenham Hotspur 4-2 at the Emirates Stadium.
05:00You got to see Hotspur lose.
05:01That's all you wanted.
05:02North London is red.
05:03You're a simple man.
05:03Well done.
05:04Molly Murray is here, a professor from New York, New York.
05:07Tell us about your experience at nerd camp.
05:10Am I allowed to call it that?
05:12Yeah, sure.
05:12Is that the official name?
05:13We were nerds.
05:14Oh, okay.
05:14Yeah.
05:15And what happened to you at nerd camp?
05:16Well, in addition to learning many things, I also pierced my own nose.
05:22Your own nose?
05:23Yeah.
05:23I assume that's not recommended.
05:25Well, you know, it was a long day in the library and I felt like it was a thing to do.
05:30Just to be clear, you're not giving instructions to anyone at home, but what tools does one know?
05:33How do you use a summer camp if you want a piercing?
05:35An ice cube and, like, delusion, basically.
05:38That's all you had.
05:39The will to win.
05:40Yeah.
05:41You really wanted that piercing?
05:42No regrets.
05:42No regrets.
05:42I'm glad it worked out.
05:44Speaking of summer camp regrets, our champion is Allegra Cuny from New Brunswick, New Jersey, a PhD candidate.
05:50Your summer camp experience kind of cramped your scheduling style, right?
05:54It certainly did.
05:55This was decades ago now, before they did Jeopardy auditions in Zoom and over the phone.
06:01I got the call to audition for the teen tournament.
06:03Right.
06:04And unfortunately, it coincided with summer camp and my summer camp would not let me go.
06:07Oh, but it all worked out.
06:10It did.
06:10I feel like they've finally come full circle from that moment.
06:13Many years later, you finally stuck it to your summer camp.
06:15Yes, take that.
06:16That wouldn't let you try out for Jeopardy.
06:18Molly, you're in command of the board right now.
06:19You also have the lead.
06:20Make a selection.
06:21What a pleasure for 400.
06:23If you enjoy Senior's Run on Palmyra Peak at Telluride, you're into this, and really good, and crazy, Allegra.
06:31What is skiing?
06:31Yeah.
06:32What a pleasure 1,000.
06:34Classical music fans enjoy the sound of the oboe relative called the cor anglais, or this.
06:42Allegra.
06:43What's the English horn?
06:44It is.
06:44TV characters for 1,000.
06:46William Stuart Halstead, a great surgeon who battled addiction, inspired the main character of this series about a New York City hospital.
06:54Molly.
06:54What is the neck?
06:55Yes, well done.
06:56What a pleasure for 200.
06:58The Swedish type of this employs kneading movements called pitressage.
07:03Allegra.
07:03What is massage?
07:04Swedish massage, right.
07:05Following the equator for 600.
07:07Answer.
07:08It's a daily double, Allegra.
07:11You're on a bit of a roll at the moment.
07:13It's $200 off Molly's lead.
07:15I will wager 2,000.
07:17All right, that'll put you on top with 6,000 if you're right.
07:20The category, following the equator.
07:23Uhuru is the summit of this peak that's about 200 miles south of the equator.
07:33Allegra.
07:33What is Popocatepital?
07:35No, sorry, Kilimanjaro, not Kilimanjaro in Africa.
07:39So you lose 2,000, but you're still in second place, Allegra.
07:42Select again.
07:43Following the equator, 800.
07:45Similar to the Magellanic, the Galapagos type of this bird is one of the rarest, and the one living nearest the equator.
07:51Molly.
07:52What is the penguin?
07:53Yes.
07:53Following the equator for 400.
07:56Being close to the equator makes Kiribati an ideal spot for launching these via rocket, as the company Sea Launch once did.
08:03Alan.
08:03What are satellites?
08:04Correct.
08:04Equator for 1,000.
08:05Equator for 1,000.
08:06The names of the two main islands that make up this equatorial nation mean St. Thomas and Prince.
08:11Allegra.
08:12What's Sao Tome and Principe?
08:14Yes, Sao Tome and Principe.
08:15Roughing it for 1,000.
08:17You can park and sleep up to 14 days in most designated public areas run by the BLM, short for this agency.
08:23Alan.
08:24What is the Bureau of Land Management?
08:27That is right.
08:28Roughing it 400.
08:29Roughing it in Glacier National Park?
08:31Be sure to pack a can of this two-word repellent.
08:34Grisgard sells one with capsaicin.
08:37Alan.
08:37What is bear spray?
08:38Right.
08:39Roughing it 200.
08:41Saying bye to YouTube in 2025, Luke of the Outdoor Boys showed us how to avoid freezing to death in this state that has hit minus 80.
08:49Alan.
08:49What is Alaska?
08:50That's right.
08:51TV characters 200.
08:52In 2025, Ellen Pompeo marked 20 years of playing this doctor and starred on Good American Family as a suburban mom.
09:01Allegra.
09:02Who is Meredith Gray?
09:03Correct.
09:04Traveled by Twain 200.
09:06At the Church of the Holy Sepulchre's supposed burial site of this Genesis 1-4 guy, MT said it was touching to find the grave of a relative.
09:17Touching to find the grave of Adam.
09:19Everybody's relative.
09:20Back to you, Allegra.
09:21Travels by Twain 400.
09:23In Honolulu, Twain saw what he had so longed to, this dance that was wont to set the passions of men ablaze in the old heathen days.
09:31Molly.
09:32What is the hula?
09:32Right.
09:33And following the equator for 200, this Asian place, made more popular by crazy rich Asians, is at about one degree north latitude, 90 miles from the equator.
09:43Allegra.
09:44What is Singapore?
09:45Yes, they visit Singapore there.
09:46It's a closer game.
09:47You're still in third, Allegra.
09:48You will select first when we come back.
09:50Because Double Jeopardy's up next.
09:57Molly's out in front as our contestants enter Double Jeopardy.
09:59Let's take a look at the categories.
10:01We have, from left to right, great Brits, 1940s literature, you're ruining the ruins, then go for gold with golden quotation marks, stories behind the songs, and finally, a little alliteration.
10:16Allegra, what appeals up there?
10:18Alliteration for 1200.
10:20Perfectly transparent, like some varieties of quartz.
10:27They are crystal clear.
10:29Allegra.
10:30Stories behind the songs, 1200.
10:33This song came about after a pal of Sean Lennon told Billy Joel that the 1950s were a boring time to grow up.
10:40Allegra.
10:40What is We Didn't Start the Fire?
10:42Yes.
10:43Stories Behind the Songs, 1600.
10:45This hit was written for a British singer
10:47and originally had lyrics like,
10:49hopped off the plane at LAX with my tea and my cardigan.
10:52Allegra.
10:53What's Party in the USA?
10:54Yes.
10:55Stories Behind the Songs, 2000.
10:57He said he only had a mattress and a piano in his house
11:00when he began working on the viral hit Beautiful Things.
11:03Molly.
11:04Who is Benson Boone?
11:05It is. Well done.
11:06A little alliteration for 1600.
11:09Fashionable term for a synthetic version of a controlled substance
11:12with an altered molecular structure.
11:15Molly.
11:16What is the designer drug?
11:17That's it.
11:18A little alliteration for 800.
11:20Ability bestowed on the eloquent and persuasive.
11:23Allegra.
11:24What is the gift of gab?
11:25Correct.
11:26Go for gold, 1200.
11:28Despite a myth that it is a major culprit in hay fever,
11:31it's the state flower of Nebraska and Kentucky.
11:34Allegra.
11:35What is goldenrod?
11:36Right.
11:37Go for gold, 1600.
11:38The spot where the earth is, just right for liquid water to exist,
11:41is called the habitable or this zone.
11:44Allegra.
11:45What's the Goldilocks zone?
11:46Yes. Not too hot or too cold.
11:47Go for gold, 2000.
11:49In 1964, ornithologist James Bond met Ian Fleming at this Jamaican estate,
11:54possibly named for Ian's World War II spy operation.
11:57Molly.
11:58What is goldeneye?
11:59You add 2000.
12:00Great Brits for 1200.
12:02Answer.
12:03It's a daily double for you, Molly.
12:05You've retaken the lead from Allegra.
12:09How much of that 11K do you want to risk on Great Brits?
12:12Um, 1200.
12:14Just 1200.
12:15You'll have 12,200 if you're right.
12:18Here's your clue.
12:19Watching the ceremony from London via TV,
12:22this 88-year-old was made an honorary US citizen in 1963.
12:26Molly.
12:27Who is Winston Churchill?
12:28It was Churchill, in fact.
12:29Yes.
12:30You didn't seem sure at all, but you just added $1,200.
12:31Phew.
12:32Okay.
12:33Great Brits for 1600.
12:34In 1913, polar explorers Roald Amundsen, Robert Perry, and this Brit were honored at a reception in Philadelphia.
12:49Who is Shackleton?
12:54Molly.
12:55Uh, Great Brits for 800, please.
12:57At Oxford in the 1940s, this future prime minister studied chemistry under future Nobel Prize winner Dorothy Hodgkin.
13:04Molly.
13:05Who's Thatcher?
13:06Thatcher was a chemist, yes.
13:071940s literature for 1200.
13:09This folk singer and activist's bound for glory was a portrait of the depression years seen through his eyes.
13:14Molly.
13:15Who's Woody Guthrie?
13:16Right again.
13:17Um, 1940s literature for 1600.
13:20Answer.
13:21Daily Double.
13:24Your lead has grown a bit.
13:25Last Daily Double, Molly.
13:26What'll it be?
13:27Okay.
13:28I will bet 5,000.
13:30Okay.
13:31Going for 19,200.
13:32Here's your clue in 1940s literature.
13:35The title of this Mexico-set Malcolm Lowry novel refers to both Popocatepetl and Istasiwatl.
13:42Uh, what is Under the Volcano?
13:45You add 5,000.
13:46Well done.
13:511940s literature for 800.
13:53C.S. Lewis tried reconciling human suffering with a god who loves in the alliteratively titled The Problem of This.
14:00Allegra.
14:01What is pain?
14:02You got it.
14:03Great Brits, 2000.
14:04In 1820, he helped found the Royal Astronomical Society, but didn't have it use the calculating machine he designed.
14:11Allegra.
14:12Who's Babbage?
14:13Right again.
14:14A little alliteration, 2000.
14:16Something purchased without inspection, like a swine in an old-time sack.
14:20Allegra.
14:21What's a pig in a poke?
14:22Correct.
14:23You're ruining the ruins, 1200.
14:25Stop insisting that this country's Antonine Wall, once the Roman Empire's northern border, is jankier than Hadrian's Wall.
14:32Allegra.
14:33What is Scotland?
14:34Correct.
14:35Ruining the ruins, 1600.
14:37We might have beaten the crowds to this ancient Maya city near Piste, Mexico, home to the Pyramid El Castillo, had you not slept until noon.
14:48We missed Chichen Itza. Back to you, Allegra.
14:51Go for gold, 800.
14:53He's the Phoenix native who ran for president against LBJ in 1964. Allegra.
14:58Who's Goldwater?
14:59Yes.
15:00Stories behind the songs, 800.
15:02Who knew?
15:03The Hanson brothers explained that this nonsense title reflects the inexorable passing of time.
15:08Allegra.
15:09What is Mbop?
15:10Very dark take on Mbop, yes.
15:12You're ruining the ruins, 2000.
15:14I know this ancient monastic settlement off Ireland's Cary Coast was in Star Wars, but selfies with a lightsaber was a little extra.
15:21Allegra.
15:22What is Skellig Michael?
15:23It is for the lead.
15:241940s literature, 2000.
15:26A tale of love and independence in Paris, Gigi by this French novelist eventually came to the big screen with Leslie Caron.
15:37Gigi by Colette. Back to you, Allegra.
15:39Ruining the Ruins, 800.
15:41Reaching the end of the Inca trail at this ancient site is tough enough without you complaining about all the stairs. Allegra.
15:47What is Machu Picchu?
15:48Right.
15:49Great Brits, 400.
15:50He had high praise for Eddie Redmayne's portrayal of him saying, at times, I thought he was me.
15:59Who is Stephen Hawking?
16:01Back to you, Allegra.
16:021940s literature for 400.
16:04This inquisitive primate who debuted early in the decade takes a job in a later book from cleaning windows to acting in a movie.
16:11Allegra.
16:12Who is Curious George?
16:13It is.
16:14Stories behind the songs, 400.
16:16This song by Jay-Z about having nearly 100 complications took the title and hook from a nice tea song.
16:23Allen.
16:24What is 99 Problems?
16:25That's right.
16:26Alliteration, 400.
16:27Mutual ill will or a Taylor Swift chart topper.
16:31Allegra.
16:32What is Bad Blood?
16:33Right.
16:34Gopher Gold, 400.
16:35The Ballad of Jed Clampett offers this synonym for Texas tea that fits the category.
16:40Allen.
16:41Was Black Gold.
16:42Black Gold is correct.
16:43Here's the last clue from your Ruining the Ruins.
16:45Stop complaining about the heat on our walking tour of Pompeii.
16:48Just be glad temps are lower than in 79 AD when this volcano blew.
16:53Allegra.
16:54What is Vesuvius?
16:55That is correct.
16:56It means you will maintain a narrow lead over Molly as we head into Final Jeopardy.
16:59Close game.
17:00Here's the category that will decide this thing.
17:02Fun and games.
17:03Well, think about fun and games for a moment.
17:05Make your wagers, and then we'll return with the clue.
17:08Final Jeopardy is always fun for me, but today the category is fun and games.
17:13Let's reveal the clue.
17:16A 2022 article titled This at 50, the video game that changed the world, also said,
17:22it may be the most boring game of all time.
17:25Thirty seconds.
17:26Good luck.
17:27All right.
17:28Happy bedtime.
17:30Bye.
17:31Bye.
17:32Bye.
17:33Bye.
17:34Bye.
17:42Bye.
17:45Bye, bye.
17:47Bye.
17:48Bye.
17:49Bye bye.
17:51Bye.
17:52Bye.
17:54We'll start on the end with Alan Pike, $4,400 against two tough competitors.
18:01Did you come up with final, Alan?
18:02You wrote down, what is, oh, you crossed out Pong and didn't get to replace it.
18:09So that's not correct.
18:11You'll lose $3,581, leaving you with $819.
18:16Molly Murray was in second place, but only by a whisker.
18:18Did she come up with the correct response?
18:20She has Pong and she left it alone, which is good because the pioneering video game Pong is correct.
18:27What did you wager?
18:29$8,000.
18:30So you are putting the pressure on Allegra.
18:31You now have $27,200.
18:34Allegra Cuny, you know you need to get this right.
18:36Did you think of Pong?
18:38She's got it.
18:39Did she wager enough?
18:41Wow, more than enough.
18:42$17,001.
18:44Our biggest wager on a correct response of the season takes you to $38,401.
18:49That makes you a two-day Jeopardy! champion.
18:51Your total now, $65,001.
18:55What a comeback.
18:56What a game.
18:56I hope we have another one like that tomorrow.
18:58Join us then.
19:00Promotional consideration provided by Canyon Spirit.
19:02Thank you for it.
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