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Celebrity Jeopardy S04E02

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00:00From the Alex Trebek stage at Sony Picture Studios, this is Celebrity Jeopardy! All-Stars!
00:12Introducing tonight's celebrity players.
00:16She's an actor best known for her role on the hit Netflix series Nobody Wants This.
00:22Please welcome Jackie Toll.
00:25You know him as Brian Hackett on Wings, and currently as Dr. Archer on Chicago Med.
00:33It's Steven Weber.
00:36And he's known for classics like Home Alone and My Girl.
00:41And now you can catch him on season two of Prime Video's Fallout.
00:46Here's Macaulay Culkin.
00:49And now, here is your host, Ken Jennings.
00:56Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
00:57And welcome back to Celebrity Jeopardy! All-Stars.
01:00Tonight, the quarterfinal round continues as three more standouts have returned to the Alex Trebek stage in pursuit of victory.
01:08Mac, Steven, Jackie, welcome back and good luck with a $1 million grand prize and a lot of bragging rights
01:14on the line.
01:14Because you guys would brag, right?
01:16Of course.
01:17Totally.
01:17With all that on the line, let's get into the game by playing these categories in the Jeopardy! round.
01:22Here we go, everyone.
01:25First up, kiddie-lit. Note the spelling.
01:28Then pluralize it. We need the Merriam-Webster preferred plurals. We're very highbrow around here.
01:33Sure.
01:34Then we have historic history. Mind your manners. That's just for you guys.
01:39It happens once a year.
01:40And finally, scripted TV lines. You will give me the show. Mac, you're up first.
01:46It happens once a year. 100, please.
01:49Every year since 1988, Discovery has had this. Seven nights of programming devoted to great whites and their brethren.
01:56Mac.
01:57What a shark week.
01:57Yes.
01:58It happens once a year. 200.
02:01A critter named Punxsutawney Phil captivates the U.S. media's attention as part of this annual observance.
02:07Steven.
02:07What's Groundhog Day?
02:09Right.
02:10Once a year. 300.
02:12These two Ivy League colleges face each other in the U.S.A.'s oldest intercollegiate event, an annual rowing regatta
02:18since 1864.
02:20Mac.
02:21What is Yale and Harvard?
02:22That's right.
02:23It happens once a year. Let's go 500.
02:26Down to the five.
02:27This rhyming event that celebrates weaving and wearing flower garlands has been officially recognized in Hawaii since 1929.
02:37It rhymes because it's called Lay Day.
02:40Mm-hmm.
02:41They celebrate.
02:42Lay Day.
02:43Steven.
02:44Steven, we're playing Jeopardy.
02:45Sorry.
02:46Oh, yeah.
02:46So sorry, Ken.
02:47Same category. 400, please.
02:49Munich is home to this annual celebration that weirdly ends on the first Sunday of the month in its name.
02:55Mac.
02:56What is October Fest?
02:56Yeah, mostly in September.
02:58Let's go with a historic history for 100, please.
03:02This leader rendered unto us the humblebrag Veni Vidi Vici.
03:06I came, I saw, I conquered.
03:08Mac.
03:08Who is Julius Caesar?
03:09Correct.
03:10Let's go historic history for 200, please.
03:14This German wasn't trying to break up with the Roman Catholic Church with his 95 theses, but the church broke
03:19up with him.
03:21Steven.
03:21Who is Martin Luther?
03:22You are correct.
03:23Historic history for 300.
03:25During World War II, Uncle Joe was a nickname for this world leader.
03:29Steven.
03:30Who is Stalin?
03:31Yes, that's correct.
03:33Joseph Stalin.
03:34Right.
03:34Yeah.
03:35What?
03:35What?
03:36You guys are being weird.
03:37All right, everybody, calm down.
03:38We're not Russian, we're Stalin.
03:39He's Stalin.
03:39All right.
03:39I'd like to see what's behind door number three, Ken.
03:42Sorry, historic history for four.
03:44There we go.
03:45That we have.
03:46Fletcher Christian led the 1789 mutiny on this ship.
03:50Captain Bly and his followers were booted off.
03:53Mac.
03:53What is the bounty?
03:54Yes.
03:54Historic history for 500, please.
03:56Finish it off with, this affair saw the French army wrongly accuse a Jewish officer of treason,
04:02resulting in Emile Zola's j'accuse.
04:04Steven.
04:05Who's Dreyfus?
04:06Good for 500.
04:07Kitty Lit for 200.
04:08Oh, cute.
04:09Aw.
04:10Named after Winston Churchill, the cat in this Stephen King novel dies and then undies.
04:16Mac.
04:16What is Pet Sematary?
04:17That's the book.
04:18Uh, Kitty Lit, 300.
04:20Answer.
04:21It's a Daily Double.
04:22Hi-oh.
04:26You are in the lead, Macaulay Culkin, and this clue is for you alone.
04:29How much of that $1,500 would you like to risk?
04:31It's Kitty Lit.
04:32Let's go with the grand.
04:34Okay.
04:34$1,000.
04:35Macaroons, clams.
04:36Going for $2,500 if you're right.
04:38Here's your clue.
04:39The narrator of The Black Cat Goes Mad, not unlike the narrator of The Telltale Heart.
04:45Another macabre tale by this author.
04:47Who's Edgar Allan Poe.
04:48Correct.
04:49You had $1,000 for your title.
04:50Yes, whoo.
04:53Select again.
04:54Uh, let's go Kitty Lit for $500, please.
04:57This Truman Capote character says of her cat, it's inconvenient his not having a name, but
05:02I haven't any right to give him one.
05:04Mac.
05:04Who's Holly Golightly?
05:06In Breakfast at Tiffany's.
05:07Well done.
05:07Uh, Kitty Lit for $400, please.
05:10Hermione Granger's loyal pet was this half-cat, half-neasle with a knack for sussing out unsavory
05:15characters.
05:19Ah, we stumped you with Crookshanks.
05:22Who is Crookshanks?
05:24That's my grandmother's name.
05:25Back to you, Mac.
05:26Kitty Lit for $100, please.
05:28This title feline says, I know it is wet and the sun is not sunny, but we can have lots
05:33of good fun that is funny.
05:35Steven.
05:35Who's the cat in the hat?
05:36That is the right cat.
05:37Yes.
05:38You're in second place with $1,300.
05:40Three categories down means we're halfway through the round and we need to pause.
05:43But Celebrity Jeopardy!
05:43All-Stars will be right back, so don't go anywhere.
05:46I'm doing awesome.
05:48You're doing great.
05:48You're doing great.
05:50At least I don't have any wrong.
05:56Jackie Tone, originally from Oceanside, New York.
05:59An actor, a musician, and maybe most impressively of all, a Celebrity Jeopardy!
06:04semi-finalist.
06:05That's right.
06:05That's right.
06:05I call myself a Celebrity Jeopardy!
06:07champion because it could mean anything.
06:08Sure.
06:09It could be any level.
06:10Well, you won one game.
06:11All right.
06:11And it was an impressive one, right?
06:13Well, it's sort of my party trick now because I think going into my first episode, I had
06:18a sneaking suspicion I was smarter than Neil deGrasse Tyson.
06:22As many people do.
06:23Of course.
06:24That's not a delusion of grandeur at all.
06:25No, no, no, no, Ken.
06:26And so it was nice to have that actually realized, right?
06:29And I beat Neil.
06:30And now everywhere I go, I just go, I'm smarter than Neil deGrasse Tyson in that weird voice
06:37and no one asks.
06:38That is fantastic.
06:39Tell us about the charity you're playing for in your return appearance.
06:42Okay.
06:42I love this organization.
06:43They're called Kids in the Spotlight, KITS for short.
06:46And this charity organization basically empowers kids who've been impacted by the foster care
06:52system and helps them enter into kind of the entertainment business by helping them learn
06:59to write movies, make those movies, produce those movies.
07:02There's premieres.
07:03There's, and it's an incredible organization that allows these former foster kids who've
07:08aged out of the system to now tell their stories their way.
07:11I love that.
07:12Yeah, me too.
07:12What a great choice.
07:13Thanks for being back, Jackie.
07:17Stephen Webber.
07:18Hi, Ken.
07:18Originally from Queens, a Queens kid, an actor, an audio book narrator, and a celebrity
07:24Jeopardy semi-finalist as well, right?
07:26How about that?
07:27How about that?
07:27I know you don't like to brag.
07:28You played a very intense game against Katie Nolan.
07:30I did.
07:31She's incredibly smart, sharp, and wicked and all that stuff.
07:34And I, but I basically, I feel like I beat myself because in Final Jeopardy, I did what
07:40a couple of my friends advised me not to do, which was second guess myself.
07:44I have a head full of garbage anyway.
07:46It's just, just toss out whatever.
07:49And the Final Jeopardy question, the answer was something like, in 1953, the BBC said,
07:54as soon as I saw that, my brain started leaking out my ears.
07:58This television program was the highest viewed, you know, spectacular in Europe.
08:03And I'm thinking, Sputnik or Churchill's Iron Curtain speech, or is it the coronation?
08:08No, she was already queen then.
08:10And I ran out, had nothing.
08:12It was the coronation.
08:13It was one of the things you were thinking about.
08:15It was one of the things, so that was it.
08:16And instead, you wrote down.
08:18What is the end?
08:19What is the end?
08:20Yeah.
08:21A very ominous Final Jeopardy response.
08:23Yeah.
08:23It wasn't, it wasn't wrong, technically speaking.
08:25I, I haven't slept very well, haven't had a decent bowel movement since.
08:29But you know what?
08:30I'm happy to be back.
08:31That's why we brought you back on your proctologist recommendation.
08:35Thanks.
08:35Thank you so much.
08:36Tell us about your charity.
08:38My charity is New Directions for Veterans.
08:40It's a fantastic organization that takes care of our veterans after they've sacrificed so
08:45much for this country.
08:47It takes care of their health needs, their housing needs, education, and, and employment.
08:53And it's a fantastic organization.
08:56Wonderful work.
08:57Good luck to you.
08:58And them.
09:01Last but not least, Macaulay Culkin.
09:03We meet again.
09:03Mac, you're an actor.
09:04Always right here, weirdly.
09:06Yes, I know.
09:06Yeah.
09:06This is, I, I, I, I, hi, Doris.
09:08Good to see you again.
09:09It's your happy place.
09:10You're an actor and a musician.
09:12You also, just like these two, had some serious competition last time you were here, right?
09:16Yeah, yeah.
09:17I like to say I got dratched.
09:18Dratched.
09:19Dratched.
09:19Yes, I got dratched.
09:20Rachel Dratch beat me by a buck.
09:22One dollar.
09:23Close game.
09:23Yeah, yeah, yeah.
09:24You told us last time that, uh, Brenda, your lady, had helped you prepare for Jeopardy.
09:28Did that happen again?
09:30Absolutely not.
09:30No.
09:31No, I lost.
09:33So, uh, no, I, I watched a lot of Jeopardy and pretended to buzz in, uh, uh, pretty much
09:38all week, about two to three episodes a day.
09:40You've been studying up at home.
09:41Yes, indeed.
09:42Great.
09:42Well, good luck to you.
09:43Well, thank you.
09:44What charity are you playing for, Mac?
09:45I'm playing for, uh, Stand Up to Cancer.
09:46Um, uh, it's a, uh, it's a charity that's near and dear to my family's heart.
09:51Uh, Brenda's mother's a four-time breast cancer survivor.
09:54Wow.
09:54They were there for, for them.
09:55Uh, you know, they provide support, information, all, all kinds of things.
10:00Stand Up to Cancer.
10:01That's great.
10:01Yeah.
10:01Steven, you gave us the last correct response.
10:04Three categories left.
10:05Which do you prefer?
10:06Uh, let's try Mind Your Manners for 200, please.
10:11The sooner you and your spouse complete this post-wedding task, the better.
10:15Experts say three months tops.
10:16Not a year like we all thought.
10:21You only have three months to send out the thank you notes.
10:24Uh-huh.
10:24I was going to say consummate.
10:27Yeah, a year is customary, but if you can do it in three months, why not?
10:31Steven, back to you.
10:33Thanks, Ken.
10:34Uh, Mind Your Manners for three?
10:36It's bad driving etiquette to block the box, i.e. enter one of these if your car won't fit
10:41all the way through.
10:43Mack.
10:43What is it, intersection?
10:44That's right.
10:45Uh, Mind Your Manners, 400?
10:48Most experts say it's rude to leave a party without saying goodbye, a.k.a. this word that
10:53can also mean ending all contact with someone.
10:56Jackie.
10:56What is ghosting?
10:58That's correct.
10:58You're on the board.
10:59Finally!
11:00That was exhausting.
11:01I would like to do pluralize it for 400, Ken.
11:06Time to bring them in.
11:08Sheaf.
11:09And it ends there.
11:12Plural of sheaf, sheave.
11:14Bring in the sheaves.
11:16If I had a nickel for every time I used the word sheaves, probably.
11:19Sheaves.
11:20Well, now you can sprinkle it into a conversation.
11:22Sheaves all that.
11:23Okay.
11:24I hate you both.
11:25Mind your manners for 500, Ken.
11:28On the golf course, it's good manners for a slow group to let a faster group do this.
11:32A two-word term that means jump ahead.
11:35Steven.
11:36What is playthrough?
11:37That's right.
11:38Pluralize it for 200, please.
11:40Figure out the relationship.
11:42Son-in-law.
11:44Mac.
11:44With sons-in-law.
11:45That's right.
11:46Uh, pluralize it.
11:48500, please.
11:49Letting you say indexes would be ridiculous.
11:52So give us the one with no X in it.
11:54Index.
11:55Steven.
11:56Indi-what is indices?
11:57Indices, right.
11:58Do that one.
11:59Uh, pluralize it.
12:00I'm working here for 300.
12:01Proud of you, Steven.
12:02Be super smart with the five-letter plural.
12:05Genius.
12:09Nobody wants to guess.
12:10One genius, two genie-eye.
12:12Yeah.
12:13Or three, like today.
12:14Steven, back to you.
12:15Oh, Ken.
12:16Cute.
12:17Pluralize it for 100.
12:19Taking a pregnant pause.
12:21Ovum.
12:22Steven.
12:22What is ova?
12:23Yes, and that category is ova.
12:25Where to now?
12:26Oh, no.
12:27Wow.
12:28Okay.
12:28I'm gonna head out.
12:29Mind your manners, Ken, for 100.
12:32At a party, don't be that person who's caught fubbing.
12:35Defined as snubbing those around you by doing this.
12:38Hmm.
12:39Hmm.
12:41The pH in fubbing.
12:42It's because you're playing with your phone.
12:44Oh.
12:45Steven.
12:47Scripted lines for 500.
12:50Hedy, dead since 1895, but still available to offer advice.
12:54Stop wasting your life sitting around not doing cocaine.
12:58Ooh.
13:00She's one of the title characters on Ghosts.
13:03Steven.
13:04Scripted TV lines for 400, please.
13:06Narrator Ron Howard, after Michael Cera's George Michael, was called Opie.
13:11Jessie had gone too far, and she had best watch her mouth.
13:15Mac.
13:15What is Arrested Development?
13:16That's the show.
13:17Uh, scripted lines, 300, please.
13:19Tyrion.
13:20Though I would treasure your friendship, I'm mainly interested in your facility with murder.
13:25Steven.
13:26What's Game of Thrones?
13:27You got it.
13:27Scripted lines, 200.
13:29Taking a new, opposite approach in meeting women.
13:32My name is George.
13:33I'm unemployed, and I live with my parents.
13:35Steven.
13:36What's Seinfeld?
13:37That's the show.
13:37And for 100, please.
13:39Final clue.
13:40Roman Roy on his brother's run for Prez.
13:42Do you think that that's like a natural progression from never done nothing, never?
13:47Oh, Steven.
13:48Oh, man, I told you to let me have it.
13:50What, Succession?
13:51That's right.
13:52Never seen it.
13:52Cured coconut Succession.
13:54Jackie, you'll be going first in Double Jeopardy.
13:56Lots of time to catch up.
13:57That round begins after this.
13:59Stay tuned for more Celebrity Jeopardy All-Stars.
14:01Because the best and prettiest?
14:03You will live the longest.
14:04I will live the longest.
14:05We're already half dead.
14:09The board is all ready for Double Jeopardy.
14:11The All-Stars look ready.
14:12Let's show them the categories.
14:14We have I Do Like That Tile, followed by Mountain High, Doctors Are Hilarious.
14:22Then we have Iconic Movie Quotes, and Impressions Are Welcome, if you three want to indulge.
14:27Followed by Home, and finally, Where the Heart Is.
14:31Those quotation marks around heart means that it will appear in all the correct responses.
14:36Jackie, start us off.
14:37Can't wait, Ken.
14:39For this round, I'd like to start with Doctors Are Hilarious for $400.
14:45All right.
14:46Doctors love puns.
14:49Kathy Wolf, who created the YouTube channel Dr. Kathy at Your Cervix, is this type of doctor.
14:54Mac.
14:55What is it, gynecologist?
14:55I would hope so, yeah.
14:57Let's see, Doctors Are Hilarious for $200.
15:00LOL.
15:02Her sage advice included this quip.
15:03When it comes to sex, the most important six inches are the ones between the ears.
15:09Mac.
15:09Who's Dr. Ruth?
15:10Correct.
15:11Uh, Doctors Are Hilarious for $600, please.
15:14Doctor turned actor Ken Jeong once joked, E. coli is a bacteria that can kill you.
15:19iCarly is this actress.
15:22Jackie.
15:23Who is Miranda Cosgrove?
15:25That's correct.
15:26Well done.
15:26Woo!
15:27Sorry, sound.
15:28Doctors Are Hilarious for $800, Ken.
15:32Dentists are funny, too.
15:33A dental practice in Phoenix named itself after this two-word directive at the start of a cleaning.
15:39Jackie.
15:40What is open wide?
15:41They're called open wide.
15:42Very good.
15:43Doctors Are Hilarious for $1,000, Ken.
15:46The answer there is a B double.
15:48Hello, Jackie.
15:52You're on a bit of a roll in this category, and if you wager everything, you'll move into second place.
15:56How much do you want to bet?
15:57I know that everyone's screaming for me to do a true daily double.
16:01Um, it's early enough.
16:04Audience?
16:09And you can hear me if I talk into this, right?
16:11I am not bright.
16:12All right.
16:13I will make it a, um, I'll make it a true daily double, Ken.
16:17All right.
16:18I can already feel that's a mistake.
16:19With $1,800 at stake.
16:21Woo!
16:22Here's your clue in Doctors Are Hilarious.
16:25Kidding around, this physician once joked that Brad Pitt should portray him on SNL.
16:30In 2020, it happened.
16:37Damn it.
16:39Uh...
16:39Jackie?
16:42Um...
16:43Oh, out of time.
16:44A doctor that would have been on SNL in 2020, Dr. Fauci.
16:48Oh, of course.
16:49That's tough.
16:49It's tough, though, right?
16:50That's a real doctor on.
16:51Well, it feels good to have zero.
16:52It's a nice round number, you know?
16:54Do you blame the audience for misleading you there?
16:56100% not.
16:57I love this audience.
16:58Yeah, that's a comedian.
17:00You have a chance to build up again, Jackie?
17:02Select.
17:02Uh, I do like that tile for $600, Ken.
17:06Bamboo and dragon are two types of tile used in this game, not just for Chinese aunties.
17:12Jackie?
17:13What is mahjong?
17:14Right.
17:15I do like that tile for $800, Ken.
17:18It's tile made of artfully combined small elements, whether on your accent wall or in Barcelona
17:24by Gaudi and his followers.
17:26Mac?
17:26Was it a mosaic?
17:27Yes.
17:28Uh, I do like that tile for, let's go with $1,000.
17:33Blue and white fireplace tiles were popular in this royal era of reading aloud the new books
17:38of Dickens and George Eliot.
17:40Stephen?
17:42What's Victorian?
17:44That is correct.
17:44You add $1,000.
17:46Uh, let's get the hell away from there and go, uh, where the heart is for $400, please.
17:52Just like some liberals, the flowers seen here are called this.
17:57Stephen?
17:58What are snowflakes?
17:59No.
18:01Mac or Jackie?
18:03Good guess, but it's got to have heart in it.
18:05That's the bleeding heart.
18:06Oh, yeah.
18:07Sure.
18:07Stephen, where to?
18:08Okay, let's go, uh, where the heart is for $600.
18:12The search for a diamond necklace known by this name impels the elderly Rose to tell her
18:16story in the film Titanic.
18:19Mac?
18:19What is heart of the ocean?
18:20That's it.
18:21Uh, where the heart is for $800.
18:23This adjective can describe certain necklines and deals.
18:28Mac?
18:28Mm, jeez.
18:31It's hearty.
18:32No, I'm sorry.
18:33Dang.
18:34Stephen?
18:34What are sweethearts?
18:35Sweetheart.
18:36That's right.
18:36Dang it.
18:37Uh, where the heart is for $1,000.
18:39The dying words of Kurtz in this book are the horror.
18:43The horror.
18:44Stephen?
18:45What is, uh, hearts of darkness?
18:47No.
18:48Heart?
18:48Oh, damn it.
18:49Mac or Jackie?
18:51So close, Stephen.
18:52You know what you did.
18:53It's singular, right?
18:54Heart of darkness.
18:54Yes, it's singular, Ken.
18:56Uh, okay.
18:57Where the heart is for $2,000.
18:59It's where mainstream American values are said to thrive.
19:03Jackie?
19:04What is in the heartland?
19:05Yes.
19:06I do like that tile for $400,000, Ken.
19:09Subway tiles are pretty much synonymous with this type, seen here and named for the Paris
19:14subway.
19:17Those are metro tiles.
19:19You can call them subway tiles.
19:20Jackie?
19:20Yeah, I'll also get it.
19:20In New York, we call them subway tiles.
19:22That's what I thought.
19:23Um, iconic movie quotes for $600, Ken.
19:26Answer there.
19:28It's a daily double again.
19:31Come on, you.
19:32Out here wasting daily doubles?
19:35Ask the audience.
19:35Hey, audience.
19:36No, don't.
19:36Take a nap.
19:41Different category this time, Jackie.
19:43Iconic movie quotes, and you have $800, but you can wager up to $1,000.
19:47I just feel like what's important to me is that my charity is getting this money, so I'm
19:53just going to, I'm saying I don't care about winning, so I'm going to do $1,000.
19:58All right.
19:59House maximum.
20:00Why not?
20:01That's not my money.
20:01That's what we like to hear.
20:03Here's your clue in iconic movie quotes.
20:06In a league of their own, coach Jimmy Dugan gives right fielder Evelyn Gardner this line
20:11regarding a taboo in our national pastime.
20:19What is There's No Crying in Baseball?
20:22That is correct for $1,000.
20:25You kind of suckered me there.
20:26I thought you didn't have it, but well done.
20:27You know what?
20:28One of the only quotes from that movie I knew was that, but it didn't feel like the answer
20:32to the question, so I said it anyway.
20:34I'm very bright.
20:34It was smart to guess.
20:35You now have $1,800.
20:37Okay.
20:37And we've come to a break.
20:38We'll be right back with more Celebrity Jeopardy!
20:40All-Stars after this.
20:47Jack Tone, you're on a bit of a roll at the moment in Double Jeopardy!
20:50Oh, very exciting.
20:51Very exciting.
20:52Now, you have some Celebrity Jeopardy! experience, but did you do anything different to prepare
20:56for All-Stars?
20:57You know, my coach, Brendan Sargent, who is a former Jeopardy! champion, the first time
21:02around, I was so nervous.
21:04I had no idea what I was getting into.
21:05He made me a dossier, the whole thing.
21:07This time, he was like, you know what you're doing.
21:10I was like, oh, okay.
21:11I mean, he re-sent the dossier, because you know I can't find an email to save my life.
21:15And so, I re-read it.
21:16I watched a bunch of shows.
21:18But I learned the most important thing.
21:20Which is?
21:21So, to not look dumb after someone buzzes in and they know it, you just feverishly press
21:29the button, as though they just beat you.
21:32Oh!
21:32Yeah.
21:32And there's also this one.
21:33You hear the right response, and then you're like, gosh.
21:35Oh, yeah.
21:36Yeah, that thing that I knew.
21:37That I knew.
21:38But if you do the, like, you make it like you're really trying, then you look so smart.
21:43It was just the buzzer.
21:43It was the timing.
21:44It was the timing.
21:45That's a very good tip.
21:46I'm going to remember that.
21:47Thank you so much.
21:48Steven, what about you?
21:49How have you been preparing?
21:50I actually prepared by watching your classic run, because it's streaming.
21:55And you were a young, callow guy who favored a lot of tan and yellows.
22:00It was a different time.
22:01I know.
22:01You've changed, though, over the years.
22:03You have.
22:04Did you get any tips from it, by the way?
22:06None whatsoever.
22:06No.
22:07I mean, that's 37 hours of your life you'll never get back, Steven.
22:10Mac, I was just reminded that we have hit the 35th anniversary, speaking of feeling old,
22:15of Home Alone.
22:16Congratulations.
22:17I know.
22:1835 years.
22:19I know.
22:19I made it.
22:20How is that possible?
22:21Right?
22:22It's my curse.
22:23I make people feel old.
22:24Yes.
22:25Just like, there you are.
22:26What?
22:27You have not aged a day.
22:28How are you marking the big anniversary?
22:30Well, last winter or whatever, we did a tour where it's a...
22:35We air Home Alone, and then we do a Q&A.
22:37It's like a fireside chat.
22:38I bring kids up on stage.
22:40I give them trivia and all that stuff, and just regale them with just general stories.
22:43And, you know, it's taken on kind of a new meaning now that I have kids.
22:46You know, like, we watch it lots of times.
22:48My oldest thinks he's...
22:49He thinks he's Kevin.
22:50He thinks he's Kevin.
22:51And, oh, watch the movie with them, and, you know, like, there's that scene where there's
22:55the fake dinner party, and, you know, there's the Michael Jordan cutout going around on the
23:00train tracks and all that stuff.
23:02And every time that thing comes on, he's just...
23:04He's like...
23:04He gets up on the couch.
23:05He goes...
23:06Oh, he knows the moods.
23:07And I kind of go like this.
23:08I go, all right.
23:12There it is.
23:13And I gave it to him.
23:15And you guys get to have it.
23:17But, look, if you're the dad of a kid who thinks he's the Home Alone kid, you have
23:21the chance to do the funniest thing ever, you could leave him at home.
23:25Yeah, that's true.
23:26Oh, my God.
23:27It would be a dream come true.
23:28I guess we can start sitting in traps yet, but it's a matter of time.
23:31Then you'll see if he really likes it.
23:32Yes, exactly.
23:33Jackie, you've been on a bit of a roll, as I said.
23:35In fact, you gave us the last correct response.
23:37You get to pick again.
23:38Okay, I will do iconic movie quotes for 800, Ken.
23:42Dirty Harry in Sudden Impact, staring down a bad guy with a gun.
23:46This five-word line of instruction.
23:49Mac.
23:50Do you feel lucky, punk?
23:52No, I'm sorry.
23:54Stephen or Jackie?
23:56Not in Dirty Harry, but in Sudden Impact.
23:58That's the one where he says, go ahead, make my day.
24:00Make my day.
24:02Oh, my God.
24:02All right.
24:03Oh.
24:06Back to you, Jackie.
24:07I will switch it up, because I don't know what the home category is.
24:11I will go home for $1,000, Ken.
24:13In 2025, New York City hosted the first full-scale recreation of the home of this young diarist
24:19and seven other Jews from 1942 to 1944.
24:23Jackie.
24:24Who is Anne Frank?
24:25Yes.
24:25I will go home for $800, Ken.
24:28Now open to the public, the Affleck House in suburban Detroit was designed by this Midwestern architect.
24:34Jackie.
24:34Who is Frank Lloyd Wright?
24:35Wright again.
24:36I will go home for $1,000, Ken.
24:38In 2022, this young couple with three kids under age 10 moved to Adelaide Cottage on
24:44the grounds of Windsor Castle.
24:46Mac.
24:47Uh, hmm.
24:48Oh, uh, who is, uh, Prince, uh, Prince William and, and, and, and, uh, and, uh, and, uh,
24:53and, uh, uh, uh, Kate Middleton.
24:54Yes, there we go.
24:56As long as you keep doing that noise, I couldn't rule against you.
24:59You kept making a noise.
25:00I know.
25:00Hey, hey, hey.
25:00Oh, hey, hey.
25:01All right.
25:02Do you have a trick?
25:02Yeah, that's how you do it.
25:03Try it out.
25:04Oh, my God.
25:04Yeah, it works.
25:05Uh, you know what, for Stephen, this, uh, I do like that tile.
25:09For what?
25:09200, please.
25:11Azulejo tiles, from Arabic for stone, nothing to do with blue, are popular in this country's
25:16Puebla state, as on the church here.
25:18Stephen?
25:19What's New Mexico?
25:20No.
25:21Mac.
25:22What is Mexico?
25:23Old Mexico, yes.
25:24Let's do home for 200, please.
25:26In 2021, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida moved into his official residence in this city, unused
25:32for almost a decade, and possibly haunted.
25:35Mac.
25:36What is Kyoto?
25:37No.
25:38Stephen or Jackie?
25:40Right country, but the PM lives in Tokyo now.
25:43Oh, haunted?
25:44Back to you, Mac.
25:45Uh, yes, uh, home for 400.
25:47Zoe Deschanel's Brentwood home with Jonathan Scott of this TV duo was a bit of a fixer-upper,
25:52but he handled that.
25:54Jackie.
25:54What is Property Brothers?
25:57Yes.
25:57Wow.
25:59Double-checking, I read the, the, okay, my iconic movie quotes for 400, Ken.
26:06Back to movie quotes.
26:07I got there.
26:07I got there.
26:08Bruce Banner shares with Cap, that's my secret.
26:11These three words.
26:13Mac.
26:13I'm always angry.
26:15What is I'm always angry?
26:16There we go.
26:17Uh, iconic movie quotes for 1,000, please.
26:20When Johnny Fontaine complains to The Godfather that it's too late,
26:24all the contracts have been signed, Don Corleone has this plan.
26:28Steven.
26:29What is I'll make him an offer, uh, he can't refuse?
26:34Sorry, no.
26:36Mac or Jackie?
26:38Oh, you were so close, Steven.
26:40Not I'll make, but I'm gonna make him an offer, he can't refuse.
26:45Back to you, Mac.
26:46Uh, let's do movie quotes for 200, please.
26:48Sunset Boulevard ends with faded film star Gloria Swanson saying,
26:51All right, Mr. DeMille, this line.
26:54Steven.
26:55What is I'm ready for my close-up?
26:57That's right.
26:58Phew.
26:59Uh, mountain high for 400, please.
27:02Mauna Kea is a dormant volcano found here, also known as the Big Island.
27:06Steven.
27:07What is Oahu?
27:07No.
27:08Ah.
27:09Mac.
27:09What is Kona Island?
27:10Also incorrect.
27:12Oh.
27:12Oh.
27:12Jackie's gonna try it.
27:14What is Maui?
27:15No, sorry.
27:15Hilarious.
27:16The Big Island of Hawaii is, in fact, called Hawaii.
27:19Oh, come on.
27:20Oh, Ken.
27:20Back to you, Steven.
27:21Semantics.
27:22Mountain high for six.
27:24In 1970, Swiss-made Toblerone chocolate bars began featuring this peak on their packaging.
27:30Steven.
27:31What's the Matterhorn?
27:32Right.
27:32Whee!
27:33Mountain high for eight.
27:35Not much of a hot shot in recent times.
27:37This volcano looms over the Bay of Naples.
27:40Mac.
27:41Uh, what is Mount Vesuvius?
27:43Correct.
27:43Uh, let's go with mountain high for a grand.
27:48Site of a famed observatory, this mountain wasn't named for WNBA MVP Asia, but rather
27:54for the man who summited it.
27:58What is Mount Wilson?
28:00Just one clue left in mountain high.
28:02Let's take a look.
28:03The tallest peak in the world, it has a name meaning goddess mother of the world in Tibetan.
28:08Steven.
28:09What is Everest?
28:09That is right.
28:10You're just $400 behind Jackie for second place.
28:14Pretty good lead for Macaulay Culkin.
28:15Let's find out what happens in Triple Jeopardy.
28:17So much more Jeopardy awaits you after this break.
28:20This is great.
28:21We're doing it.
28:21We're doing great.
28:22We're doing great.
28:23We're doing great.
28:25I never get to say this on regular Jeopardy because it would freak people out,
28:29but we are about to enter Triple Jeopardy.
28:31Here are the categories.
28:34It happened in the aughts is up first.
28:36Then we have One Nation Under Pods, followed by Slanguage, trying to get that gold.
28:43Plays and Playwrights.
28:45And finally, British Spelling is Stupid.
28:49Steven, you're up first.
28:51Let's try British Spelling is Stupid for $300, please.
28:55Her hits, Rolling in the Deep and Hello, are spelled correctly.
28:58Why'd she ruin everything with Rumor Has It?
29:01Steven.
29:02Who's Adele?
29:03Yes.
29:04British Spelling is Stupid for $600, please.
29:06London's Wallace Collection has suits of this, including breastplate, helmet, and gorget.
29:11Bet the U adds extra weight.
29:13Mac.
29:14What is armor?
29:15Suits of armor.
29:15Yes.
29:17Let's stick with the same category for $900, please.
29:20Our favorite in La La Land.
29:22This actress then did The Favourit, an annoyingly spelled English period drama.
29:27Mac.
29:28Who is Emma Stone?
29:29That's correct.
29:30British Spelling is Stupid for $1,200.
29:33Here's the leader of this British party living up to its name with a factory visit.
29:37Don't bring that U to our side of the pond, pal.
29:40Mac.
29:40What is the labor party?
29:41Yes.
29:42British Spelling is Stupid for $1,500, please.
29:45Why?
29:46Why?
29:46The London Evening Standard has used Flavor Flav as the spelling of a member of this rap
29:52group.
29:53Mac.
29:53Oh, uh, public enemy.
29:55What is public enemy?
29:56You got it.
29:56Yes.
29:57Uh, let's see.
29:57Try to get that gold for $300, please.
30:01This NFL team is named for the many folks who flocked west thirsty for gold in the mid-19th
30:06century.
30:07Mac.
30:07What are the San Francisco 49ers?
30:09Right.
30:10Uh, try to get that gold for $600, please.
30:12Part of this state's peninsula is called the Treasure Coast, since gold from sunken ships
30:16from the 18th century often washes ashore.
30:20Jackie.
30:20What is Florida?
30:21That's the state.
30:22Um, trying to get that gold for, um, can I change it?
30:26Sure.
30:27Okay, thanks.
30:28Um, it happened in the aughts for $900, Ken.
30:30Answer.
30:31Daily Double.
30:33You're getting on.
30:33Woo!
30:37That was a good change, Jackie.
30:39And a chance for you.
30:40You're betting from second place.
30:41Oh, boy.
30:42I'm gonna be, uh, moderate this time, and I'm just gonna go $1,000.
30:49All right.
30:50With $1,000 at stake, here's a clue.
30:51I'm happy if I just beat Steven and not Mac, you know?
30:54Wow.
30:54Just kidding.
30:55It's a joke.
30:56Here's your clue in It Happened in the Aughts.
30:59The International Astronomical Union demoted Pluto from planet status to this status,
31:05sparking outrage on Pluto's behalf.
31:09What is a star?
31:10Sorry, no.
31:12It's a dwarf planet now.
31:13And you beat Neil deGrasse Tyson?
31:15I know.
31:16You're gonna be hearing from Neil after that dwarf planet clue, I think.
31:20Back to you, Jackie.
31:21Um, it happened in the aughts for $1,200.
31:24September 2008 marked the debut of the world's largest and most powerful particle accelerator,
31:30the LHC, or large hadron, this.
31:33Steven.
31:34What is a collider?
31:35Yes.
31:36Plays and playwrights for $600.
31:38When To Kill a Mockingbird became a Broadway play,
31:41Jeff Daniels starred as this character, a father and a lawyer.
31:44Steven.
31:44Who is Atticus Finch?
31:45Yes.
31:46Uh, plays and playwrights for $900.
31:48Answer.
31:49Ooh, a chance for you.
31:51Yay!
31:55Max, running away a bit with this at the moment.
31:58Steven, what do you want to wager in plays and playwrights?
32:01Do I wager big and possibly humiliate myself?
32:04Yes.
32:05Let's do a true Daily Double.
32:07Oh, right.
32:07Daily Triple.
32:08This is your category.
32:10You're that smart.
32:10You got this.
32:11You'll have $9,800 if you're right, Steven.
32:13Here's the clue.
32:15Denzel Washington starred in a revival of this,
32:18Broadway's first play written by a black woman.
32:25What is a raisin in the sun?
32:27Hey, you got there.
32:28Very nice.
32:29Yay!
32:30And we had a close game.
32:32Thanks.
32:33Give it up.
32:34Where to now, Steven?
32:36Plays and playwrights for $300.
32:39Come on, give us your best Marlon Brando
32:42and call out the name of this character
32:43from a streetcar named Desire.
32:45You know, Stanley's wife.
32:46Steven?
32:47What is?
32:48Stella!
32:49That's right.
32:50Weird line reading.
32:51That was uncanny.
32:52Well done.
32:53Plays and playwrights for $12, please.
32:55The book The Gods of New York
32:56tells how Joseph Papp vowed to keep his play
32:58The Normal Heart running at the height of AIDS.
33:02Mac?
33:02What is Rent?
33:04No.
33:07The Normal Heart by Larry Kramer.
33:09Back to you, Steven.
33:11Plays and playwrights for $15, please.
33:13To lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune.
33:16To lose both looks like carelessness,
33:18says his the importance of being earnest.
33:20Steven?
33:21Who's Oscar Wilde?
33:22Yes.
33:23Let's try It Happened in the Aughts for $3.
33:26On New Year's Day in 2002,
33:29a dozen countries began circulating notes and coins
33:31in this currency.
33:32Steven?
33:33What are euros?
33:34Yeah.
33:35It happened in the aughts for $6.
33:37As people awakened in the new millennium
33:39to a world still turning,
33:41worries about this computer bug proved unfounded.
33:44Jackie?
33:44What is Y2K?
33:46You're right.
33:47It happened in the aughts 1500.
33:51In November 2005,
33:53Angela Merkel became the first woman
33:54to assume this political office,
33:56which she held for 16 years.
33:58Mac?
33:59What is Prime Minister?
34:00Or what is President?
34:01Sorry, what is President?
34:02Nope.
34:02I'm sorry.
34:04Steven or Jackie?
34:05In Germany, it's the Chancellor.
34:07Oh, jeez.
34:09I'm kicking myself now.
34:09I'm kicking myself.
34:10Back to you, Jackie.
34:11Oh, okay.
34:12I'll go Slangwage for $900.
34:15K-pop fans used this word
34:17as a dig at obsessive fans'
34:18unrealistic about their odds
34:20of having a relationship with their idols.
34:25If you think that, you're Delulu.
34:27Oh, I thought Delulu was from Drag Race.
34:30Okay.
34:33Slangwage for $1,200, Ken.
34:36I'm okay.
34:36Not just a bit of punctuation.
34:38It means a relationship between two people
34:40of the same gender in fan fiction.
34:46That's called Slash, like Slash Fiction.
34:49Jackie?
34:49Wow, changing.
34:50One Nation Under Pods for $900, Ken.
34:52In 2024, this podcaster
34:54and former Fear Factor host
34:56made headlines with a three-hour interview
34:58of then-candidate Donald Trump.
34:59Stephen?
35:01Who's Joe Rogan?
35:01Yeah.
35:03One Nation Under Pods for $6.
35:05In 2025, Michelle Obama
35:07and her brother Craig Robinson
35:08debuted the podcast I Am O,
35:11which is text speak for this.
35:13Jackie?
35:13What is In My Opinion?
35:14Right.
35:16Pods for $12, Ken.
35:18I got cool, right?
35:19Pods for $12?
35:20That's it.
35:21Alex Cooper calls herself
35:22the founding father of this podcast,
35:25known for celeb interviews
35:26and its modern twist on feminism.
35:28Jackie?
35:29What is Call Her Daddy?
35:30That's right.
35:32One Nation Under Pods for $1,500, Ken.
35:34Answer, a Daily Double.
35:36That's good.
35:37Well, what?
35:40Come on, you got playwrights.
35:42Let me get podcasts.
35:43Stephen's out in front.
35:44Jackie, how do you feel
35:45about One Nation Under Pods?
35:46I mean, I'll do $1,200.
35:52I'm being such a wuss.
35:53I'll do $1,200.
35:54All right.
35:54You'll have $6,400 if you're right.
35:56Here's your clue.
35:57One Nation Under Pods.
35:59Presenting stories based on a theme,
36:01this weekly show won the first ever Pulitzer
36:03awarded to a radio show or podcast.
36:10Uh, I don't know.
36:11What is Radiolab?
36:13Sorry, no.
36:14This American Life.
36:14Oh, of course.
36:15So close.
36:16But you don't lose much
36:17because of the small wager.
36:18Well done.
36:18Okay, great.
36:19I love podcasts.
36:20I will do One Nation Under Pods for $300, Ken.
36:23The debut episode of her podcast,
36:25Good Hang, featured an interview
36:27with erstwhile SNL buddy Tina Fey.
36:30Stephen.
36:30Who's Amy Poehler?
36:31Yeah.
36:32Uh, trying to get that gold for $9, please.
36:36The United States Bullion Depository
36:38at this site in Kentucky
36:39holds 147.3 million ounces of gold.
36:43Mac.
36:44What's Fort Knox?
36:45Right.
36:46Uh, gold for $1,200, please.
36:48The Golden Nugget Casino displays
36:50the Hand of Faith,
36:51the largest gold nugget found
36:53with this device.
36:58Found with a metal detector.
37:00Oh, I was doing my guess.
37:01My mind was reeling.
37:03Back to you, Mac.
37:04Back to gold for $1,500.
37:06This river in the Yukon
37:07lent its name to a gold rush
37:09and an ice cream bar
37:10that people would do
37:11embarrassing things for in ads.
37:13Stephen.
37:14What can you do with a...
37:16Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
37:18Time, I'm afraid.
37:20Jackie.
37:21What is a Klondike?
37:22Yeah, that's it.
37:23Yes, it's Klondike.
37:24What is Klondike, man?
37:25I wanted that one.
37:26I'd like to buy a vowel, Ken.
37:28Three clues left, Jackie.
37:30I'll do slanguage for 15 for fun.
37:33Oxford's word of the year for 2024
37:35was this term for the deterioration
37:37of our minds
37:38thanks to the onslaught
37:39of digital content.
37:44It's a terrible thing.
37:45What is brain rot?
37:46Oh, I'll tell you.
37:47I'll tell you what it is.
37:48I can only think of brain training.
37:49Two more slanguage clues, Jackie.
37:51Slanguage for 600.
37:53In art, it means the lighting
37:55is dim or dull.
37:56In slang, it means subtle,
37:58restrained, modest.
38:00There is a high opposite.
38:04You guys are low-key struggling
38:06at this category.
38:07Low-key.
38:07What is low-key?
38:08I'm middle-aged, man.
38:10Everybody feels too old
38:11for these words, right?
38:12No cap, we're struggling.
38:14Oh, no.
38:15Yeah.
38:15You get one more chance at this.
38:17Here's slanguage for 300.
38:19As a verb, it means
38:20to tighten the muscle.
38:21So by extension,
38:22in slang,
38:23it's come to mean
38:23to show off or brag.
38:25Stephen.
38:26What is flex?
38:27Stephen's hip, yes.
38:28Oh.
38:29Flex takes you
38:30to 11,900, Stephen.
38:32A narrow lead over Mac
38:33as we head into
38:34Final Jeopardy.
38:35All three of you
38:35very much involved in this.
38:37Here's your category.
38:39National Memorials.
38:40And we'll be back
38:41with The Clue
38:41right after this break.
38:43Stay tuned.
38:45Not my round.
38:46Not my round.
38:51Welcome back
38:52to Celebrity Jeopardy!
38:53All-Stars.
38:54We've arrived at Final Jeopardy!
38:55where the category tonight
38:56is National Memorials.
38:58Let's take a look
38:59at The Clue.
39:01When this U.S. landmark
39:02was first proposed,
39:04it was planned
39:05to depict Western figures
39:06like Sacagawea,
39:07Red Cloud,
39:08and Buffalo Bill.
39:0930 seconds,
39:10All-Stars.
39:10Good luck.
39:41We'll begin with Jackie Tone.
39:43Had $5,500
39:44at the end of Triple Jeopardy!
39:46What did you come up with, Jackie?
39:48I came up with,
39:49Hi, Joe!
39:50A nice message to Joe.
39:51Yeah, that's my boyfriend.
39:52If only I could give you
39:53and Joe credit.
39:54How much did you wager?
39:55Oh, you only risked a dollar
39:56to say hi to Joe.
39:57That's not so bad.
39:58Let's see how Mac and Stephen do.
40:00Mac, you were in second place
40:01with $8,800.
40:02You came up with...
40:04What is Mount Rushmore?
40:06That's correct.
40:07They wound up putting presidents
40:08on it instead of Western figures.
40:09And a thank you there
40:10to your partner, Brenda Song.
40:12How much did you wager, Mac?
40:14He went all in.
40:15$8,800.
40:16You double up to $17,600.
40:18A big lead.
40:19So Stephen Webber
40:20has to get this right.
40:21He's looking a little mournful.
40:22Did he think about Mount Rushmore?
40:25He's right.
40:26Did he wager enough?
40:28Let's do the math.
40:29$17,900.
40:32And by $300, Stephen,
40:34you will advance
40:35to the semifinals.
40:37Congratulations.
40:38Mac and Jackie,
40:39thank you for being here.
40:40A great game for both of you.
40:42$30,000 for each
40:43of your charities as well.
40:45You should feel great about that.
40:47Stephen, we'll see you
40:49in the semifinals.
40:51And we'll be back here
40:52on the Alex Trebek stage
40:53next time on Celebrity Jeopardy!
40:54All-Stars.
40:55Be with us then.
40:57Did you know
40:58the latest episodes of Jeopardy!
41:00are now streaming on Hulu.
41:30for more movie Helpers!
41:31A経験 Cant get to hear
41:31care There is
41:32no song on thevolley
41:32and elders yay!
41:32Hmph. Oh
41:33my God!
41:33Well... Oh my
41:33God!
41:34you yeah, yyyy.
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