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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Picture Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:13Here are today's contestants.
00:16A writer from Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, Barbara McIntyre.
00:21A Catholic priest from St. Paul, Minnesota, Father Paul Baker.
00:26And our returning champion, a bureaucrat and law student from Lawrenceville, New Jersey,
00:33Jamie Ding, whose 11-day cash winnings totaled $291,820.
00:42And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:49Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
00:50And welcome to Jeopardy! on this 62nd anniversary of the show's original debut way back in 1964.
00:58We've come to call this day every year, this March 30th, Jeopardy!
01:01And here to celebrate it with us today, we have an 11-game champion in Jamie Ding,
01:06who ended Friday's game with another runaway win, his seventh.
01:10Jamie is quickly approaching our leaderboard of legends, but here today to challenge him,
01:14Father Paul and Barbara celebrating with us as well.
01:17Good luck to all three of you.
01:18Your categories in the Jeopardy! round are these today.
01:22Check My Flow first.
01:25Then we have Literary Genres, Artists by Super Bowl Set List,
01:30Chew Must Remember This,
01:32then Popori,
01:35and finally, 1 through 10.
01:38Jamie, which category appeals?
01:39Literary Genres for 800.
01:41A Tale of a Tub is one of these,
01:44which Samuel Johnson defined as a work in which wickedness or folly is censured.
01:49Jamie.
01:50What, it's a satire?
01:51That's right.
01:52Chew Must Remember This for 600.
01:55Macrolopiota procera is a type of edible mushroom called this,
01:58like an umbrella used as a sunshade.
02:01Barbara.
02:01What is a parasol?
02:02Right.
02:04Potpourri 400.
02:05This numerical slang term for the police comes from a TV show set on Oahu.
02:10Father Paul.
02:12What is 5-0?
02:13From Hawaii 5-0, you got it.
02:15Potpourri 600.
02:17A broadcast alert to all police stations in the area is called an APB, short for this.
02:22Jamie.
02:23What is an all-points bulletin?
02:24Correct.
02:25Chew Must Remember This for a Thousand.
02:27Just one vowel different from a pasta is this word for white beans that Tuscans use in soups and elsewhere.
02:34Barbara.
02:34What is fagioli?
02:35No.
02:36Father Paul.
02:37What is fagioli?
02:38Also incorrect.
02:40Jamie, maybe not going to try it.
02:42Not cannelloni, but cannellini are the beans.
02:46Back to you, Jamie.
02:471 through 10 for 800.
02:48We likely owe this term for a chaotic situation to the showmanship of P.T. Barnum.
02:54Father Paul.
02:55What is a three-ring circus?
02:56Right.
02:571 through 10 for 600.
02:59In baseball, it's slang for a home run.
03:03Barbara.
03:03To four-bagger?
03:04That's right.
03:05Chew Must Remember This for 100.
03:08The potato dish called pomme go fret is also known as this, sounding like a breakfast item.
03:13Jamie.
03:14What are waffle fries?
03:15Correct.
03:16Literary genres for 600.
03:17Types of poetry include narrative, as well as this one, with a name that tells you the
03:22verse is meant to be sung.
03:24Father Paul.
03:25What is lyrical?
03:26Yes, lyric poetry.
03:28Genres for 1,000.
03:30Answer there is a daily double, Father Paul.
03:35An early blessing for you.
03:37If you have $800, you can wager up to 1,000.
03:39I will wager 1,000.
03:41All right.
03:41You'll have 1,800, if you're correct, in literary genres.
03:45This portmanteau word is used of the genre that blends passion with dragon riders and such,
03:50as in fourth wing.
03:56What is fan fiction?
03:58Sorry, no.
03:59That portmanteau is romanticy.
04:01You're not a big fan of romanticy, Father?
04:03No, I can't say I am.
04:04Well, you can look into it.
04:05You're down to negative 200, but select again.
04:07Potpourri for 1,000.
04:08A 1982 article in The Atlantic introduced this controversial theory that petty crimes would lead to larger ones.
04:16Jamie.
04:16What is broken windows?
04:18Yes.
04:18Super Bowl set list for 800.
04:20Only girl in the world, rude boy, and run this town.
04:25Father Paul.
04:26Who is Rihanna?
04:26Right.
04:27Very good.
04:28Super Bowl 600.
04:30Pump it, boom, boom, pow, and where is the love?
04:34Jamie.
04:35With the black eyed peas.
04:36Yes.
04:36Check my flow for 800.
04:382,900 miles long, this river, formerly the Zaire, flows into the Atlantic.
04:43Jamie.
04:44Where's the Congo?
04:45That's right.
04:45Super Bowl set list for 1,000.
04:47Her in 1996.
04:49You can't hurry, love.
04:51Reach out and touch somebody's hand and chain reaction.
04:55Jamie.
04:55Who's Tina Turner?
04:56No.
04:57Barbara.
04:58It was Diana Ross.
04:59It was Diana Ross that year.
05:00Well done.
05:01You move into second place.
05:02Jamie's in the lead, and we need to pause for this break.
05:04Jeopardy! will continue in just a moment.
05:07Barbara McIntyre from Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, is a writer, but also holds high elected office.
05:14You are the president for life of what organization, Barbara?
05:17I am president and founder of the Tuba Wives Club.
05:20The Tuba Wives Club.
05:21I made it up.
05:22Are you?
05:23So you're a self-appointed, not elected president.
05:25Yes, but no one wants to topple me.
05:28I would never topple a Tuba wife.
05:30Are you the Tuba player?
05:31Are you the spouse of a Tuba player?
05:33I am the spouse, and I'm an audience member, which is more important.
05:37I love that.
05:37Well, you're perfect for your office, then.
05:39Father Paul Baker is with us from St. Paul, Minnesota.
05:42He's a Catholic priest.
05:43You were in Rome last year, right?
05:45Tell me about that.
05:45Yes, I was leading a pilgrimage of students from our parish high school to the Eternal City,
05:51about 40-some students, along with some members of our school's faculty.
05:55We had a wonderful time there.
05:57Went to all the major papal basilicas, as well as many other churches and holy sites.
06:01Let me ask you, as a Midwesterner, now that His Holiness is also from the Midwest,
06:05do you have an in?
06:06Is it easier to get an audience next time?
06:08You know, it's funny.
06:08I went to a wedding once, a Lutheran wedding, where the pastor actually knew Pope Leo way back when.
06:15Back in the day.
06:15Yeah.
06:16I love that.
06:17Friends of friends of the Pope.
06:18Jamie Ding is our champion, a bureaucrat and law student from Lawrenceville, New Jersey.
06:23And I am just learning this now, Jamie.
06:25We apparently have met before the Alex Trebek stage, and I didn't know.
06:28It was 20 years ago at the NAQT High School Quiz Bowl Championships, and you were keeping score.
06:34And I had no idea that you would be there, so I wasn't very prepared, but you graciously signed a
06:41book that wasn't yours.
06:42It was The Masterpieces of World Literature.
06:44Oh, nice.
06:45And that's why the last time I was here, I brought your actual book and got your signature again.
06:50I signed it again.
06:51I didn't even know it was the second time.
06:53And I hope I was a good scorekeeper.
06:54Yes.
06:54I hope I was reliable.
06:56If I am keeping score correctly today, it is Barbara's turn to select.
06:59She must remember this, 800.
07:02You don't have to eat this Japanese rice cake with ice cream.
07:05In Japan, it's traditionally served to celebrate the new year.
07:08Jamie.
07:08What is mochi?
07:09Yes.
07:091 through 10 for 1,000.
07:11This idiom from Shakespeare means all at once, or with a single quick effort, like a hawk diving for prey.
07:18Father Paul.
07:19What is one fell swoop?
07:20You got it for 1,000.
07:22Check my flow for 1,000.
07:24Bingen Bon.
07:25Those two cities will be on your tour as you pass along the middle section of this river.
07:30Father Paul.
07:31What is the Rhine?
07:32They're both on the Rhine.
07:33Flow for 200.
07:35This river, highlighted here, rises 12,000 feet above sea level in the Rockies.
07:39Jamie.
07:40It's the Rio Grande.
07:41It is.
07:42Super Bowl set list for 400.
07:44Suit and tie, filthy, and sexy back.
07:48Jamie.
07:48It was Timberlake.
07:49That's it.
07:50Check my flow for 600.
07:52Entering Idaho through the Palisades Reservoir, it winds its way across the state up into Washington,
07:57south of Pasco.
07:58Jamie.
07:59What is the snake?
08:00It is.
08:01Potpourri for 800.
08:02During a pursuit, the cop car taps the fleeing vehicle near the rear wheel, causing it to
08:08spin in this three-letter maneuver.
08:13That's a pit maneuver, pursuit intervention technique.
08:16Jamie.
08:171 through 10 for 400.
08:19This term can refer generically to all the navigable waters of the Earth, or to a lucky number
08:24of specific ones.
08:25Barbara.
08:26What are the seven Cs?
08:27You got it.
08:281 through 10 for 200.
08:29It's among the gnarliest of surfing maneuvers, executed from the very front of a perfectly
08:34balanced longboard.
08:36Jamie.
08:36What is hang 10?
08:37Right.
08:38Two must remember this for 200.
08:40A hollow thump is a good indicator of the ripeness of this fruit, whether it's the picnic
08:45or icebox type.
08:46Barbara.
08:47What is watermelon?
08:48That's the fruit.
08:49Literary genres, 400.
08:50A Bildungsroman is a work about the education and formative years of the protagonist, like
08:56this novel by J.D. Salinger.
08:58Jamie.
08:58Was the catcher in the rye.
08:59Yes.
09:00Check my flow for 400.
09:02This 1,560 mile long river rises on the Indian side of the border with Tibet.
09:07Father Paul.
09:08What is the Ganges?
09:09You are correct.
09:11Literary 200.
09:12England is a dictatorship in Children of Men, a book of this sci-fi subgenre whose name
09:18comes from the Greek for bad.
09:20Barbara.
09:20What is dystopian?
09:22Correct.
09:22Potpourri 200.
09:24Keeping in rhythm with the streets, a type of police officer who patrols on foot is said
09:28to be walking the this.
09:30Jamie.
09:30What's the beat?
09:31Yes.
09:31Final clue.
09:332001.
09:34Jaded.
09:35I don't want to miss a thing.
09:36Jamie.
09:37Or Aerosmith.
09:38That's correct.
09:38You're in the lead with 6200.
09:40Father Paul and Barbara have some catching up to do, but that's what Double Jeopardy is
09:43for.
09:46Barbara will be selecting first in Double Jeopardy.
09:49Let's show her the options.
09:51We have one alone of BC in the first slot, followed by neologisms, some TV tough guys and
09:59gals, followed by geez louise, secrets of the bees, and finally, all preachers great
10:07and small.
10:08Barbara, what'll it be?
10:10Tough Guys, 1200.
10:11A katana used by Danai Gurira, as this Walking Dead character is in the National Museum of
10:17American History.
10:20And she played Michonne.
10:22Barbara?
10:23Tough Guys, 1600.
10:25On How to Get Away with Murder, some killers do, because this Viola Davis character is for
10:30the defense.
10:33Nope.
10:34The character's name, Annalise Keating.
10:37Barbara?
10:38All right.
10:39Geez Louise, 1200.
10:40Over to geez louise.
10:41The beautiful Lake Louise is in this prairie province.
10:45Father Paul?
10:46What is Alberta?
10:47Yes, it is.
10:48Louise, 1600.
10:50Her bobbed hair and her portrayal of the sensual side of the flapper in films like Pandora's
10:55Box made her a film icon.
10:57Barbara?
10:58Who's Louise Brooks?
10:59That's correct.
11:00But geez, Louise, 2000.
11:02Is there an EGOT equivalent for writers?
11:04This poet won a National Book Award, Bollingen Prize, Pulitzer, and in 2020, the Nobel.
11:11Jamie?
11:11It was Gluck.
11:12It is Louise Gluck.
11:13All preachers great and small for 1600.
11:16This Puritan minister raised some eyebrows with The Wonders of the Invisible World, his 1693
11:21book about Salem's witch trials.
11:24Father Paul?
11:25Who is Mather?
11:25Can you be more specific?
11:27Who is Cotton Mather?
11:28It was Cotton Mather.
11:29B.C. 2000.
11:31Around 1000 B.C.
11:33These people, no kin to Conan the Barbarian, despite the name, were among the first to occupy
11:38Crimea.
11:42They were Sumerians, like Conan the Sumerian.
11:44Father Paul?
11:46B.C. 1200.
11:48Tel Lachish was the most important city after Jerusalem in this biblical kingdom, south of
11:53Israel.
11:54Father Paul?
11:55What is Judah?
11:55Yes.
11:56B.C. 1600.
11:59A royal tomb from the early B.C. era of this three-letter dynasty yielded the skeleton of
12:03a giant panda.
12:05Jamie?
12:05What was the Han?
12:06That's right.
12:07Do you have to eat tough guys and gals for 2000?
12:09In agony from arthritis, Clay Morrow, leader of this tidal crew, has his hands strapped
12:15to his bike.
12:16Jamie?
12:17What are Sons of Anarchy?
12:18Good for 2000.
12:19Neologisms for 1200.
12:20This colorful term is used for making a product or service appear more environmentally friendly
12:26than it really is.
12:27Father Paul?
12:28What is greenwashing?
12:29Right.
12:31Neologism 16?
12:32It's no longer just a swimming stroke.
12:35It's a verb meaning to improvise a rap.
12:38Jamie?
12:38What is freestyle?
12:39You got it.
12:40Secrets of the Bees for 2000.
12:42Honeybees can tell one another where food is, how far, and directions to take through
12:47a shaking dance known by this six-letter word.
12:51Jamie?
12:51What is waggle?
12:52It is the waggle dance.
12:54Preachers for 1200.
12:55The answer there is a daily double.
13:02You got a preacher clue away from Father Paul.
13:04What do you want to wager?
13:062600.
13:06All right, going for 18,000 then, with a correct response, here's your clue.
13:10All preachers, great and small.
13:12Once known as the most famous man in America, this abolitionist preacher also had a famous
13:18abolitionist sister.
13:21It was Beecher.
13:22That is correct.
13:23Harriet Beecher Stowe's brother.
13:26So let's begin.
13:28Jeez Louise for 800.
13:30Robert Edwards won a Nobel Prize for developing this, which resulted in the birth of Louise
13:35Browne on July 25th, 1978.
13:38Jamie?
13:39What is IVF?
13:39Yes, in vitro fertilization.
13:41Bees for 1600.
13:43An Asian honeybee can pile on and cook their foes with heat, like this type of Asian wasp
13:48that invaded the U.S. in the past decade.
13:51Jamie?
13:52What is the giant Japanese wasp?
13:54No.
13:57Barbara?
13:57The murder hornets?
13:58Murder hornets?
14:00Yes, yes, that's correct.
14:02TV, tough guys, 800.
14:04You've got to be tough to be a double agent, like Jennifer Garner as Sidney Bristow on this
14:09series.
14:10Jamie?
14:10What is alias?
14:11That is the series.
14:12What a load of BC for 800.
14:14For more than 1,000 years, Çatalhöyük, a city with houses but no streets, thrived in
14:20the Anatolia region of what's now this country.
14:23Father Paul?
14:23What is turkey?
14:24Right.
14:26Bees, 1200.
14:27These male honeybees are gifted with eyes twice the size of their sisters.
14:32They use them to spot queens from other hives to mate with.
14:35Jamie?
14:36For drones?
14:37Yes.
14:37All preachers for 2,000.
14:39This founder of Saddleback Megachurch retired in 2022, but not before making some waves by
14:45ordaining three women as pastors.
14:47Father Paul?
14:48Who is Warren?
14:49Rick Warren for 2,000, yes.
14:51Neologism's 2,000.
14:52A very early example of this is an 1853 image of Sally and Mrs. Reed with not just Sally
14:59and Mrs. Reed in it.
15:01Jamie?
15:01That's a photobomb.
15:02It's a very early photobomb.
15:04Jeez Louise for 400.
15:06Before taking the throne, she had a beloved governess named Louisa Leitsen born in Germany,
15:11like the queen's future husband.
15:13Barbara?
15:13It was Victoria?
15:14Right.
15:15Bees, 800.
15:16Filmed for the first time, a bee uses a droplet of this sugar-rich liquid to stop pollen
15:21from blowing off during her flight home.
15:24Jamie?
15:24It was nectar.
15:25Yes.
15:26Preacher's for 800.
15:27When this evangelist retired in 2005, his son Franklin became the leader of the ministry.
15:33Jamie?
15:34It was Billy Graham.
15:34Yep.
15:35Neologism's for 800.
15:36The answer there is the final Daily Double.
15:39Thank you!
15:41You can protect your lead a bit, Jamie.
15:43What do you want to wager?
15:45$500.
15:46Just $500 at stake in neologisms.
15:49Here's the clue.
15:50In Rebecca Solnit's essay that helped launch this word, a guy informs Rebecca about an important
15:56book that he doesn't realize she wrote.
16:00What is mansplaining?
16:02That is prime mansplaining right there, yes.
16:04You add $500.
16:06Five more clues, Jamie.
16:08BC for 400.
16:09An iteration of Troy was founded in the Greek V's, a term long used of the supposedly ignorant
16:15and backward early medieval time.
16:18Barbara?
16:18Dark Ages?
16:19Greek Dark Ages.
16:20You got it.
16:20Neologians, 400.
16:22One study says 11 words is the ideal length of this kind of headline to get you to hit a
16:26link.
16:27Try starting with, you won't believe.
16:29Jamie?
16:30What is clickbait?
16:31It is.
16:32Secrets of the Bees for 400.
16:34The two-colored mason bee has been compared to a witch as it gathers twigs in a way that
16:38resembles this conveyance.
16:41Jamie?
16:41What is a broomstick?
16:42That's right.
16:43And if you want more bee facts, Secrets of the Bees is premiering tomorrow on Nat Geo and
16:46Disney+.
16:47Jamie, select.
16:49Preacher is for 400.
16:50To the people around the Jordan River, this honey-eating biblical preacher was a voice
16:54crying in the wilderness.
16:56Jamie?
16:56It was John the Baptist.
16:57That's right.
16:58One more clue in TV Tough Guys and Gals.
17:01You can tell Lucy Lawless's Xena is Tough just from this, the show's subtitle.
17:06Jamie?
17:07It was Warrior Princess.
17:07She was a warrior princess.
17:09You finished the day with $24,900, but Final Jeopardy is still to be played, folks.
17:13Your category will be fictional characters, and the clue will be coming up right after this
17:19short call.
17:21For Final Jeopardy today, we turn to this category, fictional characters.
17:25Let's reveal the clue.
17:28Literary theories say the first name of this 1847 title character is meant to evoke plainness,
17:34while the last name hints at a bequest.
17:3730 seconds, players.
17:38Good luck.
17:45Good luck.
18:08We'll begin with Barbara McIntyre,
18:10who finished Double Jeopardy with $6,000.
18:13Her response in final was...
18:16Will. It is not Will, I'm afraid.
18:19What did you wager?
18:20$5,730. That leaves you with $270.
18:24Father Paul Baker in the middle had $11,000.
18:27Another great total.
18:28What did you come up with in final?
18:29David Copperfield.
18:31It's a pretty good guess, but it's not David Copperfield.
18:33What did you wager, Father Paul?
18:35You'll lose $1,001, dropping you down to $9,999.
18:40Jamie Ding ran away with this thing again.
18:41$24,900.
18:43Will he be adding to it?
18:44He wrote down, Kansas Testament.
18:48No.
18:49The literary title character, whose name means plainness and a bequest, Jane Eyre.
18:55She turns out to be an heir when she inherits.
18:57What did you wager, Jamie?
18:59You will just lose $2,280, leaving you with $22,620.
19:03And now a 12-day total of $314,440.
19:09Very impressive.
19:11Thank you for being with us on Jeopardy.
19:13You know, you can take the Jeopardy giveaway test today for a chance to win $6,200.
19:18And who knows, you could make it right here to the Alex Correct stage.
19:21We'll see you tomorrow.
19:23We'll see you tomorrow.
19:24We'll see you tomorrow.
19:25We'll see you tomorrow.
19:26We'll see you tomorrow.
19:27We'll see you tomorrow.
19:29We'll see you tomorrow.
19:29We'll see you tomorrow.
19:32We'll see you tomorrow.
19:32We'll see you tomorrow.
19:34We'll see you tomorrow.
19:35We'll see you tomorrow.
19:36We'll see you tomorrow.
19:36We'll see you tomorrow.
19:37We'll see you tomorrow.
19:38We'll see you tomorrow.
19:39We'll see you tomorrow.
19:39We'll see you tomorrow.
19:40We'll see you tomorrow.
19:41We'll see you tomorrow.
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