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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:14In producing today's contestants, a writer from Knoxville, Tennessee, Zach Williams.
00:22An English teacher from Williamsburg, Virginia, Kathy Fitzgerald.
00:26And our returning champion, a Bureau of Bratton law student from Lawrenceville, New Jersey, Jamie Ding, whose 20-day cash
00:36winnings totaled $572,600.
00:43And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:50Thank you to the great Johnny Gilbert, and welcome to Jeopardy!
00:53Yesterday marked win number 20 for our super champion, Jamie Ding, a milestone he now shares with Jeopardy! legend, Julia
01:00Collins, and one that only six other players in the show's history have ever surpassed.
01:05His new total of $572,600 also puts him ahead of Mateo Roach.
01:10Jamie is now sixth all-time on our leaderboard of legends for highest money winnings in regular season play.
01:15Today, he faces Kathy and Zach.
01:17Good luck to all three of you.
01:18Time for the Jeopardy! round, where today the categories are from left to right, people from places, then blue per
01:26reel, we have case in point, in their live aid set, cast your mind back to the 80s, then one
01:34piece, and oronyms.
01:37Oronyms are like homophones, but at least one half will be a phrase, not just a single word.
01:42Jamie?
01:43Case in point for 800.
01:45Craig V. Boren said a state could not set different minimum ages for men and women to buy the 3
01:50.2% type of this.
01:52Jamie?
01:53What is beer?
01:53Yes.
01:54People from places for 1,000.
01:56If you live in Jupiter, Florida, you may be a Jupiterian.
02:00If you live on Jupiter, per writers including Arthur C. Clark, you're this.
02:05Jamie?
02:05What is a Jovian?
02:06Yes.
02:07One piece for 800.
02:09Answer there is a daily double, Jamie.
02:13And you have 1,800 to bet.
02:151,800.
02:16All right.
02:17You'll try to double it in the category One Piece.
02:19Here's your clue.
02:20On 60s TV, Diana Rigg and Eartha Kitt helped popularize this off-leather onesie.
02:30What's a cat suit?
02:31It is a cat suit.
02:32Very nice.
02:33That takes you to 3,600.
02:36Case in point for 1,000.
02:37The case of this man v. Wainwright overturned a 1942 decision and ruled that every defendant has a right to
02:44counsel.
02:45Jamie?
02:45It was Gideon.
02:46You got it.
02:47People from places for 800.
02:49An ancient Phoenician lived in the region that's now Lebanon.
02:52A modern Phoenician lives in the capital city of this state.
02:56Jamie?
02:56It was Arizona.
02:57Yeah, Phoenix, Arizona.
02:58Case in point for 600.
02:59A 1995 decision called U.S. These Tenure Restrictions Incorporated v. Thornton held that states can't impose them on members
03:07of Congress.
03:08Jamie?
03:09What are term limits?
03:10No term limits allowed.
03:11Live Aid set for 1,000.
03:13In his set, love somebody.
03:15Shockingly not in his set, Jessie's Girl.
03:18Jamie?
03:19Who was Springfield.
03:20Very good.
03:20Rick Springfield.
03:21Or an imps for 800.
03:22A guard at the Tower of London.
03:24Or one who nourishes hive insects.
03:27Zach?
03:28What is Beefeater Beekeeper?
03:30No.
03:33Jamie or Kathy?
03:35You're almost right, Zach.
03:36These are like homophones, so they sound the same.
03:38Beefeater and Beefeeder are the two halves.
03:41Back to Jamie.
03:43Live Aid set for 600.
03:44This band suited up Iron Man.
03:47Zach?
03:47What is Black Sabbath?
03:48Yeah.
03:49800, Live Aid.
03:50You might think I'm crazy, but all I want is the name of this group.
03:54Zach?
03:55Who are the cars?
03:56Those are the cars.
03:57400, Live Aid.
03:58This band was back on the chain gang.
04:01Zach?
04:02Who are the pretenders?
04:03Yes.
04:04Blue Perea 1000.
04:06A blue cheese made from sheep's milk.
04:08It was featured in a Bob's Burger special called the Plymouth This.
04:12Jamie?
04:12What is Roquefort?
04:13Plymouth Rockford, yes.
04:15People from places for six.
04:17This term refers to a resident of Greece's largest island.
04:20It's not spelled like an insult, but it sure sounds like one.
04:23Jamie?
04:24What is a cretin?
04:25Correct.
04:25Or an IMS for a thousand.
04:27You have entered my field of vision, or an often busy section of a hospital.
04:32Jamie?
04:32What are ICU and ICU?
04:34Yes, ICU.
04:36One piece for 600.
04:37The Orlan space suit used for EVAs by these Russian spacemen and women is a semi-rigid
04:43one-piece suit.
04:44Jamie?
04:45Who are cosmonauts.
04:46Worn by cosmonauts.
04:47Yes, you're over $10,000 as we come to our first break.
04:49But don't worry, Kathy and Zach, a lot of Jeopardy left to play.
04:52We'll be back after this.
04:57Zach Williams is a writer from Knoxville, Tennessee.
05:00And, Zach, you appear to be enjoying that Live Aid category.
05:02Are you a music fan?
05:03Yes, I collect records, particularly obscure, 60s psychedelic bands with inscrutably long
05:09names.
05:09Oh, I love this.
05:10The 13th Four Elevators or The Lollipop Shop.
05:13What would you recommend to me?
05:14Pick me out a record.
05:15I would say either Easter Everywhere by the 13th Four Elevators or Forever Changes by Love.
05:19Oh, okay, that's a great record.
05:21I have Forever Changes by Love.
05:22So I'm halfway there.
05:23Okay, yes.
05:23I'll check out the Easter...
05:25Easter Everywhere.
05:26Rocky Erickson.
05:27I love it.
05:28Kathy Fitzgerald is an English teacher from Williamsburg, Virginia.
05:31Yes.
05:31But before you were a teacher, what did you do, Kathy?
05:33Um, I served for 20 years in the U.S. Navy.
05:36Ah.
05:36Back during the big Cold War.
05:39We won that one, by the way.
05:40Congratulations.
05:41You're 1-0.
05:42Yes.
05:43How is your second career going?
05:44Are you going to be 2-0 at the end of that?
05:45I hope so.
05:46I've survived it so far.
05:47You beat the Soviets.
05:48You beat the high schoolers.
05:49I did.
05:49Yeah, I win.
05:50I win.
05:51And we'll see what happens today on Jeopardy.
05:53You could be 3-0.
05:53Thanks.
05:54Our returning champion is Jamie Ding.
05:56Jamie, after the show yesterday, you told me you were a casual Jeopardy viewer over the
06:00years.
06:00What's your first memory of Jeopardy?
06:02It was actually the video game with Alex Grubach, of course.
06:06What really messed me up later on was, I mean, he didn't change in the video game.
06:11He always had his mustache.
06:12So then later on, after he shaved it, I didn't realize that he had shaved.
06:15So when I met him at the Geography Bee and he came into the room,
06:19I was like, well, who's this guy?
06:22But then the other Geography Bee contestants, I guess, were more up on their Jeopardy viewing.
06:27The way that they reacted let me realize, okay, this is Alex Grubach.
06:31They filled you in.
06:31This guy looks nothing like he does on the NES.
06:34That's great.
06:34Jamie, you have control of the board.
06:36Make a selection.
06:37One piece for a thousand.
06:39The name of this one piece bathing suit is a variation on the name of a bathing suit
06:43that caused a stir in the 50s.
06:45Zach.
06:46What is the burkini?
06:47No.
06:48Jamie.
06:49What is the monokini?
06:50That's it.
06:51Oranyms for 600.
06:52This oranym is found in a 1920s novelty song that's still quoted
06:56when kids or grown-ups want a frozen treat.
06:59Jamie.
07:00What are ice cream and ice cream?
07:03That's right.
07:03Ice cream, ice cream.
07:06Blue for real for 800.
07:07Highlighted here, this segment of the Appalachians includes the nearly 6,000-foot Mount Rogers in
07:13Virginia.
07:14Kathy.
07:14What are the Blue Ridge Mountains?
07:16Well done.
07:16I'll take in their Live Aid set for 200.
07:18It would be so nice if you knew she opened her set with Holiday.
07:23Kathy.
07:23Who is Madonna?
07:24That's right.
07:25I'll have one piece for 400.
07:28You've got your choice between a Snuggie and this competitor that its creator made from
07:32a sleeping bag in his drafty dorm room.
07:35Zach.
07:35What is it, a slanket?
07:36A slanket, yeah.
07:38Blue for real, 600.
07:39The call after Joe Carter's home run won the 1993 World Series for this team.
07:43Touch them all, Joe.
07:44You'll never hit a bigger home run in your life.
07:47Zach.
07:47Who are the Blue Jays?
07:48That's them.
07:50400 Blue for real.
07:51Bred since the 19th century, a Kerry Blue this is actually born black, but starts living
07:57up to its name around 18 months.
07:59Zach.
08:00What is it, a terrier?
08:00It is.
08:01People from places, 400.
08:03If you've studied, you'll know an Oxonian is from this city.
08:07Jamie.
08:07What is Oxford?
08:08Good.
08:09One piece for 200.
08:10The man who invented the flying trapeze act wore this tight-fitting one piece that would
08:15later bear his last name.
08:16Jamie.
08:17Who is Leotard.
08:18Right, you are.
08:19Case in point for 400.
08:211905's Jacobson v. Massachusetts said the city of Cambridge was within its rights to require
08:26these during a smallpox outbreak.
08:28Jamie.
08:29What are vaccinations?
08:30That's correct.
08:31People from places for 200.
08:33Nobody quite seems to know why, but residents of Indiana are proudly known as these.
08:37Kathy.
08:38What are Hoosiers?
08:40You got it.
08:41Case in point for 200.
08:43Loving prevailed in the appropriately titled Loving v. Virginia, which struck down laws
08:47against interracial this.
08:49Jamie.
08:50What is marriage?
08:51Right.
08:51Ordinams 400.
08:53A much debated ethical issue.
08:55Or young people in the Far East.
09:00They are both youth in Asia.
09:04Jamie, back to you.
09:07Blooper reel for 200.
09:09It can reach 150 tons, feeds on krill, and is also known as a sulfur bottom.
09:14Zach.
09:15What is a blue whale?
09:15That's correct.
09:16And great news, there's one more oronym.
09:18A large bird of prey that's not feeling well.
09:21Or forbidden by law.
09:23Kathy.
09:26Oh, a sick eagle and an illegal.
09:29Sorry, no.
09:30Oh, I'm sorry.
09:31What is illegal?
09:32Illegal for both of them.
09:33That's correct.
09:34Taking Zach to 1,800, second place.
09:36Kathy, you will select first when we return.
09:38Double Jeopardy's up next.
09:39Don't go anywhere.
09:46We have some good news for Zach at the beginning of the round.
09:49Our riders have determined that a burkini is a one-piece swimsuit that qualifies for that clue.
09:53He's going to get $2,000 back, taking him to 3,800.
09:56Good news for Kathy is she'll be selecting first from these categories in Double Jeopardy.
10:00First, we're going back two centuries to 1826.
10:03Then we have a medical bill, followed by Americana, cover girls, unk status, and finally, seven-letter words.
10:15Kathy, what do you like?
10:16I'll take Americana for 1,200.
10:19During World War I, who better to teach soldiers how to escape sinking ships, ropes, chains, and handcuffs than this
10:25escape artist?
10:26Zach.
10:27Who's Houdini?
10:28That's right.
10:291,600, Americana.
10:31The son of Italian immigrant parents, he touched down as mayor of New York City in 1934, departing the office
10:36in 1945.
10:38Jamie.
10:39Who was La Guardia?
10:41La Guardia is right.
10:421826 for 2,000.
10:44Construction of this artificial waterway connecting Ottawa to Lake Ontario begins in Canada.
10:49Zach.
10:50What's the St. Lawrence Seaway?
10:52No.
10:53Jamie.
10:54Oh, what's the Welland Canal?
10:56That's also incorrect.
10:58Kathy, care to try it?
10:59That's the Rideau Canal.
11:01Back to you, Jamie.
11:03Seven-letter words for 1,200.
11:05X marks the last letter of this ancient Macedonian tactical formation.
11:09Zach.
11:10What's the phalanx?
11:11Yes.
11:12Seven-letter words, 2,000.
11:13From French, it's a portable heater on a stand with a pan for holding hot coals.
11:21What is a brazier?
11:22Zach?
11:23Seven-letter words, 1,600.
11:25It can refer to a person assisting a priest celebrating Mass or to a devoted follower.
11:33What is an acolyte?
11:34Zach?
11:35Medical bill, 2,000.
11:37William Withering used extracts of this plant to treat edema, which led to heart drugs using
11:42its active compound, digoxin.
11:44Jamie?
11:45What is foxglove?
11:46You add 2,000.
11:47Covergirls for 1,600.
11:49In a Henry James work, we learn from Randolph that this sister is an American girl, and her
11:54first name is actually Annie.
11:56Zach?
11:57Who is Daisy Miller?
11:58Well done.
11:59Covergirls, 2,000.
12:00Sarah Crewe, Frances Hodgson Burnett's book about a girl whose fortunes rise and fall,
12:05was expanded under this title.
12:07Jamie?
12:07What is a little princess?
12:09That's correct.
12:09Unk's status for 1,200.
12:11James Avery and Adrian Holmes have played this character on TV, a lawyer who is passionate
12:16about civil rights and role model for fresh will.
12:19Zach?
12:20Who is Uncle Phil?
12:21That is Uncle Phil Banks.
12:22Unk's status, 2,000.
12:24Charles Adams described him as absolutely hairless, with dead white skin and eyes circled unhealthily
12:29in black.
12:31Jamie?
12:31Who is Uncle Fester?
12:32That's right, from the Adams family.
12:341826 for 1,600.
12:35The answer there is a daily double for you, Jamie.
12:40Zach's making a bit of a run.
12:42How do you want to handle the first daily double of the round?
12:44Uh, 4,400.
12:46All right.
12:46With 4,400 at stake, here's your clue in 1826.
12:50This newspaper that shares its name with an opera character begins publishing in Paris
12:55as a literary journal.
12:58What is Figaro?
13:00Figaro is right, taking you to 23,000.
13:07Americana for 2,000.
13:08The answer there.
13:09Back to back, it's the other daily double.
13:14You did a good job finding them.
13:15What do you want to do with this one, Jamie?
13:17Uh, 5,000.
13:18All right.
13:19For $28,000, with a correct response, here's your clue in Americana.
13:23This city, the seat of Montana's Cascade County, was named for some watery obstacles encountered
13:29by Western explorers.
13:36What is Big Rapids?
13:38No, that's not correct.
13:39Great Falls is the city in Montana, so you drop back to 18,000.
13:43Make a selection.
13:44Medical bill for 12.
13:45In 1772, William Heberden coined this Latin term we still use to describe chest pain caused
13:52by diseased coronary arteries.
13:54Jamie.
13:54Or his angina.
13:55Right.
13:55Cover girls for eight.
13:57This orphan hits Green Gables, gets a new friend drunk, works incredibly hard to attend college,
14:02but turns down a scholarship.
14:04Zach.
14:04Who's Ane?
14:05And Shirley, right.
14:06Unkstat is 1,600.
14:07This basketball film starring Kyrie Irving got made thanks to that typical soft drink commercial
14:12to film pipeline.
14:14Jamie.
14:15Or his Uncle Drew.
14:16Very good.
14:17Seven letter words for 800.
14:18Quilted and rope are types of this backyard swinger.
14:22Kathy.
14:23Uh, what is a porch swing?
14:25No.
14:26Jamie.
14:26Or his hammock.
14:27That's correct.
14:28Cover girls for 12.
14:30Roald Dahl characterizes the parents of this title girl as gormless and unaware of her special
14:35abilities.
14:36Jamie.
14:36Who is Matilda?
14:37Yes.
14:38Medical bill for 16.
14:40William Osler brought teaching beyond the lecture and wanted the epitaph,
14:44I taught medical students in these large rooms in a hospital.
14:48Jamie.
14:49What are operating theaters?
14:50No.
14:51Kathy or Zach?
14:54She taught them in the wards.
14:56Hospital wards.
14:57Jamie.
14:591826 for 800.
15:00Bernardino Rivadavia becomes the first president of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata,
15:05still an official name of this country.
15:08Jamie.
15:08It is Argentina.
15:10Correct.
15:11Americana for four.
15:12Having to care for sick and frightened passengers, Boeing's first stewardesses,
15:17including Ellen Church, also had this occupation.
15:20Zach.
15:20Order nurses?
15:21Yeah, they were RNs.
15:231826, 1200.
15:25Cayetano Ripoll, the last known victim of this tribunal's program of persecution, is executed
15:30in Valencia.
15:31Jamie.
15:31What was the Spanish Inquisition?
15:33Right.
15:34Unc's status for eight.
15:35On DuckTales, he liked to dive into a giant pool of gold coins.
15:39Zach.
15:40Who's Scrooge McDuck?
15:41That's right, Uncle Scrooge.
15:43Americana 800.
15:44In 1783, the Continental Congress met in this university's Nassau Hall, which briefly served
15:50as the national capital.
15:51Zach.
15:52What is U-Pan?
15:54No.
15:55Jamie.
15:55What is Princeton?
15:56Yes, your alma mater.
15:58UNC status for four.
15:59Richard Griffiths played Uncle Monty in Withnil and I, and this Unc in the Harry Potter films.
16:04Jamie.
16:05Who's Uncle Vernon?
16:06That's right.
16:07Medical bill for eight.
16:08William Murphy shared a Nobel for medicine for finding a liver diet raised red blood cell
16:13counts to treat pernicious this.
16:15Jamie.
16:16What is anemia?
16:17That's right, again.
16:17Cover girls for four.
16:19Recovering from an accident in the hospital, Ludwig Bemelmans met a girl recovering from
16:23an appendectomy.
16:24Voila, this character.
16:26Jamie.
16:27Who's Madeline?
16:28It is Madeline.
16:28Seven letter words for four.
16:30A specialized officer with an embassy may be a liaison, or this.
16:34You can be a military one, or perhaps an agricultural one.
16:38Jamie.
16:38What is an attache?
16:39Correct.
16:40Medical bill for four.
16:41In 1884, William Welch developed one of the USA's first university departments of pathology
16:46at this then-new medical school in Baltimore.
16:49Jamie.
16:50What is Johns Hopkins?
16:51That's right.
16:52And one more time, back to 1826.
16:54In Baltimore, on July 20th of the Jubilee year, 20,000 honored Charles Carroll.
16:59As of 16 days earlier, the last living man to do this.
17:03Jamie.
17:04Or to sign the Declaration of Independence.
17:06Correct.
17:06He outlived Adams and Jefferson.
17:08You finished today with 26,800.
17:10A substantial lead as we head into Final Jeopardy.
17:12But all three of you will be playing on this category.
17:15Around the world.
17:17Think about it.
17:17The whole world.
17:18Make your wagers.
17:19You have a few minutes.
17:19And then we'll come back with the clue.
17:22We're headed around the world with Final Jeopardy today.
17:25Where will we land?
17:26Let's see the clue.
17:28A river named for the sacred lotus flower flows toward this 839,000 square mile body of
17:34water.
17:3530 seconds now, players.
17:36Good luck.
18:07What part of the world would this be?
18:09We'll start in the middle with Kathy Fitzgerald, $200.
18:12Her Final Jeopardy response was the Indian Ocean.
18:16That's close, but the area's not quite right.
18:18Not quite right.
18:18What did you wager, Kathy?
18:20Nothing at all.
18:21So you still have $200.
18:22Zach Williams was in second place.
18:24A hard-fought $8,200.
18:25Nicely done.
18:26What did you come up with in Final?
18:28The Bay of Bengal.
18:30That is correct.
18:31The river is the Padma, a channel of the Ganges.
18:34Forms part of the India-Bangladesh border.
18:36You're going to add to that $8,200.
18:38$7,000, taking you to $15,200.
18:41A very nice total, but hard to catch Jamie Ding today with $26,800.
18:45Does he know it's the Bay of Bengal?
18:48He's correct as well.
18:49Did he wager big or small?
18:50He's done both.
18:51Pretty big.
18:52$9,600 brings him up to $36,400 today and makes him a 21-game Jeopardy! champion.
18:58Now $609,000 to his name.
19:01He survived another week, and he'll be back here on Monday.
19:04Have a great weekend.
19:05We'll see you as well then.
19:33We'll see you as well then.
19:42We'll see you as well then.
19:43We'll see you as well then.
19:43We'll see you as well.
19:43Let's get started.
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