- 1 day ago
tele: https://t.me/TopFilmUSA1
#film#shows#usa#usashows#hot#filmhot
#film#shows#usa#usashows#hot#filmhot
Category
😹
FunTranscript
00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:13Let's meet today's contestants.
00:17A volunteer docent from Wharton Grove, Illinois, Bill Page.
00:21A writer from Sunnyvale, California, Kim Elliott.
00:25And our returning champion, a bureaucrat and law student from Lawrenceville, New Jersey,
00:32Jamie Ding, whose 23-day cash winnings totaled $644,000.
00:41And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:48Thanks, Johnny. And welcome to Jeopardy! on this tax day, April 15th,
00:52which, for me personally, always brings back memories of the final Jeopardy! clue I missed
00:56that ended my run when I didn't know enough about H&R Block.
00:59But one Jeopardy! streak that shows no signs of slowing down is that of our 23-game champion,
01:04Jamie Ding, who is now tied with Matea Roach to round out the top five
01:08of most consecutive games won in Jeopardy! history.
01:11What Matea could not do, however, win their 24th game.
01:15And I'm sure Kim and Bill are here today hoping that they can keep Jamie from doing the same.
01:19Good luck, gang. Let's get into the Jeopardy! round.
01:21Your categories today will be...
01:24First, USA.
01:26Then we have the same word twice, a classical music glossary,
01:31followed by the long movie shortlist,
01:34then it's a fine romance.
01:36Let's call the whole thing off.
01:39Jamie?
01:39USA for $800.
01:41This Bloomington, Minnesota attraction boasts some 500 stores
01:45and the indoor Nickelodeon Universe theme park.
01:48Jamie?
01:49Well, it's the Mall of America.
01:50Good.
01:51Classical music glossary for $1,000.
01:53Chopin was famed for his heroic one of these,
01:56named for the country of his birth.
01:59Jamie?
01:59What is a polonaise?
02:01It is.
02:01A fine romance for $800.
02:03This RKO investor and political patriarch
02:06had a torrid romance with movie star Gloria Swanson.
02:10Kim?
02:10Who is Kennedy?
02:11Can you be more specific?
02:12Who is Joseph Kennedy?
02:14You got it.
02:15USA for $1,000.
02:16Cheryl Strayed famously hiked this national scenic trail
02:20that extends 2,650 miles through California, Oregon, and Washington.
02:25Kim?
02:25What is the Pacific Crest Trail?
02:27What is the Pacific Crest Trail?
02:28Same word twice for $800.
02:30To flatten a gourd.
02:34Or in other words, to squash squash.
02:37Back to you, Kim.
02:38Same word twice for $1,000.
02:41The warm-hearted type...
02:45...is the kind kind.
02:47Kim, going to stick with us?
02:49Let's go elsewhere.
02:51Long movie shortlist for $800.
02:52At about three and a half hours,
02:55it took a while for this Oklahoma-set 2023 DiCaprio film to eclipse.
02:59Jamie?
03:00What is Killers of the Flower Moon?
03:01That's it.
03:02Let's call the whole thing off for six.
03:04In 2021, this telecommunications company got out of entertainment
03:08by spinning off Warner Media.
03:10Kim?
03:11What is AOL?
03:12No.
03:13Bill?
03:14What is AOL Time Warner?
03:15Also incorrect.
03:17Jamie?
03:19That was your AT&T spun off Warner Media.
03:22Back to Jamie.
03:23A Fine Romance for $1,000.
03:25The answer there...
03:26A Daily Double.
03:27The only one in the round.
03:29And it comes to you, Jamie.
03:31$2,600.
03:32Betting it all on a fine romance,
03:34you'll have $5,200 if you have the correct response to this clue.
03:38On April 5th, 1953,
03:41the Atlanta Daily World announced the engagement of this pair who met in Boston.
03:50Who are Elizabeth and Philip?
03:52No, sorry.
03:53Coretta Scott and Martin Luther King in Atlanta.
03:57You're down to zero.
03:58Select again, Jamie.
03:59Classical Music Glossary for $800.
04:01Rossini would have called a comic opera this in Italian.
04:04His first, The Bill of Marriage, came out in 1810.
04:07Jamie?
04:07What is an opera buffa?
04:09You got it.
04:10USA for $600.
04:11Escaping from this battleship on December 7th, 1941,
04:15Lauren Bruner became the last man to be interred among its wreckage in 2019.
04:19Bill?
04:20What is the USS Arizona?
04:22That's correct.
04:23Same word twice, $600.
04:25A tally of European noblemen.
04:28Bill?
04:28What's a count count?
04:29Very good.
04:31USA $400.
04:33At Cleveland's Progressive Field,
04:34you can take in a home game for this team, formerly the Indians.
04:38Jamie?
04:39We're the Guardians.
04:39Yes.
04:40Let's call the whole thing off for $800.
04:42You say Daimler and I say Daimler, Daimler, Daimler, Daimler, tomato, tomato.
04:46They called it off with this car brand in 2007.
04:50Jamie?
04:50What is a Skarsler?
04:51Right.
04:52Long movie shortlist for $1,000.
04:54Could this 1971 film about Jewish peasants in Russia have been shorter?
04:58Maybe, but when you have Topol, you just gotta go three hours.
05:02Kim?
05:02What is Fiddler on the Roof?
05:03Fiddler on the Roof is correct.
05:05Yes, you just passed Jamie to move into first place,
05:07and we need to pause for some quick messages.
05:09But we'll be right back with more Jeffery.
05:18Let's get to know Bill Page, a volunteer docent from Morton Grove, Illinois.
05:22Tell me how you met your wife, Bill.
05:24In sixth grade, we were at a nature retreat,
05:27and the teachers decided to make all the 10- and 11-year-old boys ask a girl to dance.
05:33The favorite thing that 10-year-old boys love?
05:35Of course.
05:36I asked Jan, and she said yes.
05:3930-some years later, at our high school reunion, was when we got together.
05:44Oh, wow.
05:45I love that.
05:46That's great.
05:46Congratulations to you, Kim.
05:48Kim Elliott is a writer from Sunnyvale, California.
05:50Tell me about the house where you lived in grad school.
05:52So I lived in a house with three women who were just as obsessed with Jane Austen as I was.
05:59Is this how you found each other, or just by coincidence?
06:01Just by coincidence.
06:02I love it.
06:02And we had so many copies of the Pride and Prejudice DVDs that Colin Firth's face just went all the
06:08way across the room.
06:09So we called our house Pemberley after his estate.
06:12Mr. Darcy's estate.
06:13I love it.
06:14And you're just, probably even right now, you're thinking about Colin Firth coming out of the water, right?
06:18I pretty much never stop.
06:19Yeah, a few times an hour.
06:20That's the normal number.
06:22Jamie Ding from New Jersey is back with us, of course.
06:24A bureaucrat, a law student, and an unsuccessful bird hunter.
06:28Tell me about this.
06:28Yes, so I was with some trivia friends in Rhode Island, and one of them, Brandon, he's really into birds,
06:34and he heard that there was a tundra bean goose in Rhode Island randomly.
06:38I guess it got blown over from Europe.
06:39Is that a very rare goose?
06:41Here it is, yeah.
06:42And then we drove around.
06:44We went to a high school.
06:45We went to, like, an abandoned railroad track.
06:47Turns out the goose was mobile and would leave those places before we got there.
06:52But you were going places you had heard the goose had been.
06:54Yes.
06:55Well, maybe next time in Rhode Island, Jamie.
06:57Kim, you have commanded the board.
06:58Pick up your buzzers, everybody.
06:59We're back into the round.
07:01Let's call the whole thing off for $1,000.
07:04FTC issues made computer chip giant Arm call off a deal with this AI company, once valued at $5 trillion.
07:14Called it off with NVIDIA.
07:15Kim?
07:16How about a fine romance for $200?
07:19Napoleon sent this woman, the DM, how happy I would be if I could assist you at your undressing.
07:25Jamie?
07:25It was Josephine.
07:26Oh, yeah.
07:27Long movie short list for six.
07:29The only Best Picture Oscar winner to have a hyphen in its title was this three-and-a-half-hour,
07:341959 epic.
07:36Jamie?
07:37It was Ben-Hur.
07:37Correct.
07:38Classical music for $200.
07:40Brahms was just one composer of this type of piece with a name from the French for small, and also
07:45a dance.
07:46Jamie?
07:47It was a minuet.
07:48Well done.
07:48Fine romance for four.
07:50She met her future hubby in Buenos Aires at an earthquake relief fundraiser in 1944.
07:55Jamie?
07:56It was Eva Peron.
07:57Right.
07:58Classical music glossary for six.
08:00Manuel de Fallas' Nights in the Gardens of Spain is a set of this type of composition, named for the
08:05time of day mentioned.
08:06Bill?
08:07What's a nocturne?
08:08That's correct.
08:09Long movie short list, $400.
08:11It takes a while before Cat picks up and wields Mjolnir in this film.
08:15But as it runs about three hours, Steve had some time, on a few levels.
08:19Bill?
08:20What is The Avengers?
08:22Can you be more specific?
08:26Oh no, out of time.
08:28Jamie?
08:29What is Avengers Endgame?
08:30Endgame, yeah.
08:31The last one.
08:32Let's call the whole thing off for two.
08:34Here's a bottle cap fact.
08:36Quaker Oats sold this beverage company to Triarch for $300 million in 1997.
08:41Jamie?
08:41What is Snapple?
08:42Yes.
08:43Fine romance for six.
08:44This founding father could no longer say it wasn't me after he detailed his affair with Mariah Reynolds in a
08:5098-page pamphlet.
08:51Jamie?
08:52It was Hamilton.
08:53Right?
08:53Classical music for four.
08:55Before his death at 31, Schubert composed 600 songs called these in German.
09:00Bill?
09:01We're a leader.
09:02You're right.
09:03USA 200.
09:04Here's Rachel Dratch.
09:06In April 2025, I was on hand to help kick off the 250th anniversary celebration of the start of the
09:13American Revolution and this first battle, which took place in my hometown.
09:19Jamie?
09:20What is Lexington?
09:21Yes.
09:21Let's call the whole thing off for four.
09:23Carmen Sandiego and Barbie were no longer friends after this company unloaded The Learning Company.
09:29Jamie?
09:29What is Mattel?
09:30Barbie's from Mattel.
09:31Long movie short list for two.
09:32Non-stop watching of the nearly nine hours across the 1972, 74, and 90 parts of this franchise is an
09:39offer you can't refuse.
09:41Jamie?
09:42What is The Godfather?
09:42That's the franchise.
09:44Same word twice for four.
09:45A supply of broth kept on hand.
09:49Jamie?
09:49What is a stock stock?
09:50You gotta have a stock stock.
09:52And we'll try one more of these.
09:53The same word twice.
09:54An exposition of average quality.
09:57Bill?
09:57What's a fair fair?
09:58Just a fair fair.
09:59That's correct, Bill.
10:00You have $1,400, and you'll be selecting first when we come back with Double Jeopardy.
10:11All three players very much in this game as we move now to Double Jeopardy.
10:15The categories will be, from left to right, characters in Shakespeare, then two border countries, followed by old things, leveling
10:25up.
10:26After that, we have some tough one-syllable words, and we finish things off with laughing at the president.
10:33Bill?
10:35Let's do characters in Shakespeare for $1,200.
10:38Sure.
10:39When we first meet this character, she reads a letter from her husband about his supernatural experience with three weirdos.
10:46Jamie?
10:46It was Lady Macbeth.
10:47Yes.
10:48Old things for 16.
10:49In 2025, this human ancestor fossil left Ethiopia for an exhibition at the Czech National Museum, her first trip to
10:57Europe.
10:58Bill?
10:58Who's Lucy?
10:59You got it.
11:00Two border countries for $800.
11:02Go north from Costa Rica, and you're in Nicaragua.
11:05Head southeast, and you're in this country.
11:08Jamie?
11:08What is Panama?
11:10Panama is right.
11:11Leveling up for 12.
11:12In 2010, John Lindsay joined MLB's Dodgers from Albuquerque at this level of baseball, having spent 16 years in the
11:20minors.
11:21Jamie?
11:22What is Major League?
11:23Baseball.
11:25Bill?
11:25What's AAA?
11:26Yes, from Albuquerque and AAA.
11:29Old things, $1,200.
11:31Fancy x-ray tech confirms King Tut's dagger was made of iron obtained not from smelting, but from outer space
11:37via these falling bodies.
11:39Jamie?
11:39What are meteorites?
11:40That's right.
11:41Tough one-syllable words for 12.
11:43Sometimes found before off, it's a six-letter word meaning to shed skin, as snakes do regularly.
11:49Kim?
11:50What is slough?
11:51That's the word.
11:53Old things for eight.
11:55Xi'an, China is home to a vast terracotta army from the 3rd century B.C. that includes horses, 8
12:01,000 soldiers, and 130 of these vehicles.
12:05Jamie?
12:05Order chariots.
12:06Also some chariots.
12:07Two border countries for 16.
12:08Lebanon borders just Israel and this country. Kim?
12:12What is Syria?
12:13You got it.
12:15Characters in Shakespeare for 16.
12:17Tired of being surrounded by moochers, he feeds his so-called friends rocks and then exiles himself from Athens.
12:23Jamie?
12:24Who's Timon?
12:25Timon of Athens, yeah.
12:26Laughing at the president for 8.
12:28On the west wing, this president says he can't pardon a Thanksgiving turkey, but drafts the bird into military service
12:34to save it.
12:35Jamie?
12:35Who's Bartlett?
12:36Yes.
12:37Tough one-syllable words for 16.
12:38Four of the five letters are consonants, in this word referring to an unstressed vowel. Jamie?
12:44What is schwa?
12:45Right.
12:46Leveling up for 8.
12:48When Edward VIII quit his job in 1936, this younger bro, known as Bertie, got the biggest promotion in the
12:54family biz.
12:55Jamie?
12:56Who's George VI?
12:57Right.
12:58Two border countries for 12.
12:59It has a 21-mile border with Austria and a 25-mile border with Switzerland.
13:05Jamie?
13:05What is Liechtenstein?
13:06Right.
13:07Characters in Shakespeare for 2.
13:08In ancient Rome, Caius Martius is given this title name after conquering a Volscian city.
13:14Kim?
13:15What is Scipio Affakranus?
13:17No.
13:18Jamie?
13:19What is Coriolanus?
13:20That's correct, for 2,000.
13:22Laughing at the president for 12.
13:24Bombs away, President Merkin-Muffley has an uncomfortable conversation with his pal Dimitri in this 1964 film.
13:31Jamie?
13:32What is Dr. Strangelove?
13:33Right.
13:34Tough one-syllable words for two.
13:36The urn seen here rests upon this kind of pedestal that also starts with a P.
13:41Jamie?
13:41That's a plinth?
13:42That's it.
13:43Old things for four.
13:44The frieze once encircling this temple has been called a perfect expression of mid-5th century B.C. Greek sculpture.
13:51Jamie?
13:51What is the Parthenon?
13:52That's right.
13:52Leveling up for 16.
13:54Answer.
13:55Daily double.
13:58You have been on a tear lately, Jamie.
14:00You have 20,200 to play with on this daily double.
14:03Uh, 4,800.
14:05All right.
14:05You'll have 25,000 even, if you're correct, in leveling up.
14:09In 1826, this city became a state capital, taking over for Murfreesboro.
14:18What is Little Rock?
14:20I'm afraid not.
14:22Murfreesboro's in Tennessee.
14:23What is Nashville?
14:24A little bit closer game.
14:25Select again, Jamie.
14:27Tough one-syllable words for eight.
14:29Back to back.
14:29Gets another daily double.
14:33You have another swing at this.
14:35Jamie, how do you feel about this category?
14:36Yeah, 2,600.
14:38All right.
14:40For $18,000, then, here is your clue.
14:42Tough one-syllable words.
14:44It can refer to an accident or part of a whale tail.
14:49What is a fluke?
14:50Fluke, that's right.
14:51This time, you add some money.
14:53You go to $18,000.
14:55Still your selection.
14:56Leveling up for two.
14:57In the Air Force, this is the rank immediately above first lieutenant.
15:05And that rank is captain.
15:07Jamie?
15:08Laughing at the president for 16.
15:10Terry Crews was president Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho in this 2006 comedy, where smarts were in short supply.
15:17Kim?
15:18What is idiocracy?
15:19That's right.
15:20Old things for two.
15:21The Mesopotamian tablet seen here is the oldest known customer complaint.
15:26A disgruntled copper buyer wrote it using this type of script.
15:29Jamie?
15:30What is cuneiform?
15:31You add 2,000.
15:32Characters in Shakespeare for eight.
15:34With a certain amount of jester privilege, this character, never given a government name, openly mocks King Lear.
15:41Jamie?
15:41Who's the fool?
15:42Right.
15:43Two border countries for two.
15:44Estonia has Russia to the east and this country to the south.
15:48Bill?
15:48What is Latvia?
15:49Right.
15:50Laughing at the president, 400.
15:53Once veep, this character becomes Prez.
15:56Also accused of being Europhobic, she asked if that meant she was scared of subtitles.
16:00Jamie?
16:02Who is Selena?
16:03Meyer.
16:03Selena Meyer is right.
16:04Laughing at the president for two.
16:06Finish it off with this.
16:07In this 1993 film, President Kevin Kline brings in CPA Charles Grodin to help me cut the budget a little.
16:16It's a favorite of mine.
16:18What is Dave?
16:18Four clues left, Jamie.
16:20Tough one-syllable words for four.
16:22Freight is a one-syllable word, as is this adjective etymologically related to it, regarding stress or tension.
16:29Jamie?
16:29This fraught?
16:30Yes.
16:31Characters in Shakespeare for four.
16:33He tells Brabantio about seeing men whose heads do grow beneath their shoulders, and Desdemona overhears.
16:39Bill?
16:39Who's Othello?
16:40Yes.
16:42Leavening up 400.
16:44Sell one million units of that salsa album you've been working on, and you'll go, this RIAA certification established in
16:501976.
16:51Jamie?
16:52What is platinum?
16:53Yes.
16:53Platinum for a million.
16:54Here's the last clue in two border countries.
16:57Bhutan is nestled between these two big neighbors.
17:00Jamie?
17:01What are China and India?
17:02You will end the round with the correct response, and $22,400.
17:05But Kim and Bill, you're alive for Final Jeopardy as well.
17:08Here's the category today.
17:10Notable Americans.
17:11We'll come back with the clue as soon as the wagers are in.
17:20We are concerned with notable Americans in Final Jeopardy today.
17:24Let's take a look at that clue.
17:27In 1909, she joined the Socialist Party and later published Out of the Dark, her writings on physical and social
17:34vision.
17:34You have 30 seconds.
17:36Players, good luck.
18:07Kim Elliott came into Final Jeopardy with $4,600, and what did she write down?
18:12Who is Helen Keller?
18:14That's right.
18:15Keller became an activist, realizing that then is now poverty and workplace safety.
18:19We're big drivers of disability.
18:20What did you wager, Kim?
18:21You'll add $4,599, taking you up to $9,199.
18:26Bill Page was in second with $6,600.
18:29Did he come up with Helen Keller?
18:31He's right as well.
18:32He wagered $2,601, so he has $9,201.
18:36He's now in second place.
18:38But Jamie Ding, once again, hard to catch today with $22,400.
18:42Will he be adding to it?
18:44Yes, he has Helen Keller.
18:46He wagered just $600 today for a nice, tidy $23,000.
18:51And now, a 24-game total of $667,000.
18:57Or in other words, two-thirds of the way to a million.
19:00Will he get there?
19:01Join us tomorrow.
Comments