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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:14Today's contestants are an actuary from Wheaton, Illinois, Patrick Nolan.
00:21An attorney originally from Fresno, California, Liana Mixter.
00:25And our returning champion, a bureaucrat and law student from Lawrenceville, New Jersey,
00:32Jamie Ding, whose 29-day cash winnings total $793,602.
00:42And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:49Thank you so much, Johnny.
00:51We're so glad to have you with us today on Jeopardy!
00:53A good friend of our champion, Jamie Ding, once said,
00:56Jamie Ding knows everything about everything.
00:59And after watching him dominate on the stage for the past several weeks,
01:02his knowledge does sometimes appear to be endless.
01:04But as Jamie himself would say, his busy law school schedule meant that
01:08he didn't have a lot of time to intensely study for Jeopardy!,
01:11relying instead on what he calls a sticky mind.
01:14Today that mind will go up against Liana and Patrick,
01:16who I'm sure have sticky minds of their own.
01:18May the stickiest mind win.
01:20Good luck to the three of you.
01:21These are your categories in the Jeopardy! round.
01:24Big 12 schools comes up first.
01:27Then we have science.
01:29America from $1750 to $1800.
01:32Then recent hitmakers.
01:34Hobbies and pastimes.
01:36And we finish the board with words for the young.
01:39Jamie, what looks good to you up there?
01:41Uh, America, $1750 to $1800 for $800.
01:44Answer.
01:45A daily double right off the bat.
01:49You were right, it did look good.
01:50You can wager up to $1,000 on this clue.
01:52$1,000.
01:53Going for $1,000 in America, $1750 to $1800.
01:57In 1789, Governor George Clinton named as New York's Attorney General this man,
02:03who 15 years later could have used an attorney himself.
02:08Uh, who was Aaron Burr?
02:10Aaron Burr is correct.
02:11And you're on the board first with $1,000.
02:16Hobbies and pastimes for $1,000.
02:18Vases used in this, the Japanese art of flower arranging, often feature a kenzan, or flower
02:24frog that holds stems upright.
02:26Patrick.
02:27What is it, Ikebana?
02:28Yes.
02:28Uh, science, $1,000.
02:30This 13-letter word is the discharge of water into the atmosphere, mainly through the stomata
02:35of leaves.
02:36Jamie.
02:37What is it, transpiration?
02:38That's correct.
02:39America, $600.
02:41In 1797, three French agents, ID'd by these three letters in correspondence, asked for
02:47a $250,000 bribe from U.S. diplomats.
02:50Patrick.
02:51What is XYZ?
02:52Yeah, the XYZ affair.
02:53Uh, America, $1,000.
02:55It's a prerequisite, a must, in fact, to know George Washington surrendered this fort in July
03:001754, and the French burned it.
03:02Patrick.
03:03What is Fort Necessity?
03:04Good for $1,000.
03:05Science, $8.
03:06A candy bar created by Nestle is in this nickname of the hypothetical model for the universe's
03:11end, where all matter collapses on itself.
03:14Leanna.
03:15What is Milky Way?
03:16No.
03:17Jamie.
03:17What is the Big Crunch?
03:18That's correct.
03:19Recent hit makers for $600.
03:21Man, I need this Grammy-winning British singer who put her soul into that tune, as well as
03:26So Easy to Fall in Love.
03:28Patrick.
03:28Who's Dean?
03:29Good, Olivia Dean.
03:30Science, $6.
03:31Good news.
03:32This layer in the stratosphere is healing, and that's not going to exacerbate global warming.
03:37Jamie.
03:38What is the ozone layer?
03:39That's correct.
03:40Words for the young for $800.
03:42This four-letter word for a neglected or abandoned child has also come to mean an extremely thin
03:47person, usually female.
03:49Jamie.
03:50What is a waif?
03:50Correct.
03:51Hobbies and pastimes for $400.
03:53If you take up ballroom dancing, you are likely to learn this one said to be named for a
03:57guy, not a canine.
04:02The canine is a fox.
04:04What is the foxtrot?
04:05Back to you, Jamie.
04:06Big 12 schools for $600.
04:08President William Howard Taft, Governor Bob Taft, and a couple of Kelsey's are alums of
04:12the University of this city.
04:14Jamie.
04:15What is Cincinnati?
04:16Yes.
04:17Hobbies and pastimes for $8.
04:18Instead of making beer, you can make this by fermenting honey and water.
04:23Patrick.
04:23What is mead?
04:24Right.
04:24America Fork.
04:26In Chisholm v. Georgia, the Supreme Court and this first Chief Justice said states were
04:31subordinate to the federal government.
04:33Leanna.
04:33Who's Marshall?
04:34No.
04:35Jamie.
04:35Who's John Jay?
04:36John Jay is first.
04:38Recent hitmakers for $1,000.
04:40In 2025, Ella Langley topped the country chart singing, She's From This State.
04:45I can tell, by the way, he's two-stepping around the room.
04:51She's from Texas.
04:53Must have been a Texas two-step.
04:54Jamie.
04:55Science for $400.
04:57Males of this common pig species from Africa have pairs of bumps on their faces and two pairs
05:02of tusks.
05:03Jamie.
05:03What are warthogs?
05:04Warthogs are right.
05:06You have $5,600.
05:07A narrow lead over Patrick.
05:08Also off to a good start.
05:09Leanna, we'll get you out of the hole when we come back.
05:11Much more Jeopardy after this.
05:17Patrick Nolan from Wheaton, Illinois is an actuary.
05:19I assume you're living that glamorous actuary life, Patrick.
05:22Like everybody in the business does, for sure.
05:24I assume so.
05:25Tell me about the glamorous Christmas present you got a few years ago.
05:28Yeah, I sent my wife to a high school quiz bowl supplies website.
05:32Got a little bit of a weird look when I asked for a buzzer lockout system.
05:36And it's actually paid a lot of dividends because every year on Christmas Eve, I'll set up
05:41a Christmas Jeopardy game with my family.
05:43I'll get to play as, you know, I'll get to be Ken Jennings.
05:45You get to host, yeah.
05:46And, you know, they get really competitive and my daughters say it's like the best day
05:49of the year.
05:49So, big return on investment for Patrick.
05:51I love that.
05:52Did you use it to practice for today on Jeopardy?
05:54I did.
05:55I assume so.
05:56The gift that keeps on giving.
05:57Absolutely.
05:58Leanna Mixter, originally from Fresno, is an attorney.
06:01Yes.
06:02You have also hosted not Jeopardy like Patrick does.
06:04What kind of show did you host?
06:05So, last year I was involved with organizing a work retreat and we decided it would be fun
06:11to interview our boss in the style of hot ones.
06:14Okay.
06:15So, we bought the full set of hot sauces, got the wings.
06:18I sourced questions from the team and since it was my idea, I agreed to host.
06:23I made it through all 10 and didn't get fired.
06:26I was about to say, this is a dangerous game to play.
06:29I did make him agree in advance that he wouldn't hold it against me.
06:31There we go.
06:32I'm not an expert on employment law.
06:34You're the attorney here.
06:35I'm glad you're still working there.
06:36Our champion is Jamie Ding, of course.
06:38I just learned your Quiz League team name, Jamie.
06:41Walk me through this.
06:42It is MC Gandalf the Fresh and his hip hobbits.
06:45Now, are you MC Gandalf the Fresh or are you one of the aforementioned hip hobbits?
06:49None of us are MC Gandalf the Fresh.
06:51We are all hip hobbits.
06:53It's like Hootie and the Blowfish.
06:54Everyone is both Hootie and the Blowfish.
06:55Exactly.
06:56I love that team name.
06:57Is there a story?
06:58I don't remember exactly.
06:59I wasn't there for it, but I was all for it once I learned it.
07:03You'll always be Gandalf the Fresh to me, Jamie.
07:05You also have command of the board.
07:07What clue next?
07:08Words for the Young for 600.
07:10A music genre is in this two-word affectionate term from TikTok.
07:14It's a person who embraces the feminine side of things.
07:20I'm not on TikTok either.
07:22What's a girly pop?
07:23Jamie?
07:24Recent hitmakers for eight.
07:26He topped the Hot 100 singing,
07:28something so out of the ordinary,
07:29you got me kissing the ground of your sanctuary.
07:32Patrick?
07:33It was Warren.
07:33It is Alex Warren.
07:34Science, too.
07:35This white variety of limestone is made from shells of marine organisms.
07:40Some classroom versions are made with gypsum.
07:42Leanna?
07:43What is chalk?
07:44Yes.
07:45Hitmakers, four.
07:46In Back to Friends, he lived up to his E-less name,
07:49lamenting getting friend-zoned after we just shared a bed.
07:53Leanna?
07:53What is somber?
07:54Somber with no E, right.
07:56Hobbies for 600?
07:57Maho Beach in front of the runway at St. Martin
08:00is a renowned spot for this pastime
08:02that rhymes with one in a 1993 Scottish novel.
08:05Jamie?
08:06What is plane spotting?
08:07Not train spotting, but plane spotting.
08:09Words for the Young for 1,000.
08:10Two J's are in this adjective describing juvenile ideas.
08:15Jamie?
08:16What is jejun?
08:17You add 1,000.
08:18Big 12 for 4?
08:19The first Baptist missionary to Texas,
08:21James Huckins co-founded this Waco University,
08:24established in 1845.
08:26Patrick?
08:27What is...
08:29Nope.
08:30Out of time, I'm afraid.
08:32Jamie or Leanna?
08:34That's Baylor.
08:36Back to you, Jamie.
08:37Big 12 for 8.
08:38Tonight, on The Real Students of Orange County,
08:41UCF, this Southern school
08:43came into being in the shadow of the Mercury program.
08:45Patrick?
08:46What is University of Central Florida?
08:48That's right.
08:49America for 2.
08:51Healthy, wealthy, and wise,
08:53in 1757, Ben Franklin edited himself
08:56out of editing this publication after 25 years.
08:59Jamie?
08:59What is Port Richard's Almanac?
09:01Correct.
09:01Words for the Young for 400.
09:03Young mariners who have not yet crossed the equator
09:05have this nickname, another word for tadpole.
09:08Leanna?
09:09What is Poliwog?
09:10Right.
09:11Words for 200.
09:12This adjective for a whippersnapper
09:14advanced in knowledge or skill
09:15comes from Latin words for a head and to cook.
09:19Jamie?
09:19What is Precocious?
09:21Right.
09:21Big 12 for 1,000.
09:23This Big 12 school is in Manhattan,
09:25also known as the Little Apple,
09:26population 55,000.
09:28Patrick?
09:29What is Kansas State?
09:31Right.
09:32Recent Hitmakers for 2.
09:34In November 2025,
09:36he was on nearly half the 25 top country streaming songs,
09:39including I Got Better in the top spot.
09:42Patrick?
09:43Who's Wallen?
09:43Yes, Morgan Wallen.
09:45Big 12 for 2.
09:47Key and Peele's East-West Bowl
09:49featured Ty Royal Smoochie Wallace,
09:51Jack Marius, Tac Theratrix,
09:52and from this Provo College, Dan Smith.
09:56Leanna?
09:57What is BYU?
09:57Yes.
09:58And Hobbies for 200.
10:00The hobby of using this device to sweep for treasure
10:02is prohibited in U.S. national parks
10:04to protect relics and archaeological sites.
10:07Leanna?
10:08What is a metal detector?
10:09Yes, great job.
10:09You finished the round in positive territory.
10:12Patrick's just behind Jamie.
10:13We got a close game here.
10:14Double Jeopardy's up next.
10:16Don't you miss it.
10:22Patrick finds himself just $1,200 behind the Super Champ
10:25as we move into Double Jeopardy,
10:27where the categories today are
10:29American Lit first,
10:31then second, Celebrity Chefs.
10:33We also have Art for Art's Sake,
10:36Word Origins,
10:37some teeny tiny little countries,
10:40and finally,
10:41I have a lot of grey friends.
10:43Leanna, select.
10:45Word Origins for 2000.
10:46The name of this game is basically a German word
10:49minus Tisch, or table.
10:55Table football became foosball.
10:57Leanna, back to you.
10:59Word Origins for 16.
11:00This word comes from French genealogical charts.
11:03The branching lines look like the pied,
11:05or foot, of a bird.
11:10That's where pedigree comes from.
11:12Leanna?
11:12Let's try teeny tiny countries for 2000.
11:14Okay, switching categories.
11:15Since 2002,
11:17Hamad bin Issa al-Khalifa
11:18has been king of this small island nation
11:21on the southwestern coast of the Persian Gulf.
11:23Jamie?
11:24What is Bahrain?
11:25That's right.
11:25I have a lot of grey friends for 1200.
11:28Robert E. Lee rode this horse,
11:30whose color he described as Confederate grey
11:32for most of the Civil War.
11:34Patrick?
11:34What is traveler?
11:35You got it.
11:36Teeny tiny country's 16.
11:38Airport options for visiting Andorra
11:40include BCN, serving Barcelona,
11:43and TLS, the airport of this city.
11:46Jamie?
11:47What is Toulouse?
11:47Right.
11:48Art for Art's Safe for 1200.
11:50While the original of this Michelangelo statue
11:53is indoors at Florence's Academia Gallery,
11:55there are two outdoor copies nearby.
11:58Patrick?
11:59What is David?
12:00Yes.
12:01Lit for 16.
12:03Pennsylvanian, Owen Wister's best-known novel
12:05isn't The Pennsylvanian,
12:06but this one about a southerner out west.
12:11He wrote The Virginian.
12:13Back to you, Patrick.
12:14Art for 16.
12:16Born in Seville,
12:17this 17th century artist traveled to Italy
12:19to create paintings like Vulcan's Forge.
12:22Patrick?
12:23Who's Velasquez?
12:24That's right.
12:25American Lit 12.
12:26A South Carolina literary festival
12:28is named for this late author
12:29of The Great Santini.
12:31Patrick?
12:31Who's Conroy?
12:32That's correct.
12:33You're in the lead.
12:34Teeny Tiny Country's 12.
12:36Answer.
12:36The Daily Double.
12:38First one in the round comes to you, Patrick.
12:42A $400 lead over Jamie Ding at the moment.
12:45How much do you want to wager on Teeny Tiny Countries?
12:48I'm going to bet everything, Ken.
12:50Oh, not a Teeny Tiny wager, then.
12:52You'll have $23,200 if you're right.
12:55Here's your clue.
12:56Teeny Tiny Countries.
12:57Borgo Maggiore and Cerro Valle
12:59are towns in this landlocked nation
13:01that bears the name of a 4th century holy man.
13:05What is...
13:07San Marino?
13:09San Marino is correct.
13:11Let's go!
13:12You have $23,200.
13:18Where to now, Patrick?
13:19Let's do Grey Friends for 16.
13:23She was queen for a day on July 10th, 1553,
13:26and then eight days more.
13:27After that, thanks to Mary Tudor, not so much.
13:30Patrick?
13:31It was Lady Jane Grey.
13:32That's right.
13:33American Lit 2000.
13:35He was friends with gunfighter-turned-sports writer
13:37Bat Masterson
13:38and used his name for gambler hero Sky Masterson.
13:41Jamie?
13:42It was Damon Runyon.
13:43That's right.
13:43Guys and Dolls.
13:45Uh, Art for Art's Sake for 2000.
13:47Answer.
13:47The Other Daily Double.
13:53Jamie, this is an important moment in the game
13:55and in your run.
13:56How much do you want to wager on Art for Art's Sake?
13:59It's got to be a true Daily Double.
14:01Okay, he's going to try to do the same thing.
14:04If you're right, you'll have a narrow lead back over Patrick.
14:06Here's your clue in Art for Art's Sake.
14:08The Glass House in Seattle
14:10is a one-of-a-kind structure
14:11holding a 100-foot sculpture by this artist.
14:17Who is Chihuly?
14:18Dale Chihuly is correct.
14:20Jamie moves back into the lead.
14:23With 26,400.
14:25Wow.
14:27Word Origins for 8.
14:28This jellyfish relative
14:29is named for its resemblance
14:31to an old combat ship with sails.
14:33Jamie?
14:34What is it, Portuguese Man of War?
14:35Yes.
14:35I have a lot of Gray friends for 400.
14:38A nod to her most famous role,
14:40Jennifer Gray's 2022 memoir
14:42is titled Out of This Spot
14:43Where Nobody Puts Baby.
14:45Jamie?
14:46What is the corner?
14:47Yes.
14:47Celebrity Chefs for 8.
14:49Discover the Essential This Chef.
14:51Favorite recipes and hard-won wisdom
14:53from my life in the kitchen.
14:54And may we add, bam.
14:57Leanna?
14:57Who is Emeril Lagasse?
14:58Right.
14:59Celebrity Chefs for 2000.
15:00This Ethiopian Swedish American chef
15:03is equipped to bring multicultural flavor
15:04to diners and home cooks.
15:09His name is Marcus Samuelson.
15:11Back to you, Leanna.
15:12Uh, Chefs for 16.
15:14An episode of This Chef in Italy
15:16celebrated the 100th birthday
15:17of her grandfather,
15:18an Oscar winner for La Strada.
15:20Patrick?
15:21Who is...
15:22De Laurentiis?
15:23That's right.
15:24Giada?
15:25American Lit 8.
15:26The first American female professional writer,
15:29Hannah Adams,
15:30wrote a 1799 history of this region,
15:33including her native Massachusetts.
15:35Patrick?
15:36What is New England?
15:36Right again.
15:37Um, Grey Friends 8.
15:39Earl Grey Tea is possibly named for an Earl
15:42and most certainly flavored
15:43with the extract of this Mediterranean citrus fruit.
15:46Leanna?
15:46What is bergamot?
15:47Right.
15:48Uh, Grey for 2000.
15:49James Whistler's Arrangement in Grey and Black No. 1
15:52is a famous portrait of his mother.
15:54Number 2 is of this Scottish historian.
15:57Jamie?
15:58Who is Carlisle?
15:59It is Thomas Carlisle.
16:00Teeny Tiny Countries for 8.
16:02On the Maldives in the Indian Ocean,
16:04a key local product is coir,
16:06made into ropes and, more lately,
16:08souvenirs from the husks of these.
16:10Leanna?
16:11What are coconuts?
16:11You got it.
16:12Word Origins for 12.
16:13This 8-letter verb meaning to increase
16:15was created after the invention
16:17of a moving staircase.
16:19Leanna?
16:20What is Escalate?
16:20You got it.
16:21Uh, Countries for 4.
16:23The Dingley Cliffs are the highest points
16:25on this mainly limestone island republic
16:27about 60 miles south of Sicily.
16:29Patrick?
16:30What is Malta?
16:30Yes.
16:31Art 8.
16:32An Obie and Emmy winner,
16:34Rosalind Drexler was also a formidable artist
16:36in this movement of Warhol and Marisol.
16:39Jamie?
16:39What is pop art?
16:40You got it.
16:41American Lit for 4.
16:42Maybe attendees at a John Dos Passos Society conference
16:45chant the name of this trilogy,
16:47like American fans at the Olympics.
16:50Jamie?
16:50What is USA?
16:51That's the trilogy.
16:52Celebrity Chefs for 1,200.
16:54In 1999, this Brit got down
16:56to the bare essentials of food prep
16:58for the naked chef.
16:59Leanna?
17:00Who's Jamie Oliver?
17:01That's him.
17:02Celebrity Chefs for 4.
17:03In 2025, Layla Ali got in the ring
17:06for the Knockout Kitchen episode
17:07of Beat This Chef.
17:11That show was called Beat Bobby Flay.
17:14Two clues left, Leanna.
17:15Which one?
17:16Word Origins for 400.
17:17The guns made by Samuel Colt acquired this name
17:20from the way the cylinder turned.
17:22Leanna?
17:22It was a revolver.
17:23Right.
17:24Final clue.
17:24Art for art's sake.
17:26The coup de grace of the Gates of Hell
17:28is Rodin's The Thinker,
17:29a representation of this Italian writer.
17:31Patrick?
17:32Who is Dante?
17:33Dante is correct.
17:34You finished with a very impressive $28,000.
17:36You are just $2,800 behind Jamie Ding in the lead.
17:40Great game from all three of you.
17:41Here's the Final Jeopardy category to decide things.
17:45The 1950s.
17:46While they make their wagers,
17:47we'll pause and then we'll come back
17:49to see how this thing ends.
17:51For Final Jeopardy today,
17:52we are turning the clock back to the 1950s.
17:55Here's the clue, players.
17:58The announcement declaring this safe and effective
18:00was made April 12th, 1955,
18:03the 10th anniversary of the death of a famous American.
18:0630 seconds starts now.
18:07Good luck.
18:38Let's begin with Leanna Mixter,
18:40an impressive 5,400 up against these two.
18:42What did you come up with in Final, Leanna?
18:44You changed nuclear power to polio vax at the last minute,
18:47and you got it in there, in the nick of time.
18:49That is correct, the 10th anniversary of FDR's death.
18:52What did you wager, Leanna?
18:54You'll add 5,000, taking you to 10,400.
18:57Patrick Nolan was in second place with 28,000.
18:59Quite a score.
19:00Did he think of the polio vaccine?
19:02Dr. Salk?
19:03No, he has penicillin.
19:05He wagered $10,000.
19:08That'll drop him down to 18,000 in second place.
19:10Jamie Ding with 30,800 can add to it
19:13if he has the polio vaccine.
19:16He's correct.
19:17How much did he wager?
19:19Today he had to go big.
19:20$25,201.
19:22That is your biggest successful wager, Jamie.
19:24It takes you to $56,001
19:26and makes you a 30-game Jeopardy! champion.
19:29Your total, $849,603.
19:35What a game.
19:36That was an all-timer.
19:37We'll see you tomorrow right here on Jeopardy!
19:57We'll see you tomorrow right here on Jeopardy!
19:57We'll see you tomorrow right here on Jeopardy!
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