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Jeopardy! - Season 2026 Episode 83 -
Mon, Apr 27, 2026
tele: https://t.me/TopFilmUSA1
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Mon, Apr 27, 2026
tele: https://t.me/TopFilmUSA1
#film#shows#usa#usashows#hot#filmhot
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FunTranscript
00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:12Here are today's contestants.
00:16A chess player from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Greg Chahadi.
00:21A teacher from Washington Courthouse, Ohio, Katrina Puckett.
00:26And our returning champion, a bureaucrat and law student from Lawrenceville, New Jersey,
00:32Jamie Ding, whose 31-day cash winnings total $882,605.
00:42And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:49Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
00:51Welcome to Jeopardy!
00:52For the seventh straight Monday, we are joined on the Alex Rebeck stage by a familiar face,
00:58our 31-game champion, Jamie Ding.
01:01So far in his run, Jamie has won 23 runaway games, responded correctly to 976 clues,
01:07he's broken multiple season 42 records, and now finds himself rounding out the top five
01:11on our all-time leaderboard of legends.
01:13Behind only Jeopardy! icons, James Holtzauer, Matt Amodio, Amy Schneider,
01:17and a fourth person I'm too humble to mention.
01:21How long can Jamie's run continue?
01:23Today, our challengers, Katrina and Greg, are hoping the answer is not past today.
01:27Good luck to all three of you.
01:29Let's play Jeopardy!
01:30Your categories in the first round will be...
01:35Entertaining Demises.
01:36Then we have Women of Science,
01:38followed by a perfect 10,
01:41Squealers,
01:43then Where There's a Ville,
01:45and finally...
01:46I'm Anne Hathaway.
01:48And I'm Stanley Tucci.
01:49It's taken 20 years for our sequel to The Devil Wears Prada to appear.
01:53But as you're about to see in the world of fashion and fashion magazines,
01:57some things don't change.
01:59Jamie, where do we start the game?
02:01Entertaining Demises for 800.
02:03Edie Britt, played by her,
02:05made an unintentional PSA about the danger of downed power lines on Desperate Housewives.
02:12That's Nicolette Sheridan.
02:14Back to you, Jamie.
02:15Women of Science, for eight.
02:17Chen Xiangwu, the first lady of physics,
02:19worked on this 1942-47 project
02:21and was the first female president of the American Physical Society.
02:25Greg.
02:26What's Manhattan?
02:28That's right, the Manhattan Project.
02:29Women of Science, 1000.
02:31During World War II,
02:33Betty Holburton was an original programmer
02:35on this first general-purpose electronic digital computer.
02:38Greg.
02:40What's Univac?
02:41No.
02:42Jamie.
02:43What is ENIAC?
02:44ENIAC is correct.
02:45Squealers for 800.
02:46It's a shortened word for an agent investigating drug traffickers,
02:49or just any informer.
02:51Jamie.
02:52What is NARC?
02:53Yes.
02:53Women of Science, for six.
02:55Ruth Gates was known for her work on preserving these oceanic structures
02:58and combating the bleaching that harms them.
03:01Katrina.
03:01What is coral?
03:03Can you be more specific?
03:05What is brain coral?
03:07No.
03:08Jamie.
03:09What are coral reefs?
03:10Those are the structures, yes.
03:12Squealers for six.
03:13Pentito is an Italian word for people like Tommaso Buscetta,
03:17who laid out the workings of this island's mob in the 1980s.
03:20Greg.
03:21What's Sicily?
03:22Yes.
03:23Entertaining Demises, 1000.
03:25Here's Steven Weber.
03:27I like to think I had one of the more memorable cinematic deaths of the 90s
03:31when Jennifer Jason Leigh ended things for me with a high heel
03:35in this psychological thriller.
03:40How soon we forget.
03:41Single White Female is the movie.
03:43Back to Greg.
03:44Perfect 10, 8.
03:45Of Canada's 10 provinces, this Atlantic one is the smallest.
03:49Greg.
03:50What's Prince Edward Island?
03:52Yes.
03:53Perfect 10, 1000.
03:55Shakespeare's 10 history plays about kings of England
03:57include one about this son of Eleanor of Aquitaine.
04:00Katrina.
04:00What is King John?
04:02You got it.
04:03You're out of the hole.
04:04Perfect 10 for 600.
04:06The first of the 10 planks outlined in the Communist Manifesto
04:09is the abolition of this, so it can be used for public purposes.
04:13Jamie.
04:14What is property?
04:14Private property.
04:15That's right.
04:16Where there's a bill for 800.
04:18The U.S. Space and Rocket Center can be found in this Alabama city.
04:22Katrina.
04:22What is Huntsville?
04:23Correct.
04:24Where there's a bill for 1,000.
04:26Home to the University of Southern Indiana,
04:28it's the third most populous city in the state.
04:31Greg.
04:32Hmm.
04:32What's Evansville?
04:33Evansville is right, yes.
04:35Squealers, 1,000.
04:36Answer there is a Daily Double, Greg.
04:41Evansville just hooked you up.
04:42You're in second place,
04:43but you're wagering for the lead here, possibly.
04:45It's to 2,200, all of it.
04:47Okay, go on for the True Daily Double in Squealers.
04:50You'll have the lead by 1,400 if you're right.
04:52Here's your clue.
04:54You don't want to be called this,
04:56the last name of John Turturro's title character in a Coen Brothers flick.
05:01What's Fink?
05:02Barton Fink is the movie.
05:04Fink is correct.
05:05And you just moved into first place.
05:08Fashion 400.
05:10Here's Anne Hathaway.
05:11Editors from every major magazine attend these events,
05:15held in Paris by the Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode.
05:19In the first movie, Andy got to attend with Miranda,
05:22much to her co-worker Emily's dismay.
05:25Katrina.
05:25What are fashion shows?
05:27No.
05:28Jamie or Greg?
05:30Those are fashion weeks.
05:32Back to you, Greg.
05:33Where there's a Ville 200.
05:34A silhouette of our seventh president over a sunburst
05:37is featured on the flag of this Florida city.
05:40Greg.
05:42What's Jacksonville?
05:43That's right.
05:43Andrew Jackson.
05:44Greg is in the lead.
05:45We need to pause.
05:46Jeopardy! will be right back.
05:48Greg Shahadi from Philadelphia is a chess player.
05:51And I'm told a very good one,
05:52but Greg, when you go viral online,
05:55it's for doing what?
05:56So I had a few videos that had over 5 million views online,
05:59which is the good news.
06:00Sure.
06:00Bad news is me losing a chess to 9-year-old children.
06:05But that's your weakness.
06:06Pretty much, but I think they're all there, so I'm...
06:08It's true.
06:09It's true.
06:09We don't have any 9- or 10-year-olds today.
06:10That might be a good sign for you.
06:12Katrina Puckett is here from Washington Courthouse, Ohio.
06:15You're a teacher,
06:15and you have Jeopardy! in your blood, I understand, right?
06:18So my mom is a huge Jeopardy! fan,
06:20and back in the day,
06:21they had a tournament called Super Jeopardy!
06:23that was on Saturdays.
06:25I decided to be born during Super Jeopardy!
06:27So she missed it.
06:28To this day, your mom doesn't know what happened.
06:29She did find the YouTube video in the last month or so
06:32and finally got to watch the episode I made her miss.
06:35Nice. That's family history.
06:36Our returning champion is Jamie Ding from Lawrenceville, New Jersey.
06:39A bureaucrat, a law student, a world traveler.
06:42You've even been to Oktoberfest, Jamie.
06:44But when?
06:45When I was 8 years old.
06:46Is that a little young to be at Oktoberfest?
06:48I believe so.
06:49But my dad was at a conference in Munich,
06:51and I went with him,
06:52and I guess he snuck me in.
06:53He got me a ticket somehow.
06:55I did not have any beer,
06:56but the chicken was good.
06:57A drunk man gave me a ride on his shoulders
06:59through the tent.
07:00I had a great time.
07:01My dad was terrified,
07:02but I did not get kidnapped.
07:04Sounds like a perfect Oktoberfest.
07:06Nobody got kidnapped.
07:07Greg, it's your selection.
07:08Pick a clue for us.
07:09Where There's a Ville, 400.
07:11This capital is paired with Davidson
07:13in a consolidated city-county government.
07:16Katrina.
07:17What is Nashville?
07:17That's correct.
07:18Where There's a Ville for 600.
07:20In 1846, the Kentucky legislature
07:22combined a medical school,
07:24a law school, and a college
07:25to create the university of this city.
07:27Jamie.
07:28What is Louisville?
07:28Right.
07:29Fashion magazine's 1,000.
07:31Here's Stanley Tucci.
07:32If Miranda Priestly
07:34hadn't thrown my character Nigel
07:36to the wolves,
07:37he would have been a creative director
07:38much like this icon
07:40who wrote the memoir ALT.
07:46ALT is Andre Leon Talley.
07:48Back to you, Jamie.
07:49Entertaining Demises, 600.
07:51In this movie,
07:52Demi Moore's character expires
07:54at her star on the Walk of Fame,
07:55the character's star.
07:57Demi didn't have hers yet.
07:58Greg.
07:59What's the substance?
08:01That is the movie.
08:01Demises, too.
08:03In Cold Pursuit,
08:04Liam Neeson does some killing
08:06driving this,
08:07usually used to kill kids' dreams
08:09of a day off school in winter.
08:10Greg.
08:12What's bus?
08:13No.
08:14Jamie.
08:15What is a snowplow?
08:15He drives a snowplow.
08:17Perfect 10, 200.
08:18The southernmost
08:19of the University of California's
08:2110 campuses
08:21is called UC This City.
08:24Katrina.
08:25West, San Diego?
08:26Right.
08:26Perfect 10, 400.
08:28The third of the 10 amendments
08:29in the Bill of Rights
08:30bars forcing homeowners
08:31to do this,
08:33house soldiers.
08:34Katrina.
08:35Was quartering soldiers?
08:36That's correct.
08:37Woman of Science, 400.
08:38Public health advocate
08:40Dr. Mona Hanna
08:41made headlines
08:41when she exposed
08:42the water crisis
08:43in this Michigan city.
08:45Katrina.
08:45What is Flint?
08:46Right again.
08:47Woman of Science, 200.
08:48Two years before
08:49Crick and Watson,
08:50Rosalind Franklin
08:51used x-ray diffraction
08:52to show it has a helical shape.
08:54Greg.
08:55What's DNA?
08:56Yes.
08:57Fashion mags, 8.
08:58Back to Anne Hathaway.
09:00Andy had to quickly master
09:01the skill of running in heels,
09:03which is also the title
09:04of a docu-series
09:05about interns
09:06at this magazine
09:07that sounds like
09:07a French woman's name,
09:09the slightly older rival of Elle.
09:13What is Marie Claire?
09:15Back to you, Greg.
09:16Fashion for six.
09:19Miranda Priestly's
09:20withering monologue
09:21about Andy's frumpy sweater
09:22came full circle in 2025
09:24when a magazine reported
09:25that this type of blue
09:26was Spring's next it shade.
09:29Jamie.
09:30What a cerulean.
09:30Yes.
09:31Squealers for four.
09:33There are four
09:33of the same consonant
09:34in this word
09:35for a schoolyard informant.
09:37Greg.
09:38What's Tattletale?
09:39That's right.
09:40Demise is four.
09:42The season one finale
09:43of Barry killed off
09:44Detective Janice Moss
09:45to the dismay
09:46of many viewers
09:47and of Gene Cousinow
09:48played by him.
09:52That's Henry Winkler's character.
09:54Two clues left, Greg.
09:55Squealers, too.
09:56A seat and a squab
09:58combine in this
09:58two-word term for a snitch.
10:00Greg.
10:01What's stool pigeon?
10:02That's right.
10:03Here's Stanley Tucci
10:04with the last clue.
10:05In the first film,
10:06the line,
10:07I have Patrick,
10:09refers to the late
10:10Patrick de Marchellier,
10:12a celebrated one of these
10:14whom every fashion editor
10:15wanted to work with.
10:17Greg.
10:18What's designer?
10:20No.
10:20Jamie or Katrina?
10:23What is a photographer?
10:25Our thanks to Anne and Stanley
10:26for that category.
10:27You can see them
10:27in The Devil Wears Prada 2
10:29starting this Friday,
10:29and you can see
10:30Double Jeopardy
10:31after this break.
10:32Greg has the lead
10:33over a 31-day champion.
10:35Let's see if he can keep it
10:36rolling in Double Jeopardy
10:37with these categories.
10:39We have historic alliances
10:40up first,
10:41then it's the shape of things,
10:44followed by new meaning,
10:46flowers on the wall,
10:48plays and playwrights,
10:51and in the sixth spot,
10:52crafty celebrities.
10:54Katrina, where to first?
10:55Historic alliances for 2,000.
10:58The original nations
11:00stacked together
11:00in this organization
11:01were China, India,
11:02Russia, and Brazil.
11:03When South Africa joined,
11:05they added the S.
11:06Greg.
11:07What's bricks?
11:08Bricks, that's right.
11:09Plays and playwrights, 16.
11:11Answer.
11:11A daily double for you, Greg.
11:16You're in the lead
11:17over Jamie by just over 3,000.
11:19How much do you want
11:19to risk on plays and playwrights?
11:227,600.
11:23Okay, another true daily double.
11:25You'll have 15,200
11:27if you're right.
11:28Here's the clue.
11:29Plays and playwrights.
11:30The title object
11:31of this Oscar Wilde play
11:33is both a fashionable accessory
11:35and a mark of femininity.
11:39What is Lady Windermere's fan?
11:41That is correct, yes.
11:43Taking you to 15,200.
11:47Fortune favors the gold, Greg.
11:48Select again.
11:50Historic Alliance is 16.
11:51Answer there.
11:52Back to back.
11:53It's the other daily double.
11:55Now, Greg, you have gone
11:56true daily double
11:57on both of the first
11:58two daily doubles in this game.
11:59How much do you want
12:00to risk on the third one?
12:02Let's do 7,000.
12:04All right, for 7,000 this time,
12:06here's your clue
12:06in Historic Alliances.
12:09This 55-nation group
12:10launched in 2002
12:12has its headquarters
12:13in Addis Ababa.
12:20What's African Union?
12:22African Union is correct
12:24and it takes you
12:24to $22,200.
12:27No more daily doubles
12:28but lots of game left,
12:30Damien and Katrina.
12:31Select, Greg.
12:31Plays, 2,000.
12:33In this O'Neill drama
12:34about the Tyrone family,
12:36James Jr. is an alcoholic,
12:37mom's an addict,
12:38and Edmund is dying.
12:40Greg.
12:40What's Long Day's Journey
12:42into Night?
12:42You got it.
12:43Playwrights, 12.
12:45Barbara's parents,
12:46Andrew Undershaft
12:46and Lady Britomart
12:47are separated
12:48in his play, Major Barbara.
12:50Jamie.
12:51It was Shaw.
12:51Yes.
12:52New meaning for 16.
12:54Jinkies.
12:55This word for a piece of evidence
12:56originally meant a ball of yarn.
12:59Jamie.
12:59What's a clue?
13:00Write again.
13:00Historic Alliances for 12.
13:02The Delian League,
13:03an alliance of Greek city-states
13:05led by Athens,
13:06was formed in 478 B.C.
13:08against this empire to the east.
13:10Jamie.
13:10What was Persia?
13:11Correct.
13:12Shape of Things for 2,000.
13:14This bone that holds up the shoulder
13:15derives its name
13:16from looking somewhat
13:17like an old-fashioned key.
13:19Jamie.
13:20What's the clavicle?
13:21You add 2,000.
13:22New meaning for 12.
13:23Tiki-taki gained currency
13:25when used of suburban homes
13:26in a 1962 song.
13:28Today it describes one of these
13:29in a basketball game.
13:31Greg.
13:32What's foul?
13:33Yeah, borderline foul.
13:34Flowers in the wall, 400.
13:36On a Madrid museum wall
13:38is a Jan Broego the Elder
13:39depiction of this lush,
13:40flower-filled place
13:41in Genesis 2.
13:42Katrina.
13:43What is the Garden of Eden?
13:44Right.
13:45Shape of Things for 1,600.
13:47Long, thin cookies
13:48called Long de Cha
13:50in French
13:50are named for their
13:51resemblance to these.
13:53Jamie.
13:53What are ladyfingers?
13:54No.
13:55Greg.
13:56What are tongues?
13:58Can you be more specific?
13:59A cat's tongue.
14:00Yes, cat tongues.
14:01Play's playwrights.
14:03Four.
14:03The plot of this Norwegian's
14:05play Ghosts actually has to do
14:06with syphilis.
14:07Greg.
14:08What's Ibsen?
14:10Yes.
14:11Play's eight.
14:12What happened suddenly
14:13this title time
14:14to Catherine's cousin Sebastian?
14:16Read the play by Tennessee Williams
14:17and find out.
14:18Greg.
14:19What's Last Summer?
14:21Suddenly Last Summer
14:22is that play.
14:23Crafty 12.
14:24Think of Cara Delevingne's
14:26first famous profession
14:27and you'll know she's been seen
14:28knitting backstage at these,
14:30like Giles Deakins.
14:34Knitting at fashion shows.
14:36Greg.
14:36Crafty Celebrities 2000.
14:39Hooked.
14:39How Crafting Saved My Life
14:40is by this star
14:41of Younger and Bunheads
14:42who has her own yarn dealer.
14:44Jamie.
14:45It was Sutton Foster.
14:45Very good.
14:46Flowers on the Wall for 16.
14:48It's not the yellow rose of Texas.
14:50It's Fontaine Latour's depiction
14:51of the roses of this main city
14:53of the French Riviera.
14:55Jamie.
14:55What is Nice?
14:56Yes.
14:57New meaning for eight.
14:58It describes a job
14:59that was poorly done.
15:01Now it can also mean a DIY trick
15:03to get a job done faster.
15:04Katrina.
15:05What's a hack?
15:05You got it.
15:06New meaning for 400.
15:08Thanks in part to a company
15:10once run by Jack Dorsey,
15:11the pound sign now means this
15:13in the world of social media.
15:15Greg.
15:18What's Hashtag?
15:19Oh, in the nick of time, yes.
15:21Celebrity 16.
15:23Marsha from 70s TV.
15:24This actress is also a quilter
15:26who has a fabric line
15:27aptly called a blooming bunch.
15:29Greg.
15:30What's McCormick?
15:31Marie McCormick, yes.
15:33New meaning 2000.
15:35In 2025, this slur for droids
15:37in the Star Wars universe
15:38turned into a viral term
15:40for our future AI overlords.
15:42Jamie.
15:43What is Clanker?
15:43Very nice for 2000.
15:44Flowers through 12.
15:46There are Madonnas of the Carnation
15:48by this man and by Luini,
15:50born 30 years later, circa 1480.
15:5219th century critic John Ruskin
15:54liked Luini's better.
15:56Jamie.
15:56Who is Raphael?
15:57No.
15:58Greg.
16:00Who's Da Vinci?
16:01Yes, Leonardo Da Vinci.
16:02Flowers, 2000.
16:03A prickly pear is in Rachel Royce's 1735 painting of flowers
16:08using this adjective, meaning non-native but also mysterious.
16:13Greg.
16:14What's exotic?
16:15Those are exotic flowers.
16:16Shape thing's 12.
16:18You're on a roll if you know that rotelle means little these in Italian,
16:22which the same-named pasta shape resembles.
16:25Jamie.
16:25What are wheels?
16:26Yes, wagon wheels.
16:27Flowers on the wall for 800.
16:29A master of floral canvases, Paul Delong-Prie had a home that was an early tourist site
16:34in this LA area with a plant in its name.
16:37Katrina.
16:38Uh, shoot.
16:40What is fernwood?
16:41No.
16:42Jamie or Greg?
16:44Hollywood.
16:45The holly is also a plant.
16:46Back to you, Jamie.
16:47Shape of things for 800.
16:49Gladiate means shaped like this, something gladiators used.
16:53Jamie.
16:53What is a sword?
16:54Yes.
16:55Crafty Celebrities for?
16:56He's seen here in the midst of his second best-known, but it's a close call, activity.
17:01Jamie.
17:01Who is offerman?
17:02Yeah, woodworking.
17:03Historic alliances for eight.
17:05This international organization has 12 stars on its flag and 27 countries in its ranks.
17:11Jamie.
17:11What is the EU?
17:12Yes.
17:13Crafty Celebrities for eight.
17:14He is Matt Remick on the studio, but just himself in the studio where he makes ceramic pieces
17:19like ashtrays.
17:20Greg.
17:22Who's Pratt?
17:23No.
17:24Jamie or Katrina?
17:26That's Seth Rogen on the studio.
17:28Two clues left, Jamie.
17:29Historic alliances for four.
17:31The Soviet Union invoked this treaty that formed a mutual defense organization to justify
17:35a 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia.
17:38Greg.
17:39What's Warsaw Pact?
17:41The Warsaw Pact is correct.
17:42One more clue in the shape of things.
17:43Home to private residences and hotels, the man-made archipelago seen here in Dubai is built
17:49in the shape of one of these.
17:51Greg.
17:53What's lotus?
17:54No.
17:56Jamie.
17:56What's a palm leaf?
17:57No, I'm sorry.
17:58We will not take that either.
17:59Katrina.
18:00What's a palm tree?
18:00It's a palm tree, yes, taking you to $3,000.
18:04Greg has $32,600 thanks to those three big daily double wagers.
18:08Here is the Final Jeopardy! category, players.
18:11World Languages.
18:12Back with the clue right after this.
18:15For Final Jeopardy!, World Languages is the category, and here's the clue.
18:19Of South Africa's 12 official languages, these two are alphabetically first and last.
18:25You have 30 seconds, players.
18:27Good luck.
18:27You have 30 seconds, please.
18:57First up, we come to Katrina Puckett, who has $3,000 and wrote down what two languages?
19:02Afrikaans and Zulu.
19:03From A to Z, you got them both.
19:04Well done, Katrina.
19:05You will add $1,990, taking you to $4,990.
19:09Jamie Ding, our 31-game super champ, was in second place today with $16,000.
19:13Did he have Afrikaans and Zulu?
19:15He did.
19:16He wagered $3,010.
19:19He's saying TTFN.
19:20Ta-ta for now.
19:21He has $19,010.
19:23But today, by a tiny margin, Greg Shahadi could not be caught in final.
19:27Was he correct?
19:29Afrikaans and Zulu, yes.
19:31How much did he wager?
19:32$400 takes Greg to $33,000 and makes him today's Jeopardy champion.
19:37Congratulations, sir.
19:39And, Jamie, an outstanding run for you.
19:41We will be seeing you back on the Alex Correct stage.
19:44Greg will be back tomorrow.
19:45Join us then.
19:47Bye.
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