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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:14Today's contestants are a novelist from Los Angeles, California, Kate Brody.
00:20An attorney from Los Angeles, California, Derek Kaufman.
00:25And our returning champion, a chess player from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Greg Chahadi, whose three-day cash winnings totaled $74,602.
00:40And now, here is the host of Jeopardy! Ken Jennings!
00:47Thank you, Johnny Gilbert. Welcome to Jeopardy!
00:50Over the course of his three games here on the Alex Rebeck stage, our champion, Greg Chahadi, seems to be
00:55dialed in on a winning strategy.
00:57First, find all the daily doubles. He's found all nine of them in three games.
01:01Second, bet big. And third, and most importantly, be correct, which Greg has done over 77% of the time.
01:07Can the chess master continue to make all the right moves?
01:10Or will Derek or Kate challenge his winning ways today?
01:13Let's start finding out in the Jeopardy! round.
01:15Your categories today, players, will be British Geography, which is followed by Compost Mentis.
01:23Then we have a category all about pant names.
01:27Then it's Climb Time, Two-Word Palindromes, and finally, Come At Me, Bro.
01:34Greg, come at me with the first selection.
01:36British Geography, 800.
01:38Chartered by King John in 1207, this city lies on the northern shore of the River Mersey, a few miles
01:44from the Irish Sea.
01:46Derek.
01:46What is Dublin?
01:47No.
01:48Greg.
01:49What's Liverpool?
01:50That's right.
01:51British Geography, 1000.
01:54Loch Ness and this other Bonny Bonny Loch are the two largest lakes in Scotland.
01:59Greg.
02:00What's Loch Lomond?
02:01Yes, Lomond is correct.
02:03Climb Time, 8.
02:04In North America, the difficulty of hikes and climbs is graded using the YDS, or this decimal system, after a
02:12certain national park.
02:14Kate.
02:15What is Yellowstone?
02:16No.
02:17Derek.
02:17What is Yosemite?
02:18Yosemite, that's the one.
02:20Let's go two-word palindromes for four.
02:22A protuberance on one's bread roll.
02:25Greg.
02:28What's... I don't know.
02:30Didn't come to you.
02:31Kate.
02:32What is a bun nub?
02:33Yes, we hate to see a bun nub, but that's correct.
02:36Pant names, 800.
02:38A character played by Catherine Bach gave her name to these cut-off jean shorts.
02:42Derek.
02:43What are Daisy Dukes?
02:44Yeah.
02:45Pant name, 600.
02:46These calf-length pants share a name with an island in the Tyrrhenian Sea.
02:51Kate.
02:51What are capris?
02:52You got it.
02:53Pant names, 1000.
02:54These ultra-spacious pants have an Italian name for an ultra-spacious abode.
02:59Greg.
03:00What's Palazzo?
03:01Yes.
03:02British Geography, 6.
03:05Castle Rock and Arthur's Seat are two of the seven hills of this Scottish city.
03:09Greg.
03:11What's Edinburgh?
03:13Edinburgh's right.
03:14Two-word palindromes, 8.
03:16A snare component.
03:19Kate.
03:23No.
03:23Out of time.
03:25Greg.
03:26What's Trap Part?
03:27Trap Part.
03:28That's the palindrome.
03:30Comet B-bro, 8.
03:32After a scathing book review, this Swan's Way author fought a French journalist in a duel.
03:37Both sides fired and missed.
03:39Kate.
03:40Who's Proust?
03:41Yes.
03:41Pant names, 400.
03:43These distinctive baggy knickers worn by golfers like Payne Stewart are named for the number
03:48of inches they hang below the knee.
03:49Greg.
03:51What's plus fours?
03:52Yes.
03:53Climb time, 1000.
03:54The subject of an Oscar-winning 2018 documentary, the mind-boggling practice of climbing without
04:00safety gear is called this.
04:02Greg.
04:03What's free solo?
04:04Good for 1000.
04:05Compost, 800.
04:07Sharing its name with a machine that polishes rocks, this type of rotating composter easily
04:12mixes the materials.
04:14Kate.
04:14What is a tumbler?
04:15That's right.
04:17Compost for 1000.
04:18If done correctly with the right amount of oxygen, composting can reduce emissions of this,
04:23also known as swamp gas.
04:25Greg.
04:26What's methane?
04:27Good.
04:28Two-word palindromes, 1000.
04:30A Greek deity visiting a port city in northern Egypt.
04:36The palindrome here.
04:37What is Suez Zeus?
04:40We need to go away for a moment and ponder Suez Zeus, but we'll be right back.
04:43You're watching Jeopardy.
04:46Kate Brody from Los Angeles is a novelist.
04:49And Kate, this is a real Jeopardy interview, Flex.
04:51You have already been a Jeopardy clue before you appeared as a contestant.
04:55That's right.
04:55So my debut novel came out in 2024.
04:57New Year's Eve 2024, I was coming back to L.A. from New York.
05:01And when I landed, I had a flurry of text messages from friends and family letting me know that
05:05I had been a clue in the animal expressions category.
05:08It was something like this novel by Kate Brody, whatever.
05:11And the answer was Rabbit Hole, my book.
05:14Very smart of you to plug the title of your book.
05:16Yeah.
05:16Authors are always thinking.
05:17I'm a move.
05:17What a validation to be a Jeopardy clue, right?
05:20Yeah, no, I'm a clue and a contestant.
05:21Well done.
05:22Doesn't happen to too many people.
05:23Derek Kaufman, also from Los Angeles, is an attorney.
05:26Your favorite film franchise is?
05:28Rocky.
05:29And you and your partner are, what, joint Rocky fans now?
05:33I'm the only Rocky fan.
05:33We've got to find someone to marry who indulges your quirky interests.
05:36I did.
05:37Our wedding was entirely Rocky themed.
05:39I walked down the aisle to the Rocky processional music, to Gunna Fly Now.
05:43Our tables were named Clubber Lang and Apollo Creed.
05:46You knew where you stood if you were at the Tommy Gunn table.
05:48But wait, did you just say your partner is not a Rocky fan and put up with all this?
05:52She became a Rocky fan.
05:52She's been dressed up like Adrienne for our shoot.
05:55Very nice.
05:55Sounds like she was a good sport.
05:57Speaking of Rocky, Greg Shahadi is here from Philadelphia.
06:00He's a chess player and the founder of a chess-related non-profit.
06:04Is that right?
06:04Yeah, back in 2006, I created a non-profit called the United States Chess School.
06:09And we run a few camps each year, some in person, a bunch online also, in which we invite the
06:15top-rated
06:16and ranked young chess players in the country to train together with top players.
06:21That's amazing.
06:22I love that.
06:23Pick up your signaling devices, everybody, because Greg gave us the last correct response.
06:27What'll it be?
06:28Come at me, bro.
06:29A thousand.
06:30This luncheon on the grass painter slapped art critic Edmund Duranty in the face at a Paris cafe,
06:36leading to a duel with swords.
06:38Greg?
06:38What's Mene?
06:40Yes.
06:41Um, climb time, six.
06:43This term for helpful info about a climb comes not from a Greek letter, but an 80s videotape
06:48format used to share such info.
06:50Kate?
06:51What is Beta?
06:52Yes.
06:53Compos Mentos, 600.
06:55Pre-Columbian civilizations in Mesoamerica and the Andes used human waste as compost or fertilizer,
07:01as well as this seabird dung.
07:03Greg?
07:04What's guano?
07:06Right.
07:07Palindrome, six.
07:08Smooth and glossy boat bottoms.
07:11Greg?
07:12What's sleek keels?
07:13You got it.
07:14Come at me, bro, six.
07:15After being called a black leg, this great compromiser wasn't feeling so compromisy and challenged
07:21Senator John Randolph to a duel.
07:23Greg?
07:25Who's Clay?
07:26Yes, Henry Clay.
07:27British Geography 4.
07:29Known for its volcanic rock mountains like 3,500-foot Urwithva, Erwery National Park is found
07:35in this UK country.
07:36Greg?
07:37What's Wales?
07:38Good.
07:38Um, climb time for?
07:40A climber might carry dozens of these ring thingies, a fundamental tool of the sport with
07:45a name borrowed from German.
07:46Kate?
07:47It's a carabiner?
07:48Right.
07:49Pants, 200?
07:50Inspired by the Turkish salwar, these pants have a name invoking the women's quarters of a
07:55sultan's household.
07:57Kate?
07:57What's harem?
07:58Yes.
07:59Compost, 400?
08:01Vermicomposting involves the use of these, with only a few species that are suitable.
08:06Kate?
08:06What are worms?
08:08You got it.
08:09Come at me, bro, 400?
08:10That, as you might guess, is the Daily Double.
08:15You find it worth $2,600.
08:18How do you feel about the category Come at me, bro?
08:20You want to bet it all?
08:21True Daily Double.
08:21Going for $5,200 in Come at me, bro, here is your clue.
08:25Pushkin survived exile, but not his brother-in-law's pistol.
08:28A monument in this then capital marks the site of their 1837 duel.
08:33What is St. Petersburg?
08:35It was in St. Petersburg, taking you to $5,200.
08:42Okay, Come at me, bro, 200.
08:43This future president of Texas gravely wounded his opponent, a stand-in for the Nashville
08:48Postmaster, in an 1826 pistol duel.
08:52Derek?
08:52Who's Houston?
08:53Yes, Sam Houston.
08:54Let's go climb time 200.
08:56Often considered a big achievement, the first person to send or complete a climbing route
09:01is said to have made an F.A., or first this.
09:04Kate?
09:05What is ascent?
09:05Yes.
09:06Compost, 200?
09:08You're said to walk on these when you try not to upset someone.
09:11But you can compost them as well.
09:13Greg?
09:13What's eggshells?
09:14Right.
09:15Palindromes, too?
09:16The lid of a cauldron.
09:18Greg?
09:19What's pot top?
09:20Pot top is right.
09:20One more clue from British geography.
09:23Associated with an outlaw hero of medieval legend, this forest once covered about one-fifth
09:27of Nottinghamshire County.
09:29Greg?
09:30That's Sherwood.
09:31Yes, Robin Hood's old stomping grounds.
09:33You have $10,000.
09:34Even Kate's in second.
09:35Derek will select first when Double Jeopardy begins right after these words.
09:41Kate has already kept Greg from the Daily Double.
09:43Who will find the two in the Double Jeopardy round?
09:45Here are the categories.
09:47U.S. history stories.
09:49Then we have political subdivisions, followed by Johnny Gilbert, number one hit machine.
09:55You need to name the original artist or group that Johnny is improving upon here.
10:00After that, common bonds, book dedications, and once again, come at me, bro, this time
10:07with B-R-O somewhere in each correct response.
10:10Derek, start us off.
10:11Let's take Johnny Gilbert, hit machine, 1200.
10:13Here's Johnny.
10:14I'll tell you what I want, what I really, really want.
10:17If you want to be my lover, you've got to get with my friends.
10:21Greg?
10:22What's Wannabe?
10:24No.
10:24Spice Girls.
10:25Kate?
10:26What is Spice Girls?
10:27Spice Girls is correct, but Johnny does the definitive version.
10:30Johnny, 1600?
10:31Back to Johnny.
10:32Forever united here somehow.
10:34Yeah, you got a piece of me, and honestly, my life would suck without you.
10:40Kate?
10:41What is Kelly Clarkson?
10:42That's right.
10:43Johnny, 2000?
10:44Johnny?
10:45Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle, wig.
10:47Yeah, yeah, do the wiggle, man.
10:49I do the wiggle, man.
10:51Yeah, I'm sexy, and I know it.
10:55Kate?
10:56What is LMFAO?
10:58It is LMFAO, but that's the kind of thing Johnny will just say.
11:03Book dedication, 16?
11:05In Franny and Zooey, he paid homage to William Sean of The New Yorker, calling him his closest
11:10friend and lover of the long shot.
11:12Kate?
11:13Who is Salinger?
11:14Yes.
11:142000, book dedications?
11:16She dedicated Play It As It Lays to her husband, John Gregory Dunn, and he dedicated True Confessions
11:22partly to her.
11:23Derek?
11:24Who's Joe Didion?
11:24Correct, for 2000.
11:25Let's see, books, 1200.
11:27Stephen King dedicated Firestarter in memory of this Haunting of Hill House author.
11:32Greg?
11:33Who's Jackson?
11:34Shirley Jackson, yes.
11:35U.S. History, 16.
11:37With the help of his daughter, Ioka, he presented his syllabary to Cherokee leaders in 1821.
11:43Greg?
11:44Who's Sequoia?
11:45Correct.
11:46U.S. History, 1200.
11:49In the 1800s, Margaret Getchell suggested that the founder of this department store use his
11:54red star tattoo as the store's logo.
11:56Kate?
11:57What is Macy's?
11:58That's right.
11:59U.S. Stories 2000.
12:01Foreman Chin Lin Su helped recruit for this company that built the Transcontinental Railroad
12:06from the western side?
12:10What is the Central Pacific?
12:12Kate?
12:13Book dedications, 800.
12:15Kristen Hanna dedicated the women to the courageous women who served here, as well as to all veterans
12:20in POW MIA.
12:22Greg?
12:24What's Vietnam?
12:25That's correct.
12:27Uh, common bond, 16.
12:29Barrel, wingback, club.
12:32Kate?
12:33What are shoes?
12:34No.
12:35Greg or Derek?
12:37They're all chairs.
12:39Greg?
12:40Political, subdivision, 16.
12:42Around the time of Eritrea's secession, this country divided into ethnically-based regional
12:47states called Kililoch.
12:49Kate?
12:49What is Ethiopia?
12:50Yes.
12:51Common bonds, 2,000.
12:53Smaug, the accident-prone Zog, Sephira.
12:57Kate?
12:57What are dragons?
12:58Dragons from literature, yes.
13:00Common bonds, 1,200.
13:01The answer there is a daily double, Kate.
13:08Greg's good at finding them, but so far you've kept two away from him, and you have the lead.
13:12Do 5,000.
13:14All right, going for 20,000, if you're correct, in common bonds.
13:17Here's your clue.
13:19Knives, mines, cheddar cheese.
13:23What are things that are sharp?
13:25Sharp things, yes.
13:26Gives you 5,000 more.
13:32I'll do come-at-me-bro, 16.
13:34From French for pledge and middleman, this person might be a welcome source of funds if your credit
13:40isn't so hot.
13:44You might have to see a pawnbroker.
13:46Kate?
13:47Come at me, bro, 2000.
13:48This word, borrowed from Italian, is a diplomatic way of saying a messy dumpster fire of a situation.
13:55Derek?
13:55What's a brouhaha?
13:56No.
13:58Greg or Kate?
14:00What is imbroglio?
14:01Back to you, Kate.
14:03Come at me, bro, 1200.
14:04This word can mean a compound of the element with atomic number 35, or a cliché.
14:10Greg?
14:12What's...
14:13bro-mean?
14:16No.
14:17Kate?
14:17What's a bromide?
14:18Bromide.
14:19That's right.
14:20Political subdivisions, 1200.
14:21The answer there.
14:23The final daily double, Kate.
14:26You found all three, which is very good luck for you, and has resulted in a $10,000 lead.
14:32Um, 1200.
14:34Okay.
14:35Going for 22,400, here's your clue in political subdivisions.
14:39The ninth is the largest and easternmost one of these districts in the city of New Orleans.
14:47What are parishes?
14:49No, sorry.
14:50It's the ninth ward.
14:51What are wards?
14:52Knocks you down to 20,000, but you're still in the lead.
14:55Uh, book dedications, 400.
14:57He wrote The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe for Lucy Barfield, and dedicated it to her
15:01from your affectionate godfather.
15:03Derek?
15:04Who is C.S. Lewis?
15:05Yes.
15:06Let's go political subdivisions for 800.
15:08Switzerland is made up of 26 of these states, including Glarus and Tzuq.
15:13Greg?
15:14What's Canton?
15:14Yes, Cantons.
15:162,000 political.
15:17One of Spain's 17 autonomous communities,
15:20its name may mean extreme and hard, or beyond the river Doro.
15:27What is Extremadura?
15:29Greg?
15:30Uh, come at me.
15:31Bro 800.
15:32It's a kind of fruit salad made with oranges and coconut.
15:35Zeus is reportedly a fan.
15:37Greg?
15:38What's ambrosia?
15:39Correct.
15:40Bro 400.
15:41Styles of this craft are categorized according to substrate or base material and type of stitching.
15:47Greg?
15:48What's embroidery?
15:49Yes.
15:50Johnny Gilbert 800?
15:52Back to Johnny.
15:53But ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, this time I'm telling you, I'm telling you, we are never,
16:00ever, ever getting back together.
16:02Kate?
16:03Who is Taylor Swift?
16:05Yes.
16:05Johnny Gilbert 400?
16:07One more time.
16:08The great Johnny Gilbert.
16:09This ain't Texas, woo, ain't no hold'em, hey, so park your Lexus, woo, and throw your
16:16keys up, hey.
16:18Greg?
16:18Who is Beyonce?
16:19Yes.
16:21Uh, history 800.
16:22During this war's Meuse-Argonne Offensive, Mexican-born U.S. Private Marcelino Serna single-handedly
16:29captured 24 soldiers.
16:31Greg?
16:33What's World War I?
16:34That is the right war.
16:35Uh, U.S. History, four.
16:37In 1967, Robert Clark became the first black member of the Mississippi legislature since this
16:42immediate post-bellum era and served until 2004.
16:46Kate?
16:46What is Reconstruction?
16:47Right.
16:48Common bonds, 800.
16:49A bowling ball, your eyes, dice.
16:52Greg?
16:55Things with, like, holes?
16:58No.
16:59Derek or Kate?
17:01Those are things you roll.
17:03Two clues left, Kate.
17:04Common bonds, 400.
17:05Tuna, tennis balls, paint.
17:08Greg?
17:11What is things that are round?
17:13No.
17:14Kate?
17:15What are things that come in a can?
17:16Come in cans, that's it.
17:18One more clue in political subdivisions.
17:20This birthplace of George Washington became the first U.S. commonwealth, not state, in 1776.
17:26Kate?
17:27What is Virginia?
17:27Virginia is correct.
17:29We come now to Final Jeopardy, or End Game, as Greg would say.
17:31The category today?
17:33Sports and the movies.
17:35Make your wagers, players, and then we'll return with the clue.
17:38Time to find out what our players know about sports and the movies.
17:41That's the Final Jeopardy category, and this is the clue.
17:45In 2026, a New Year's Day college football game featured these two team names that are both Gene Hackman movie
17:52titles.
17:5330 seconds starts now, players.
17:55Good luck.
18:26Derek Kaufman in the middle came into Final Jeopardy with $1,400.
18:29What did he come up with for a response?
18:31He wrote, what are Hoosiers and Rams?
18:35You're half right.
18:35Indiana in the Rose Bowl.
18:37What did you wager, Derek?
18:38You will lose $1,300, dropping you down to $100.
18:42Greg Shahadi was in second with $13,200.
18:45His response is also half correct.
18:48Crimson Tide is right.
18:49Indiana played Alabama.
18:51Fighting Irish, I'm afraid, is not right.
18:53What will it cost you, Greg?
18:54You lose $10,000, dropping you down to $3,200.
18:58So this is Kate Brody's game to lose.
18:59$22,000, a big lead.
19:01Does she have the two teams?
19:04Patriots and Jets?
19:05No.
19:05What was the wager?
19:07Just $4,401, leaving her with $17,599 and making her the new Jeopardy! champion.
19:14Well done, Kate.
19:20Come finish the week with us tomorrow on Jeopardy!
19:25Ta Costner!
19:29Do you not miss it?
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