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Jeopardy! - Season 2026 Episode 92 -
Tristan Williams, Natalie Oyler-Lusco, Bill Bogan
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Tristan Williams, Natalie Oyler-Lusco, Bill Bogan
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!
00:13Introducing today's contestants, a research administration specialist from Lafayette, Indiana, Bill Bogan.
00:22A marketing professional from Baltimore, Maryland, Natalie Euler-Lusko.
00:28And our returning champion, a data scientist originally from Lincoln, Nebraska, Tristan Williams, whose two-day cash winnings totaled $38
00:39,400.
00:42And now, here is the host of Jeopardy! Ken Jennings.
00:49Thank you so much, Johnny Gilbert. Welcome back to Jeopardy!
00:52In yesterday's game, new dad Tristan Williams did well in a category about parenting, including an important daily double about
00:59the phrase, because I said so.
01:01Which, Tristan, I think is a phrase you'll get more and more familiar with as your daughter grows.
01:05We also found out this is the first getaway trip for Tristan and his wife since they became parents.
01:09So, two Jeopardy! wins and almost $40,000. Pretty good getaway.
01:14Let's see if the winning vacation will continue into the weekend, or if Natalie or Bill will end today's game
01:18as a Jeopardy! champ.
01:19I wish all three of you good luck, and I'm going to show you your categories in the Jeopardy! round.
01:26We begin with the colors of music.
01:28After that, we have materials.
01:30Then we have geography.
01:33Followed by feeling your oats.
01:35The body non-human.
01:37And finally, French scramble.
01:39You need to solve each anagram to give us the right French word.
01:43Tristan, over to you.
01:45Colors of music for 800.
01:46Look at the stars.
01:48In 2024, this Coldplay hit passed one billion views on YouTube.
01:52Tristan.
01:53What is yellow?
01:54That's the song.
01:55Colors of music, 600.
01:56They probably had the time of their lives opening Super Bowl 60 with a set that included holiday.
02:02Bill.
02:03Or Green Day.
02:03Right.
02:05The body non-human, 800, please.
02:07When injured, a type of Medusa morphs to its infant state.
02:11Then, in a few months, is an adult again and is known as the immortal this.
02:15Tristan.
02:15What's the jellyfish?
02:16Correct.
02:17Uh, colors of music, 1000.
02:19Back to Black is a 2006 album by Amy Winehouse.
02:23Back in Black is a 1980 release from these Aussie rockers.
02:27Bill.
02:27Or ACDC.
02:28Good for 1000.
02:29Materials for 800.
02:30It was used in materials such as glasses frames until a ban, then replaced by acetate to the relief of
02:37Leonardo and Donatello.
02:39Tristan.
02:39What is bronze?
02:40No.
02:41Bill.
02:42What's tortoise shell?
02:42No more tortoise shell.
02:43Uh, materials 1000.
02:46Tennis.com said, 1989 was the last time a tour event was won with a wood racket.
02:51Actually, this type of melded material, wood and graphite.
02:57That's a composite racket.
02:59Milislav Machir, in fact.
03:01Back to you, Bill.
03:01Uh, materials 6.
03:03Side window glass tends to shatter.
03:05Windshields are made to flex, says this company, whose jingle has it ready to repair or replace.
03:10Tristan.
03:11With safe light?
03:12Good.
03:13Uh, body non-human for 600.
03:15Way bigger than the King species.
03:17An extinct type of this bird, dubbed Colossus, went 6 foot 6, 250.
03:21It might have waddled on court for the Knicks.
03:24Bill.
03:25What's a penguin?
03:25Very big penguin, right.
03:27Uh, body non-human for 1000.
03:29The scarabs, sacred to ancient Egyptians, were this type of beetle.
03:32The strongest animal on earth relative to its size.
03:36Bill.
03:36What's a dung beetle?
03:37It is for 1000.
03:38Uh, materials for 400.
03:40It's estimated that one-third of 1930s U.S. cookbook recipes included this material, especially in the popular congealed salads.
03:48Natalie.
03:49What is lard?
03:50No.
03:51Tristan.
03:52What is jello?
03:53No.
03:55Bill?
03:57You were a little too specific, Tristan.
03:58It's gelatin.
03:59What is gelatin?
04:00Okay.
04:01Back to you, Bill.
04:02Uh, geography for 800, please.
04:05Peace be with you in this city, home to the Palais des Nations, which was built in the 1930s.
04:10Natalie.
04:11What is Geneva?
04:12Yes.
04:13Um, Colors of Music for four.
04:15Born Pink by this K-pop quartet, debuted at number one on the Billboard albums chart in 2022.
04:21Natalie.
04:22Who is Blackpink?
04:23Yes.
04:24Um, Colors of Music for two.
04:25Taylor Swift saying, losing him was blue like I'd never known, missing him was dark gray all alone, but loving
04:32him was this.
04:34Tristan.
04:34What is red?
04:35Correct.
04:36Geography for 600.
04:38The southernmost of the Mariana Islands, this U.S. territory enjoys temperatures between 70 and 90 pretty much all year.
04:45Tristan.
04:46What is Guam?
04:46Right.
04:47Geography for 1,000.
04:48The answer there is a daily double, Tristan.
04:54You're in second place.
04:55How much do you want to wager on geography, Tristan?
04:57Let's make it a true daily double.
04:59All right.
04:59For $3,600, if you're correct, here's your clue in geography.
05:04The Gaelic name of this city means Green Glen.
05:09What is Glasgow?
05:10Glasgow is correct, yes.
05:12And you're just $400 off the lead, and we need to take a quick break.
05:15You're watching Jeopardy.
05:16Stay tuned.
05:17Let's get to know our contestants.
05:18Bill Bogan is a research administration specialist from Lafayette, Indiana, who, can this be right, once had a presidential candidate
05:25and entourage convinced that you were trying to kidnap them?
05:29Yeah.
05:29What happened, Bill?
05:30So I was a volunteer on John Kerry's presidential campaign and had the opportunity to drive him and his entourage
05:35around Chicago for a fundraising stop at one point.
05:38And I knew that the only way to avoid a massive highway construction delay was to get off and go
05:44through a kind of dicey neighborhood.
05:46And it was just kind of funny to hear them all on their cell phones just kind of stop talking
05:50and do a little bit of this business.
05:52But he stayed on and stayed in his conversation until just about time to get back on the highway, and
05:57he got off just in time to say, oh, Boston cab driver approved.
06:00I like it.
06:00Ah, there we go.
06:02And it turned out you did not kidnap anyone.
06:03I did not.
06:04It's honorated.
06:04I'm not in the federal pen, no.
06:06Natalie Euler-Lusko from Baltimore is a marketing professional and plays in a metal band, right?
06:12Well, I used to.
06:13Back in the day.
06:14Yeah, in high school and a little bit of college.
06:16What did you play?
06:17Keyboards.
06:18Ah.
06:18And I was the only female in a seven-member band.
06:22We had two vocalists, two guitarists.
06:25It was pretty crazy.
06:25You probably don't want to go on tour.
06:27That band probably has to be pretty smart.
06:28Oh, our band was disgusting.
06:29That's what I imagined.
06:30I'm sure they loved your playing.
06:32Our returning champion is Tristan Williams, a data scientist originally from Nebraska.
06:36You did a one-man show in New York back in 2022.
06:39What was your show?
06:40Yeah, this was like the peak of my comedy career.
06:43I wrote a one-man show where I did 100 impressions in 30 minutes.
06:47In 30 minutes?
06:48Yeah.
06:48And it had a narrative, too.
06:49It wasn't just...
06:50Were any of them good?
06:51Can you do an impression for us right now?
06:53If you'll permit me an overly sentimental Jimmy Stewart.
06:55Let's do Jimmy Stewart.
06:55Oh, Ken.
06:57I think any kid who learns a fact should get a chance to come here and say it on Jeopardy.
07:01Have you met my friend Harvey?
07:02He's a giant rabbit.
07:03That's amazing.
07:04It's like Jimmy Stewart is here talking about Jeopardy for some reason.
07:08He must have been a fan.
07:09Tristan, you have control of the board.
07:11Either you or Jimmy should make a selection.
07:14Yeah.
07:15Well, let's do geography for 400.
07:17There it is.
07:18Don't blow your top, but around 30 volcanoes stretch over 180 miles in the southern part
07:24of this Central American nation.
07:26Tristan.
07:26What is Guatemala?
07:27Yes.
07:28French Scramble for 800.
07:30Many look forward to this day.
07:32Medias.
07:34Tristan.
07:34What is Samadie?
07:35Yes, Saturday.
07:36French Scramble 600.
07:38Your kinfolk, elf male.
07:41Tristan.
07:41What is famil?
07:42That's right, famille, family.
07:43Scramble 1000.
07:45Found across the channel, enter Regal.
07:49Natalie.
07:50What is Angleterre?
07:51You got it, England in French.
07:53French Scramble for four.
07:55It puts a roof over your head, no aims.
07:58Tristan.
07:58What is maison?
07:59Or house, right.
08:01French Scramble 200.
08:03Camembert, perhaps.
08:04Ego farm.
08:05Natalie.
08:06What is homage?
08:07Meaning cheese, well said.
08:08Let's do geography for two.
08:11You can stand on the prime meridian at the Royal Observatory in this borough.
08:15Tristan.
08:15What is Greenwich?
08:16Correct.
08:17Let's try oats for 1000.
08:19His 1755 dictionary.
08:21Oats, a grain which in England is generally given to horses, but in Scotland supports the
08:25people.
08:29It's a little bit problematic, Samuel Johnson.
08:32Back to you, Tristan.
08:32Oats, 800.
08:34Oats don't contain this, but can contact it in processing.
08:38So folks with celiac disease are advised to look for the free label.
08:42Tristan.
08:42What is gluten?
08:43Correct.
08:44Uh, body non-human, 400.
08:46This tree-dwelling marsupial is super cute, eats eucalyptus, and has an alibi for murder,
08:52as its fingerprints are just like humans.
08:54Tristan.
08:54What's a koala?
08:55Yes.
08:56A body non-human, 200.
08:57This clothes-minded four-letter flying insect can detect chemical love signals of potential
09:02mates seven miles away.
09:04Tristan.
09:05What's a moth?
09:05Yes.
09:06Oats, 600.
09:07A village in the extreme north of mainland Britain is John O. These, also a word for hulled oats.
09:16What are groats?
09:18John O. Groats.
09:19Tristan.
09:19Oats, 400.
09:21In 1877, a cereal maker trademarked a figure of a man in this religious sect's garb.
09:27Tristan.
09:27Who are the Quakers?
09:28Yeah, Quaker oats.
09:29Materials, 200.
09:31This precious metal is the most malleable element, so what's used in dental fillings is alloyed,
09:35not 24 carat.
09:37Bill.
09:38What's gold?
09:38That's right.
09:39Bring it.
09:39One more clue.
09:40Feeling your oats.
09:41Oat plants are hardy, but they're susceptible to this type of fungal disease that sounds like
09:46it should afflict iron.
09:48Tristan.
09:48What is rust?
09:49It is a rust.
09:50Yes, $8,000 even for you.
09:51Bill and Natalie playing well, too.
09:53Natalie, you'll select first when we come back.
09:55Double Jeopardy's next.
09:57As promised, we are back and ready for Double Jeopardy.
10:00I hope you are as well.
10:01Here are the categories.
10:03First, we have Praise Chic.
10:05Then, Famous Pairs, followed by 21st Century TV theme song lyrics.
10:10You name the show.
10:12Then, Hey Ma, where responses begin with the letters M-A.
10:16After that, She Walks in Beauty like the Night.
10:21Natalie, what'll it be?
10:23Let's do 21st Century TV theme song lyrics for eight.
10:28Don't sing if you want to live long.
10:30They have no use for your song.
10:32You're dead, you're dead, you're dead.
10:34And out of this world.
10:38That's the theme to What We Do in the Shadows.
10:40Back to you, Natalie.
10:41Uh, same category for four.
10:44Come on, grab your friends.
10:46We'll go to very distant lands with Jake the dog and Finn the human.
10:49The fun will never end.
10:50It's...
10:51Bill.
10:51Adventure Time?
10:53What's Adventure Time?
10:54Yes.
10:55Uh, Famous Pairs, 12.
10:56Who's on first was a famous comedy routine by this pair, who also made more than 30 movies together.
11:02Bill.
11:03For Abbott and Costello.
11:04Right again.
11:05Uh, Hey Ma, 12.
11:06Angola's flag features half a cogwheel and this type of knife, forming a hammer and sickle.
11:11Tristan.
11:12What's a machete?
11:13Yes.
11:13Famous Pairs, 1,600.
11:15The answer there is a daily double.
11:20What do you think in here, wager-wise, Tristan?
11:23Uh, 6,000.
11:25A big wager.
11:26You'll have 15,200 if you're correct.
11:28Your category is Famous Pairs.
11:31Domenico and Stefano are the first names of this pair, who debuted their first collection
11:36at Milan Fashion Week in 1985.
11:40Who are Dolce and Gabbana?
11:42That is correct.
11:42Yes.
11:43Taking you to 15,200.
11:49Okay.
11:49Let's do Like the Night for 1,200.
11:52Before dying in 1329, this Scottish king and liberator asked his knight, James Douglas,
11:57to take his heart to the Holy Land.
12:00Bill.
12:01It was Robert the Bruce.
12:02Correct.
12:03Okay.
12:03Uh, Hey Ma, 16.
12:05Small but potent.
12:06It's espresso and a bit of milk in a small cup.
12:09Tristan.
12:10What's a macchiato?
12:10You're correct.
12:11Uh, Like the Night's 1,600.
12:13Writing gear-related nickname of Henry Percy, a rebel against England's Henry IV, and a
12:18major character in Henry IV Part 1.
12:21Tristan.
12:21Who is Hotspur?
12:22Yes.
12:23Uh, Like the Night 2,000?
12:24After King Arthur is mortally wounded in his last battle, this faithful but lesser-known
12:29knight throws Excalibur into the lake.
12:34Tough one.
12:35Who is Sir Bedivere?
12:37Back to you, Tristan.
12:38Uh, She Walks in Beauty, 1,200.
12:40In a sonnet about this mysterious woman, Shakespeare writes,
12:44Sweet beauty hath no name, no holy bower.
12:50That's one of his sonnets, too.
12:51The Dark Lady.
12:52Tristan.
12:53Uh, She Walks in Beauty, 1,600?
12:55There's the other Daily Devil in the round.
13:00You have $18,400 to wager at this point, Tristan.
13:04Let's do $2,000 this time.
13:05Okay.
13:06You'll be above $20,000 if you're correct in She Walks in Beauty.
13:10Dante Gabriel Rossetti says of this witch, whom Adam loved before Eve, her enchanted hair
13:16was the first gold.
13:18Who is Lilith?
13:19Lilith is correct, and you're over $20,000.
13:23Oh, right.
13:26Uh, famous pairs for $2,000.
13:29Flora, the Red Menace, was the first Broadway show to feature music and lyrics by candor and
13:34him.
13:35Tristan.
13:35Who is Eb?
13:36Good for $2,000.
13:37Hey Ma, $2,000?
13:38In addition to referring to entering a college, this word means to register a coat of arms
13:43in heraldry.
13:44Bill.
13:44That's matriculate?
13:45Yes.
13:46Good for $2,000.
13:47Uh, famous pairs, $8.
13:48A crossword puzzle book in 1924 was the first offering from this publishing pair.
13:56You're looking at Simon & Schuster.
13:58Back to you, Bill.
13:59Praise Chic for $1,600.
14:02Fringes are affixed to the four corners of the tallit, one of these garments worn by Jewish
14:06men during the morning prayer service.
14:08Tristan.
14:09What's a scarf?
14:10No.
14:12Natalie or Bill?
14:12Natalie.
14:13What's a sash?
14:14Also incorrect.
14:16Bill, shake in his head.
14:17It's a prayer shawl.
14:19Back to you, Bill.
14:20Ah, praise Chic, $1,200.
14:22Three knots in a corded rope or cincture signify vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience taken
14:28by friars of this religious order.
14:30Natalie.
14:31Uh, what are Dominican?
14:34No.
14:36Tristan or Bill?
14:38It's the Franciscan friars.
14:40Back to you, Bill.
14:41Hey, ma, for $1,600.
14:43It follows cornbread, Swedish house, and $3,600.
14:47Tristan.
14:48What is Mafia?
14:48Yes.
14:49She walks in beauty $800.
14:51In what's known as her fragment 16, this poet of circa 600 B.C. calls Helen of Troy
14:57far more beautiful than any mortal woman.
14:59Tristan.
15:00Who is Sappho?
15:01Yes.
15:01Uh, she walks in beauty $2,000.
15:03Fairest of all the maids was this longfellow lass of Grand Prix, Benedict's daughter.
15:08Tristan.
15:09Who is Evangeline?
15:09Good for $2,000.
15:11Praise Chic $2,000.
15:12This long, narrow vestment worn by Catholic priests has the same name as a fancy and similarly
15:17shaped women's garment.
15:19Natalie.
15:20What is a stole?
15:21Stole is correct.
15:22You're out of the hole.
15:23Famous pears for four?
15:25They're the biblical pair captured on canvas here.
15:28Notice she's holding a pair of scissors.
15:30Bill.
15:31We're Samson and Delilah.
15:32Yeah.
15:33Uh, hey, ma, for four.
15:35Though she does have stepchildren, Helen Mirren has stated that she has no this instinct.
15:40Tristan.
15:40What is maternal?
15:41You got it.
15:42She walks in beauty $400.
15:43His poem with the line, all the face composed of flowers, was printed about 10 years after
15:49his marriage to Elizabeth.
15:50Tristan.
15:51Who is Robert Browning?
15:52You're right.
15:52Like the knight $800?
15:54This by name of Spanish knight Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar comes from the Arabic for lord.
15:59Tristan.
16:00Who is El Cid?
16:01Yes.
16:02Like the knight $400?
16:03English knight William Marshall helped in marshalling the barons and the king to assent to this document
16:08in 1215.
16:09Tristan.
16:10What is the Magna Carta?
16:10Correct.
16:11Pray Sheik, 800.
16:13When preparing for the major pilgrimage, a person of this faith must wear Iram clothing.
16:18Bill.
16:19What's Islam?
16:19That's right.
16:21Uh, 21st century theme song, 12.
16:23Back to the theme songs.
16:25Mumford, No Sons.
16:26Yeah, might be all that you get.
16:28Yeah, I guess this might well be it.
16:30But heaven knows I've tried.
16:35That's how the theme to Ted Lasso goes.
16:37Bill.
16:38Uh, 16.
16:39Same thing.
16:40Bluesy in Baltimore.
16:41You gotta keep the devil way down in the hole.
16:44Natalie.
16:45What is The Wire?
16:46That's right, from Baltimore.
16:47Yes.
16:48Um, let's do Pray Sheik for four, please.
16:51ShĂŽzoku are the traditional priestly vestments worn in this Japanese religion, the way of the
16:55kami.
16:56Natalie.
16:56Uh, what is Shinto?
16:57That's right.
16:58One more clue.
16:59I'm afraid it's TV theme song lyrics, everybody's favorite.
17:02A recent Jagger little pill.
17:04Surrounded by losers, misfits, and boozers.
17:07You made one mistake, you got burned at the stake.
17:12That is mixed theme song two, Slow Horses.
17:15Tristan's in the lead as we head into Final Jeopardy.
17:16Let's see what category you three deal with today.
17:19It'll be energy.
17:20And we'll be back with the clue right after this break.
17:24The final Jeopardy category today is energy.
17:27And here's the energetic clue.
17:29The first power plant using this type of energy was built in Italy at a site thought to have
17:34inspired Dante.
17:35You have 30 seconds, contestants.
17:37Good luck.
17:38Good luck.
17:47Good luck.
18:08Natalie Euler-Lusko had $3,200 heading into Final Jeopardy, and her response was, what
18:15is coal?
18:15I'm afraid not.
18:16Natalie, you wagered $3,199.
18:20That will leave you with $1.
18:21Bill Bogan was in second place with $10,200.
18:25What did he come up with?
18:26He said, what is geothermal?
18:28That's correct.
18:29It was in Devil's Valley, whose steaming fumaroles were thought to have inspired hell in Dante's
18:34work.
18:34What did you wager, Bill?
18:35You'll be adding $3,600, taking you to $13,800.
18:39But you may have to settle for second place today.
18:41Tristan Williams had a big lead with $26,400.
18:43Does he have geothermal?
18:46He has volcanic, which we will not be accepting, I'm afraid.
18:50The wager was $3,601, but that still leaves you with $22,799, Tristan, and now a very respectable
18:57three-day total, $61,199.
19:01Congratulations.
19:03Thanks for being with us this week on Jeopardy.
19:05Have a great weekend, and we'll see you on Monday.
19:09We'll see you on Monday.
19:09I'm Mike.
19:22Have a great weekend, and we'll see you on Monday.
19:26We'll see you on Monday.
19:26Bye-bye.
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