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Jeopardy - Season 43 - Episode 02: S41 Second Chance Tournament Group 3 Final Game 2
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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy! Second Chance.
00:13For the deciding game, here are our three finalists.
00:18A recent graduate from Oakville, Ontario, Canada, Ryan Sharp,
00:23whose cash winnings Thursday totaled $33,440.
00:30An academic administrator from Waltham, Massachusetts, Abigail Arnold,
00:36who earned $23,600 in our last game.
00:41And an operations executive from New York, New York, Dondi DiMarco,
00:47who had $0 yesterday.
00:50And now, here is the host of Jeopardy! Ken Jennings.
00:57Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
00:58Welcome back to Jeopardy!
01:00We have reached the second chance endgame.
01:02And despite the scores you see in front of our players right now,
01:05this is a two-game total point affair.
01:07And as we've seen over the years, anything can happen at this point.
01:11We will now wipe these scores clean
01:13and let our players start building again from scratch.
01:15Good luck, finalists.
01:16Here are the categories you have in your Jeopardy! round today.
01:21Historical hodgepodge for you first.
01:23Then parenting.
01:25Followed by flip around the compound words.
01:28You give us both words, but the second one should be easy.
01:31After that, logos.
01:33Modern horror is lit.
01:36And finally, we ask TV, who played them?
01:39Dondi, start us off.
01:42Flip around the compound words for $1,000.
01:45The final design of something to be printed and an expenditure of money.
01:50Dondi.
01:51Lay out and outlay?
01:53That's correct.
01:54Compound words $800.
01:56Nightly hotel service in which rooms are tidied, bed covers arranged,
02:00and a measurable decline economically.
02:03Abigail.
02:04What are turn down and downturn?
02:05Correct.
02:06Modern horror for six.
02:08His chilling novel, Lunar Park, features murders similar to those committed in his American Psycho.
02:14Dondi.
02:15Who's Ellis?
02:16Brett Easton Ellis, yes.
02:18Compound words $600, please.
02:20Answer there.
02:20A daily double for you, Dondi.
02:24You have $1,600.
02:26What do you want to wager on?
02:28Flip around the compound words.
02:29$1,600, please.
02:30Alright, you're going for $3,200 here.
02:33Here is your clue.
02:35A verb meaning to distract or divert,
02:37and area right next to the rail yard,
02:40or the horse race.
02:48Dondi?
02:52Doesn't have it.
02:53What are sidetrack and trackside?
02:55That was a tough one.
02:57Start again, Dondi.
02:58Logos $1,000.
02:59Named for a Northwest outdoorsman,
03:01this company recently refreshed its logo with block letters instead of cursive,
03:05and a new goose icon.
03:10What is Eddie Bauer?
03:11Dondi?
03:13Logos $800.
03:14The king of watches.
03:15This expensive brand has long used a crown for its logo.
03:19Ryan?
03:20What is Rolex?
03:20That's right.
03:21Logos for $600.
03:23This company wrote its first policy in 1931 for a Studebaker.
03:27Ryan?
03:28What is Allstate?
03:29Yeah, the good hands.
03:30Logos for four.
03:31Your old country store is here to stay, said this restaurant chain,
03:35after a logo change uproar caused it to scrap the new image.
03:38Abigail?
03:39What is Cracker Barrel?
03:40Yes.
03:41Modern Horror for eight.
03:42This author of impressive horror lineage wrote of a heart-shaped box that contained a haunted suit.
03:48Abigail?
03:48Who is Joe Hill?
03:49Stephen King's son, right.
03:50Horror for $1,000?
03:51In the deep, the cure to a disease is found in this, the deepest part of the Pacific,
03:56but the lab there has gone silent.
03:58Abigail?
03:59What is the Marianas Trench?
04:00Good for $1,000.
04:01TV for $6.
04:03Officer Jessica Tang on Southland and Joan Watson on Elementary.
04:07Abigail?
04:08Who is Lucy Liu?
04:09Right.
04:09TV for $8.
04:10TV for $8.
04:10Blackie Parrish on General Hospital and Jesse Katsopoulos.
04:15Dondi?
04:18Who is...
04:19Time, I'm afraid.
04:21Abigail or Ryan?
04:23That's Uncle Jesse on Full House.
04:24John Stamos.
04:25Abigail?
04:26TV for $1,000.
04:28Kate Hennessy on Eight Simple Rules and Peg Bundy.
04:31Dondi?
04:32Who is Seagal?
04:33Katie Seagal is right.
04:34Historical hodgepodge $1,000.
04:37Around 1800, a military leader named this helped knock out the French from Egypt and began building it into a
04:43modern nation.
04:44Ryan?
04:46What is Muhammad Ali?
04:47Muhammad Ali is right.
04:49Historical hodgepodge $800.
04:51In 843, the Treaty of Verdun made peace among three Frankish kings, his grandsons who were fighting for his empire.
04:58Abigail?
04:58Who is Charlemagne?
04:59Charlemagne is right.
05:00That means you'll have the lead as we reach our first break.
05:02Still have some catching up today.
05:04Ryan's got the lead in the two-game total point affair.
05:05But we'll be back with more Jeopardy! Second Chance after this.
05:15We like to use this time at the end of a competition or tournament to let our finalists say thank
05:20you to whoever it is they want to thank.
05:21Who would that be for you, Ryan Sharp?
05:23So I have to say thank you to my family who are here today to watch.
05:26My parents and my sister who have all just put up with me and helped me along the way as
05:32I prepared to come here.
05:34And I also wanted to give a shout out to my cousins Em and Lexi who, before my first appearance,
05:41put together some really sweet signs to cheer me on that they sent me.
05:45Oh, they sent you signs.
05:46Yeah.
05:47That's so great.
05:48Yeah.
05:48Abigail Arnold, what about you?
05:50Who would you want to say thank you to?
05:51Definitely my family and my parents who have come to both of my tapings, all of my tapings rather, and
05:56my dad who brags on my Koryat all the time.
06:00Your dad is bragging about your advanced Jeopardy! stats.
06:02Yes.
06:03I love that.
06:04And my friends, my friend Christina is here today and her four-year-old taught me everything I know about
06:08Notre Dame, which was very helpful in my first game.
06:11You have a four-year-old expert on Notre Dame.
06:13Absolutely.
06:13She's got a secret weapon.
06:14Unless you guys also have a four-year-old expert on Notre Dame.
06:17What about you, Dondi DeMarco, your secret weapons you want to thank?
06:21Well, my family, of course, and various teachers throughout the years.
06:24But mostly, honestly, thank my wife, Zoe, who has been endlessly supportive and not just in the good job, proud
06:35of you sense, but she has put together flashcards and study guides with hand illustrations throughout everything.
06:43And it's just been amazing what she's done.
06:45Hand-drawn illustrations.
06:47Yes.
06:47Take that, four-year-old Notre Dame expert.
06:49I mean, that sounds pretty good, too, I gotta say.
06:52Abigail, you have control of the board right now.
06:54Make a selection.
06:55All right.
06:55Well, on the theme of four-year-olds, let's do parenting for six.
06:57That's right.
06:59If you know the leading cause of death for kids age one to four, you know it's important to start
07:03these lessons young.
07:05Abigail.
07:05What are swimming lessons?
07:06Right.
07:07Parenting for eight.
07:08Studies show an increase in violence in movies with this rating introduced in 1984, and put on Jack Reacher in
07:15Taken.
07:16Ryan.
07:18What is PG-13?
07:19That's the rating.
07:21Parenting for a thousand.
07:22This term for a parent who emphasizes discipline and achievement was popularized by Amy Chua's 2011 book.
07:29Abigail.
07:30What's a tiger mother?
07:31Good for a thousand.
07:32Historical hodgepodge for six.
07:34In 1595, and again in 1617, Sir Walter Raleigh led expeditions in South America in search of this lost city
07:41of gold.
07:42Dondi.
07:43What is El Dorado?
07:44Right.
07:45Historical hodgepodge 400.
07:46In response to the sinking of HMS Hood, Churchill gave the order to sink this German battleship.
07:52Ryan.
07:53What is the Bismarck?
07:54Sink the Bismarck, yes.
07:55Logos for two.
07:56With the advent of color TV, NBC introduced this colorful logo in the late 1950s, and a version of it
08:03is still used.
08:04Ryan.
08:05What's the peacock?
08:05Good.
08:07Hodgepodge for 200.
08:08During the Edo period, Basho perfected his writing of these.
08:12Ryan.
08:13What are haikus?
08:14Yes.
08:14Flip around the compound words for 200.
08:18A play-action pass begins with a fake one, and a synonym for casual, like some comments.
08:24Ryan.
08:25What are hand-off and off-hand?
08:27Got them both, yes.
08:28400, same category.
08:30Preparatory motion from a baseball pitcher, and location of a hunter from which they can be smelled by prey.
08:36Dondi.
08:37What are upwind and wind-out?
08:39Correct.
08:40TV for 400, please.
08:43Mark Scout on severance, and Ben Wyatt on parks and recreation.
08:47Ryan.
08:47Who is Scott?
08:48Adam Scott, yes.
08:50Parenting for two.
08:51A teen acting out before leaving for college, maybe easing the transition, is soiling this, soon to be empty.
08:58Ryan.
08:58What's the nest?
08:59That's right.
09:00Parenting for four.
09:00They're defined as tasks that benefit the household.
09:04A good one to start toddlers on is matching socks out of the dryer.
09:08Abigail.
09:08What are chores?
09:09Yes.
09:10Horror for four?
09:11In Tender is the Flesh, a virus has contaminated most of Earth's protein supply, so folks become these unsavory sorts.
09:19Abigail.
09:20What are cannibals?
09:21Yes.
09:21Horror for two?
09:22Koji Suzuki's novel, Ring, involves one of these outdated pieces of technology.
09:27Teens watching it die a week later.
09:29Abigail.
09:30What's a VHS tape?
09:31Yes.
09:31Here's the last clue from TV Who Played Them.
09:34Frank Reagan on Blue Bloods and Thomas Magnum.
09:38Dondi.
09:38Who's Selleck?
09:39Tom Selleck is correct, taking you to 1400.
09:42You're in third place, Dondi, which means you will select first when we come back with Double Jeopardy after these
09:46words.
09:53Abigail has kept the lead as we move now into the Double Jeopardy round.
09:57Two Daily Doubles, this time hidden somewhere in these categories.
09:59We have That Place Sounds Fishy, followed by Ballet and Opera, Wall Things Considered, some films about writers, then Ow!
10:13I Feel Good.
10:15Dondi?
10:16That Place Sounds Fishy for $2,000, please.
10:19This fish name Beach City in Broward County is just north of Fort Lauderdale.
10:27What is Pompano Beach?
10:29Dondi?
10:30Ballet and Opera, $2,000.
10:33Vengeful ghost maidens called Willys welcome this dancing peasant girl into their fold after she dies of a broken heart.
10:39Abigail.
10:40Who's Giselle?
10:41It is.
10:41Ballet and Opera, $16.
10:43Nijinsky danced the part of The Golden Slave when this ballet, based on an Arabian knight's tale, first premiered.
10:49Ryan.
10:50What's Scheherazade?
10:51Correct.
10:52Place Sounds Fishy for $16.
10:53This song includes the searchers all say they'd have made Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin, if they'd put 15 more miles behind
11:00her.
11:01Ryan.
11:02What is the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald?
11:04Well done.
11:04Place Sounds Fishy for $12.
11:06Answer.
11:07A daily double for you, Ryan.
11:12$1,000 off the lead right now.
11:14Let's do $8,000.
11:16Okay.
11:17It worked yesterday at this point.
11:19Going for $16,000 and that place sounds fishy.
11:22Here's your clue.
11:24A town on the Naknek River in Alaska is named for this regal fish, the largest of its five specific
11:30species.
11:34What is the king salmon?
11:35The king salmon?
11:36The king salmon is the right fish.
11:37You have $16,000.
11:39And the lead once again.
11:41Nerves of steel on this guy.
11:43All right.
11:44Ballet and opera for $12.
11:46Benjamin Britten's opera, Gloriana, about Elizabeth I, gets its title from this Edmund Spencer work.
11:52Dondi.
11:52What is the fairy queen?
11:54Right.
11:54Films about writers, $2,000.
11:56Answer.
11:57A daily double for you, Dondi.
12:01How much of your $2,600 do you want to put at risk here?
12:04$2,500.
12:05Okay.
12:05Going for $5,100 in films about writers.
12:08Here's your clue.
12:10In Only Lovers Left Alive, John Hurt is this poet slash dramatist.
12:14Really, a vampire who gives his work to an illiterate Shakespeare.
12:23Dondi.
12:24Who is Marlowe?
12:26It is Marlowe.
12:27Well done.
12:28The few 100 for you.
12:32Films about writers, $1,600.
12:34In Kill Your Darlings, Ben Foster played this author of Naked Lunch.
12:38Abigail.
12:39Who is Burrows?
12:40Right.
12:40Writers for $12.
12:42Goodbye Christopher Robin had Donal Gleeson playing this man.
12:45First name Allen.
12:46Ryan.
12:47Who is Milne?
12:48A.A. Milne is right.
12:49Place sounds fishy for eight.
12:51About 15 miles from Yosemite National Park, Bass Lake sits high above sea level in this
12:56mountain range.
12:57Ryan.
12:57What's this, Sierra Nevada?
12:59Right.
12:59Place sounds fishy for?
13:01Spearfish, South Dakota, near the Wyoming border, lies in these colorful hills.
13:06Dondi.
13:07One of the Black Hills?
13:07That's right.
13:09Wall things considered 2,000.
13:11This Croatian city's old town has been surrounded by stone walls since the 14th century, when
13:16it was the independent Republic of Ragusa.
13:18Ryan.
13:19What is Dubrovnik?
13:20That's right.
13:21Wall things for 16.
13:22The largest structure built by the Incas was the walled Sacsayhuaman complex on a hill
13:28north of this ancient capital.
13:29Ryan.
13:30What's Cusco?
13:31Yes.
13:32Wall things for 12.
13:33If you'd like to leave a note at this wall but can't get there in person, you can write
13:37one online at thecotel.org.
13:40Ryan.
13:41What's the Western Wall?
13:42Yes.
13:43Wall things for eight.
13:44Since the 90s, visitors have made their own colorful additions to the gum wall near this
13:49city's famous fish market.
13:51Ryan.
13:52What's San Francisco?
13:54No.
13:55Dondi or Abigail?
13:58Shamefully, it's in my hometown of Seattle.
14:00It's pretty gross.
14:01Ryan, back to you.
14:02Wall things for four.
14:04Surrounding Kumballgar Fort in Rajasthan, the world's second longest wall is known as the
14:09Great Wall of this non-China country.
14:11Ryan.
14:12What is India?
14:12Great Wall of India.
14:13Yes.
14:14Ballet and opera for four.
14:15In act two of this holiday ballet, the sugar plum fairy welcomes Clara to the kingdom
14:20of sweets.
14:21Ryan.
14:22What is the nutcracker?
14:23Yes.
14:23Ballet for eight.
14:24In act one of this opera, Cho Cho-san's uncle, a priest, curses her for changing her religion
14:30to marry Lieutenant Pinkerton.
14:31Abigail.
14:32What is Madame Butterfly?
14:33You got it.
14:34Ow for 12.
14:35To deny, if you or your IM force mess up, the secretary will do this regarding knowledge
14:40of your actions.
14:41Abigail.
14:42What is disavow?
14:43That's it.
14:44Ow for 16.
14:46Supercilium is a fancy name for this follicular facial feature.
14:49Ryan.
14:51Uh, what is...
14:53No.
14:54Out of time.
14:56Dondi.
14:56What is eyebrow?
14:57It is the eyebrow.
14:59Ow, 2000.
15:01Cutter's national emblem depicts crossed swords, palm trees, and one of these boats with a triangular
15:07sail.
15:08Dondi.
15:09What is a scow?
15:10No.
15:11Abigail or Ryan?
15:13D-H-O-W.
15:15D-H-O-W.
15:15What is a dow?
15:15Back to you, Dondi.
15:17I feel good.
15:182000.
15:19Feeling vibey after walking the cherry tree lined philosopher's path in this old capital
15:24of Japan.
15:25Ryan.
15:25But it's Kyoto.
15:26Yes.
15:27I feel good for 12.
15:28I feel good after going to Waco Surf Water Park with the fam and floating down its mile
15:33one of these rides with an indolent name.
15:36Abigail.
15:37What's a lazy river?
15:38Yeah.
15:38Films for eight.
15:40Sylvia finds Gwyneth Paltrow starring as Ms. Plath and Daniel Craig playing this poet,
15:45her hubby.
15:46Ryan.
15:46Who is Ted Hughes?
15:47Yes.
15:48Films for writers for...
15:49Johnny Depp played James Berry in the 2004 movie titled Finding This Place.
15:55Abigail.
15:55What's Neverland?
15:56Finding Neverland.
15:57I feel good for 16.
15:58In my good feelings era, I read up on the 19th century era of good feelings when this
16:04president sought to eliminate political parties.
16:06Abigail.
16:06Was Polk?
16:07No.
16:08Dondi or Ryan?
16:09Ryan.
16:10Who is Monroe?
16:12It is James Monroe.
16:13I feel good for H.
16:15I messed around on the basketball court and got one of these.
16:18Two-digit totals in points, assists, and rebounds.
16:21It was a good day.
16:22Ryan.
16:22What's a double-double?
16:23No.
16:25Dondi.
16:25What's a triple-double?
16:26Triple-double, yes.
16:27Al, 800.
16:29It's a canned automatopia or a Lil' Puppy Love rapper.
16:32Ryan.
16:34Uh, what is...
16:37I don't know.
16:38Time.
16:38Dondi.
16:39Was Bow Wow.
16:40Lil' Bow Wow, you got it.
16:42Al, 400.
16:43The Florida Department of Transportation affirmed it had this type of machine after a January
16:482025 storm.
16:50Ryan.
16:50What's a snowplow?
16:51Yes.
16:52And one more clue.
16:53I feel good.
16:54It's not a tan out of tan, but I did get a B minus in this math subject that focuses
16:59on the relationship between angles and triangles.
17:02Ryan.
17:03What is trigonometry?
17:04It is trigonometry.
17:05Ryan, you have 24,800, a pretty big lead over Abigail and Dondi.
17:09Let's remind our home viewers the scores you three had at the end of yesterday's game,
17:13which will be added to your totals after Final Jeopardy.
17:16All right.
17:16Time for Final Jeopardy.
17:18Your category is...
17:19British Royal Titles.
17:21Make your wagers carefully, and we will return with the Final Jeopardy clue right after
17:25these words.
17:27We'll be back with Final Jeopardy right after this.
17:32The last Final Jeopardy category of Second Chance this year, British Royal Titles.
17:37Here's the clue.
17:39This title, named for a county of coastal England, had lapsed by 1843, but was revived in 2018
17:46when Elizabeth gave it to a family member.
17:49You have 30 seconds, players.
17:50Good luck.
17:51your work.
18:02So,
18:22Dondi DeMarco, we'll start with you.
18:24You have $6,700 and wrote down in final, no response.
18:29What did you wager, Dondi?
18:31You will lose everything but a dollar.
18:33You have $1 today, no money from yesterday.
18:35You will stand pat at $1.
18:38Abigail Arnold was in second place with $12,600.
18:41What did you come up with, Abigail?
18:43What is the Duchess of Sussex?
18:45I'm afraid not.
18:46That is not a title that existed in the 19th century.
18:48What did you wager?
18:51$11,639, so that'll drop you down to $961.
18:54But when we add in your $23,600 from yesterday,
18:58you wind up at $24,561.
19:02Ryan Sharp had a big lead, $24,800 at the moment.
19:06What did he come up with in final?
19:08He wrote down the Duke of Sussex.
19:10Yes, that is the 19th century title given to Prince Harry by Queen Elizabeth when he married Megan.
19:14What did you wager?
19:16$42 today, a lucky 42, taking you to $24,842.
19:20And when we add your $33,440 from yesterday, it's a big win for you, $58,282.
19:29And you are advancing the Champions Wild Card, Ryan Sharp.
19:32Congratulations.
19:34That means Ryan will be back next week along with other great players from our past season.
19:39Join us on Jeopardy!
19:40Champions Wild Card beginning Monday.
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