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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:13Here are today's contestants.
00:16A marriage and family therapist from Brea, California, Jessica Doverspike.
00:22A college professor from Perry, North Carolina, Steve Green.
00:26And our returning champion, a data scientist originally from Lincoln, Nebraska, Tristan Williams, whose three-day cash winnings totaled $61
00:38,199.
00:41And now, here is the host of Jeopardy! Ken Jennings.
00:47Thank you so much, Johnny Gilbert. Welcome to Jeopardy!
00:50In Friday's game, our champion Tristan Williams found all three daily doubles and was correct all three times, boosting his
00:57score into a range that could not be caught in Final Jeopardy!
01:00In fact, two of Tristan's three wins have been runaways, so it's proving to be a strong streak, but we'll
01:06see how he fares today against Steve and Jessica.
01:08Welcome and good luck to all three of you. Let's get cracking in the Jeopardy! round.
01:12Where the categories will be...
01:15Work Union is up first.
01:18Then it's 1950s America.
01:20Wellness Buzzwords.
01:22Then the Brady Bunch.
01:25Nonfiction.
01:26And finally...
01:28I'm Colin Jost, host of Pop Culture Jeopardy!, which a lot of people consider the real Jeopardy!
01:33I can't believe I've spent 20 years writing at Saturday Night Live, and I'm gonna have clues about great moments
01:40from all the show's eras.
01:42Tristan, you're up first.
01:44Soon, 1950s America for 600.
01:46In 1957, Army troops were called out to escort nine black students as they entered Central High School in this
01:53city.
01:54Tristan.
01:54What is Little Rock?
01:55Yes.
01:561950s America, 800.
01:57In a trial that lasted just over three weeks, this couple was convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage and were
02:04sentenced to death.
02:05Tristan.
02:06Who are the Rosenbergs?
02:07Yes.
02:08Work Union, 800.
02:09New York City has the USA's largest municipal union of these men and women, and it honors its heroes as
02:16finest of the finest.
02:20That's a police union.
02:21Tristan.
02:22Nonfiction, 800.
02:24This Nobel laureate and educational activist writes about life, love, and coming of age in her 2025 memoir, Finding My
02:31Way.
02:32Tristan.
02:33Who is Malala?
02:34Yes.
02:35Nonfiction, 600.
02:36Spark Joy is a follow-up to her life-changing magic of tidying up.
02:41Tristan.
02:42Who is Kondo?
02:43Right again, Marie Kondo.
02:44Wellness buzzwords, 800.
02:45Per the WHO, this malady is not a medical condition, but a workplace phenomenon marked by exhaustion and cynicism.
02:54Whatever.
02:57That's how they define burnout.
03:00Tristan.
03:00Work Union, 600.
03:02At 101 in 2015, Norman Lloyd was Hollywood's oldest working actor, having joined this union in 1939.
03:10Steve.
03:11What is the Screen Actors Guild?
03:13You got it.
03:14Nonfiction for 400.
03:16Probably not the most engaging read is a book for number nerds listing one million digits of this, beginning with
03:223.14159.
03:24Jessica.
03:25What is Pi?
03:25Yes.
03:26Wellness buzzwords, 1,000.
03:28Close your eyes.
03:29Focus your attention and belief on this quasi-spiritual method of visualizing your desires into reality.
03:35Jessica.
03:35What is manifestation or manifesting?
03:38Yes.
03:38You just manifested $1,000.
03:40Wellness buzzwords, 600.
03:42This two-word phrase for witnessing and validating another person's feelings was the subject of one of 2024's biggest memes.
03:52We were holding space for that response.
03:55Jessica.
03:56Wellness buzzwords, 400.
03:58For a work of art, a certificate can prove this quality.
04:01For a person, it takes behavior in accordance with one's true self.
04:05Steve.
04:06What is authenticity?
04:07That's right.
04:091950s America for 400.
04:11In an address to Congress, he said, I now close my military career and just fade away.
04:17Tristan.
04:18Who is MacArthur?
04:18Yes.
04:191950s America, 1,000.
04:21From Cape Canaveral in 1958, NASA sent its first satellite into space called this one.
04:30That was Explorer 1, and it's back to Tristan.
04:33Work Union 400.
04:35The Congress of Industrial Organizations split from this group in 1938, but the two had a
04:41reunion 17 years later.
04:42Steve.
04:43What is the AFL?
04:44Yes.
04:45The Brady Bunch for 600.
04:47Consisting of square hair divisions, this three-letter type of braid is a protective hairstyle for natural hair.
04:57Those are called box braids.
04:59You three can take a breather for a moment.
05:00Tristan, as the lead, as we move into our first break.
05:03But Jeopardy!
05:03we'll be right back.
05:06Jessica Dilverspike, here from Brea, California, is a marriage and family therapist.
05:10And Jessica, you once gave your dad a very special gift.
05:13What was it?
05:13I did.
05:14I gave him a gift certificate to come here and see Jeopardy!
05:17You have it here.
05:18I do.
05:18And did he ever cash it in?
05:19He cashed it in today.
05:21Oh, look at that.
05:22You chose the right day, sir.
05:23Well done.
05:23I didn't even know we honored handwritten coupons like that.
05:26Surprise.
05:26Apparently we do.
05:28Steve Green from Cary, North Carolina, is a college professor and a soccer coach, right?
05:32Yes.
05:32Between three of my four children and now just other people's children, I've coached over 40 seasons of rec soccer.
05:3840 seasons.
05:38And you're still going even though your kids have aged out.
05:40Still going strong.
05:41Look at that.
05:41For the community.
05:42Well done.
05:43Our returning champion is Tristan Williams, originally from Nebraska, a data scientist.
05:47But that's not your family line of work, right?
05:49No.
05:49I have 10 aunts and uncles, both sides of grandparents and my parents all worked for the post office.
05:54And how did they feel when you turned your back on that to become a data scientist?
05:57I think they'd rather I go back to paper, but I'll stay digital for now.
06:00All right.
06:01It is the digital age, Tristan.
06:03Steve, you gave us the last correct response.
06:05Why don't you go ahead and make a selection?
06:07Nonfiction for a thousand.
06:09This demon copperhead author tells about her family's adventures eating off the land in Animal Vegetable Miracle.
06:16Steve.
06:16What is Kingsolver?
06:17Barbara Kingsolver for a thousand.
06:19Great moments on SNL with Colin Jost for 600.
06:22Here's Colin Jost.
06:24Bowen Yang correctly pointed out, you came to where I live and you hit me as this character.
06:31Sure, anywhere between 20 and 1,500 people died.
06:34Maybe I shouldn't have asked what was going through his head on that fateful night in 1912.
06:39Tristan.
06:40What is the Titanic iceberg?
06:42That's correct.
06:43Work Union 1000.
06:45Well, the answer there is a Bailey double, Tristan.
06:49You have found it with the lead.
06:51How much do you want to risk?
06:53Let's do 2,500.
06:55All right.
06:55With 2,500 at stake, here is your clue in the category Work Union.
06:59He made a few enemies during his service from 1957 to 1971, leading what was then America's largest union.
07:10Who is Hoffa?
07:13Of the Teamsters, Jimmy Hoffa is correct.
07:16And you add 2,500 to your score.
07:19All right.
07:20Let's go back to Colin Jost for 800.
07:23Here's Colin.
07:23In 1983, Eddie Murphy's advice for impersonating this singer to, well, this singer, included a big smile, move your neck
07:33like someone's choking you, and even to watch this.
07:36But though he sang My Sharia Moore beautifully, Eddie still wasn't impressed.
07:41Steve.
07:43Who is Stevie Wonder?
07:44Yes.
07:45Colin Jost for 1,000.
07:46Back to Colin.
07:48Whether he was an unfrozen caveman lawyer in a world that frightened and confused him, or an anal retentive chef
07:55cutting lean beef into 43 pieces, he was the glue in 80s and 90s sketches.
08:01Tristan.
08:02Who is Phil Hartman?
08:03That's right.
08:04Colin Jost, 400.
08:05Colin?
08:06On Weekend Update, we learned New York's hottest club is Push, which has ghosts, banjos, a stuck-up kitten who
08:14won't sign autographs, Ferkles, which, as you know, are fat Urkels.
08:19This Bill Hader character truly had everything.
08:23Tristan.
08:23Who is Stefan?
08:24You got it.
08:25Colin Jost, 200.
08:26One more time.
08:27Colin Jost.
08:28Years later, Christopher Walken told Will Ferrell a certain sketch had ruined his life, as people were always asking the
08:35man if he wanted to be a man.
08:35He wanted more this, even bringing them to theater curtain calls.
08:40Steve?
08:40What is cowbell?
08:41More cowbell.
08:42You got it.
08:43Our thanks to Colin Jost for that category.
08:45Colin, of course, is the host of Pop Culture Jeopardy, beginning today on Netflix.
08:49Back to you, Steve.
08:50The Brady Bunch for 800.
08:52Billy Collins wrote a poem about these small cords used on ships and braided at summer camps.
09:00The poem is called The Lanyard.
09:02Steve?
09:03Brady Bunch for 1,000.
09:06Kumihimo, the Japanese art of making braided cords, can be used with this three-letter sash around a kimono.
09:12Tristan?
09:13What is an obi?
09:14Good for 1,000.
09:15Brady Bunch, 400.
09:16A piece of braided cord fastened with a decorative metal slide, it's Arizona's official state neckwear.
09:22Tristan?
09:23What is a bolo tie?
09:23Right again.
09:24Brady Bunch, 200.
09:25This nationality, and a way of splitting the bill, lends its name to a three-stranded braid that's also called
09:32an inside-out braid.
09:33Jessica?
09:34What is Dutch?
09:35That's right.
09:35Dutch braid.
09:36Wellness buzzwords, 200.
09:38If someone hasn't been taught these personal limitations on acceptable behavior, good luck dating or babysitting them.
09:45Steve?
09:45What are boundaries?
09:46Yes.
09:471950s America for 200.
09:49Movie-goers are seen here in the 50s watching Buana Devil, the first feature-length color film of this type.
09:56Jessica?
09:57What is 3D?
09:58That's correct.
09:59Nonfiction 200.
10:011491 by Charles C. Mann shares new revelations of the Americas before this man.
10:07Steve?
10:07Who is Columbus?
10:08Right.
10:09One more clue from Work Union.
10:10A 2023 strike by the UAW, short for this, resulted in workers locking in raises of at least 25%.
10:18Steve?
10:19United Auto Workers.
10:20What is United Auto Workers?
10:21Yes, you remembered your phrasing, and it takes you to 4,000 even.
10:25Tristan's in the lead at the end of the Jeopardy round, but there is lots of time for things to
10:28change in Double Jeopardy.
10:32Welcome back to what I consider the real Jeopardy, which is Jeopardy.
10:36It's time for Double Jeopardy now, and Jessica will be selecting from these categories.
10:39The first one, Big Old Chunks of Time.
10:43After that, we have Around the World, The King James Bible Sayeth, a category Made of Metal.
10:50Then it's a Song for You, and finally, Tough 10-letter Words.
10:56Jessica, what sounds good?
10:57King James, 800.
11:00Beware of these which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves.
11:06What are sheep?
11:07No.
11:08Tristan or Steve?
11:10What are false prophets?
11:12Back to you, Jessica.
11:13King James, 400.
11:15Now Israel, formerly known as Jacob, loved Joseph more than all his children, and he made him this splendid garment.
11:22Tristan?
11:22Was the dream coat?
11:23No.
11:24Jessica?
11:25What is a coat of many colors?
11:26Yes, the dream coat is the Broadway version, Tristan.
11:28Back to you, Jessica.
11:29King James, 1200.
11:31From Matthew 419, and he saith unto them, follow me and I will make you these three words.
11:38Tristan?
11:38What are leaders of men?
11:39No.
11:40Jessica?
11:41What are fishers of men?
11:42You got it.
11:43Fishers.
11:441600, King James.
11:46These famous words in Ecclesiastes precede, and a time to every purpose under the heaven.
11:54That starts, to everything there is a season.
11:57Back to Jessica.
11:58Let's finish the category, 2000.
11:59One more from the King James Bible.
12:01The book of Proverbs tells us, he that troubleth his own house shall do this.
12:09Shall inherit the wind.
12:11No more Bible, Jessica.
12:12Go ahead.
12:12Tough 10 letter words, 1200.
12:15This breakfast food cooked on the griddle begins with a boy's name.
12:18Steve.
12:19What is Johnny Cake?
12:20That's right.
12:22Around the World for 1200.
12:23The answer there is a daily double, Steve.
12:28You're in second place, but you're wagering for the lead here, possibly.
12:31Okay.
12:31Let's do 3,000.
12:33All right.
12:33That'll put you on top, if you're correct, in Around the World.
12:36In South America, the Middle of the World monument stands just north of this capital.
12:46What is Brazilia?
12:48I'm afraid not.
12:49Middle of the World equator.
12:50That's Quito, Ecuador.
12:52You'd lose a few thousand.
12:53Select again, Steve.
12:54Around the World for 1600.
12:57In 2025, four of this King's fairy tale castles in Bavaria, including Neuschwanstein, made UNESCO's
13:03list of World Heritage sites.
13:08That's Mad King Ludwig of Bavaria.
13:10Steve.
13:11Big ol' chunks of time for 1200.
13:13This big bad canine with a threatening name roamed North America in the Pleistocene.
13:21What is a dire wolf?
13:23Steve, back to you.
13:24Big ol' chunks of time for 800.
13:26The Eocene epoch marked the first appearance in the fossil records of cetaceans, a group
13:32in this class.
13:33Steve.
13:34What are mammals?
13:35That's correct.
13:36The whales.
13:37Made of metal for 1200.
13:39In 1994, Calloway Golf introduced its revolutionary Great Big Bertha driver with a great big head
13:45made of this metal.
13:46Tristan.
13:47What is titanium?
13:48Yes.
13:48A song for you, 1200.
13:50An irreverent 2022 chart topper by Sam Smith and Kim Petrus said,
13:54Daddy's getting hot at the body shop doing something this.
13:58Jessica.
13:59What is unholy?
14:00Yes.
14:011600 song for you.
14:02Answer.
14:03The final daily double of the game goes to you, Jessica.
14:07You have moved into second place and you can make a move here.
14:11Um, let's make it a true daily double.
14:13Alright.
14:15You'll be just 1100 behind Tristan if you're right in a song for you.
14:19Brian May said,
14:21John Deacon's bass riff was the starting point for this collaboration with David Bowie.
14:28I know it.
14:30Um.
14:33Jessica.
14:34It's not coming to me.
14:35Oh, that's a shame.
14:36Under Pressure was the song.
14:38Yes.
14:38That was the you song.
14:39So you're starting over from zero, but make a selection.
14:422000 song for you.
14:43This Righteous Brothers classic about love was originally written for a 1955 prison movie,
14:49hence the title.
14:50Tristan.
14:50What is Unchained Melody?
14:52Good for 2000.
14:52Around the World 2000.
14:54Less than 3% of the people in Zambia and this next door neighbor directly north of Namibia
14:59are age 65 or over.
15:04That's where Angola is.
15:06Back to Tristan.
15:07Around the World 800.
15:08This museum on the banks of the Neva River houses some 3 million exhibits.
15:13Tristan.
15:14What is the Hermitage?
15:14In St. Petersburg.
15:16Around the World 400.
15:17Mountain peaks in Tajikistan are named for Karl Marx and this associate.
15:22Tristan.
15:22Who's Angles?
15:23Yes.
15:23Chunks of Time, 2000.
15:25Some propose 1950 as the start of the Anthropocene, the recent age of man, as the present epoch
15:31versus this 12,000 year old one.
15:34Tristan.
15:34What is the Holocene?
15:35You got it.
15:36Chunks of Time, 1600.
15:38The name of the oldest geologic eon, when Earth looked like a fiery hell ball, is a reference
15:42to this Greek god.
15:46Who is Hades, the Hadean eon?
15:49Tristan.
15:50Song for you, 800.
15:51Billy Joel said he began writing this song while dating Elle MacPherson, but ended up
15:55making it about Christie Brinkley.
15:57Steve.
15:58What is Uptown Girl?
15:59That is the U song.
16:00Tough 10 letter words for 1600.
16:02If you're doing this, you're either chewing cud or pondering the world.
16:06Steve.
16:07What is Ruminating?
16:08Write again.
16:09Made of Metal, 800.
16:12142 stainless steel sections were used to build this 630 foot tall landmark that's in
16:17the shape of a catenary curve.
16:19Tristan.
16:19What is the Gateway Arch?
16:20Correct.
16:20In St. Louis.
16:21Made of Metal, 1600.
16:23Shorter than the Tachi, this sword with a curved blade was the most iconic of the ones used
16:28by samurai.
16:29Tristan.
16:30What is a katana?
16:31It is.
16:31Made of Metal, 2000.
16:33Famous for his balloon dog sculptures, he also created a massive pile of Play-Doh from
16:38polychromed aluminum.
16:39Tristan.
16:40Who is Koons?
16:40Jeff Koons for 2000.
16:42Song for you, 400.
16:44Rihanna topped the charts for seven weeks in 2007 with this collab.
16:48Steve.
16:49What is Umbrella?
16:50That's it.
16:50Tough ten-letter words for 800.
16:53In Latin times, this noun referred to the punishing of every tenth man.
16:56Now it refers to any wholesale slaughter.
16:59Steve.
17:00What is decimate?
17:01No.
17:03Tristan.
17:04What is decimation?
17:04That's the ten-letter word.
17:06Right.
17:07Made of Metal, 400?
17:08FYI, the spiral on this tool that opens up your best bottle of wine is called the worm.
17:14Jessica.
17:15What is a corkscrew?
17:17That's right.
17:18Tough ten-letter words, 400.
17:20Early Carmelites vowed austerity.
17:22And this other A word, referring to refraining from a certain desire.
17:29What is abstinence?
17:30Two clues left, Jessica.
17:32Two thousand ten-letter words.
17:34Add one letter to the practice of divining omens from the stars.
17:37And you get this, the study of the stomach.
17:42What is gastrology?
17:44Astrology plus G.
17:45The final clue?
17:47The creation and breakup of super these land masses may have caused the great unconformity,
17:52a billion-year gap in the geologic record.
17:55Steve.
17:55What are continents?
17:56What are supercontinents?
17:58That is correct.
17:59Tristan, you're in the lead as we move into Final Jeopardy.
18:01The category today will be world history.
18:04And the clue will be coming up after this break.
18:07With world history revealed as our final Jeopardy! category today, it's time to look at the clue.
18:13In 1454, the future Pope Pius II saw the work of this man at the Frankfurt Fair and marveled at
18:19the extreme elegance and accuracy.
18:21Thirty seconds, players.
18:23Good luck.
18:23With the perfect
18:54Jessica Doverspike made it to Final Jeopardy.
18:56What was your response, Jessica?
18:58I got it right at the end, but...
18:59Oh, you thought of it. Who do you think it is?
19:01It's okay.
19:02I don't even remember who I was gonna play.
19:04No pressure. What did you wager?
19:06You'll lose $400, dropping you down to zero.
19:09Steve Green had $5,400 in second place.
19:12His response of Holbein is also not correct, I'm afraid.
19:16Steve, you wagered $3,000.
19:18You'll finish with $2,400.
19:20Tristan Williams could not be caught again today.
19:22A third runaway for him with $19,100.
19:24Will he be adding to it?
19:26Raphael, no, this was Gutenberg,
19:28the future pope admiring the elegant work of the printing press.
19:32How much did you wager, Tristan?
19:34That'll drop you down just $4,100 to $15,000
19:36and making you a four-day Jeopardy! champion.
19:38With $76,199 to your name.
19:42Congratulations.
19:44He'll be going for win number five tomorrow.
19:46We'll see you then.
19:52Someone said so,
19:53Oh look,
19:54I'll see you then.
19:56Bye-bye.
19:58Jain bye.
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