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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:14Introducing today's contestants.
00:16An attorney from Greenville, South Carolina, Valerie Fulton.
00:21A professor of tree fruit physiology, originally from Saline, Michigan, Chase Griffin.
00:27And our returning champion, a data scientist, originally from Lincoln, Nebraska, Tristan Williams, whose seven-day cash winnings total $132
00:39,900.
00:42And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:49Thank you, Johnny. Welcome to Jeopardy!
00:52It was win number seven for our champion Tristan Williams in yesterday's game,
00:56but unlike in his previous four wins, Tristan did not have the runaway going yesterday,
01:01and the pressure was on him to be correct in final.
01:03Thankfully for him, Jack and Diane meant that, oh yeah, Tristan's run goes on.
01:08He's joined today by Chase and Valerie on the Alex Rebeck stage.
01:11Good luck to all three of you.
01:12Let's see what categories you're dealing with in the Jeopardy! round.
01:16We have blank of blank literary edition in the first column, then the elements, a meet cute, followed by song
01:26song blue, the old west, and finally, expressions from the sporting world.
01:32Tristan, start the game for us.
01:34Let's do the elements for 800.
01:36Escalith is a brand name of the carbonate of this element used to treat bipolar disorder.
01:41Valerie.
01:42What is lithium?
01:43Yes.
01:43A meet cute for 600.
01:46The pork version of this ten-letter cut of meat is the most, let's say soft and succulent part of
01:51piggy.
01:52Tristan.
01:52What is the tenderloin?
01:53Yes.
01:54The element's 600?
01:56To phrase a coin, a nickel is only 25% nickel.
02:00The rest is this reddish element.
02:02Chase.
02:02What is copper?
02:03Yes.
02:04Let's do the elements for a thousand.
02:06This metal is derived from shaleite or wolframite.
02:09Don't say wolfram.
02:11Chase.
02:11What is tungsten?
02:12Correct for a thousand.
02:13Let's do meet cute for 800.
02:15Corned beef is usually made from this cut from the breast section, which sounds good about now.
02:20Chase.
02:21What is brisket?
02:21It is a brisket.
02:22Meet cute for a thousand.
02:24Called Italian bacon, it gets its name from the Italian word for belly, as in pork belly.
02:29Valerie.
02:30What is pancetta?
02:31You get a thousand.
02:31Literary edition 600, please.
02:35I was named after a swimming pool, says the son of a zookeeper in this novel by Jan Martel.
02:40Tristan.
02:40What is the life of pie?
02:41That's right.
02:42Literary edition 800.
02:44Bible story plus California history equals Steinbeck's formula for this 1952 novel.
02:50Chase.
02:51What is east of Eden?
02:52That's correct.
02:53A meet cute for 400.
02:55A turkey's heart, liver, and gizzard make up what's called this plural word, which can be fried or stewed.
03:01Valerie.
03:02What are the giblets?
03:03Yes.
03:04Song sung blue for 600.
03:06In this song, New Order asked the question, how does it feel to treat me like you do?
03:11Tristan.
03:12What is blue Monday?
03:13That is the song.
03:14Song sung blue 800.
03:15Lana Del Rey's cover of this fabric-focused classic was used in a promotional video by H&M.
03:21Valerie.
03:22What are blue jeans?
03:23No.
03:24Tristan or Chase?
03:27She covered blue velvet.
03:29Back to you, Tristan.
03:29Song sung blue 1000.
03:31Bono said Ronald Reagan was the red-faced man peeling off those dollar bills and slapping them down in this
03:37U2 song.
03:41On the Joshua Tree, that's bullet in the blue sky.
03:44Tristan, back to you.
03:45Let's do Old West for 800.
03:47You know how people say, on Fridays, the office is like one of these?
03:51Well, former mining center Bonanza, Idaho, is one all week long.
03:55Tristan.
03:55What is a ghost town?
03:56Good.
03:57Old West 600.
03:58It's unclear which member of this kind of group, formed by Marshall Heck Thomas, fired the fatal shot into outlaw
04:04Bill Doolin in 1896.
04:06Tristan.
04:07What is a posse?
04:08Yeah.
04:09Expressions from the Sporting World 800.
04:11Like a golfer sent home halfway through a tournament, one who's rejected at a certain level has failed to do
04:16this.
04:17Valerie.
04:18What is make par?
04:19No.
04:20Tristan.
04:20What is make the cut?
04:21Make the cut, yes.
04:22All three of you have made the cut so far, but we need to pause.
04:25Jeopardy! will be back after this commercial break.
04:35Valerie Fulton is an attorney from Greenville, South Carolina.
04:38And Valerie, I'm learning about a South Carolina event I had never heard of before.
04:42As a young person, you used to attend...
04:44The South Carolina Annual Governor's Frog Jump.
04:47Governor's Frog Jump.
04:48It is not particularly well known even in South Carolina.
04:51Both of my grandparents were from a very tiny town called Springfield.
04:54They hosted every single year.
04:56I never had to pay for a frog.
04:58My cousins provided those.
04:59Oh, you've actually raced in the frog jump.
05:01Well, you don't race.
05:03I'm sorry.
05:03I don't want to offend, Valerie.
05:05You try to make your frog jump the furthest.
05:08And does the governor have a frog?
05:09No, the governor is in no way involved.
05:11Oh, okay.
05:11That is simply a mystery of naming, so there you go.
05:14I feel like I know even less about this event than I did a second ago.
05:17Yeah, you're welcome.
05:17It sounds like fun.
05:19Chase Griffith is here, originally from Saline, Michigan.
05:21Yep.
05:22A professor of tree fruit physiology.
05:24That's right.
05:24This is a new one on me, Chase.
05:26What does a tree fruit physiologist do?
05:28Yeah, Michigan State Horticulture, we're trying to make plants work better for us.
05:32And so in my particular job, I get to work on tree fruit, first Michigan apples, now Michigan cherries, peaches,
05:37trying to make them better.
05:38So I worked on Honeycrisp, trying to improve it over the years, and we made a little bit of progress.
05:41The Honeycrisp is pretty good, Chase.
05:43You're doing good work.
05:43As is, yep.
05:44Thank you for your service.
05:45Thanks.
05:46Our returning champion from Lincoln, Nebraska, Tristan Williams, a data scientist.
05:50A few years back, you had kind of an interesting celebrity encounter at the movies, right?
05:53Who did you see?
05:54Yeah, so I was getting ready to go into a movie, and I look over and I'm like, is that
05:57Adam Duritz?
05:58From Counting Crows.
05:59From Counting Crows, yeah, who's a pretty distinct looking man.
06:01I was like, okay, that, maybe that is.
06:04Then we get inside, and I sit down, I'm like, oh, I'm in the same row as him.
06:06And then he's talking to everybody in the row, and I'm like, is that the entire band, Counting Crows?
06:12So it turns out, I saw Super Troopers 2 with Counting Crows, as I verified on their Twitter that they
06:17were there.
06:17That they all hang out together and go to the movies.
06:19Yeah.
06:20Good vibes in Counting Crows.
06:21Who knew?
06:21It's your turn to select next.
06:23Tristan, what'll it be?
06:24Uh, Sporting World for 600.
06:27And so there is a Daily Double.
06:30You have a narrow $800 lead over Chase at the moment.
06:34How much do you want to wager?
06:36Let's do $3,000.
06:38All right.
06:38That'll put you on top by quite a bit, if you're correct, in expressions from the Sporting World.
06:43Anything easy to answer?
06:44Or, more specifically, what if the game is tied after the regulation's seven innings?
06:55Tristan?
06:58What, uh, pop fly?
07:00I'm afraid not.
07:01That's an example of a softball question.
07:04Seven innings in softball.
07:06Oh.
07:06Okay, that drops you down into second place.
07:08Interesting.
07:08Select.
07:09Sporting World 1000.
07:10Salvage a tough situation, and you may hear the Marv Albert catchphrase,
07:14This, and a beauty.
07:19He would say, kick save, and a beauty.
07:21Tristan?
07:22Literary Edition 1000.
07:24The oldest extant of the French poems called Chanson de Geste is this tale of a knight.
07:29Tristan?
07:30What is Song of Roland?
07:31You got it for 1000.
07:32Old West 1000?
07:34Trying to rob this railroad, the UP, George Parrot was hanged, and his skin made into shoes worn
07:40by Wyoming's governor at his inaugural.
07:45The UP was the Union Pacific.
07:47Back to you, Tristan.
07:48Song sung blue for 400.
07:50Zach Bryan's song, About a Goodbye, has this apparel-related title.
07:54Also, the first three words of Tiny Dancer.
07:57Valerie?
07:58What is Blue Jean Baby?
07:58Blue Jean Baby.
07:59You got it.
08:00Literary Edition 400.
08:02To think of time, to think through, is a poem in the original 1855 edition of this Walt
08:07Whitman work.
08:08Tristan?
08:09What is Leaves of Grass?
08:10Yes.
08:11The Elements 400?
08:12Mad as a Hatter came from makers getting slowly poisoned using a compound of this to remove
08:17fur to make felt hats.
08:19Valerie?
08:20What is Mercury?
08:21That's right.
08:22The Old West for 400.
08:23The stuff sold to Indians as this type of liquor was made of watered grain alcohol,
08:27tobacco juice, molasses, and red pepper.
08:31Valerie?
08:31What is Corn Liquor?
08:32No.
08:33Tristan or Chase?
08:35Chase?
08:35What is Fire Water?
08:37No.
08:39Tristan?
08:40Not gonna try it.
08:41They called it whiskey.
08:42Back to you, Valerie.
08:44Sporting World for 400.
08:45The favorite to land that big promotion has this lane in a race.
08:49It means a shorter distance on a circle or oval.
08:52Tristan?
08:52What's an inside track?
08:53Yes.
08:54Sporting World 200?
08:55To run this means to remove obstacles in another's path.
08:59In football nowadays, people tend to just say block.
09:05What is to run interference for someone?
09:07Back to you, Tristan.
09:08Song Sung Blue for 200.
09:10Whether they're worn by Carl Perkins or Elvis, don't you even think about stepping on these
09:14title items.
09:15Valerie?
09:16What are blue suede shoes?
09:17Good.
09:18The Old West 200.
09:20This 1872 graduate of the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery went west to become famous
09:25as a gunfighter.
09:26Tristan?
09:27Who's Doc Holliday?
09:28Right.
09:28The Elements 200?
09:30Element number 101 is named for this Russian chemist who did not discover any elements himself
09:35but did design the periodic table.
09:37Tristan?
09:38Who's Mendeleev?
09:38That's right.
09:39Literary Edition 200.
09:41Control of the Seven Kingdoms is at stake in A Clash of Kings, the follow-up to this novel.
09:47Valerie?
09:47What is Game of Thrones?
09:49A Game of Thrones is right.
09:50One more clue in a meet-cute.
09:52Some l'orange in Julia Child's recipe for Roast This includes orange liqueur, four oranges,
09:58and drops of orange bitters.
10:00Chase?
10:01What is duck?
10:01Duck a l'orange.
10:02You got it.
10:03You're in second place by just $200.
10:05All three off to a good start.
10:06We'll find out what happens when we come back.
10:08Double Jeopardy is next.
10:16We have a very close game as we prepare to move into Double Jeopardy with these categories.
10:22First, Civil War era numbers.
10:24Then we have wings.
10:27TV title towns.
10:29Let's talk about X, baby.
10:31Each response will contain that letter.
10:33Then People's Court.
10:37Valerie, start the round for us.
10:38Wings for $800.
10:41After St. Francis of Assisi had a vision of a seraph with six wings, he received this.
10:46Marks like the wounds on Jesus' crucified body.
10:49Chase?
10:49What are the stigmata?
10:50Yes.
10:51TV title towns for $1,600.
10:55Juno Temple as Dot shoots Jon Hamm's evil sheriff Roy in the 2024 season finale of this.
11:01Chase?
11:02What is Fargo?
11:02Correct.
11:03Let's talk about X for $1,600.
11:06In poetry, it's where Alf the Sacred River could be found.
11:10Valerie?
11:10What is Styx?
11:12No.
11:13Tristan?
11:13What is Xanadu?
11:14In Xanadu, you got it.
11:15Civil War era numbers for $1,600.
11:17As many as $1,200 may have died in the five-day draft riots in this city.
11:22Chase?
11:23What is New York City?
11:24Yes.
11:25Peoples for $1,200.
11:27The Twin Cities has the largest U.S. concentration of this ethnic group that helped fight communism
11:32in Vietnam and Laos.
11:33Valerie?
11:34What are the Hmong?
11:35Hmong is correct.
11:36Peoples, $800.
11:38Go too close to the edge of the ice and the Kalupalik will snatch you.
11:42A tale for kids among this one of Canada's recognized indigenous peoples.
11:46Chase?
11:47What are the Inuit?
11:48Right.
11:49Peoples for $1,600.
11:50Color, shape, and design all carry meaning in the intricate beadwork of this people,
11:55the largest ethnic group in South Africa.
12:00Who are the Zulu?
12:01Chase?
12:02Let's do Peoples for $2,000.
12:04Answer there is a daily double.
12:09You've pulled ahead of the champ.
12:10How much do you want to wager on Peoples?
12:13I'd like to wager $3,000, Ken.
12:15Okay.
12:16If you're correct, you'll have $10,800.
12:18Here's your clue in Peoples.
12:21Most indigenous North Africans prefer Amazic, meaning free man, to this name, derived from
12:26one the Romans used for foreigners.
12:28Who are the Berbers?
12:30Berber is correct, yes.
12:31You now have $10,800.
12:37Let's do Civil War era numbers for $1,200.
12:39With a population of about 170,000, this city on the Mississippi was the most populous southern
12:45city at the start of the war.
12:47Tristan?
12:48What is Vicksburg?
12:50No.
12:51Chase for Valerie?
12:53New Orleans was the biggest.
12:55Chase, back to you.
12:56Let's do Civil War era numbers for $2,000.
12:58By 1871, 300,000 Union dead and even some of their foes were buried in national cemeteries,
13:05such as Fredericksburg in this state.
13:07Tristan?
13:07What is Virginia?
13:08Correct for $2,000.
13:09Wings for $1,200.
13:11This insect is named for the song it makes by rubbing its wings together.
13:14The third syllable sometimes sounds like didn't.
13:18Chase?
13:18What is it, Katie did?
13:19Correct.
13:20Wings for $1,600.
13:22Only pieces of this statue's wings were found on Samothrace.
13:25It's now on the prow of a ship atop the Louvre's Daru Stairs.
13:29Tristan?
13:29What is the winged victory of Samothrace?
13:31That's right.
13:32TV title towns for $1,200.
13:34In 2021, CSI went back to its roots, adding this abbreviated city name as the subtitle
13:40of a new series.
13:42Tristan?
13:42What is LV?
13:44No.
13:44What is LV?
13:45Valerie?
13:46What is NYC?
13:47Also incorrect.
13:49Chase?
13:50Not gonna try it.
13:51You had the right city, Tristan, but it's called CSI Vegas.
13:54Just Vegas.
13:55Okay.
13:55Back to you.
13:56Let's talk about X for $1,200.
13:57Answer.
13:58The final daily double of the game.
14:03And as you can see, you have exactly half Chase's total at the moment.
14:07Let's do $4,500.
14:09All right.
14:10That'll put you close, if you're correct, in Let's Talk About X.
14:14Examples include Silent Scream and Working Vacation.
14:20What is an oxymoron?
14:22That is right.
14:23And we have a close game again.
14:28Okay.
14:29Let's talk about X for $2,000.
14:31This on both your houses.
14:33This being an adhesive resin bonding to materials.
14:35Yeah, yeah, we know it's a plague, but that blows the joke.
14:39Tristan?
14:39What's a pox?
14:40What's an epoxy?
14:41Correct, for the lead.
14:43TV title towns for $2,000.
14:45The 2019 reboot of this sci-fi series added New Mexico to the title.
14:50Chase?
14:50What are the X-Files?
14:51No.
14:52Tristan or Valerie?
14:55That show is called Roswell.
14:56Back to you, Tristan.
14:58Yeah.
14:58Wings for $2,000.
14:59It's Henry James' novel about sweet, wealthy, dying American girl Millie Thiel.
15:07It's called The Wings of the Dove.
15:09Tristan?
15:10Let's try a court for $1,600.
15:12The Court of the Lions, 12 Lions to be exact, is a prime stop for visitors touring this Moorish
15:18fortress in Granada, Spain.
15:20Tristan?
15:20What's the Alhambra?
15:21Yes.
15:21Court for $2,000?
15:22This king's royal court was itinerant, following him wherever he went, though frankly, he preferred
15:28his royal residence in Aachen.
15:29Chase?
15:30Who is Charlemagne?
15:31You got it for $2,000.
15:32Court for $1,200.
15:34This adjective for an idea that has lost all significance precedes court in law school.
15:39Tristan?
15:40What is moot?
15:40That's right.
15:41Let's talk about X for $800.
15:43What a newsie might yell on a street corner, or slang for someone being just too much.
15:48Tristan?
15:49What is extra?
15:49They're extra.
15:50Title towns for $800.
15:52JR got shot and died for real in a 2013 episode of this reboot.
15:57Tristan?
15:57What is Dallas?
15:58Yeah.
15:59Court for $800?
16:00Title, The Tennis Court Oath, the unfinished sketch seen here depicts a pivotal moment in
16:05the early stages of this conflict.
16:07Tristan?
16:08What is the French Revolution?
16:09That's right.
16:09Civil Warrior are numbers for $800.
16:11A group of wealthy abolitionists, known as the Secret Six, funneled money to this militant
16:16activist.
16:17Valerie?
16:18Who is Brown?
16:18It is John Brown.
16:19Wings.
16:20Finish off wings.
16:21If you need to escape a labyrinth and can't sail away, build some wings like he did.
16:26Worked out better for him than his kid.
16:28Chase?
16:29Who is Icarus?
16:29No.
16:31Tristan?
16:31Who is Daedalus?
16:32Yes, Daedalus, the dad.
16:33Title towns for $400.
16:35Exterior shots for this sitcom are actually the 78th precinct house in Prospect Heights.
16:40Tristan?
16:41What is Brooklyn Nine-Nine?
16:42Correct.
16:43Let's talk about X for $400.
16:45Waymo offers a self-driving one of these rides that one might take to the apartment of an
16:49ex at 3 a.m.
16:51Chase?
16:51What's a taxi?
16:52Self-driving taxi, yeah.
16:53Peoples for $400.
16:55Lip and chin designs are traditionally reserved for women in Tamoko, this art sacred to the
17:00Maori people of New Zealand.
17:02Tristan?
17:02What is tattooing?
17:03You got it.
17:04Court for $400?
17:05This brand launched in 1983 expressly from all food courts and is now the country's largest
17:10Asian restaurant chain.
17:12Chase?
17:12What is Panda Express?
17:13That is correct.
17:14The last clue from Civil War era numbers.
17:17By 1861, 11 former U.S. states had seceded to form the new entity with this full formal
17:22name.
17:23Chase?
17:24What are the Confederate States of America?
17:25You are correct.
17:26So you're not that far behind, Tristan, as we move into Final Jeopardy.
17:30Here is the category for you three.
17:33Play characters.
17:34And we'll be back to play Final Jeopardy right after this.
17:40Tristan's been winning all week, but today it all comes down to this category, play characters,
17:44and this clue.
17:46This title character of an 1890 play is often called the Female Hamlet.
17:5130 seconds, contestants.
17:53Good luck.
18:24Valerie Fulton made it to Final Jeopardy thanks to John Brown.
18:27Well done.
18:27Was she correct?
18:28She wrote down, what is no clue?
18:31So fun.
18:32What a great attitude.
18:33It's just like you're back at the frog jump.
18:34That's exactly right.
18:35How much did you wager, Valerie?
18:37Everything but a dollar.
18:38So you'll be left with a buck.
18:39Chase Griffith was in second place with 12,800.
18:42His response?
18:44Who is Ophelia?
18:46I'm afraid it is not Ophelia.
18:47Chase, you wagered 8,000.
18:50That'll knock you down to 4,800.
18:51Tristan Williams had the lead with 18,900.
18:54Not a runaway today.
18:56Was he correct?
18:56He wrote down, who is Hedda Gabler.
18:59And that is correct.
19:01Ibsen's complex mercurial protagonist, Hedda Gabler.
19:04What did you wager, Tristan?
19:06You will add 6,701 to finish with $25,601 today.
19:11And now an eight game total of $158,501.
19:16What a week he had here.
19:18Thanks so much for watching.
19:19We'll see you back here on Monday.
19:49And we'll see you back here on Sunday.
19:50We'll see you back here on Monday.
19:53We'll see you back here on Sunday.
19:53Bye.
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