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Jeopardy - Season 43 - Episode 102 Eng Sub
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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:15Introducing today's contestants, a nuclear power instructor from Holland, Michigan, Jeff Waymiller,
00:22a law school administrator from Indianapolis, Indiana, Mary Morris,
00:26and our returning champion, a content manager from Washington, D.C., Chris D'Angelo,
00:34whose two-day cash winnings total $28,600.
00:40And now, here is the host of Jeopardy! Ken Jennings.
00:47Thank you, Johnny Gilbert. Welcome to Jeopardy!
00:49Our two-game champion, Chris D'Angelo, has been watching this show since he was a little kid,
00:54and he attributes his success on the Alex Rebeck stage to what he says is a lifelong love of knowing
00:59things.
00:59Well, that love is certainly paying off for Chris so far.
01:02And you know what? Mary and Jeff strike me as that kind of Jeopardy! fan, too.
01:05So this should be a great game. Good luck to you three.
01:07Let's get into the first round with these categories.
01:10First, I have some advice.
01:12Then we have school books, coffee or tea.
01:17This category is beyond redemption. Each response begins with R-E-D and is found after redemption in the dictionary.
01:25Boxers, or the eternal question, briefs.
01:28Chris, start us off.
01:30School books, $600.
01:31In Twilight, this 17-year-old moves to Washington and meets a mysterious classmate at Forks High School.
01:38Jeff.
01:38Who is Bella Swan?
01:39That's right.
01:40Coffee or tea? $800.
01:41The two major types of coffee beans are Robusta and this milder and more aromatic variety.
01:47Jeff.
01:48What is Arabica?
01:49Correct.
01:50Coffee or tea? $1000.
01:52Heavy on one vowel, this word that follows Formosa in the name of a popular tea comes from words meaning
01:58black dragon.
02:00Chris.
02:00What is it? Oolong?
02:01Yes, you're on the board.
02:03School books, $800.
02:04Staffed by Comical Wizards, Unseen University is located on this flat planet created by Terry Pratchett.
02:10Mary.
02:11What is Discworld?
02:12Right.
02:13Beyond Redemption, $6.
02:15This type of fix of grievances is in the First Amendment.
02:19Chris.
02:20What is redress?
02:21Redress of grievances, yeah.
02:22School books, $1000.
02:24In this Muriel Spark novel, an unorthodox teacher at a Scottish girls school runs afoul of the authorities and is
02:30forced to retire.
02:31Jeff.
02:32What is the prime of Miss Jean Brody?
02:34That's the book.
02:35Some advice, $600.
02:36According to author Ben Mesrick, Sean Parker did indeed suggest dropping the from this website.
02:42Chris.
02:43What is Facebook?
02:44The Facebook, yes.
02:45Beyond Redemption, $800.
02:47To increase one's efforts with intensity, perhaps twice as much.
02:51Mary.
02:52What is Redouble?
02:52You got it.
02:53Boxers, $6.
02:55This daughter of boxing royalty has refused to come out of retirement to fight trash-talking heavyweight champ Clarissa Shields.
03:01Jeff.
03:02Who is Layla Ali?
03:03You are correct.
03:05Briefs, $800.
03:06Over to briefs.
03:07Griswold v. Connecticut, 1965.
03:09The First Amendment has a penumbra where this is protected from governmental intrusion.
03:14Mary.
03:15What is privacy?
03:16Yes.
03:17Brief 6.
03:18Shelby County v. Holder, 2013.
03:21Our decision in no way affects the ban on racial discrimination in this.
03:25Chris.
03:26What is voting?
03:27You are correct.
03:28Beyond Redemption, $1000.
03:30Adjective meaning emitting a suggestive odor.
03:34Chris.
03:34What is Redalent?
03:35Yeah, Redalent is right.
03:38Some advice, $800.
03:40Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar give some advice to this Old Testament guy while he's going through some tough times.
03:45Jeff.
03:46Who is Job?
03:47Job's friends, yeah.
03:49Coffee or T600?
03:50Despite its name, this grade of tea leaf, abbreviated OP, doesn't have a citrus flavor.
03:56Chris.
03:56What is orange peel?
03:58No.
03:59Mary or Jeff?
04:01What is orange pico?
04:02Back to Jeff.
04:04Boxers, $800.
04:05Answer.
04:05A daily double, Jeff.
04:09You have $3,800 in the lead.
04:11How much do you want to wager on boxers?
04:14I'm going to make it a true daily double.
04:16Okay.
04:16Going for $7,600 early.
04:19Here's your clue in boxers.
04:22The name of these amateur tourneys, host to many future world champs, is a nod to the metal charms awarded
04:28to some winners.
04:34Jeff?
04:37What are belts?
04:39Out of time, I'm afraid.
04:40Those are the golden gloves.
04:42Those are the golden charms.
04:43So you're down to zero, but it's still early in the game.
04:46We're going to pause, but then we'll come back with a lot more Jeopardy.
04:48Don't you go anywhere.
04:56Jeff Wayne Miller here is a nuclear power instructor from Holland, Michigan.
05:01And Jeff, you and your wife have what sounds like a very sweet tradition.
05:03Tell me about it.
05:05I read my wife to sleep every night in bed.
05:08Oh, that's nice.
05:09How long has this been going on?
05:11Approximately 23 years, I want to say.
05:1223 years, every night?
05:14Every night.
05:14Are you just that boring a reader?
05:16Jeff, does she just, she nods right off?
05:18It's just the cadence of my voice, I guess.
05:20I love that.
05:21I'm kind of worried about our viewers right now because you do have a very soothing affect.
05:24I'll try and keep the energy up a little bit today.
05:26I love that.
05:26You're doing well, Jeff.
05:28Mary Morris is a law school administrator from Indianapolis, but you're into astrology.
05:32Is that right?
05:32Yes, I am.
05:33I'm also very type A, which is sometimes in conflict with astrology people.
05:37Oh, I see.
05:38You're woo and type A.
05:39Yes, very much so.
05:40To the point where I keep a spreadsheet on my phone of all of my friends' sun, moon,
05:45and rising signs so that if they need it for reference at any point, I've got it handy.
05:50Can you text them alerts if you see trouble coming?
05:52Like, is that what it's for?
05:53I mean, it's all in the stars.
05:54It's not up to me.
05:55Not up to you.
05:56That's fair enough.
05:57Our returning champion is Chris D'Angelo, a content manager from Washington, D.C.
06:01I understand a problem presented itself when you were about to propose to your wife.
06:06Yes, so I had ordered the ring from an online place and it was going to be delivered to my
06:11in-laws' house because I wasn't going to be home to accept the package when it arrived.
06:15Okay.
06:15And on the day it was supposed to arrive, on her way to work, my now wife found spiders climbing
06:22all through her car.
06:23Oh.
06:23And so she called off work and called her father and took her car over to his garage, we didn't
06:30have one, and to bug bomb the car.
06:32So she was there.
06:33So my sister-in-law had to spend the entire day waiting for the package to arrive to make sure
06:37that Ashley didn't see it.
06:38So she, my sister-in-law ran to the end of the street as soon as she saw the truck
06:42coming.
06:43To intercept them.
06:44Yes.
06:44Your plan was almost thrown off by the spiders.
06:46Completely.
06:46As if they had something in mind.
06:48I guess.
06:48The spiders were against it.
06:49I'm glad you persevered, Chris.
06:51Jeff, it's your board.
06:52Let's get back into the game.
06:54Boxers, 1,000.
06:56The title of this AJ Liebling book, a collection of writing about boxing's golden age, is also a nickname for
07:01the sport itself.
07:03Jeff.
07:03What is the sweet science?
07:04You are correct for 1,000.
07:05Boxers, 400.
07:07In 2025, Oleksandr Usyk of Ukraine held all four major heavyweight championship belts, making him this type of world champion.
07:15Chris.
07:16What is undisputed?
07:17That is correct.
07:18Some advice, 1,000.
07:20In Hamlet, Polonius tells his son Laertes this phrase that's now something of a mantra for acting authentically.
07:26Chris.
07:27What is to thine own self be true?
07:29Right.
07:30Some advice, 400.
07:32This priestess told Croesus of Lydia that a great empire would be destroyed if he went to war, but didn't
07:37say which one.
07:39Chris.
07:40What is the oracle of Delphi?
07:41You're right.
07:42School books, 400.
07:44Professor Wogglebug is the president of the College of Art and Athletic Perfection in Osma of Oz by this author.
07:50Chris.
07:51Who is L. Frank Baum.
07:52Yes.
07:53Beyond Redemption, 400.
07:54A movement of troops from one area to another.
07:57Chris.
07:58What is it, redeployment?
07:59Right again.
08:00Coffee or tea, 400.
08:02High in antioxidants, this powdery green tea from Japan is used to flavor ice cream and cocktails.
08:07Jeff.
08:08What is matcha?
08:09You got it.
08:10Beyond Redemption, too.
08:11To subdue or to make smaller, like a waistline.
08:15Chris.
08:15What is reduce?
08:16Yeah.
08:18Coffee or tea, 200.
08:19The Swiss water process is one method for removing this compound from coffee beans.
08:24Chris.
08:24What is caffeine?
08:25Right.
08:26School books, 200.
08:27Published in 1861, the sequel to the genre-starting Tom Brown School Days was titled Tom Brown at This
08:34British University.
08:38Tom Brown at Oxford.
08:40Chris.
08:41Some advice, 200.
08:42Derek Jeter told this man, don't bounce it, they'll boo you before a 2001 ceremonial first pitch.
08:49Chris.
08:49Who is Rudy Giuliani?
08:51No.
08:52Mary.
08:53Who's George Bush?
08:54Can you be more specific?
08:55Bush Jr.
08:56That's right.
08:57George W. Bush.
08:58He threw a strike, by the way.
08:59Brief for four.
09:00Citizens United v. FEC 2010.
09:03The court has recognized that First Amendment protections extend to these entities.
09:08Mary.
09:08What are business entities?
09:09No.
09:11Jeff.
09:11What are corporations?
09:12That's the quote.
09:13Briefs, 1,000.
09:14U.S. v. Virginia, 1996.
09:17Exclusion of women from the opportunities this school provides denies equal protection.
09:22Chris.
09:22What is VMI?
09:23That's correct.
09:24Two clues left, Chris.
09:25I gotta ask you, boxers or briefs?
09:28Uh, boxers, 200.
09:30If a boxer is hurt or otherwise unable to fight, a ref may declare this type of victory,
09:35as in the sixth and last Sugar Ray Jake LaMotta bout.
09:37Jeff.
09:38What is a TKO?
09:39That's right.
09:40And one more clue from briefs.
09:42Tinker v. Des Moines, 1969.
09:44Students don't shed their constitutional rights to freedom of this at the schoolhouse gate.
09:49Jeff.
09:50What is privacy?
09:50No.
09:52Chris.
09:52What is speech?
09:53Speech is right.
09:54You have the lead at the end of the Jeopardy! round.
09:56Mary and Jeff, plenty of time to mount a comeback and plenty of cash to do so in Double Jeopardy!
10:00when we return.
10:09In Double Jeopardy!
10:10one of the things that gets doubled is the daily double count.
10:13Two of them this time, hidden somewhere in these categories.
10:17Science vocabulary, followed by yoink.
10:20Then we have cabinet members, accented words, record labels, and finally, a geography bee.
10:29Jeff, start us off.
10:30Cabinet members, 2,000.
10:32Great grandson of a Revolutionary War figure, Ethan Allen Hitchcock's fight was in this post,
10:38against swindlers taking Western land.
10:40Chris.
10:41What is Secretary of the Interior?
10:42Correct, for 2,000.
10:44Yoink, 2,000.
10:45Variants of a gift-stealing game are White Elephant, Dirty Santa, and this one,
10:50with a name that reminds us of New England.
10:52Chris.
10:53What is Yankee Swap?
10:54Right again.
10:55Geography bee, 1,200.
10:57The Bahamas include these other bee islands that lie about 50 miles off the coast of Florida.
11:02Chris.
11:03What is Bimini?
11:04Correct.
11:05Geography bee, 1,600.
11:07Mount Greylock, the highest point in Massachusetts, is part of this range.
11:11Jeff.
11:12What are the Berkshires?
11:13You're right, the Berkshires.
11:14Cabinet members, 1,600.
11:16In this job, Andrew Mellon helped the 20s roar by pushing big tax cuts through Congress.
11:22Jeff.
11:22What is Treasury?
11:23Right.
11:24Cabinet, 1,200.
11:25Answer.
11:26A daily double for you, Jeff.
11:29You're mounting a bit of a comeback, and you can make a move here.
11:32What's the wager on cabinet members?
11:34Let's run it back.
11:35True daily double.
11:35All right.
11:36Trying it again.
11:37You'd love to see the perseverance.
11:39Here's your clue.
11:40Cabinet members.
11:41Just like Kiefer Sutherland on the TV show, the 2010 choice as this was the HUD Secretary,
11:46Sean Donovan.
11:49What is Housing and Urban Development?
11:51No.
11:51That's not correct.
11:52He was the HUD Secretary, but he was chosen as Designated Survivor.
11:56All right.
11:57You're down to zero, but you have come back before, Jeff.
11:59Select.
11:59Science Volcab, 2,000.
12:01From Hawaiian, uh-uh is this stuff with a rough, broken surface.
12:05Chris.
12:06What is lava?
12:06A type of lava.
12:08Geography bee, 2,000.
12:09Beginning in the Himalayas, this big river flows some 1,800 miles before joining the Ganges
12:14and emptying into the Bay of Bengal.
12:19That's the Brahmaputra.
12:21Chris.
12:22Accents in words, 1,200.
12:24You're just a gullible babe in the woods.
12:26You have this quality with an accent on its final E.
12:29Chris.
12:30What is naivete?
12:31That's it.
12:32Accents in words, 1,600.
12:33From the French for protect, it's a young person guided by a more experienced or influential
12:38mentor.
12:39Jeff.
12:40What is mentee?
12:40No.
12:42Chris.
12:42What is protege?
12:43Protege is right.
12:44Accents in words, 2,000.
12:46You could say this procession is spelled with an accent grave.
12:50Chris.
12:53Um...
12:53Oh, God.
12:55Lost it.
12:55Out of time.
12:56Mary or Jeff?
12:58The funeral procession is a cortege.
13:00Back to you, Chris.
13:02Uh...
13:02Yoink, 1,200.
13:03Back to yoink.
13:05In 2025, this then head of Homeland Security wasn't up on purse security.
13:09A subtle yoinking occurred mid-meal at a D.C. restaurant.
13:12Jeff.
13:13Who's Kristi Noem?
13:14Yes.
13:15Yoink, 16.
13:16Often in an office hierarchy, this two-word act has been defined as taking advantage of
13:21a situation in order to take control.
13:26What is a power grab?
13:28Jeff.
13:28Science vocab, 1,200.
13:30Answer.
13:31The third daily double is also yours.
13:35You're not back above the waterline, Jeff, but as you know, you can wager up to 2,000
13:39here.
13:40Might as well do 2,000.
13:41Okay.
13:41You'll have 1,600 if you're correct.
13:43Here's your clue in science vocabulary.
13:46This adjective describes bacteria and protozoa able to live in the absence of oxygen.
13:53What is anaerobic?
13:55Anaerobic is correct.
13:56Yes.
13:56First thing you had is $1,500.
14:00Hey.
14:00Where to now?
14:01Science vocab, 1,600.
14:03Measured in ohms, it's the opposition to current flow in an electric circuit.
14:08Chris.
14:08What is resistance?
14:09You're right.
14:10Geography B, 800.
14:12Panama City lies about 470 miles northwest of this other capital.
14:17Mary.
14:17What is Belmopan?
14:18No.
14:19Chris.
14:20What is Bogota?
14:20That's it.
14:22Geography B, 400.
14:23800.
14:23It's Germany's largest state in area.
14:26Chris.
14:27What is Bavaria?
14:27Good.
14:29Accented words, 800.
14:31With its straight sides, this type of pan has more cooking area than slopey ones.
14:35So it may be better for that big ol' steak.
14:38Mary.
14:39What's a saucepan?
14:40No.
14:41Chris or Jeff?
14:43Jeff.
14:43What is a sauté pan?
14:45Sauté.
14:45That has an accent.
14:47Cabinet, 800.
14:48The first cabinet member confirmed by the Senate in the second Trump administration
14:51was this man for state, 99 to 0.
14:54Chris.
14:55Who's Rubio?
14:56Yes.
14:57Yoink, 800.
14:58In 1982, Ricky was just bein' Ricky when Mr. Henderson of the Oakland A's led the league
15:03with 130 of these.
15:05Chris.
15:06What are stolen bases?
15:07That's it.
15:08Yoink, 400.
15:09It takes about an hour to yoink out this tube connected to the cecum at the beginning
15:14of the large intestine.
15:16Chris.
15:17What is the appendix?
15:17When you yoink out the appendix, yes.
15:19Accented words, 400.
15:21Having a famous literary son has added this, French forefather, to the name of Alexander
15:26Dumas.
15:27Chris.
15:27What is pair?
15:28Correct.
15:30Cabinet members, four.
15:31William B. Saxby took over in this job January 4th, 1974 at a tricky time and got lots
15:37of impeachment questions in his first news conference.
15:39Chris.
15:40What is attorney general?
15:41Right.
15:42Record labels, 400.
15:44Home to giants like Springsteen and Dillon, this mother of all record labels is named for
15:48the district once home to its headquarters.
15:52Mary.
15:52What is Columbia?
15:53It is Columbia.
15:54Record labels, eight.
15:56Jay-Z spent three years as the president and CEO of this record label founded by Rick Rubin
16:01out of his NYU dorm room in 1984.
16:04Mary.
16:04What is Def Jam?
16:05Right again.
16:06Record labels, 12.
16:08After releasing Nirvana's low-budget debut album in 1989, this Seattle-based label became
16:13synonymous with the grunge movement.
16:18What is Sub Pop Records?
16:20Mary.
16:21Science, eight.
16:22Containing an extra neutron, deuterium is also called heavy this.
16:26Chris.
16:27What is water?
16:28No.
16:29Jeff.
16:32What is heavy hydrogen?
16:33Heavy hydrogen is right.
16:34Science vocab, four.
16:36They're four-letter unspecialized cells that can divide to produce specialized ones.
16:41Chris.
16:41What are stem cells?
16:42Stem cells, yes.
16:441600.
16:45This jazz label, founded in 1939, shares its name with a chain of live jazz clubs, including
16:50a famous one in Greenwich Village.
16:55That label is Blue Note.
16:57One more clue from record labels, and it's this.
16:59This classical music label says it was named after an altogether splendid figure from Greek mythology.
17:07What is Hyperion?
17:09Chris, you have the lead at the end of the double jeopardy round.
17:11Let's see what final jeopardy category awaits.
17:15Literary terminology.
17:16We'll think about that for a moment.
17:18They'll make their wagers, and then we'll return with the clue.
17:22As promised, we are back for final jeopardy.
17:25Literary terminology is the category we're dealing with.
17:27This is the clue.
17:2917th century critic Thomas Reimer coined this two-word term, instructing that a work should
17:35uphold moral principles and see vice punished.
17:3830 seconds, players.
17:40Good luck.
17:42Quite the idea of a heartbeat.
17:46It is true.
17:51You have to wait.
17:55Thanks, guys.
17:56We will turn to a board of applause.
17:56Our hearts is still a good sort of a venue.
17:56Our hearts is still a good sort of a venue.
17:58It is a beautiful cause of aСone.
17:58And it is a very narrow way that you walk.
17:58Then we'll come down to the edge of a kind and a place.
17:58And, you know, we will begin at the end of the next one.
18:02We will get the right.
18:03Let's go to the next book.
18:03And then we'll try the next book.
18:06That's all, I'll be back.
18:10Mary Morris in the middle has $1,800 coming into final
18:13and wrote down what as a response?
18:16A virtuous text.
18:18I'm afraid not.
18:19Mary, what did you wager?
18:20We'll take away $1,399, leaving you with 401.
18:25Jeff Waymiller was in second place with $3,200.
18:28What did he come up with?
18:30What is morality play?
18:32That's a good guess.
18:33I'm afraid it's not morality play, Jeff.
18:35Your wager was smaller, just $500.
18:37So you have $2,700.
18:39But Chris D'Angelo, quite a total today, $20,400 already.
18:42Will he be adding to it?
18:43He wrote down poetic justice.
18:47That is correct, where we get the phrase poetic justice.
18:49Nicely done.
18:50How much did you wager, Chris?
18:51$4,600 takes you to a nice even $25,000
18:54and makes you a three-day Jeopardy! champion.
18:56Your total, $53,600.
19:02Is it reminding you of Quiz Lady?
19:03It's starting to remind me of Quiz Lady.
19:05Chris will be back on Monday.
19:06We'll see you as well.
19:10Thanks.
19:24Thanks, Mike.
19:25And we're gonna say good cash.
19:25So close, if indeed.
19:33Go ahead and talk with us.
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