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00:00From the Alex Trebek stage at Sony Picture Studios,
00:04This is Jeopardy!
00:12Today's contestants are the special education teacher from Broken Arrow, Oklahoma,
00:18Tyler Stevenson,
00:19the policy analyst from Moorville, Kentucky,
00:23Dora Inman,
00:24and our returning champion,
00:26and attorney and theater producer from Memphis, Tennessee, Adam Grimson,
00:32whose four-day has winnings going $72,601.
00:39And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:46Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
00:47Welcome to Jeopardy.
00:49It was a convincing runaway victory yesterday for our champion, Adam Grimson,
00:53who is back today looking to clinch his fifth win and a guaranteed spot in the Tournament of Champions.
00:59When I asked Adam how he felt about potentially qualifying for the TOC,
01:02he said he hadn't even thought about it until I brought it up.
01:06Well, Adam, we're thinking about it now.
01:07Especially Nora and Tyler are here today to stop you.
01:10Good luck, players.
01:10Let's see the categories we have in play in the Jeopardy! round.
01:15First, we have a category on the loner calendar.
01:18Then, Broadway musicals by song.
01:21We'll follow that with meanings of geographic names.
01:25Cozy words.
01:27Then fit.
01:29To be tied.
01:31Adam, champion starts us off.
01:33Let's do meanings of geographic names for 600.
01:37Not always calm.
01:38It was named after a ship passed through a peaceful section of it in 1520.
01:43What's the Pacific Ocean?
01:44Yes.
01:45Geographic names for eight?
01:47Not part of any range.
01:48This peak gets its name from Swahili for mountain of the god of cold.
01:52Adam?
01:53What's Kilimanjaro?
01:54Yes.
01:55Geographic names for a thousand.
01:57The flag seen here was adopted in 2004 by this country,
02:01known in its native language as Cernagora, meaning black mountain.
02:06Nora.
02:06What is the Czech Republic?
02:07No.
02:08Adam.
02:09What is Montenegro?
02:10Yes.
02:10Broadway musicals by song for six?
02:14Suddenly Seymour and Don't Feed the Plants.
02:17Adam.
02:18What is Little Shop of Horrors?
02:20That is the show.
02:22Musicals by song for eight?
02:23When You're Good to Mama.
02:25Nora.
02:26What is Chicago?
02:26Yes.
02:27Broadway musicals by song for 1,000?
02:30Sex is in the heel.
02:32Tyler.
02:32What's Kinky Boots?
02:33Right.
02:35Fit for six?
02:36If layering is your style, make use of this button-down sweater named for an earl.
02:41Tyler.
02:42What's a cardigan?
02:43That's right.
02:44Cozy Words for six?
02:46Answer.
02:46A Daily Double is yours, Tyler.
02:50You're in second place with $1,600 to play with on this Daily Double.
02:55Send the house all out, all in.
02:56All right.
02:58$1,600 at stake.
02:59You'll be in the lead if you're right.
03:00Cozy Words is the category.
03:03With an acute accent on its last letter, it's a company making chocolate, coffee, etc.
03:08Without the accent, a verb meaning snuggle up.
03:18What is Cuddle?
03:21No, Nestle is the verb, so Nestle with the accent.
03:26All right.
03:26You're starting over from zero.
03:27Where to now?
03:28Loner calendar for six.
03:30The loner feasts on July 22nd, the feast day of her.
03:34By tradition, an ex-bad girl who later became a hermit.
03:37Tyler.
03:37Who is Mary Magdalene?
03:39That's right.
03:40A loner calendar for $800.
03:42As the loner is a sole proprietor, he looks forward to the early May week sponsored by
03:47this same government administration.
03:50Nora.
03:51What is Small Business Week?
03:53That's right.
03:54Oh, okay.
03:55Cozy Words for $800, please.
03:57If you're comfy and into triple rhyme, you may use this phrase that includes an insect
04:02and a household item.
04:03Adam.
04:04What's snug as a bug in a rug.
04:06Correct.
04:06Cozy Words for $1,000.
04:08This two-word legal term means a place that offers refuge for shelter from a storm or otherwise.
04:14Adam.
04:15Um, what's a safe haven?
04:18That's right.
04:18Or safe harbor.
04:19Fit for $800.
04:21For my look at the Henley Regatta, this flat-top straw hat will be my vessel to complete the
04:26traditional dress code for men.
04:28Adam.
04:29What's a boater?
04:29Got to wear a boater.
04:30Fit for $1,000?
04:32I'm keeping it simple and giving it the old college try.
04:35Let's go with an OCBD, short for this type of shirt.
04:38Adam.
04:39What's an Oxford College button-down?
04:41No.
04:42No, sorry.
04:42Too late.
04:43Nora or Tyler?
04:45That would be an Oxford cloth button-down.
04:47Back to you, Adam.
04:49Uh, to be tied for $1,000.
04:51Based on theories of this British lord and temperature-scale guy, the feral tide-predicting
04:56machine was an 1880s game-changer.
04:58Tyler.
04:59Who is Lord Kelvin?
05:00Lord Kelvin is correct, Tyler, taking you to 1600 and bringing us to our first break.
05:05After these words, we'll be back with more Jeopardy.
05:12Tyler Stevenson is from Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, who's a special education teacher and in your
05:16spare time a bit of an amateur Jeopardy writer, right?
05:19Yes, I actually go by a nickname, Tiger Songbird, online, and we are part of the Jeopardy Discord.
05:26And I have actually written two Tournament of Champions boards for the Jeopardy Discord.
05:30I actually did one just this past year.
05:32It was about 28 games, a lot of clues in there and a lot of posting.
05:37It was fun.
05:38That does sound fun, but I can't get over your alter ego.
05:40Tiger Songbird.
05:41Yes.
05:41That's pretty great.
05:43Were you not tempted to go by that today?
05:44Today, you're just Tyler.
05:45I'm just Tyler.
05:46Okay.
05:46I will go by Tiger one another day, maybe, if I win.
05:49We may get to meet Tiger.
05:51Nora Inman is from Louisville, Kentucky, a policy analyst with an exciting event coming
05:55up, right?
05:56Yes.
05:56I am 16 weeks pregnant with my first baby.
05:59Hey, congratulations.
06:00Yes.
06:01I have two brains and one body.
06:03You've got a bit of an advantage here.
06:05I know.
06:06And you're giving the baby a head start in life, a very early TV credit for their IMDb.
06:10It's true.
06:11Very exciting.
06:11Well, good luck to both of you.
06:13Our returning champion is Adam Remsen from Memphis, an attorney, a theater producer.
06:18And you've taken us for over $75,000 already, Adam.
06:22Do you have some plans for the winnings?
06:23Well, I was lucky enough to live in Japan for a period of time when I was in high school.
06:28Okay.
06:28Haven't been back since 1988.
06:30So I would love to take my wife and son over there to see some of my old haunts and
06:34revisit
06:34Tokyo myself as well, of course.
06:36And I bet it's changed a lot since 88.
06:38I'm sure it has.
06:39I can only imagine.
06:40Well, that sounds like fun.
06:41I hope you have a great time.
06:42But you have some Jeopardy to play first, Adam.
06:44Tyler, make a selection.
06:46Loner calendar, $1,000.
06:48Spring is a good time to visit Hobart, Oklahoma and see the statue of the Kiowa chief with this
06:53name, a solitary canine.
06:55Nora.
06:56What is Lone Wolf?
06:57Yes.
06:58Broadway musicals by Song for 400.
07:00The music of the night.
07:02Tyler.
07:03What is Rent?
07:05No.
07:06Nora.
07:06What is The Phantom of the Opera?
07:08It's in Phantom.
07:08Yes.
07:09Cozy words for 400.
07:10The 17th century painting of the Chumley ladies shows two kids wrapped in this way, what
07:16TheBump.com calls burrito style.
07:18Adam.
07:19Was swaddled.
07:20Yes.
07:21Tied for 800.
07:23There's a 28-foot tidal range at Banco Direction, Chile in the straight name for him just north
07:29of the tip of South America.
07:30Tyler.
07:31Who is Magellan?
07:32Straight of Magellan, right.
07:33To be tied, six.
07:35There's gooey earth in this word for an area left bare at low tide.
07:39Cook Inlet in Alaska can be deadly in a quicksandy way.
07:45Those are mudflats.
07:47Tyler.
07:48Fit for 400.
07:49In 2026, TV's love story made us remember the unique fit, preppy meets bike messenger,
07:56of this famous son and icon of the 90s.
07:59Adam.
08:00Who's JFK Jr.?
08:01Yes.
08:02Fit for 200.
08:03Despite what many remember, the Monopoly man's fit does not include this eyewear.
08:08You might be thinking of Mr. Peanut.
08:10Adam.
08:11What's a monocle?
08:12Doesn't wear a monocle.
08:13Geographic names for four.
08:14The name of this active volcano on the east coast of Sicily is from the Greek for I burn.
08:20Tyler.
08:21What is?
08:24Adam.
08:25What's S?
08:27Tied for four.
08:28Slack-tied between incoming and outgoing is a great time to do this with your boat better
08:33than with your pay.
08:35Adam.
08:37What's float?
08:38No.
08:39Nora.
08:40What is dock?
08:41Yes.
08:41Docking your boat or your pay.
08:43Loner calendar for 400.
08:45On May 22nd, 1990, there was a new way to play this card game as Microsoft included it
08:50in Windows 3.0.
08:52Adam.
08:52With solitaire.
08:53Right.
08:54Calendar for 200.
08:55Every year, the 4th of July in the Loner's Town brings a carnival with a kindred spirit.
09:00This type of talented musician.
09:02Tyler.
09:03What's a one-man band?
09:04Yes.
09:06Broadway by song, 200.
09:08Ten dual commandments.
09:10Tyler.
09:11What is Hamilton?
09:12Right again.
09:13Geographic nicknames, too.
09:15Spanish sailors named what's now this South American capital for the patron saint of favorable
09:20winds.
09:21Tyler.
09:22What's Buenos Aires?
09:23You got it.
09:23Cozy words, 200.
09:26Often paired with cranny, it can mean a cozy recessed area in your home.
09:30Nora.
09:31What is a nook?
09:31Nook and cranny, right.
09:32Final clue in To Be Tied.
09:35Galileo's dumbest idea had Earth's rotation causing the sloshing of the tides.
09:39Kepler got it right, with this body controlling them.
09:42Tyler.
09:42What is the moon?
09:43The moon, yes.
09:44You have 2,400.
09:45All three of you off to a pretty good start.
09:47Tyler will select first when we return.
09:48Double Jeopardy's up next.
09:56Welcome back.
09:57We've just been time for Double Jeopardy.
09:59Let's show our three contestants and you what the categories are.
10:02We have world history first, then it's silent, G, followed by all kinds of lit, whatever is
10:11clever, then Adobe, and both TV and film in the last category.
10:18Tyler, start us off.
10:19World history 16.
10:20In 1955, this dictator made the mistake of freeing Fidel Castro from the Presidio Modelo
10:27prison.
10:28Tyler.
10:28Who is Florencio Bautista?
10:30That's correct.
10:311,200 history.
10:33In 1793, Lord McCartney famously refused to do this, kneel and bow the head to the ground
10:39in supplication to China's emperor.
10:41Tyler.
10:42What is genuflect?
10:43No.
10:44Adam.
10:45What is kowtow?
10:46Kowtow, right.
10:47Silent G for 12.
10:49An African antelope that can weigh 600 pounds.
10:52Adam.
10:53What's a new?
10:53I don't know.
10:54What's a new with you?
10:55Yes, that's correct.
10:57Silent G for 16, please.
10:59Answer is a daily double there.
11:03You're in the lead right now, Adam.
11:05How much do you want to wager here on?
11:06It's silent, G.
11:073,000, please.
11:09Going for 11,400 if you're right.
11:11Here's your clue.
11:13It means a model example or a perfect archetype.
11:16When a shift of one occurs, there's a major change of thinking.
11:19What's a paradigm?
11:20That's right, and it gives you $3,000 more.
11:26All kinds of lit for 12.
11:282025 Booker Prize winner Flesh by David Soloy is about Istvan, a young man born in this country.
11:38Born in Hungary.
11:39Back to Adam.
11:40Lit for 16.
11:42Answer.
11:42The final daily double of the game is yours, Adam.
11:47Bigger lead than a moment ago.
11:49What's the wager?
11:502,000, please.
11:52All right.
11:52Looking to add 2,000 to his score.
11:54Here's Adam's clue in all kinds of lit.
11:57The goat, or who is Sylvia, is by this playwright, who was never afraid of using a question as a
12:03play title.
12:04Who is I'll be?
12:05That's right.
12:06A theater clue for our theater producer.
12:09Where'd you now, Adam?
12:11Silent G for 2.
12:13By attacking, you malign or do this six-letter word to a court defendant's character, or really the lack thereof.
12:20Adam.
12:21What's impugned?
12:22Yes.
12:23All kinds of lit for 2.
12:25Writer Dana Schwartz joked that most excellent fancy could be the sequel to this big book from 1996.
12:33Adam.
12:33What is Infinite Jest?
12:35Yes, also drawn from Hamlet.
12:37Whatever's clever for 12.
12:38In the 1870s, this Russian touched on the extraordinary cleverness of devils, if only these are devils, in his writer's
12:46diary.
12:47Tyler.
12:47Who is Dostoevsky?
12:49It is for 1,200.
12:50World History, 2,000.
12:52The Step Pyramid of Djoser at Saqqara is credited to this Egyptian, considered the first physician and architect in written
12:58history.
12:59Tyler.
13:00Who is Imhotep?
13:01You got it.
13:02Um, whatever's clever, 16.
13:05This Commedia dell'Arte character is known for both his cleverness and his colorful diamond-patterned costume.
13:11Adam.
13:12What's Harlequin?
13:12Right.
13:13Clever for 2,000.
13:15In Medieval Tales, this fox character used his cunning to prevail over Easton Grimm, a not-too-clever wolf.
13:22Adam.
13:23What's Reynard?
13:24You add 2,000.
13:25Adobe for 12?
13:27The process of making keimados, a durable type of burnt adobe bricks, involves placing them in this four-letter oven.
13:34Nora.
13:35What is a kiln?
13:36Yes.
13:36TV and film for 1,600?
13:38First, it was a TV series with Edward Woodward as Robert McCall.
13:42Then a movie with Denzel.
13:44Then a TV series with Queen Latifah.
13:46Tyler.
13:47What's the equalizer?
13:48Right.
13:49TV and film 12?
13:50Alec Baldwin was the first actor to portray this Tom Clancy character on screen.
13:55John Krasinski played him for four seasons on TV.
13:58Adam.
13:59Who's Jack Ryan?
13:59Correct.
14:00TV for 2,000.
14:02Lauren Graham and Peter Krause were part of the Braverman family on this beloved series based on a Ron Howard
14:07film.
14:08Nora.
14:08What is Parenthood?
14:09That's right, for 2,000.
14:10TV and film for 800?
14:12TV's Cobra Kai served as a follow-up series to this franchise.
14:17Tyler.
14:17What's the Karate Kid?
14:18Yes.
14:19Adobe 16.
14:20This artist's Adobe home, a 60-mile drive from Taos, is a national historic landmark.
14:26Tyler.
14:27Who is Georgia O'Keeffe?
14:28Right again.
14:29Adobe for 2,000.
14:31Ancestral to the Zuni and others, the native people called the Ancestral Vs used Adobe and Stone to build their
14:37cliff dwellings.
14:39Adam.
14:39What, a Pueblo?
14:40That's right, the Ancestral Puebloans.
14:43Silent G for 800.
14:45Why, yes, we'll have the Hennessy Parody, a bottle of this.
14:48What's that?
14:49It's $1,400?
14:51Eh, thanks, I'll have a Mr. Pibb.
14:53Tyler.
14:54What's cognac?
14:55Silent G and cognac.
14:56Uh, World History 8.
14:57At the Battle of Lepanto, the Holy League took on this empire as it attempted to conquer Cyprus.
15:03Adam.
15:04What's the Ottoman?
15:05Right.
15:06Silent G for 4.
15:07Musician Ben or actor Vince?
15:10Tyler.
15:10Who is Vaughn?
15:11Good.
15:12Lit, 800.
15:14This author said the final book in her Alphabet Mystery series was inspired by a real murder case in Santa
15:19Barbara.
15:20Nora.
15:21Who is Sue Grafton?
15:22Right.
15:23Uh, whatever's clever, 800.
15:25Cleverness is an asset of this Norse god of mischief and discord, who can change shape, form of a flea,
15:30or gender and give birth.
15:33Adam.
15:33Who's Loki?
15:34Yes.
15:35Clever for 4.
15:36Clever Hans was a performing one of these animals, thought to exhibit great intelligence.
15:41He was probably responding to cues.
15:43Tyler.
15:43What's a horse?
15:44Right.
15:45800.
15:46Adobe.
15:46In 2009, the Adobe abode of this first female Supreme Court justice was moved to the grounds of an Arizona
15:52park.
15:54Nora.
15:54Who is Sandra Day O'Connor?
15:56Yes.
15:56TV and film for 400?
15:58With Freddie Highmore as Norman Bates, Bates Motel was a prequel to this classic film.
16:03Adam.
16:04What's Psycho?
16:05Right.
16:06Lit for 400.
16:07A waterfall on Howarth Moor is named for these literary sisters.
16:11Tyler.
16:12Who are the Brontes?
16:13That's right.
16:14Adobe 4.
16:15To build an Adobe structure, you might need this six-letter mixture to use as a bonding agent to put
16:20on the bricks.
16:21Tyler.
16:22What, cement?
16:23No.
16:24Adam or Nora?
16:26It's mortar, I'm afraid.
16:28The last clue in world history is the House of York won the 1471 Battle of Barnet, but the future
16:34of this
16:35rival house, led by Henry Tudor, was Rosier.
16:37Tyler.
16:38What's Lancaster?
16:39That is correct.
16:40You and Nora fought bravely, but Adam has the lead as we move to Final Jeopardy now.
16:44Let's see what category awaits you.
16:46Around the world.
16:48We're headed around the world with Final Jeopardy after this.
16:56Today's final clue comes from the category Around the World.
16:59Let's take a look at the clue.
17:02The only places in mainland Africa where the euro is official currency are in territories of this nation.
17:08You have 30 seconds.
17:09Good luck.
17:13Good luck.
17:15Good luck.
17:16Good luck.
17:17Good luck.
17:18Good luck.
17:40EU country with African territory.
17:43Let's start with Nora Inman in the middle with $7,400 in winnings.
17:46And so far, her response was England.
17:50And it's not England, I'm afraid.
17:52How much did you wager, Nora?
17:53You'll drop $4,600, leaving you with $2,800.
17:57Tyler Stevenson was in second place with $12,000.
17:59What did you come up with, Tyler?
18:01What is Morocco?
18:03You're in the right part of Africa, but I'm afraid it's not Morocco either.
18:06The wager?
18:08$2,801.
18:08Drops him down to $9,199.
18:12Adam Remsen, very impressive today against strong competitors.
18:15$26,200.
18:16What did you write down?
18:18What is Spain?
18:20And Spain is correct.
18:21It has two tiny exclaves adjacent to Morocco.
18:24Ceuta and Malia, where the euro is the currency.
18:27So you're going to add to that.
18:28What did you wager today, Adam?
18:30Just $800 takes you up to $27,000.
18:32That makes you a five-game deputy champion.
18:36$99,601.
18:38Congratulations, Adam.
18:42Adam, set it to the tournament of champions, but we have to see how far he'll go.
18:46Join us, Canara.
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