- 1 day ago
Jeopardy! - Season Episode 122 -Adam Remsen, Jacob Ross-Ewart, Deidre Purcell englishsubtitle fullfilm❌❌
Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Picture Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:13Here are today's contestants.
00:17A software quality assurance engineer from San Francisco, California, Carlos Sayo.
00:23A data analyst from Petaluma, California, Kyla Wall-Poland.
00:28And our returning champion, an attorney and theater producer from Memphis, Tennessee, Adam Remsen, whose six-day cash winnings total
00:39$124,502.
00:45And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:51Thank you, Johnny Gilbert. Welcome to Jeopardy!
00:54We wrapped up the week on Friday with our champion, Adam Remsen, earning yet another runaway win, his fifth in
01:01six games.
01:02Very impressive.
01:03One possible explanation for Adam's success here on the Alex Rebeck stage.
01:07He tells us he has not missed an episode in 15 years.
01:10Wow.
01:11We always say that watching Jeopardy! is the best way to prepare for playing, so hopefully the newcomers, Kyla and
01:16Carlos, have been watching as well.
01:17Good luck to all three of you.
01:18Jeopardy! round is at first with these categories today.
01:22We have generals and admirals, followed by literary subtitles, then at the museum, board games.
01:32We follow that up with kudos to you.
01:36Each response here will have that letter twice.
01:38Two letter U's.
01:39Adam?
01:40Literary subtitles for $800.
01:41A historical fiction bestseller, Zee, a novel of this literary wife, imagines her meeting her future husband in Alabama in
01:501918.
01:51Kyla?
01:52Who is Zelda Fitzgerald?
01:53Yes.
01:54At the museum for $800, please.
01:56The National Museum of African American History and Culture has a training plane used by this group of World War
02:02II aviators.
02:03Adam?
02:04Who are the Tuskegee Airmen?
02:06Correct.
02:07Literary subtitles for $1,000.
02:09Answer.
02:09A daily double is there, Adam.
02:11You found it.
02:12You get to wager.
02:14$1,000, please.
02:16All right.
02:16The house maximum, $1,000.
02:18You'll have $1,800 if you're right in literary subtitles.
02:21This Cormac McCarthy novel, subtitled The Evening Redness in the West, has been called both the ultimate Western and anti
02:29-Western.
02:29What is Blood Meridian?
02:31That's right.
02:31You add $1,000 just like that.
02:35Select again, Adam.
02:37At the museum for $1,000.
02:39This Paris museum in an old train station houses perhaps the finest Impressionist paintings, and also some by Armand Guillemin.
02:46Adam?
02:47What's the Musée d'Orsay?
02:48It is.
02:49Two U for $800.
02:52It's the grammatical mood of choice for expressing a desire, as in, I wish I were a little bit taller.
02:58Adam?
02:59What's the subjunctive?
03:00That's right.
03:01Two U for $1,000.
03:02Latin for drinking cup may have given us this word for a political party's conference to pick a candidate.
03:08Carlos?
03:09What's caucus?
03:10Yes, you're on the board.
03:11I'll take board games for $600.
03:13A strategy game is called The Quest for This Legendary Place, that has a Spanish name meaning The Gilded One.
03:20Carlos?
03:21What is El Dorado?
03:22Right again.
03:23Literary subtitles for $600.
03:25Thackeray doesn't come right out and say this book is about rotten people, but just saying, its subtitle is A
03:31Novel Without a Hero.
03:33Adam?
03:33What's Vanity Fair?
03:34That's the novel.
03:35Kudos for $1,000.
03:37Let's hear some kudos.
03:38Britt Stephen Graham won Emmys for writing, producing, and acting in this 2025 series that explored the impact of social
03:45media on teenagers.
03:49Such a great show, but sobering. Adolescence is what it's called. Adam?
03:53Kudos for $8,000.
03:54This 11-time Olympic medalist accepted her award as SI's 2024 Sportsperson of the Year from former teammate Allie Raisman.
04:02Adam?
04:02Simone Biles?
04:03Yes.
04:04Two U for $6,000.
04:06It's the Southern University where you'll hear the battle cry, War Eagle at Tigers games. Adam?
04:11What's Auburn?
04:12You got it.
04:13Generals and Admirals for $6,000.
04:16In 1989, George H.W. Bush made this son of Jamaican immigrants and self-described C-average student a four
04:22-star general.
04:23Carlos?
04:24Who's Powell?
04:25Good.
04:26Board games for $800.
04:27This Hasbro game involves getting a quartet of your 21 red or yellow discs arranged in a row before your
04:33opponent does.
04:35Adam?
04:35Let's connect four.
04:36Yes.
04:37Board games for $1,000.
04:39Surrounding the in-jail space on a classic Monopoly board are these two words, indicating you are only passing through.
04:46Adam?
04:47What's just visiting?
04:48$1,000 more for you.
04:50Generals and Admirals for $1,000?
04:52Developed by Admiral Hyman Rickover, father of the nuclear navy, this was the first sub to be powered by atomic
04:58energy.
04:59Adam?
04:59What's the Nautilus?
05:00It is the Nautilus.
05:01You add another $1,000.
05:02You're off to a fast start, but lots of game left.
05:04We'll be back with more Jeopardy in just a moment.
05:12Let's take a moment to get to know our players.
05:14Carlos Sia, for example, a software quality assurance engineer from San Francisco and an adventurous eater.
05:20Yeah, so when I was a kid, anyone in my family will tell you I was super picky, didn't eat
05:24a lot, but as I've grown older, I've come to try and appreciate some more strange and exotic food.
05:30For example?
05:31I've had crickets, mealworms, I've had shark fin over in Iceland, and then silkworms on a trip to China.
05:39I had silkworm larvae in Korea.
05:41Is that what they are?
05:41Yes, the silkworm larvae.
05:42And what did you think?
05:43I liked it.
05:44They were delicious.
05:44They smell great.
05:45It's like street food in Korea.
05:46Yeah.
05:47Delightful aroma.
05:48Oh, it's wonderful.
05:48Speaking of living overseas, Kyla Wall-Polin from Petaluma, California, is a data analyst who used to serve in the
05:54Peace Corps.
05:54You were a volunteer.
05:55That is true.
05:56From 2006 to 2008, I was a Peace Corps volunteer in rural Bulgaria.
06:01What's rural Bulgaria like?
06:03There's not a lot going on.
06:05It's not the most happening place.
06:07I live in a town of about 3,000 people, so everybody knew who I was.
06:12I was like the town foreigner, and all my students would come to my house.
06:18I had no, there was no separation between me and my students.
06:22They would just be like, oh, let's go to Kyla's house and see what she's up to.
06:25I guess it's not big news that rural Bulgaria is a little quiet.
06:27I was hoping you would say there was like a bumping EDM scene that we didn't know about.
06:30There is not.
06:31Okay, sadly, no.
06:33But other things to recommend that I'm sure.
06:34Very much.
06:35Our champion is Adam Remsen from Memphis, an attorney and a theater producer.
06:39How'd you meet your wife, Adam?
06:40It's a story.
06:41Some friends of mine were making an independent film many years ago,
06:44and they had a rather large cast for a no-budget indie film.
06:47And my now wife and I happened to be both cast in it, and that's how we first met.
06:53It didn't connect or anything, but years later we did connect and we were getting married.
06:57And so we had our filmmaker friends who had introduced us come film the wedding
07:01and make a little video of it for us.
07:03Oh, it's an informal sequel.
07:05That's so great.
07:05You gave us the last correct response, Adam.
07:07So let's get back into the game.
07:09What'll it be?
07:10Generals and admirals for 800.
07:11The only living person ever promoted the six-star general, the army's highest rank,
07:16was this commander of U.S. troops in World War I.
07:19Carlos.
07:20Who was Pershing?
07:21That's right.
07:22At the museum for 600.
07:25Located in Amsterdam, this National Museum of the Netherlands is known for its 17th century Dutch art.
07:31Adam.
07:31What's the...
07:32It's a Rijksmuseum?
07:33Correct.
07:34Kudos for six.
07:35At these awards in 2025, Tyla was named favorite global music star and ended up getting doused in green slime.
07:43Kyla.
07:44What is the Kids' Choice Award?
07:46Yes.
07:47Let's see.
07:47Literary subtitles for 400.
07:49This French novel is subtitled Mours de Provence, or Provincial Customs, of which its unfulfilled heroine is not a fan.
07:57Kyla.
07:58What is Madame Bovary?
08:00It is.
08:00Well done.
08:01Literary subtitles for 200.
08:02The Parish Boys' Progress is the subtitle of this Dickens novel, where the title orphan learns to pick a pocket
08:08or two.
08:09Adam.
08:10What's Oliver Twist?
08:11Right.
08:122U, 400.
08:14This triple-decker poultry dish with a portmanteau name may be the ultimate in engastration, i.e. food stuffed inside
08:20other food.
08:22Kyla.
08:22What is a turducken?
08:23The famous turducken.
08:24I'll go with 2U for 200.
08:27Also the name of a meditation app, this verb can mean to take a break from one's obligations, or more
08:32literally, from one's devices.
08:37That's when you unplug.
08:38Kyla.
08:39Kudos for 400.
08:40At the 2026 Actor Awards, this Life Achievement Award winner thanked George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, and his wife, Calista Flockhart.
08:48Adam.
08:49Who's Harrison Ford?
08:50Right.
08:50Kudos for 2U.
08:52The screenplay for Coralie Farja's film The Substance earned a 2024 Bram Stoker Award for achievement in this genre.
08:59Carlos.
09:00What is horror?
09:01That's right.
09:02Board games, 400.
09:03In this classic game, you can grab Yakutsk and Irkutsk.
09:08Adam.
09:08What's Risk?
09:09That's the game.
09:10Board games, too?
09:11Eleanor Abbott created this board game for kids confined to polio wards.
09:15The goal was to avoid the cherry pitfall and get home.
09:18Adam.
09:19What's Candyland?
09:20Yes.
09:21At the museum, for?
09:22An L.A. museum has lots of fossils excavated from adjacent pools of viscous asphalt called the La Brea Vs.
09:29Kyla.
09:30What are tar pits?
09:30Right.
09:31At the museum for two?
09:32The Tokyo National Museum has armor and swords of this warrior class.
09:37Kyla.
09:38What are samurai?
09:39Right.
09:40Generals and admirals for four, please.
09:42Tommy Franks was the U.S. general in charge of the operation that overthrew the Taliban in this country.
09:47Adam.
09:48What's Afghanistan?
09:49Correct.
09:49And bring it.
09:50Final clue.
09:51Generals and admirals of his father and grandfather, both admirals who shared his name, this Arizona senator wrote,
09:57they were my first heroes.
09:59Kyla.
10:00Who is McCain?
10:00John McCain III is correct.
10:02Everybody's off to a good start.
10:03Adam's in the lead.
10:04Kyla will select first when we return.
10:06Double Jeopardy is next.
10:07Stay tuned.
10:15Adam has the early lead in his seventh game, but Double Jeopardy is where the scores can really change.
10:20Here are the categories for that round.
10:22First, biblical geography.
10:25Then we have math folk.
10:27Three-syllable rhymers, for example, Monocle Chronicle.
10:31After that, we come to That's Precious, Musical Potent Potables.
10:36And in the sixth category, we are jester-maxing.
10:40Kyla.
10:41Um, biblical geography for 1600.
10:43The Santo Stefano Romanesque Church in this Italian city is known as the place where Christopher Columbus was baptized.
10:50Carlos.
10:51What is Genoa?
10:51That's right.
10:52Math folk for 1600.
10:55This father of computing also compiled the first reliable actuarial tables and was famous for his Saturday night parties.
11:02Adam.
11:03Who's Babbage?
11:03Party animal Charles Babbage.
11:05Three-syllable rhymers for 2000.
11:07An overly theatrical sufferer of a chronic lung disorder.
11:14Would be a dramatic asthmatic.
11:16Back to you, Adam.
11:18Rhymers for 16.
11:19The place where you do the job to which you are called, as with priests.
11:26That would be the vocation location.
11:29Okay.
11:29Adam.
11:29Uh, let's move along.
11:31That's Precious for 1200.
11:33I shoot the hippopotamus with bullets made of this, because if I use leaden ones, his height is sure to
11:38flatten them.
11:39Adam.
11:40That's platinum?
11:41Yes.
11:41Precious for 2000.
11:43One estimate says it costs $25 billion to make a gram of this stuff at CERN, and that's just for
11:49the cheap repositrons.
11:51Carlos.
11:51What is antimatter?
11:52Right.
11:53Musical Potent Potables for 1200.
11:56Thanks, bartender.
11:57I'll take another one of these that the Eagles said was staring slowly across the sky.
12:02Adam.
12:02What's a tequila sunrise?
12:04Good.
12:04Musical Potent Potables, 2000.
12:07Hennessy pioneered black representation in ads, and years later, this rapper titled a song for it on his posthumous album,
12:13Loyal to the Game.
12:17Who is Tupac?
12:19Back to you, Adam.
12:20Musical Potent Potables, 16.
12:22In Champagne Problems, Taylor Swift name-checks this fancy brand.
12:27Carlos.
12:28What's Dom Perignon?
12:29It is.
12:30Go back to it.
12:31Three-syllable rhymers for 1200.
12:33Yeah, you guys can do this.
12:34A trusted bit of food that contains THC.
12:40That's a credible edible.
12:43Really, the only kind of edible you want.
12:45Back to you, Carlos.
12:46Biblical Geography for 1200.
12:48Answer.
12:49A Daily Double for you.
12:53And it comes at an important juncture in the game.
12:55You've made a bit of a run, Carlos.
12:56Adam's lead is within reach.
12:594,000.
13:004,000.
13:00All right.
13:00Going for 12,400.
13:02It'll be a much closer game, if you're right, in Biblical Geography.
13:05The name of this capital city, between the Pacific Ocean and the Andes, is the Spanish version of an apostle's
13:12name.
13:13What is Santiago?
13:14Yes, St. James.
13:1512,400 for you now.
13:20Where to?
13:21That's precious for 1600.
13:23This word originally referred to the mold from which a bar of metal like gold is cast.
13:28Now it primarily means the bar itself.
13:30Adam.
13:31What's ingot?
13:32Right.
13:32Let's see what jester maxing is for 400.
13:36Yeah, let's start jester maxing.
13:38It said Will Summers brought mirth to this bad-tempered king,
13:41but Cardinal Wolsey didn't find his buffoonery amusing.
13:44Adam.
13:45This is Henry VIII?
13:46Right.
13:47Jester maxing, eight.
13:48James I liked jester Archie Armstrong,
13:51so he could get away with making fun of dukes and roasting Spain over this 1588 fleet.
13:57Carlos.
13:57What's the Spanish Armada?
13:59Yes.
14:00That's precious for 800.
14:02Caviar from Huso Huso, this species of sturgeon,
14:05can go for nearly $1,000 an ounce.
14:08Adam.
14:08What's beluga?
14:09Right.
14:10Jester maxing for 12.
14:11This jester maxed opera, first performed in Venice in 1851,
14:15was based on the play Le Roi s'amuse, roughly The King Has Fun.
14:20Adam.
14:20What's Pagliacci?
14:21No.
14:22Kyla or Carlos?
14:24Carlos.
14:24What's Rigoletto?
14:25Rigoletto is the jester.
14:26Very good.
14:27Math Folk for 1,200.
14:29Answer.
14:30The other Daily Double also falls to you, Carlos.
14:35And this time you're less than 2,000 off the lead.
14:38Let's do four again.
14:39All right.
14:40You will be in front, if you're correct, in Math Folk.
14:44In the 18th century, Leonard Euler popularized Latin squares,
14:49forerunners of the puzzles that got this name in 1984.
14:53What are Rubik's Cubes?
14:55I'm afraid not.
14:56Sudoku.
14:57Early Sudoku.
14:58This time you drop 4,000.
15:00Select, Carlos.
15:01Biblical Geography for 800.
15:04St. Bartholomew's Cathedral in Frankfurt, Germany, was the site of several coronations of these emperors,
15:09including Francis I.
15:11Carlos.
15:11What are Holy Roman emperors?
15:13That's right.
15:14Math Folk for 2,000.
15:16Known for his last theorem, this father of differential calculus was a lawyer by day.
15:21Math was just a hobby.
15:23Kyla.
15:23Who is for Mott?
15:24Good for 2,000.
15:26Musical Potent Potables for 800.
15:28Kevin Costner said, this state isn't heaven.
15:31And per a song at its university, in heaven there is no beer.
15:34That's why we drink it here.
15:36Adam.
15:37What's Iowa?
15:37Not heaven, it's Iowa.
15:39Biblical Geography for 2.
15:40A small hill in Chennai, India is named for this apostle, said to have evangelized there in the first century.
15:49It's St. Thomas, said to have gone to India.
15:52Back to you, Adam.
15:53Jester for 16.
15:54Royal Jester is still a job.
15:56King Tupo IV of this Polynesian nation appointed one, who was later sued for financial fraud.
16:02Adam.
16:03What's Tonga?
16:04That's correct.
16:05Jester 2,000?
16:06Yorick and the Fool get all the talk, but only real bardheads know Duke Frederick's Jester Touchstone from this play.
16:16Touchstone is in As You Like It.
16:18Back to Adam.
16:19Rhymers for 800.
16:21Melon for a springbok.
16:24Adam.
16:25What's an antelope cantaloupe?
16:26There you go, yes.
16:27Rhymers for 400.
16:29All the trees and verdant bushes you're seeing as you drive along.
16:33Adam.
16:33What's greenery scenery?
16:35Correct again.
16:36Math folk for eight.
16:38This French mathematician devised the system of coordinates used for, among other things, plain battleship.
16:44Carlos.
16:45Who is Descartes?
16:46Correct.
16:47That's precious for 400?
16:49The 1901 work Yo Picasso once sold for $47.9 million.
16:54If you know what yo means in Spanish, you know it's this kind of painting.
16:58Kyla.
16:58What's a self-portrait?
16:59Yes, I Picasso.
17:01Biblical geography 400.
17:02Finish that category with this.
17:04The Jerusalem chamber found in this famous London church is where the men who translated the King James Bible would
17:10meet.
17:10Adam.
17:11What's Westminster Abbey?
17:12It is.
17:13Math folk for four.
17:14A theorem about right triangles bears the name of this ancient Greek, once also regarded as the father of vegetarianism.
17:21Carlos.
17:22Who's Pythagoras?
17:23That's right.
17:23One more clue in musical potent potables.
17:26It said tomato juice tastes better on a plane.
17:28It did for Willie Nelson, flying to Houston on a this cocktail morning.
17:33Adam.
17:33That's a Bloody Mary?
17:34Bloody Mary morning, yes.
17:35Adam's in front.
17:36Carlos within striking range.
17:37Here's the final Jeopardy! category.
17:40Ancient Authors.
17:41We'll come back with the clue right after this break.
17:44It's anybody's game today and final.
17:46Ancient Authors is the category.
17:47Here's the clue.
17:49A mural discovered in Tajikistan of a man stabbing a fowl is cited as evidence that this author's works traveled
17:55the Silk Road.
17:5630 seconds.
17:57Good luck.
18:28Kyla Wall-Poland finished with $5,400 and wrote down as her response, which ancient author?
18:33Plato, and that's not correct, Kyla.
18:35You wagered $2,900 and will be left with $2,500.
18:39Carlos Sayer was in second with $12,400.
18:42He guessed Diogenes, and it's also not Diogenes, Carlos.
18:47That'll drop him down $8,201, leaving him with $4,199.
18:51Adam Remsen had the lead today with $20,600.
18:54What did he come up with?
18:56He wrote down Aesop, and that is correct.
18:58A depiction of the man killing the goose that laid the golden egg.
19:01What was the wager?
19:03Adam bet $4,201, bringing him up to $24,801 and making him a seven-day Jeopardy! champion.
19:10$149,303.
19:11Wow.
19:13Thanks for joining us today here on Jeopardy!
19:16We'll see you tomorrow.
19:42We'll see you tomorrow.
Comments