Suggest correction - #8058 - 2019-09-25

Fill in your contact information if you would like to be notified when your correction has been reviewed.
On the left you see the clue as it is currently displayed. Enter your correction on the right by editing the text directly. The top left field is the clue's value, either as given on the board, or, if a Daily Double, the value of the contestant's wager. If the clue is a Daily Double, check the checkbox to the right of this field. The top right field is the clue order number representing the order of the clue's selection amongst other clues in the round. The large blue field is for the clue text, which should be entered as closely as possible to how it appears on the show, with the exception that the words should not be all caps. Links to media clue files should be entered with HTML-style hyperlinks. Next come the nicknames of the three contestants in the form of response toggles: single clicks on the name change its color from white (no response) to green (correct response) to red (incorrect response) and back. Below this should be typed the correct response (only the most essential part--it should not be entered in the form of a question). The bottom field on the right is the clue comments field, where dialog (including incorrect responses) can be entered. (Note that the correct response should never be typed in the comments field; rather, it should be denoted by [*].)
    $2000 5
With one serpent, the rod of Asclepius can be confused with the Caduceus, a twin-serpent symbol of peace belonging to this messenger
#
 
 

Show #8058 - Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Jason Zuffranieri game 19.

Contestants

Gairen Wallace, a technology consultant from Goffstown, New Hampshire

Ted Berg, a sportswriter from New York, New York

Jason Zuffranieri, a math teacher from Albuquerque, New Mexico (18-day champion whose cash winnings total $502,096)

Jeopardy! Round

NEW DINER SLANG FOR SANDWICHES
GETTING TO THE AIRPORT
STADIUM STUFF
THE FRENCH & INDIAN WAR
YOU DID IT!
"MAN" UP
    $200 18
Gimme a meatball "u-boat", extra provolone
    $200 28
Green Ride Boulder will shuttle you to this international airport
    $200 26
(Sarah of the Clue Crew stands outside the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, CA.) For the 1932 Olympics, the Rose Bowl hosted the cycling events; it's expected to be a soccer venue at the Los Angeles games in this year
    $200 29
The 1754-63 French & Indian War was the North American phase of this global conflict that was 2 years shorter
    $200 30
In 2010 she launched Let's Move!, a campaign to fight childhood obesity
    $200 27
This gentle giant is Florida's state marine mammal
    $400 17
Table 5 wants a "rotary" or a "glee", hold the Bacon
    $400 23
In San Francisco's International Terminal there's a station for this train service with a male first name
    $400 15
This Windy City mainstay was named for World War I veterans
    $400 12
Fort Ligonier was built in SW Pennsylvania to enable the Brits to capture France's Fort Duquesne, now this city
    $400 24
Sergey Brin & Larry Page officially founded it on September 4, 1998; look it up!
    DD: $3,000 25
It's the last word of a historic utterance made July 20, 1969
    $600 14
A "Dumas count" & a root beer, & hurry it up
    $600 3
You can take the T to Logan from State Street Station in this city
    $600 11
Valhalla IP is a soccer stadium fit for the gods in Gothenburg in this country
    $600 20
The British deported French-speaking settlers from Acadia in Nova Scotia; many went south, where their descendants became these people
    $600 21
In 2019, in an incredible comeback, he won his fifth Masters title & his first major since 2008
    $600 22
It's the unlawful killing of another person without malice
    $800 13
"Brother of Joseph" in the Bible
    $800 10
From The Strip, take Tropicana Avenue to Paradise Road to 5757 Wayne Newton Boulevard, this facility
    $800 8
Clemson's & LSU's stadiums both use this nickname, also a very dry region in California
    $800 19
Algonquian-speaking peoples took France's side; this 6-nation confederacy was allied with the British
    $800 6
A professor & New York Times columnist, Paul Krugman won a Nobel Prize in this category in 2008
    $800 4
Almost all of the world's production of this metallic element is used in the iron & steel industry
    $1000 2
"Mayflower colonist", lean turkey, easy cranberry
    $1000 9
It's 28 miles south of London between Povey Cross & Lowfield Heath, & it's not Heathrow
    $1000 7
This stade, or stadium, hosts tennis' French Open
    $1000 16
This European power came in on the losing side late in the war & lost Florida as a result
    $1000 5
This renowned architect designed the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain & the Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles
    $1000 1
It's the style of roof on the house seen here

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 15):

Jason Ted Gairen
$6,000 $1,400 $3,400

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Jason Ted Gairen
$7,800 $8,000 $3,800

Double Jeopardy! Round

SWEAR IN THE BIBLE
SIGNS & SYMBOLS
BOOKS ABOUT CHINA
WORLD CAPITAL BIRTHPLACES
WORDS FROM NATIVE AMERICAN LANGUAGES
NON-GENEVA CONVENTIONS
    $400 30
This man tells Esau that he must "swear to me this day" to sell his birthright
    $400 29
Seen here is this chess piece as represented in the Unicode system for electronic communication
    $400 28
Published soon after he came to power, Robert Payne's 1950 study of this leader is subtitled "Ruler of Red China"
    $400 23
Yoko Ono
    $400 26
The name of this pungent striped mammal comes from the Massachusett language
    $400 27
Since 1995 the Schengen Convention has allowed free movement among 26 member countries on this continent
    $800 15
In Isaiah 45:23 the Lord says, "unto me every knee shall bow, every" this body part "shall swear"
    $800 13
In the 1960s & '70s, signs with 3 triangles indicated that a building had one of these nuclear war sanctuaries
    $800 22
Not "Hidden Dragon" but this is the title of a study by Peter Navarro of China's growing militarism
    $800 4
Giada De Laurentiis
    $800 25
This word for a fierce tropical storm comes from the Taino name for a turbulent god
    $800 24
The Berne Convention protects these for the life of the author plus 50 years
    $1200 9
Denying Jesus for the third time, he "began to curse and to swear, saying, I know not this man of whom ye speak"
    $1200 7
In white, the flower known as the calla this is a symbol of purity
    $1200 21
"Empress Dowager Cixi" is a bio of a 19th c. mother of emperors who began as a low-ranking one of these mistresses
    $1200 3
Placido Domingo
    $1200 12
The high-flying condor gets its name from the word for that bird in this Inca language
    $1200 16
Banning trade in many plants & animals, CITES is the Convention on International Trade in these
    $1600 8
Hebrews 6 says that when God made a promise to this patriarch, "because he could swear by no greater, he sware by himself"
    $1600 6
A symbol of the Mormon faith is the angel Moroni with one of these in his mouth
    $1600 20
In "The Great Walk of China", Graham Earnshaw describes a journey on foot from this massive seaport to Tibet
    $1600 1
Arianna Huffington
    $1600 14
Zucchini & pumpkins are both types of this vegetable, a gourd family from a Narragansett name
    DD: $4,000 18
The 1786 Annapolis Convention on Interstate Commerce pointed up the weakness of these, leading to another convention next year
    $2000 10
The book of Jeremiah asks, "Will ye steal, murder, and commit adultery, and swear falsely, and burn incense unto" this Canaanite god?
    $2000 5
With one serpent, the rod of Asclepius can be confused with the Caduceus, a twin-serpent symbol of peace belonging to this messenger
    DD: $5,000 11
Nixon's famed trip is covered in "On China", a look at Sino-U.S. relations by this former Secretary of State
    $2000 2
Natalie Portman
    $2000 19
From Salish, it can be a type of salmon of the Pacific Northwest, or a warm, dry wind
    $2000 17
This pro-central-government party conducted the secret antiwar Hartford Convention of 1814-15

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Jason Ted Gairen
$30,400 $13,200 $11,800
(lock game)

Final Jeopardy! Round

NATURAL GEOGRAPHIC FEATURES
Timely for 2018, in 1866 Mark Twain wrote of this landmark's "sputtering jets of fire" & "heat from Pele's furnaces"

Final scores:

Jason Ted Gairen
$30,400 $2,799 $1
19-day champion: $532,496 2nd place: $2,000 3rd place: $1,000

Game dynamics:

Coryat scores:

Jason Ted Gairen
$25,000 $10,600 $11,800
26 R
(including 2 DDs),
0 W
15 R
(including 1 DD),
0 W
15 R,
2 W

Combined Coryat: $47,400

[game responses] [game scores] [suggest correction]

The J! Archive is created by fans, for fans. Scraping, republication, monetization, and malicious use prohibited; this site may use cookies and collect identifying information. See terms. The Jeopardy! game show and all elements thereof, including but not limited to copyright and trademark thereto, are the property of Jeopardy Productions, Inc. and are protected under law. This website is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or operated by Jeopardy Productions, Inc. Join the discussion at JBoard.tv.