Jennifer Pelletier, Mother & small business owner from Norwalk, CT
John Salmon, Computer programmer from Altadena, CA
Jamie Aliperti, Legal aid attorney from Atlanta, GA (Returning 1-day champ with $11,600)
Click here for the correct responses.
The number in parentheses preceding the clue denotes the order in which the clue was played.
ENGINEERING
| WHICH TV SHOW CAME FIRST?
| COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES
| PATRON SAINTS
| TOPLESS JEOPARDY!
| "O" MY!
|
$200 - John (6) The Old London Bridge was first built in the 13th century over this river | $200 - Jennifer (1) "Here's Lucy", "The Lucy Show", "I Love Lucy" | $200 - Jennifer (14) As the top-ranked university for 2003 by U.S. News & World Report, this New Jersey school rules | $200 - Triple Stumper (23) Julian the hospitaller is the patron saint of these musicians, a favorite of Old King Cole | $200 - Jamie (8) (Video) It's no stretch of the imagination for you to tell us the name of this animal | (-$200) - Jennifer $200 - Jamie (13) The only person to play for both the NL's Dodgers & the NHL's Rangers, Gladys Gooding played this instrument |
$400 - Jamie (7) This man's World Tower in New York was once the world's tallest residential development | $400 - Jamie (2) "How the West Was Won", "How to Marry a Millionaire", "Howdy Doody" | $400 - John (15) Universities in Columbia & in Los Angeles share this 3-letter abbreviation | $400 - John (24) As patron saint of Quebec & for makers of these, Anne should help the Expos to a clean sweep of any series | $400 - Jennifer (9) (Video) Important adviser to President Bush seen here | $400 - Jamie (19) (Video) Hey, this is Wayne Brady and this is your clue. This city, my hometown, is home to Sea World of Florida & college football's annual Citrus Bowl |
$600 - Jennifer (16) The widest cable-stayed bridge is the Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge in this city | $600 - John (3) "The Today Show", "The Tonight Show", "The Tomorrow Show" | $600 - John (21) Emily Dickinson's grandfather was one of the founders of this Massachusetts college | $600 - Jamie (25) For protection against these, call on Gertrude of Nivelles, or call a pied piper | $600 - Jamie (10) (Video) Asian poet and dictator seen here | $600 - Triple Stumper (20) In WWII, the U.S. estimated the number of enemy soldiers on Pacific islands by counting these from the air |
$800 - John (17) In 2002 the first line in this country's Oporto Light Rail System opened | (-$800) - Jamie $800 - Jennifer (4) "Gilligan's Island", "Hogan's Heroes", "Charlie's Angels" | $4600 - John (22) The Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes is a well-known landmark at this midwestern school DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $4600 | $800 - John (26) Zita is the patron saint you invoke in the search for these items, also a symbol of St. Peter's power | $800 - Jennifer (11) (Video) He's the multi-marrying man seen here | $800 - John (27) Lewis Grizzard mused on marriage in "If Love Were" this "I'd Be About a Quart Low" |
$1000 - John (18) The only contemporaneous man-made objects taller than the Pharos of Alexandria Lighthouse | (-$1000) - Jamie $1000 - John (5) "Phyllis", "Rhoda", "Lou Grant" | $1000 - John (30) Founded in 1842, Willamete University in this state is the oldest university west of the Rockies | $1000 - John (29) Being shot with dozens of these helped make Sebastian a patron of fletchers | $1000 - Jamie (12) (Video) He's the great world leader seen here in his usual simple garb | $1000 - John (28) Elected to the Hall of Fame in 1951, this N.Y. Giant hit a career 511 home runs |
Scores at the first commercial break:
John: $2,200
Jennifer: $2,200
Jamie: $1,000
Scores at the end of the JEOPARDY! Round:
John: $14,200
Jennifer: $2,800
Jamie: $2,000
Click here for the correct responses.
SHAKESPEAREANA
| POTENTATES
| THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING
| ROCK & ROLL BOOKSTORE
| PEAKING AT NAMES
| 5-LETTER WORDS
|
$400 - Jamie (8) Oscar Wilde asked whether the critics who'd written on this play were mad or only pretending to be | $400 - Jennifer (10) Thutmose III, who lived in the 1400s B.C., is called the Napoleon of this ancient country | (-$400) - Jamie (1) The mast on top of the Empire State Building was originally designed as a mooring for these rigid airships | $400 - John (5) "Nowhere Man" is Robert Rosen's take on "The Final Days of" this Beatle | $400 - John (6) The Surveyor General of India from 1830, he lent his name to Nepal's highest peak | $400 - John (7) It's to brush your fingers on the strings of a guitar |
$800 - John (9) Will's shortest play, its title has become an expression meaning a ridiculous series of events | (-$800) - Jennifer $800 - Jamie (22) When the Central African Republic's Pres. Bokassa declared himself Emperor, he renamed the country this | $800 - Jamie (2) The building was bathed with blue lights on Dec. 12, 1995 to match this man's eyes on his 80th birthday | $800 - Jennifer (17) "Last Train to Memphis" tells of the first part of this man's life up to the death of his mother | $800 - John (14) The highest peak in this island nation bears the name of Captain James Cook | $800 - John (15) Your carpal tunnel passes through this joint |
$1200 - Jamie (11) Shakespeare's mother Mary shares her maiden name with this idyllic forest in "As You Like It" | $1200 - Triple Stumper (28) In November 1918 the New York Times headlined, This ruler "and Crown Prince abdicate" | $2200 - Jamie (3) At the Empire State Building's 60th anniversary celebration in 1991, this 83-year-old actress was guest of honor DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $2200 | $1200 - Triple Stumper (18) The title of Robert Shelton's bio "No Direction Home" about this performer comes from a line in one of his hits | $1200 - Triple Stumper (24) The director of Canada's geological survey from 1842 to 1869, he lent his name to the 2nd-highest peak in N. America | $1200 - Triple Stumper (16) To make amends; it sounds like what you hear when you pick up a phone |
$1600 - Jamie (12) Coined by George Bernard Shaw, this adaptation of "idolatry" is the worship of Shakespeare | (-$1600) - Jamie (29) Historic rulers of this name were nicknamed the Upright, the Wise & Barbarossa | $1600 - John (4) In 1931 the building opened on the former site of this hotel with a hyphenated name | $1600 - Triple Stumper (19) Danny Sugerman has written 2 biographies about The Doors & one called "Appetite for Destruction" about this group | $1200 - John (25) Appropriately, Pico Cristobal Colon is the highest peak in this South American country DAILY DOUBLE WAGER $1200 | $1600 - Triple Stumper (20) It can mean "before" or be the rank before abbot in a monastery |
$2000 - Jamie (13) Many plays first appeared in these books, smaller than folios, made from sheets folded twice to make 4 leaves | $2000 - CLUE NOT REVEALED FOR LACK OF TIME | $2000 - John (23) He made an 8-hour film about the Empire State Building in 1964 in which the camera never moved | $2000 - Triple Stumper (27) "The Rose that Grew from Concrete" is the title of a book of this slain rapper's poetry | $2000 - Jennifer (26) With peaks named for Washington & Adams, the Presidential Range is found in this state's White Mountains | $2000 - John (21) (Video) Sport that uses the ball seen here |
Scores at the end of the Double JEOPARDY! Round:
John: $24,600 (Lock game)
Jamie: $9,000
Jennifer: $5,200
SEASONAL CHARACTERS
|
In late 1939 Chicago adman Robert May considered Rollo & Reginald before settling on this name
|
Click here for the correct response.
Final JEOPARDY! wagers:
Jennifer: $5,200 + $5,199
Jamie: $9,000 + $1,401
John: $24,600 + $6,600
Final Scores
|
| John: $31,200
Jamie: $10,401 Jennifer: $10,399 |
| John: $21,200 (24 right, including 2 DDs & 1 rebound; 0 wrong)
Jamie: $8,000 (15 right, including 1 DD & 2 rebounds; 4 wrong) Jennifer: $5,200 (9 right, including 1 rebound; 2 wrong) Total: $34,400
|
Go to the next game
Back to the Index page
Go to Iago's JEOBIRDY! Experience