Jeopardy! Round, Double Jeopardy! Round, or Tiebreaker Round clues (267 results returned)

#9061, aired 2024-03-1821st CENTURY WORDS $600: What used to be a "buddy movie" depicting an affectionate relationship between 2 guys is now this blended word a bromance
#9053, aired 2024-03-06SHAKESPEARE FOR EVERYONE! $1,000 (Daily Double): Her last speech includes "Thy husband is thy lord, thy life, thy keeper... thy sovereign" Katherina
#9052, aired 2024-03-05MOUNTAINS $800: A Disneyland attraction is exactly 100 times shorter than this 14,700-foot Alp the Matterhorn
#9027, aired 2024-01-30POPE FICTION $2000: 18 years later but not exactly like "Clockwork", this novelist used his "Earthly Powers" to create Pope Gregory XVII Anthony Burgess
#26, aired 2024-01-23CLASSICAL COMPOSERS $200: This "5th Symphony" composer was quite particular about his morning coffee; he used exactly 60 beans to ensure a proper cup of joe Beethoven
#9016, aired 2024-01-15DISNEY FILM TITLES VISUALIZED $600: It's not exactly as it appears The Jungle Book
#8996, aired 2023-12-18U.S. FIRSTS $7,000 (Daily Double): The first woman mayor of a major U.S. city was Bertha Landes in Seattle; soon after came Dorothy Lee in this city 172 miles south Portland (Oregon)
#8964, aired 2023-11-02FUN WITH THE PERIODIC TABLE $400: It's the only element on the chart with exactly the same name as a planet in our solar system mercury
#16, aired 2023-10-11FASHION FOR ALL $900: Because clasps in the back can be painful to reach, Liberare is a brand that sells front-opening types of this undergarment a bra (brassiere)
#8935, aired 2023-09-22DO I WANT THAT NAMED FOR ME? $2000: Who exactly Norman was is lost to history, but Norman's Woe is the reef made famous in the poem "The Wreck of" this ship the Hesperus
#8931, aired 2023-09-18SCIENCE $2000: His uncertainty principle states that events on the atomic level can't be predicted exactly, only their probability Heisenberg
#8928, aired 2023-09-133 CONSECUTIVE CONSONANTS $1000: Geometry term for triangles that can be exactly superimposed, one on the other congruent
#8921, aired 2023-07-24HOSTEL $1200: You don't have to BYOV, bring your own volleyball, to this hostel in Bali that sounds exactly like a Tom Hanks film Castaway
#4, aired 2023-05-09PLEASE LOOK THROUGH THE TELESCOPE $400: Here is the nebula that makes up part of the sword in this constellation Orion
#8863, aired 2023-05-03, SAID THIS LITERARY CHARACTER $400: "I didn't exactly flunk out... one of the biggest reasons I left Elkton Hills was because I was surrounded by phonies" Holden Caulfield
#8839, aired 2023-03-30SPOUSAL SUPPORT $3,800 (Daily Double): Though Ring Lardner called this duo the prince & princess of their generation, their lives weren't exactly "This Side of Paradise" Scott & Zelda Fitzgerald
#8749, aired 2022-11-24DOUBLE-T WORDS $1600: The double T is exactly in the middle of this adjective meaning nervous & easily frightened word skittish
#8723, aired 2022-10-19WHAT A BUTTE! $3,699 (Daily Double): Grizzly Bear Lodge is another name for this butte that rises 1,267 feet above Wyoming Devils Tower
#8700, aired 2022-09-16TEXTING ABBREV. $800: Exactly! I had the same idea: GMTA, short for this great minds think alike
#8694, aired 2022-07-28STARTS WITH 2 VOWELS $1600: It's not exactly the same but for a quick, easy way to make this, combine mayo, garlic & lemon juice aioli
#8683, aired 2022-07-13PLAYS & PLAYWRITING $2,000 (Daily Double): The courtroom drama "Night of January 16th" by Ayn Rand needs exactly this many people to be selected from the audience 12
#8680, aired 2022-07-08BABY, DON'T HURT ME $1600: I dropped out of this university, but so did Bill Gates & Mark Zuckerberg; what exactly are you trying to say, baby? Harvard
#8662, aired 2022-06-143 FOR THE SHOW $1000: John Cena (not exactly living up to the title), Danielle Brooks & Jennifer Holland Peacemaker
#8636, aired 2022-05-09MENACE TO SOBRIETY $400: You're not exactly living like a monk when you fork over $84,000 for a bottle of rosé 1959 from this brand of champagne Dom Perignon
#8628, aired 2022-04-27MISCELLANY $2000: That's no humpback whale you're hearing--it's the singing dog breed in Papua on the western side of this in Indonesia New Guinea
#8625, aired 2022-04-22WHINE $1600: This whiny girl wants a "boat exactly like Mr. Wonka's! And I want lots of Oompa-Loompas to row me about" Veruca Salt
#8618, aired 2022-04-13AROUND THE USA $400: To see a rare stone beach on Washington Island, Wisconsin, you must brave Death's Door, a strait connecting Lake Michigan and this bay Green Bay
#8612, aired 2022-04-05DOGS $800: Nova Scotia Duck Tolling is one breed of this sporting dog for whom "fetch!" should be instinctual a retriever
#8589, aired 2022-03-034-SYLLABLE WORDS $600: Exactly as far away, or exactly as close equidistant
#8586, aired 2022-02-28BACKING BANDS $800: Not exactly a stupid answer, this group originally known as the Hawks took some of "The Weight" off Dylan in the 1960s The Band
#18, aired 2022-02-22IT'S JUST ABOUT TIME $800: The American College of Obstetrics & Gynecology applies this 2-word phrase starting at exactly 39 weeks of pregnancy full term
#8565, aired 2022-01-28SINKER $1600: As a building in Venice sinks, Vesper Lynd is trapped underwater & James Bond can't save her in this 2006 movie Casino Royale
#8557, aired 2022-01-18DEEP CUTS $1200: Discover "Exactly How I Feel" on "Cuz I Love You" by this rap & R&B singer who needs but one name Lizzo
#8555, aired 2022-01-14WORDS & PHRASES $2,000 (Daily Double): Something that is exactly what you would expect is this 4-word golfing phrase; it's actually 72 at Augusta national par for the course
#8549, aired 2022-01-06IT'LL BE MY TWEET $200: At exactly 3 a.m. London time on October 28, 2021, an unofficial account of this landmark let us know, "bong bong bong" Big Ben
#8484, aired 2021-10-07CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT $800: He gets a new job with a Mancha, Mancha man who promises future land ownership, but things don't exactly work out Sancho Panza
#8478, aired 2021-09-29IN THE TV KITCHEN $400: Though this "MasterChef" judge was brought up in Stratford-upon-Avon, his language isn't exactly Shakespearean (Gordon) Ramsay
#8453, aired 2021-07-28BURGESSES IN THE HOUSE! $800: In 1759, exactly 30 years before he became president, this man was in the House of Burgesses (George) Washington
#8449, aired 2021-07-22LIT BITS $1000: This author, Harvard class of 1852, never exactly wore rags himself but loved the "to riches" part Alger
#8426, aired 2021-06-21MOVIE TITLE MIDDLE WORD $1000: Adam Sandler takes out Drew Barrymore over & over (2004) "First"
#8401, aired 2021-05-17QUOTABLE FILMS OF THE '80s & '90s $400: "What would you do if you were stuck in one place and every day was exactly the same?" Groundhog Day
#8386, aired 2021-04-26AT THE MOVIES $1000: Cinematographer Roger Deakins didn't say exactly how many shots were in this 2019 WWI film, but the longest was about 7 minutes 1917
#8362, aired 2021-03-23SOLD AT AUCTION $800: In 1990, exactly 100 years after it was painted, this artist's "Portrait of Dr. Gachet" sold for $82.5 million Vincent van Gogh
#8311, aired 2021-01-11MOVIES BASED ON SHORT STORIES $2,200 (Daily Double): Ward Greene's "Happy Dan, the Whistling Dog" became this 1955 animated Disney film the Lady and the Tramp
#8240, aired 2020-09-18WORDS & PHRASES $2000: The sensation of being creeped out by robots that look close to, but not exactly human, is called the "uncanny" this valley
#8189, aired 2020-03-26LYRICS OF TODAY $1000: Her: "New man on the Minnesota Vikings, truth hurts, needed something more exciting, bom bom bi dom bi dum bum bay" Lizzo
#8186, aired 2020-03-23IT'S HOW YOU WIN $1000: A hand in this French game: get exactly 1,000 miles Mille Bornes
#8152, aired 2020-02-04GIVE US ONE LETTER $600: Chess notation for the piece that can move exactly one square in any direction K
#8152, aired 2020-02-04IRRITABLE OWL SYNDROME $800: Mr. Owl never does quite figure out exactly how many licks it takes to get to the center of one of these lollipops a Tootsie Pop
#8141, aired 2020-01-20COME TO YOUR CENSUS $2000: Not exactly a laptop with 5,000 vacuum tubes & weighing 16,000 pounds, this computer was utilized for the 1950 census UNIVAC
#8123, aired 2019-12-25UNUSUAL CONTESTS & PRIZES $200: Warren Buffett offers employees $1 million a year for life for getting the Sweet 16 exactly right in this alliterative event March Madness
#8118, aired 2019-12-18THE SPORTING LIFE $400: Eliud Kipchoge averaged about 4:35 per mile to be the first to finish a marathon under this amount of time (by exactly 20 secs.) two hours
#8101, aired 2019-11-25MEDICAL IDIOMS $1000: A medical professional is mentioned in this phrase for exactly the thing needed just what the doctor ordered
#8046, aired 2019-09-09WORLD CURRENCY $400: After the U.S. pulled out of the 2015 nuclear deal with this country in 2018, its currency plunged Iran
#7962, aired 2019-04-02THE OLYMPICS $2000: Roman Sebrle & Ashton Eaton share the Olympic record with exactly 8,893 points in this track & field competition the decathlon
#7904, aired 2019-01-10PLACES OF LEGEND $800: We're not exactly sure where the lost colony of this N.C. island originally was, let alone "Croatoan" where they went Roanoke
#7893, aired 2018-12-26AROUND THE WORLD AT THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART $800: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew delivers the clue from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.) A building, its setting, and its furnishings were inextricably related for this architect, who designed the prairie-style room and all of its furniture, which is placed exactly as he intended it Frank Lloyd Wright
#7831, aired 2018-10-01POP CULTURE POPS $1000: In "Four Christmases" Robert Duvall is this actor's not exactly warm & fuzzy papa Vince Vaughn
#7772, aired 2018-05-29TV NARRATORS $1000: As the narrator of "Arrested Development" he said, "Tobias was a never-nude, which is exactly what it sounds like" Ron Howard
#7769, aired 2018-05-24PHYSICS $1600: Some versions of this 6-letter theory said that space-time had exactly 10 dimensions string theory
#7764, aired 2018-05-17POP CULTURE TEACHERS $2000: This nostalgia network rebranded itself with edgy series like "Teachers", whose educators aren't exactly dedicated TV Land
#7755, aired 2018-05-04CIAO, CASSINI! $1600: Orbiting the moon Iapetus, Cassini found a huge ridge coinciding almost exactly with this geographic circle the equator
#7746, aired 2018-04-23A RuVIEW OF MOVIES $200: (RuPaul presents the clue.) "The Diary of a Mad Black Woman" introduced movie audiences to this character, whom Tyler Perry called "exactly the PG version of" his mother & aunt Madea
#7740, aired 2018-04-132008 $800: The home team won exactly 100 medals as this city hosted the Summer Olympics Beijing
#7609, aired 2017-10-12OUT-OF-DATE TV TITLES $800: When the very male Todd joined this show, Will Forte ceased to be exactly the title character The Last Man on Earth
#7604, aired 2017-10-05THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION $1600: No one knows where exactly in New York City this hero of the Revolution was hanged as a spy Sept. 22, 1776 Nathan Hale
#7596, aired 2017-09-25LIBRA-RIANS $1200: A couple in which both are Libras can work, as with Michael Douglas & this wife who was born exactly 25 years later Catherine Zeta-Jones
#7595, aired 2017-09-224-SYLLABLE WORDS $200: Exactly the same identical
#7571, aired 2017-07-10MAKES SENSE $1000: The title of this Christina Applegate sitcom referred to her amnesia Samantha Who
#7523, aired 2017-05-03NAME'S EXACTLY THE SAME $200: Shakespeare's wife & an actress who has won both a Emmy & an Academy Award Anne Hathaway
#7523, aired 2017-05-03NAME'S EXACTLY THE SAME $400: Henry VIII's wife No. 3 & "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman" Jane Seymour
#7523, aired 2017-05-03NAME'S EXACTLY THE SAME $600: The star of "Bullitt" (1968) & the director of "12 Years a Slave" (2013) Steve McQueen
#7523, aired 2017-05-03NAME'S EXACTLY THE SAME $800: A chief speechwriter for Obama & the director of "Iron Man" who also starred in "Swingers" Jon Favreau
#7523, aired 2017-05-03NAME'S EXACTLY THE SAME $1000: Please "R.T."! The drummer for Duran Duran & the drummer for Queen Roger Taylor
#7478, aired 2017-03-01CLICHES $400: Your plan sounds great, but how exactly will it work? After all, "the devil is" here in the details
#7417, aired 2016-12-06SPORTS ROUND NUMBERS $400: As a star in this sport, Elvin Hayes played exactly 50,000 minutes in his career basketball
#7417, aired 2016-12-06SPORTS ROUND NUMBERS $800: Mercury Morris of the Miami Dolphins ran for exactly this many yards in the 1972 season 1,000
#7417, aired 2016-12-06SPORTS ROUND NUMBERS $1000: In 1944-45 the NHL played this many games & "Rocket" Richard scored exactly that many goals, a feat not matched until 1981 50
#7354, aired 2016-07-28CLASSICAL COMPOSITIONS BY CENTURY $400: "Internet Symphony" by Tan Dun 21st century
#7350, aired 2016-07-22THAT GAME OF THRONES GUY WITH THE BEARD $600: Not exactly Westeros' Dad of the Year, Charles dance also played this spy novelist in the 1989 TV bio "GoldenEye" Ian Fleming
#7343, aired 2016-07-13POLYSYLLABIC $400: 4 syllables: exactly the same, like some twins identical
#7338, aired 2016-07-06HIT THE GYM $200: This upscale gym chain is named for one of the moments of the year when the sun is exactly above the equator Equinox
#7338, aired 2016-07-06TRAVELING ALONG THE 40th PARALLEL N. $400: Be sure to visit this Asian capital's National Stadium, also known as the Bird's Nest, which is almost exactly on the 40th Beijing
#7288, aired 2016-04-27DOUBLE DOUBLE LETTERS $600: It's the only state with exactly 2 pairs of double letters Massachusetts
#7261, aired 2016-03-21ART FOR ART'S SAKE $400: From the Latin for "shape", it's a statuette under 11 inches high & exactly 8 letters long a figurine
#7239, aired 2016-02-18THINKING VERBS $1200: To memorize something exactly is to learn it "by heart" or "by" this, meaning as a result of repeated study rote
#7235, aired 2016-02-12COLORFUL WORDS & PHRASES $400: Not exactly legal, not exactly illegal is this color "area" gray area
#7180, aired 2015-11-27ABOUT THAT FAR $800: From the front of the pitcher's rubber to the back of home plate in MLB: Exactly this far 60 feet, 6 inches
#7172, aired 2015-11-17TOUGH BALLET $400: (I'm Cory Stearns.) "Theme and Variations" features an incredibly difficult series of turns in the air... each turn is separated by a one-footed spin, known by this French term pirouette
#7129, aired 2015-09-17PUBLIC DOMAIN RINGTONES $800: For immigrants from Italy, this 19th c. song stirred up nostalgia for the homeland "’O sole mio"
#7099, aired 2015-06-25THE END OF THE SOVIET UNION $400: On Dec. 25, 1991 he announced, "I hereby discontinue my activities at the post of president of the USSR" Gorbachev
#7053, aired 2015-04-22TRUTH $400: Stephen Colbert popularized this, not exactly truth; Merriam-Webster's made it the 2006 Word of the Year truthiness
#7042, aired 2015-04-07TIME TO "GO" $800: This figure of Jewish folklore is super strong & follows commands exactly the golem
#6945, aired 2014-11-21BUBBLE TROUBLE $200: In 1979 this Midwest company popped up with Hubba Bubba bubble gum Wrigley
#6889, aired 2014-07-24USE YOUR "HEAD" $1600: A skilled carpenter usually does this 6-word phrase for getting something exactly right hits the nail on the head
#6875, aired 2014-07-04NATIONAL ANIMALS $3,600 (Daily Double): There are no photographs, only illustrations of this symbol of Mauritius a dodo (bird)
#6759, aired 2014-01-23GEOMETRY $800: 2 geometric figures that coincide exactly when superimposed are said to be this, from the Latin for "to agree" congruent
#6758, aired 2014-01-22TV CARTOONS $400: Not exactly the brightest starfish in the sea, he's SpongeBob's neighbor & best friend Patrick
#6729, aired 2013-12-12McCARTHYISM $400: 1998's "Cities on the Plain" completed his Border trilogy; he's not exactly a laugh-a-minute novelist Cormac McCarthy
#6690, aired 2013-10-18HERE COMES 30! $200: The 4 months of exactly 30 days each; remember the rhyme! April, June, November & September
#6689, aired 2013-10-17WEIGHTS & MEASURES $200: This unit of weight for a gemstone is exactly 200 milligrams a carat
#6634, aired 2013-06-20LITERARY LATE BLOOMERS $2000: "Post Office" hit print when he was 51; the movie "Barfly" shows him not exactly racing after success Charles Bukowski
#6632, aired 2013-06-18GOOD DEFINITION $400: An apartment building with exactly 3 units a triplex
#6632, aired 2013-06-182001: A CATEGORY ODYSSEY $600: Exactly 3 months before 9/11, this Oklahoma City bomber was executed (Timothy) McVeigh
#6605, aired 2013-05-10LITERARY CHARACTERS $1000: Saleem & Shiva are both born exactly at the stroke of 12 in this novel by Salman Rushdie Midnight's Children
#6567, aired 2013-03-191801-1810 $800: On March 23, 1806 this pair & their men left Fort Clatsop for St. Louis, arriving exactly 6 months later Lewis & Clark
#6567, aired 2013-03-19REAL NAMES OF FAKE CHARACTERS $800: "Bibendum" doesn't exactly sing, so we know the roly-poly tire mascot better by this alliterative name the Michelin Man
#6538, aired 2013-02-06ANATOM"E" $5,000 (Daily Double): This other name for the auditory tube honors an Italian anatomist the Eustachian tube
#6502, aired 2012-12-18GRAMMAR $2,000 (Daily Double): In English exactly 3 words, with a total of 6 letters, represent this part of speech the articles
#6463, aired 2012-10-24BEASTLY COLLECTIVES $200: Knot is the collective term for these amphibians that are not exactly the same as frogs toads
#6438, aired 2012-09-19NOT EXACTLY HUMAN $200: Per Bram Stoker, they cast no shadow; it's not that big a help in recognizing them, as they don't come out in daylight vampires
#6438, aired 2012-09-19NOT EXACTLY HUMAN $400: Amazingly lifelike, Repliee Q2 is this type of robot that shares its name with a popular mobile platform android
#6438, aired 2012-09-19NOT EXACTLY HUMAN $600: You could think a Roman satyr is human if he's wearing pants to hide the part that's this animal a goat
#6438, aired 2012-09-19NOT EXACTLY HUMAN $800: A Haitian named Clairvius Narcisse said he was turned into a real-life one of these resuscitated terrors a zombie
#6438, aired 2012-09-19NOT EXACTLY HUMAN $1000: Stephenie Meyer says this werewolf "was my first experience with a character taking over" Jacob Black
#6394, aired 2012-06-07I NEED SOME SPACE $400: The orbit of this now most distant planet in the solar system is almost exactly circular Neptune
#6371, aired 2012-05-07"V"OCABULARY $1600: In exactly the same words verbatim
#6342, aired 2012-03-275-SYLLABLE WORDS $3,000 (Daily Double): By having operations in both Libya & Liechtenstein, a corporation is entitled to be called this multinational
#6339, aired 2012-03-22HOW THE WEST WAS SPUN $200: Of this incident, Wyatt Earp remarked, "were it to be done again, I would do it exactly as I did it at the time" gunfight at the O.K. Corral (shootout ... accepted)
#6307, aired 2012-02-07MATHEMATICS $800: The ancient altar at Delos was this geometric shape, so the "Delian Problem" is how to exactly double it in volume a cube
#6261, aired 2011-12-05"H"EALTH & MEDICINE $2000: (Sarah of the Clue Crew shows an anatomical animation on the monitor.) This occurs when the nucleus of a disk protrudes through the surrounding cell & puts pressure on a spinal nerve a herniated disk
#6241, aired 2011-11-07SCIENCE "K"LASS $200: Almost exactly equal to the mass of 1,000 cubic centimeters of water, it's a base unit in the metric system a kilogram
#6202, aired 2011-07-26WEIGHTS & MEASURES $1600: One unit of this distance used in horse racing is exactly 660 feet a furlong
#6196, aired 2011-07-18FRENCH COMPOSERS $200: This composer died on June 3, 1875, exactly 3 months after his "Carmen" premiered Bizet
#6094, aired 2011-02-24PERIOD MOVIES $800: Keira Knightley, as "The Duchess", does not have exactly a warm & loving marriage with Ralph Fiennes, as him the Duke of Devonshire
#6079, aired 2011-02-03OUR WATERY WORLD $2000: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew shows a globe on the monitor.) Exactly two-thirds of the way south from the equator, you can circumnavigate the world without ever crossing land at this latitude 60 degrees south
#6072, aired 2011-01-25MIDDLE "C" $600: In 1923, John Deere launched it's Model D, the first of these to bear the Deere name a tractor
#6048, aired 2010-12-22LIFE IS SHORT $2000: This German epistemological philosopher who lived from 1724 to 1804 was categorically, exactly 5' tall (Immanuel) Kant
#6032, aired 2010-11-30NEWS FROM THE EQUATOR $1200: (Kelly of the Clue Crew reports from the Galapagos.) Here at the equator the Sun is directly overhead at exactly noon on these two equinoxes the vernal & autumnal equinoxes
#5986, aired 2010-09-27RECENT MOVIES $200: He's the title hero seen here in a 2010 sequel doing exactly what you would do if you had the opportunity Iron Man
#5958, aired 2010-07-07SPELL IT OUT FOR ME $1000: It sounds exactly like the name of a great lake, but it means weird or uncanny E-E-R-I-E
#5892, aired 2010-04-06WHERE'S THAT DARN TRAIN? $200: Its stopping distance is exactly 1 of these, so if the engineer sees you tied to the tracks 5,281' away, you're fine a mile
#5824, aired 2009-12-31HISTORICAL WHAT WERE THEY THINKING? $400: On Oct. 12, 1492 this captain thought he was on an island near Japan--not exactly Columbus
#5786, aired 2009-11-09THE SCIENCE OF AUTUMN $800: Because the Earth orbits faster when it's closer to the sun, the vernal & autumnal these are not exactly 1/2 year apart equinoxes
#5781, aired 2009-11-02STARTS WITH A PAST TENSE VERB $2000: They're feelings, especially highly emotional ones; you might say, "my" these "exactly" sentiments
#5774, aired 2009-10-22PARTY LIKE IT'S 1499 $5,200 (Daily Double): Upon his return from India in 1499, he was received by King Manuel I of Portugal Vasco da Gama
#5761, aired 2009-10-05MY SCENTIMENTS EXACTLY! $400: You can smell like Dr. McDreamy with Unscripted, an Avon fragrance created by this actor Patrick Dempsey
#5761, aired 2009-10-05MY SCENTIMENTS EXACTLY! $800: For the swashbuckler in you, there's this classic scent that bears the name of a musketeer Aramis
#5761, aired 2009-10-05MY SCENTIMENTS EXACTLY! $1200: I've been fixated on this 9-letter Calvin Klein scent ever since it hit fragrance counters in the 1980s Obsession
#5761, aired 2009-10-05MY SCENTIMENTS EXACTLY! $1600: The name of this classic scent from Nina Ricci is French for "the air of time" L'Air du Temps
#5761, aired 2009-10-05MY SCENTIMENTS EXACTLY! $2000: There's no mistaking this company's Brit fragrance; it has a distinct check pattern on the bottle & the box Burberry
#5737, aired 2009-07-14YOU DO THE MATH! $800: Traveling exactly twice around the globe means you've traveled this many degrees longitude 720
#5714, aired 2009-06-11LET ME TAKE YOU DOWN $1000: On June 20, 1947 this gangster found out exactly how displeased Meyer Lansky was about the cost of the Flamingo Hotel Bugsy Siegel
#5714, aired 2009-06-11SPELL IT BACKWARDS $1000: Asian new year celebration T-E-T
#5686, aired 2009-05-04TIME TO CONVERT $2,200 (Daily Double): You do the math: -40 degrees on the Fahrenheit temperature scale equals this on the Celsius scale -40
#5621, aired 2009-02-02RIGHT "IN" THE MIDDLE $2000: Having fixed or precise limits definite
#5564, aired 2008-11-13YOU CAN QUOTE ME ON THAT $200: In her June 2008 concession speech she admitted, "Well, this isn't exactly the party I'd planned" Hillary Clinton
#5544, aired 2008-10-16ROLLING STONE'S 100 GREATEST GUITAR SONGS $1000: One of the newer songs is his 2006 hit "Gravity" John Mayer
#5509, aired 2008-07-17THROUGH THE LOOKING-GLASS $800: "All mimsy were the borogoves" in this poem whose first & last stanzas are exactly the same "Jabberwocky"
#5452, aired 2008-04-29TIME $600: It's the second month of the year with exactly 30 days in it June
#5370, aired 2008-01-04GEOMETRY $1600: It's a line or segment that touches a circle at exactly one point a tangent
#5343, aired 2007-11-28THE LBJ LIBRARY & MUSEUM $2000: (Jon speaks from the Oval Office.) On March 31, 1968, LBJ spoke from the Oval Office exactly 2 months after this North Vietnamese attack; though he said it was a failure, it changed the view of the war at home the Tet Offensive
#5341, aired 2007-11-262 $3,000 (Daily Double): It's the only planet in the Solar System with exactly 2 moons Mars
#5337, aired 2007-11-20I ONLY HAVE "I"s FOR YOU $400: (Kelly of the Clue Crew shows a simple cell diagram on the monitor.) As opposed to the dizygotic type of twins, where 2 eggs develop into 2 genetically different cells, in the monozygotic, or this type, the genetics are exactly the same identical
#5315, aired 2007-10-19PHILOSOPHY $800: A "Jeopardy!" game has 13 of these; medieval writers believed there were exactly 10, including place & time categories
#5237, aired 2007-05-22CHANGE ONE LETTER $400: A stocking bag a sock sack
#5167, aired 2007-02-13MONSTER MASH $600: We're not exactly sure what the monster is on the island of this ABC drama, but Kate, Jack & Sawyer want to know Lost
#5115, aired 2006-12-01THE QUOTABLE FRAN LEBOWITZ $800: Fran warns that "spilling your" these in conversation "is just exactly as charming as it sounds" your guts
#5081, aired 2006-10-16THOU ART DA MAN! $800: In Exodus 3:14 "God said unto" this man, "I am that I am" Moses
#5025, aired 2006-06-16LET'S GO WORK OUT $400: (Jon of the Clue Crew reports from Bally Total Fitness.) You can get a low-impact workout using the not-exactly-circular pedaling motion that gives this type of machine its name an elliptical machine
#4893, aired 2005-12-14U.S. HIGHWAYS & BYWAYS $800: This east-west Interstate through Nebraska isn't really endless; it's exactly 455.32 miles I-80
#4844, aired 2005-10-06SCARFACE $200: Not exactly "Man of the Year", Al Capone appeared controversially on a 1930 cover of this magazine founded in 1923 Time
#4829, aired 2005-09-15DICKENS HEARS FROM HOLLYWOOD $800: More orphans?! & this book's start, "My father's family name being Pirrip"... not exactly "Call me Ishmael", Chuck! Great Expectations
#4775, aired 2005-05-13GEOMETRY $1000: (Sarah of the Clue Crew kneels in an ice rink in Park City, UT.) The house, the big circle in curling, is 37.699 feet in circumference, so exactly this many in diameter 12 feet
#4722, aired 2005-03-01EGYPTIAN RELIGION $1200: (Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from Abu Simbel, Egypt.) The cow goddess Hothor becoming part-woman was one of Egypt's first examples of this--worship of gods in human form anthropomorphism
#4694, aired 2005-01-20HOMOPHONIC DUOS $400: Biblical killer's walking sticks Cain's canes
#4655, aired 2004-11-26NAME THE DECADE $400: (Al Franken reads.) Chernobyl, Iran-Contra & Flock of Seagulls haircuts weren't exactly what I had in mind when I named this decade after me... "Al Franken" the 1980s
#4608, aired 2004-09-22AROUND THE CELL $1000: If you mark off each day on the wall, & you serve exactly 40% of a 5-year sentence, you end up with this many marks 730 (or 731)
#4606, aired 2004-09-20FOR GOOD MEASURE $600: It can be a few drops or exactly 1/16 of a teaspoon a dash
#4573, aired 2004-06-23DEAR JOHN $3,600 (Daily Double): In 1873 he "plowed" into politics & became the second mayor of Moline, Illinois John Deere
#4572, aired 2004-06-22ON A POSITIVE NOTE $800: Adverb used as a Hertz slogan exactly
#4482, aired 2004-02-17FAMILIAR PHRASES $400: (Cheryl of the Clue Crew presents the clue, using a small piece of wood, a nail, and a hammer.) Meaning to do or say exactly the right thing is the phrase I'm demonstrating here to hit the nail on the head (or hit the hammer on the head)
#4447, aired 2003-12-30CELL BLOCK CINEMA $800: This harrowing 1978 film that made Brad Davis a star wasn't exactly a Turkish delight Midnight Express
#4430, aired 2003-12-05AUTHORS $600: His "Hike and the Aeroplane" of 1912 didn't exactly put him on the Main Street of success Sinclair Lewis
#4357, aired 2003-07-08NAME THE YEAR $100 (Daily Double): (Jimmy of the Clue Crew reports from Little Rock, AR.) Little Rock's Old State House was the scene of a big election party in this year, exactly 150 after its completion 1992
#4356, aired 2003-07-07VATICAN CITY $400: Not exactly the B&O, this type of transportation system runs only 950 yards in Vatican City train/railroad
#4296, aired 2003-04-14THE PLANETS $1000: This planet's day is almost exactly the same as ours--24 hours, 37 minutes Mars
#4293, aired 2003-04-09EYE 8 $400: Eye exactly 8 tentacles on a marine mollusk & you're looking at one of these animals octopus
#4243, aired 2003-01-29ONE-WORD FILM TITLES $800: Reviewers said this Mariah Carey film & its soundtrack were "not exactly gold" Glitter
#4225, aired 2003-01-03CONSTELLATIONS $400: The 3 Pyramids at Giza are aligned almost exactly as the main stars in this hunter's belt Orion
#4194, aired 2002-11-21FUN WITH THE PERIODIC TABLE $400: It's the only element on the chart with exactly the same name as a planet in our solar system Mercury
#4168, aired 2002-10-16A CHICAGO TOUR $1200: A sculpture titled this "Energy" was unveiled at the U. of Chicago in 1967, exactly 25 years after the first chain reaction Nuclear Energy
#4166, aired 2002-10-14"M"USIC $400: This rocker was never exactly asked whether he wanted to be renamed John Cougar John Cougar Mellencamp
#4092, aired 2002-05-21JANUARY $200: On January 2, 1959, exactly 120 years after Daguerre took the first photo of it, Russia launched a probe to it the Moon
#4089, aired 2002-05-16BILL MURRAY MOVIE QUOTES $400: 1993: "What would you do if you were stuck in one place & every day was exactly the same?" Groundhog Day
#4056, aired 2002-04-01MONEY PROBLEMS $2,800 (Daily Double): Smallest number of U.S. bills needed to total exactly $36 4
#4038, aired 2002-03-06TIME $400: It's the second month of the year with exactly 30 days in it June
#4030, aired 2002-02-22JUST COS $400: Voiced by Cosby, this not-exactly-svelte character was known for his catchphrase, "Hey, Hey, Hey!" Fat Albert
#3952, aired 2001-11-06SONG LYRICS $500: Christina Aguilera: "Whatever makes me happy sets you free and I'm thanking you for knowing exactly..." "What A Girl Wants"
#3850, aired 2001-05-04QUAKES $500: On Jan. 13, 2001 a 7.6 temblor rocked this tiny Central American nation; a 6.6 quake hit exactly one month later El Salvador
#3822, aired 2001-03-27WRITERS BY QUOTE $600: "I am Tarzan of the apes. I want you. I am yours. You are mine" Edgar Rice Burroughs
#3712, aired 2000-10-24WORLD HISTORY $200: Exactly 600 years after the Norman Conquest, London suffered through plague & this other major disaster the Great Fire of London
#3566, aired 2000-02-21LESSER-KNOWN ANCIENT ROMANS $100: This little-known Roman was exactly half as wide as his Greek friend Diameter Radius
#3556, aired 2000-02-07"I" FULL $100: Exactly the same, like some twins identical
#3546, aired 2000-01-24JANUARY 24 $1000: Winston Churchill died Jan. 24, 1965, exactly 70 years after this man, his father Lord Randolph Churchill
#3485, aired 1999-10-29PROFILES IN CARVAGE $800: If you want to "Bob" for pumpkins, use his: Bob Dylan
#3425, aired 1999-06-25DAYS OF OUR LIVES $1000: Neil Armstrong stepped onto the Moon on this date, exactly 6 months into Nixon's presidency July 20, 1969
#3347, aired 1999-03-09REIGNING CATS & DOGS $100: A tabby cat named Dusty produced exactly 420 of these during her life, a world record kittens
#3333, aired 1999-02-17U.S.A. $300: Stand atop the state capital steps in this city & you'll be exactly 5,280 feet above sea level Denver, Colorado
#3330, aired 1999-02-12COUPLES $200: In 1998, this "Yentl" & this AAMCO spokesman were married exactly 2 years after their first date Barbra Streisand & James Brolin
#3258, aired 1998-11-04HE WAS IN THAT? $800: His role as the comatose Murphy in "Coma" wasn't exactly his "Magnum" opus Tom Selleck
#3217, aired 1998-09-08"FOOL"ISHNESS $200: It comes exactly 2 weeks before federal income taxes are due April Fools Day
#3200, aired 1998-06-26SPORTS $500: A row of purple seats rings this ball park to mark a spot that's exactly 5,280 feet above sea level Coors Field (the home of the Colorado Rockies)
#3185, aired 1998-06-05WOMEN RULE! $200: Mark Antony's "marriage" to her wasn't exactly legal; he already had a wife in Rome Cleopatra
#3164, aired 1998-05-07TIME $200: Most of the time, this month is exactly 2 fortnights long February
#3163, aired 1998-05-06TENNIS, ANYONE? $800: At the center, a tennis net should be exactly this many feet high 3 feet high
#3158, aired 1998-04-29THE UMPIRE STRIKES BACK $400: Umpires did this exactly 91 times to feisty manager Earl Weaver in his career throw him out of the game
#2994, aired 1997-09-11KNOW YOUR EARTH $200: Follow this line & you'll travel almost exactly 24,900 miles to get back to your starting point the equator
#2986, aired 1997-09-01UNINTELLIGIBLE $400: People had a tough time figuring out exactly what the lyrics were to this 1963 Kingsmen hit "Louie Louie"
#2983, aired 1997-07-16NONFICTION $1000: This 1946 John Hersey book about WWII begins, "At exactly fifteen minutes past eight in the morning...." "Hiroshima"
#2820, aired 1996-11-29AUTHORS & THEIR WORKS $1000: She says her Gothic-style novels, like "Bellefleur", are "not exactly parodies" but "parodistic" Joyce Carol Oates
#2808, aired 1996-11-13THE DREADED OPERA CATEGORY $1,000 (Daily Double): Ramfis is the high priest of Egypt in this Verdi opera Aida
#2770, aired 1996-09-20LITERATURE $200: It begins, "Alice was beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister on the bank" Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
#2588, aired 1995-11-29DOGS $200: The chow probably originated in the northern part of this continent, but no one knows exactly where Asia
#2363, aired 1994-12-07MONTHS $200: It's the first month of the year that has exactly 30 days April
#2353, aired 1994-11-23ENGLISH LITERATURE $800: Tennyson addressed his poem "To E.L. on his Travels" to this "Nonsense" poet Edward Lear
#2279, aired 1994-06-30TOMS IN LITERATURE $800: In "The Prince and the Pauper", this slum kid looks exactly like Edward Tudor Tom Canty
#2260, aired 1994-06-03COMPOSERS $800: In 1850, exactly 100 years after his death, a society was formed in Leipzig to promote his Baroque works (Johann Sebastian) Bach
#2259, aired 1994-06-02SCIENTIFIC CYCLES $1000: Since they're not exactly 24 hours long, your daily rhythms are named this, from Latin for "about daily" circadian cycles
#2148, aired 1993-12-29OFFICES $400: His office at the Cosmonaut Training Center has been left exactly as it was the day he died, March 27, 1968 Yuri Gagarin
#2133, aired 1993-12-08ODDS & ENDS $500: There are exactly 58 facets on this smart- sounding diamond cut a brilliant cut
#2106, aired 1993-11-01FOR THE BIRDS $500: After 12 days the singer of "The 12 Days of Christmas" will own exactly a dozen of these birds partridges
#2103, aired 1993-10-27IN OTHER WORDS... $200: Exactly something an M.D. called for just what the doctor ordered
#2096, aired 1993-10-18VOCABULARY $100: Add 2 letters to flammable & you'll have this word that means exactly the same thing inflammable
#2083, aired 1993-09-29EIGHTS $500: The only Disney feature to have exactly 8 people mentioned in the title Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
#2081, aired 1993-09-27SWEET TREATS $400: According to Hostess there should be exactly 7 loops in every icing squiggle on this treat cupcake
#2049, aired 1993-07-01RANKS & TITLES $400: You're on a roll if you know this was the title of the German emperor from 1871 to 1918 Kaiser
#1941, aired 1993-02-01PEAS $100: A pair of objects that are exactly alike are described as this peas in a pod
#1922, aired 1993-01-05FISH $400: The Atlantic types of these spawn in the Sargasso Sea, but the Japanese type's spawning ground is not exactly known eels
#1856, aired 1992-10-05BESTSELLERS $600: Tom Clancy's recurring hero Jack Ryan was introduced in this 1984 bestseller The Hunt for Red October
#1720, aired 1992-02-07MOVIE QUOTES $400: "We didn't exactly believe your story, Miss O'Shaughnessy, we believed your $200" The Maltese Falcon
#1714, aired 1992-01-30U.S.A. $100: The 15th step on the Capitol in Denver has a plaque indicating it's exactly this a mile high
#1639, aired 1991-10-17GETTING MARRIED $400: Exactly 9 sips of this are the essence of a Shinto wedding ceremony in Japan sake
#1638, aired 1991-10-16THE TWENTIETH CENTURY $500: This Nazi war criminal committed suicide hours before his scheduled Oct. 16, 1946 execution Hermann Goering
#1633, aired 1991-10-09ALICE IN WONDERLAND $200: This snooty hookah smoker is exactly three inches tall the Caterpillar
#1618, aired 1991-09-18THE ELEMENTS $300: The only element whose name is exactly the same as a planet's mercury
#1429, aired 1990-11-15WEIGHTS & MEASURES $400: 6 miles square is exactly equal to this many square miles 36 square miles
#1424, aired 1990-11-08WEATHER $200: The THI, it tells you exactly how miserable you are on a hot summer day the temperature-humidity index
#1392, aired 1990-09-25WEIGHTS & MEASURES $800: It was originally intended to be exactly equal to the mass of water in a liter a kilogram
#1382, aired 1990-09-11MAN IN SPACE $400: The Soviet's Buran 1st launched in 1988, looks almost exactly like this U.S. craft the Space Shuttle
#1363, aired 1990-07-04APPROXIMATE WEIGHTS & MEASURES $200: It can mean a collection tied in a bundle as well as exactly 52 playing cards pack
#1086, aired 1989-05-01APRIL $800: This president died April 4, 1841 exactly one month after his inauguration William Henry Harrison
#1059, aired 1989-03-23BIRDS $800: The bill of the sicklebill, a species of this bird, exactly fits the shape of certain flowers hummingbird
#1018, aired 1989-01-25SPORTS TRIVIA $400: Once in 1934, he told each Dodger exactly how he'd pitch to them, & the Cardinals still won 13-0 Dizzy Dean
#995, aired 1988-12-23U.S.A. $200: Popular with vacationers, this S.C. island was named for an English captain, WIlliam Hilton Hilton Head Island
#896, aired 1988-06-27WEIGHTS & MEASURES $1000: This land measure is exactly 10,000 square meters & about 2 1/2 acres hectare
#866, aired 1988-05-16U.S. HISTORY $600: In 1894, Congress passed a law making this graduated for the 1st time income tax
#791, aired 1988-02-01PARIS $500 (Daily Double): Translation of the following, one of the top TV shows in Paris: Wheel of Fortune
#712, aired 1987-10-13BIOLOGY $300 (Daily Double): A single human sperm or egg cell contains this many chromosomes 23
#677, aired 1987-07-14SHIPS $800: Exactly 4" longer than her sister ships, the Missouri, Iowa & Wisconsin, she's the largest battleship afloat the New Jersey
#554, aired 1987-01-22AUGUST $400: On Aug. 23, 1926, Italian-born R. Valentino died; exactly 1 year later, this Italian-born pair was executed Sacco and Vanzetti
#539, aired 1987-01-01MARCH $300: On March 4, 1861, the Confederacy adopted its flag, exactly 72 years after this document had gone into effect Constitution
#512, aired 1986-11-25THE '50s $1000: A prosecuting attorney in the Rosenberg case, he later assisted Sen. Joe McCarthy Roy Cohn
#511, aired 1986-11-24FEBRUARY $400: Only because it is exactly divisible by 400, the year 2000 will have this date on its calendar February 29th
#507, aired 1986-11-18TRANSPORTATION $200: Exactly a month after the Boeing 747 made its maiden flight, this Anglo-French airliner was 1st flown Concorde
#484, aired 1986-10-16POINT IT OUT $200: "Stump the Stars" charade symbol for "That's exactly right" on the nose
#484, aired 1986-10-16WILD WEST $500: Exactly 187 defenders were killed there March 6, 1836 the Alamo
#402, aired 1986-03-25PRESIDENTIAL LOSERS $600: In 1975, a copy of the Nov. 3, 1948 Chicago Tribune was worth $5,000 because of this headline "Dewey Defeats Truman"
#361, aired 1986-01-27STUPID ANSWERS $400: Of a pound of bricks, a pound of feathers, or a pound of iron, the 1 which weighs the most none of them (they all weigh exactly the same)
#266, aired 1985-09-16BASEBALL TRIVIA $200: Now with the Padres, his father drove the Dodger team bus when he was a boy Steve Garvey
#265, aired 1985-09-13SPORTS $1000: In boating, some popular types are the yachtsman, the Danforth & the mushroom anchors
#174, aired 1985-05-09U.S.A. $200: No one knows exactly why it's called the Hoosier State Indiana
#150, aired 1985-04-05SOUTH AMERICA $1000: The world's largest copper-exporting country Chile
#115, aired 1985-02-15MATHEMATICS $400: The line that cuts a circle exactly in half a diameter
#101, aired 1985-01-28MOVIES $400: 1984 fantasy that sounds like a painting of siesta scenery Dreamscape
#101, aired 1985-01-28THE CIRCUS $400: No 2 are exactly alike & each is painted on an eggshell to be registered a clown's face
#70, aired 1984-12-14TIME $300: Number of months with exactly 30 days 4

Final Jeopardy! Round clues (20 results returned)

#9055, aired 2024-03-08LITERATURE & RELIGION: This city now in Turkey is the addressee of one of the New Testament epistles & the setting for "The Comedy of Errors" Ephesus
#8978, aired 2023-11-22MUSICIANS: An Esquire profile said, "The most distinguishing thing" about the face of this singer "are his eyes, clear blue & alert" Frank Sinatra
#16, aired 2023-10-11RALLYING CRIES: Don't mess with Texas: Sam Houston's troops shouted this 3-word battle cry while attacking Santa Anna's army at San Jacinto Remember the Alamo!
#4, aired 2022-10-16ANNUAL EVENTS: In 1986 Larry Harvey called a friend & said, let's do this, no one knows exactly why; it evolved into an annual festival in the desert Burning Man
#8490, aired 2021-10-15LITERATURE FOR CHILDREN: These stories got their collective title because little Josephine Kipling insisted they be told exactly the same way each time Just So Stories
#7684, aired 2018-01-2519th CENTURY EUROPEANS: In an 1889 letter to his brother, he wrote, “I wouldn’t exactly have chosen madness if there had been a choice” Vincent van Gogh
#7633, aired 2017-11-15HISTORIC NAMES: In 2013 the village of Belrain renamed the last street in France that bore the name of this hero who became a traitor Maréchal Philippe Petain
#7343, aired 2016-07-13THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE: Discovered in 1535, this island group on the equator got perhaps its most famous visitor exactly 300 years later the Galapagos Islands
#6702, aired 2013-11-05FIRST FAMILIES: Sasha & Malia Obama are the first presidential children who were not old enough to vote for Dad since this one Chelsea Clinton
#5948, aired 2010-06-23HISTORIC DATES: The signing of the Treaty of Versailles on June 28, 1919 took place exactly 5 years after the related death of this man Archduke Franz Ferdinand
#5896, aired 2010-04-12NEW SPORTS: In 2008, Middlebury College in Vermont won its 2nd straight championship in this sport introduced in a 1997 novel Quidditch
#5695, aired 2009-05-1519th CENTURY AMERICANS: This New Englander began building his house in March 1845 & later wrote that it cost exactly $28.12 1/2 Henry David Thoreau
#5507, aired 2008-07-15OLYMPIC CITIES: This city's Olympics were exactly 200 years after the death of the British cabinet secretary it was named for Sydney
#4831, aired 2005-09-19RANKS & TITLES: In 1950 Pius XII was Pontifex Maximus; exactly 2,000 years earlier, this man held a title of the same name Julius Caesar
#4751, aired 2005-04-11ARLINGTON'S TOMB OF UNKNOWNS: Sentinels at the tomb walk exactly this many steps at a time before they stop & turn 21
#4293, aired 2003-04-0920th CENTURY WORDS: Walter Cronkite said it was first used in 1952 for "Not exactly a reporter, not exactly a commentator" anchorman
#3518, aired 1999-12-15OPERA: A 1920s discovery proved that some of the instruments used in this 1871 opera were historically accurate Aida
#3137, aired 1998-03-31AVIATION: On October 14, 1997 he re-created a feat he had performed exactly fifty years earlier Chuck Yeager
#2894, aired 1997-03-13U.S. PRESIDENTS: The first & last to preside over exactly 48 states William Howard Taft & Dwight Eisenhower
#636, aired 1987-05-18AMERICANA: Title 4 of the U.S. Code states its length must be exactly 1.9 times its width the flag

Players (56 results returned)

Francois Dominic Laramée, a writer and TV personality from Verdun, Quebec, Canada Season 25 2-time champion: $46,300 + $1,000. Francois's name was printed...
Elza Reeves, a bank teller from Louisville, Kentucky Season 25 1-time champion: $16,400 + $1,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Tom Toce, an actuary from New York, New York Season 26 2-time champion: $39,200 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
Jim Davis, a college music and humanities instructor from Freeport, Illinois Season 25 2-time champion: $62,802 + $2,000. Not be to confused...
Jonathan Hawley, a sophomore from Harvard University 2008 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. 19 and from Oceanside, CA at...
Danielle Zsenak, a senior from Marquette University 2008 College Championship 1st runner-up: $50,000. Last name pronounced like "zshen-NOCK"....
Alyssa McRae, a gift card production designer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Season 25 3-time champion: $50,402 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Patrick Tucker, a senior from the University of Notre Dame 2010 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2009 College Championship winner: $100,000...
Eric Betts, a senior from Emory University 2009 College Championship first runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $50,000. 21 and...
Gary Bechtold, a garage door company owner from St. Cloud, Minnesota Season 26 3-time champion: $42,001 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
Justin Waters, a resident physician from Royal Oak, Michigan Season 25 1-time champion: $7,199 + $2,000. Justin Waters Royal Oak,...
Stefan Goodreau, a video game tester and camp counselor from Los Angeles, California 2010 Tournament of Champions 2nd runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $50,000. Season...
Jennifer Broders, a junior high school social studies teacher from Stockton, Iowa Season 26 2-time champion: $59,801 + $1,000. Jennifer Broders - a...
Ryan Chaffee, a tutor from Los Angeles, California 2010 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 26 4-time champion: $91,900...
Hans von Walter, a junior from Southern Adventist University from Avon Park, Florida 2010-B College Championship 2nd runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $25,000 + a...
Karan Takhar, a senior from North Attleborough, Massachusetts 2008-B Teen Tournament semifinalist: $10,000. First name pronounced like "KUR-run". Jeopardy...
Brian Muth, a headmaster from Napa, California Season 25 2-time champion: $43,800 + $1,000. Last name pronounced like...
Eliza Scruton, a junior from Louisville, Kentucky 2012 Teen Tournament semifinalist: $10,000. 16 at the time of the Teen Tournament.
Mike Maheu, a high school teacher from San Diego, California Season 25 2-time champion: $46,242 + $1,000. Last name pronounced like...
Nate Austin, a student from Hutchinson Community College "His original plan was to own a chain of international hotels...
David Walter, a senior from Wilmington, Delaware 2007 Teen Tournament winner (semifinalist by wildcard): $75,000. 17 at the...
Cerulean Ozarow, an 11-year-old from Brooklyn, New York "His future is full of options. He wants to become either...
Suchita Shah, a senior from the University of Wisconsin-Madison 2008 College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. 20 and from Holmen, WI...
Katie Winter, a senior from Tufts University 2008 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. 22 and from Hershey, PA at...
Dara Lind, a junior from Yale University 2008 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. 20 and from Cincinnati, OH at...
Gabrielle McMahan, a junior from Florida A&M University 2008 College Championship semifinalist: $10,000. 20 and from Springfield, VA at...
Emily Karrs, a junior from Gibsonia, Pennsylvania 2002 Teen Tournament semifinalist: $5,000. Emily was 16 at the time...
Sid Chandrasekhar, a senior from the University of Pennsylvania from Saratoga, California 2010-B College Championship semifinalist: $10,000 + a Nintendo Wii + the...
Bob Verini, a film journalist and test prep teacher from Los Angeles, California "A resident of New York City when he won the 1987...
Ari Stern, a mathematician from San Diego, California Season 27 1-time champion: $17,201 + $1,000.
Dan Katz, a lawyer from Owings Mills, Maryland "Since his five wins in 1990, he's seen Bruce Springsteen 16...
Leszek Pawlowicz, a shovel bum from Flagstaff, Arizona "He was a material scientist living in Phoenix when he won...
Neal Freyman, a ten-year-old from Longmeadow, Massachusetts "He's not sure recess counts as a subject, but if it...
Inta Antler, a retired computer programmer from Scarborough, Ontario, Canada Season 25 1-time champion: $12,700 + $2,000. Inta Antler - A...
Kevin Wilson, a communications specialist from Toronto, Ontario, Canada Season 26 3-time champion: $76,998 + $1,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Scott Menke, a senior from Johns Hopkins University 2009 College Championship semifinalist: $10,000. 21 and from Flemington, New Jersey...
Dan Smith, a student from Chicago, Illinois Season 25 3-time champion: $69,200 + $1,000. Dan Smith - a...
Laura Myers, a senior from the University of Missouri 2009 College Championship second runner-up: $29,900. 22 and from Richmond, Virginia...
Lindsay Eanet, a senior from the University of Missouri 2010-A College Championship semifinalist: $10,000. Hometown: Deerfield, Illinois. Last name pronounced...
Leah Anthony Libresco, a junior from Yale University 2010-A College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Hometown: Mineola, New York. Jeopardy!...
Anthony Fox, an account executive from Arlington Heights, Illinois Season 27 4-time champion: $51,998 + $1,000. Playing as "Tony", Anthony...
Amy Wilson, a creative writing and women's studies student originally from Portland, Oregon Season 26 1-time champion: $19,999 + $2,000. Not to be confused...
Liz Murphy, a foreign service officer originally from Scranton, Pennsylvania 2010 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000. Season 25 5-time champion: $121,302...
Enrique Machado, an oil filtration business developer from Orlando, Florida Season 26 1-time champion: $30,799 + $2,000. Enrique Machado September 16,...
Rebecca Dixon, a graduate student and musician from Vancouver, Washington Season 26 2-time champion: $53,002 + $1,000. Rebecca and her partner...
Carolyn Young, a homemaker from Marietta, Georgia Season 25 1-time champion: $30,000 + $2,000. Mother of Season 32...
Ben Bishop, a student originally from Seattle, Washington 2009 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000. Season 25 4-time champion: $114,800...
Charlie Blatt, an 11-year-old from Scarsdale, New York "Besides cooking, working on the computer, and tap dancing, she likes...
Katie Singh, a sophomore from Northwestern University from Austin, Texas 2010-B College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000 + a Nintendo Wii + the...
Ellen Eichner, a junior from the Ohio State University from Northbrook, Illinois 2010-B College Championship semifinalist: $10,000 + a Nintendo Wii + the...
Stephen Weingarten, a paraeducator from Portland, Oregon 2010 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 26 4-time champion: $96,690...
Harry Shearer, a humorist, Spinal Tap bassist, and voice from The Simpsons "He recently celebrated the 25th anniversary of This Is Spinal Tap...
Lorna Johnson, a 12-year-old seventh grader from Willowbrook, Illinois "She loves all animals, especially her dogs Duke and Rudy, but...
Chris Miller, a retail specialist from Louisville, Kentucky 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Elite Eighteen (Round 2 winners) and...
Jerome Vered, a writer from Los Angeles, California "The 1-day record of $34,000 he set in 1992 stood for...
Mark Dawson, a business manager from Chamblee, Georgia "In 2003, he became the first to win a quarter of...



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