Jeopardy! Round, Double Jeopardy! Round, or Tiebreaker Round clues (651 results returned)

#9085, aired 2024-04-19NOT YOUR EVERYDAY WORDS $800: If you're a quidnunc, Latin for "what now?", you have this quality of excess curiosity, from a body part nosy
#9075, aired 2024-04-05YOU'RE A FINAL"IST" $200: By definition it's a person who does not believe in the existence of God an atheist
#9073, aired 2024-04-03STARS & CONSTELLATIONS $3,600 (Daily Double): If you're really smart, you should know that this constellation was named for South Africa's Table Mountain Mensa
#9064, aired 2024-03-21NOTABLE NAMES $9,400 (Daily Double): His 1936 "General Theory" suggesting government spending to lower unemployment influenced economic policy for decades Keynes
#9055, aired 2024-03-08WE'RE GOIN' TO BROADWAY! $400: Songs in this show include "King Arthur's Song", "I Am Not Dead Yet" & "You Won't Succeed On Broadway" Spamalot
#3, aired 2024-02-02IDEAS FOR TOURISM CAMPAIGNS $600: We're one big island! (& several small ones); lemur entertain you! (Disclaimer: Lemurs will not, repeat not, speak to you) Madagascar
#9026, aired 2024-01-29"D.D." $1600: This 18th century guy was a novelist, journalist & pamphleteer Daniel Defoe
#9023, aired 2024-01-24LOVE STORY $600: In Erich Segal's "Love Story", we learned, "Love means not ever having to say you're" this sorry
#9023, aired 2024-01-24FROM THE LATIN $800: We're not horsing around when we tell you this word from Latin is one who is skilled in horseback riding equestrian
#26, aired 2024-01-23PEAK TV $200: Due to a mix-up, the giant robot doll from this South Korean series was briefly displayed in front of a museum Squid Game
#26, aired 2024-01-23I'M JUST KEN $10,400 (Daily Double): In 2023 this documentarian released his latest film, a four-hour series examining the rich history of the American buffalo Ken Burns
#9018, aired 2024-01-17IF FOOD BE THE LOVE OF MUSIC $2000: Kendrick Lamar quoted a folk saying when he sang, "The blacker the berry", then this result the sweeter the juice
#9016, aired 2024-01-15DISNEY FILM TITLES VISUALIZED $600: It's not exactly as it appears The Jungle Book
#9008, aired 2024-01-03MIL. ABBREV. $400: AWOL: i.e., not where you're supposed to be absent without leave
#8995, aired 2023-12-15NOT REALLY MARRIED $200: This country diva serenades this "Huck Finn" author with her hit "You're Still The One" Mark & Shania Twain
#22, aired 2023-12-06CELEBRITY TELL-ALLS $1200: "Greenlights": His father brought a dead cockatiel back to life by giving it mouth-to-mouth Matthew McConaughey
#8985, aired 2023-12-01A RED-HOT LATIN LAWYER $600: If you're "not of sound mind" to stand trial, you're this 3-word Latin phrase non compos mentis
#8983, aired 2023-11-29LUCK OF THE DRAW $200: From the Latin for "instill with life", it's the creation of a motion picture from a series of still images animation
#21, aired 2023-11-29RULES OF THE GAME $100: If you touch the metal edge of the cavity, you'll set off the buzzer & make Sam's nose light up! Operation
#8975, aired 2023-11-17MORE TRICKY QUESTIONS $1000: It's the main reason in Wyoming why a man can't marry his widow's sister because he's dead
#20, aired 2023-11-15ADVENTUROUS WOMEN $400: Annie Londonderry inspired the 2021 novel "Spin", about her historic 19th-century trip around the world on one of these bicycle
#20, aired 2023-11-15SIX DEGREES OF ACTUAL BACON $800: Tomato sauce is in Sloppy Joes with beef, & beef is with bacon in this beloved Wendy's burger, introduced in 2007 the Baconator
#8971, aired 2023-11-13DESCRIBING THE ARTWORK $3,000 (Daily Double): We're not sure if you'd call that teal or azure the young man with a feathered cap is wearing in this 1770 work The Blue Boy
#19, aired 2023-11-01VITAMINS & MINERALS $900: Not a fan of beef liver? You're in luck: you can get a dose of this "sunshine vitamin" simply by walking outside vitamin D
#18, aired 2023-10-25THE NOBEL PRIZE $600: The youngest-ever Nobel Prize winner is also a best-selling author, for her 2013 memoir titled "I Am" this Malala
#18, aired 2023-10-25BY THE NUMBERS $800: As slang, it sounds a lot less serious than "shoplifting" -- though your arresting officer might not agree five-finger discount
#18, aired 2023-10-25FUNGUS AMONG US $1500: Scientists use this internet-inspired pun name for the vast network of fungi swapping nutrients beneath the forest floor the wood wide web
#17, aired 2023-10-18RESPOND LIKE A PIRATE $300: When he's not searching for the Lost Ark or the Temple of Doom, Indiana Jones teaches this subject archaeology
#8951, aired 2023-10-16THE LITERARY CHARACTER WHO SAID... $3,200 (Daily Double): "What did it matter where you lay once you were dead?... You were sleeping the big sleep, you were not bothered by things like that" Philip Marlowe
#8949, aired 2023-10-12HAPPIER MOVIE ENDINGS $400: "You're not going to drown, Jack." "Why, Rose?" "I have an inflatable life raft. I probably should've said something earlier" Titanic
#8949, aired 2023-10-12HAPPIER MOVIE ENDINGS $800: "I see dead people, Dr. Crowe... but you're not one of 'em. You're very, very much alive & happily married" The Sixth Sense
#16, aired 2023-10-11YOU'RE A HOMOPHONE, DIANE $1,000 (Daily Double): In her 1983 book's acknowledgements, primatologist Dian Fossey thanks mostly humans but also these animals mountain gorillas
#16, aired 2023-10-11HI, I'M J.LO $2,100 (Daily Double): You can buy a copy of "The Call of the Wild" at the gift shop in the California state park dedicated to this "J.Lo" Jack London
#15, aired 2023-10-04ESTATE PLANNING $1,200 (Daily Double): In law, it's one party managing another's property for the benefit of a third; in life, some say it's the key to a good relationship trust
#8941, aired 2023-10-02SOUTH AFRICA $2,000 (Daily Double): The majestic Victorian City Hall in East London, South Africa held the first hearing of the post-apartheid TRC, this commission Truth and Reconciliation Commission
#8940, aired 2023-09-29WORDS THAT END WITH "E" $400: The phrase "stay in your" this is bad advice if you're being told not to try new things but good advice if you're driving lane
#14, aired 2023-09-27OUI, OUI, HISTORY $1,000 (Daily Double): After being given the key to this prison overthrown in 1789, the Marquis de Lafayette re-gifted it to his pal George Washington the Bastille
#8932, aired 2023-09-19SCRAMBLING TO FIND A JOB $200: A water watchdog: FEUDAL RIG a lifeguard
#8928, aired 2023-09-133 CONSECUTIVE CONSONANTS $400: You're not outta your gourd! You're into this gourd that's big on Oct. 31 a pumpkin
#20, aired 2023-05-24YOU KNOW IT'S NOT THE SAME AS IT WAS $2000: Bacteria, parasites & viruses inside you sound bad, but they're now seen as this 10-letter realm essential to gut & overall health microbiome
#19, aired 2023-05-24SO YOU THINK YOU'RE PRETTY GOOD AT THIS $200: Called invincible, it was sent from Spain in 1588 by King Philip II to invade England; it proved... vincible Spanish Armada
#11, aired 2023-05-16KEN JENNINGS: INTERNATIONAL NERD OF MYSTERY $800: Ah, an 1869 bottle from this 2-name château in Pauillac, France! It's worth 6 figures & will certainly be savored during our D&D game Lafite Rothschild
#9, aired 2023-05-15NICKNAMES $400: I'm sorry you're not feeling well; I'll bring over chicken soup, nicknamed this, referencing a religion & a medication Jewish penicillin
#8, aired 2023-05-12TV TITLE REFERENCES $9,600 (Daily Double): Slang meaning undergoing the terrible agony of withdrawal from opiates like Oxycontin dopesick
#3, aired 2023-05-09TIME TO LAWYER UP $200: For not complying with a court order in 1995, a Philly lawyer was jailed for this; he kept not complying & was in jail for 14 years contempt (of court)
#2, aired 2023-05-08SING YOU A COUNTRY SONG $800: In Feb. 2023 Hardy & Lainey Wilson's "Wait In" this vehicle was a hit, as was Lainey's solo "Heart Like" this vehicle truck
#1, aired 2023-05-0820/23 $200: In the human body most cells normally contain 23 pairs of these chromosomes
#8854, aired 2023-04-20FACE THE POLITICIAN $1200: We're concerned you may not know this woman from Maine was the first ever Republican woman to win a fifth term in the U.S. Senate Susan Collins
#8841, aired 2023-04-03YOU'RE GONNA SING $800: Pat Benatar was "running with" these in an iconic song from the 1980s; baby, take her hand, "it'll be all right" the shadows of the night
#8820, aired 2023-03-03YOU'RE SUCH AN IDIOM! $200 (Daily Double): If something is relatively easy to do or understand, then "It's not" this, Robert Goddard's field rocket science
#8800, aired 2023-02-03THE NATIONAL PARK SYSTEM $1200: An Alabama historic site invites you to journey back to the 1940s & learn about this group of Black military aviators the Tuskegee Airmen (or Red Tails)
#13, aired 2023-02-02GETTING CLOSE TO SOMETHING $600: Almost there! You're "in" this, as they say, like Chicago's Wrigley or Boston's Fenway the ballpark
#13, aired 2023-02-02GOING UNDERGROUND $4,300 (Daily Double): In 1900 an estimated 5 billion of these, not actual canines, lived in underground "towns" in the western United States prairie dogs
#12, aired 2023-01-26WORLD HISTORY $9,800 (Daily Double): This dynasty that ruled China from 1368 to 1644 was noted for its arts & culture including, of course, ceramics & porcelain vases Ming
#11, aired 2023-01-19JOHNNY GILBERT IS THE TV CHARACTER $300: "You clearly don't know who you're talking to, so let me clue you in. I am not in danger, Skyler. I am the danger" Walter White
#11, aired 2023-01-19SHOE BIZ $600: Like Elvis sang, "don't you step on" these shoes that you can get from Brooks Brothers (blue) suede shoes
#8755, aired 2022-12-02OLD TECHNOLOGY $400: It's the 2-word former computer necessity here, & players, if you're not at least of a certain age, you may be toast a floppy disk
#8749, aired 2022-11-24NEAR THE FRONT OF THE DICTIONARY $5,000 (Daily Double): From Latin for "proverb", it's a saying that expresses a common observation, like "a penny saved is a penny earned" adage
#8747, aired 2022-11-22HEALTH & MEDICINE $600: One reason you're not supposed to eat raw cookie dough is that the eggs may have the enterica type of this bacteria salmonella
#8742, aired 2022-11-15PLAYING THE HITS OF 2022 $600: This "feline" not only got "Freaky Deaky" with Tyga, she also told us to "Get Into It (Yuh)", so we did (yuh) Doja Cat
#8, aired 2022-11-13BODY PART PHRASES $600: When you "keep" someone at this distance, you're not sure of their intentions & don't want them too close to you arm's length
#8729, aired 2022-10-27ANOTHER SHOT AT THE TITLE $400: After losing to the Warriors in the 2015 NBA Finals, in 2016 LeBron & co. beat them to bring this city its first NBA title Cleveland
#5, aired 2022-10-23OF COURSE I'M NOT BREAKING UP WITH YOU $600: Baby, we're only putting things on this... & did you know the 1970s' Channel F was the 1st console that let you do it to a game? pause
#5, aired 2022-10-23BIOLOGY $12,000 (Daily Double): Animals like frogs that can live on land or water are known as these, from the Greek for "both" & "life" an amphibian
#8723, aired 2022-10-19DEVOURING EATING IDIOMS $800: To eat this means to admit you're wrong, but not actually consume a corvid eat crow
#4, aired 2022-10-16COLORFUL RESPONSES $400 (Daily Double): This 2-word fishy term refers to a piece of information that is a distraction from the main issue a red herring
#8719, aired 2022-10-13TUDOR TIMES $5,000 (Daily Double): Alas, my love, it's probably not true that Henry VIII wrote this song, which actually dates from later in the Tudor era "Greensleeves"
#3, aired 2022-10-09THE AFTER PARTY $500: Idiomatically, when you "put someone out to" this, you're making them retire but not forcing them to graze there for food pasture
#8711, aired 2022-10-03PLANE TALK $3,000 (Daily Double): Great flying weather with no major clouds or haze is CAVU, "ceiling and" this "unlimited" visibility
#1, aired 2022-09-25YOU'RE PROBABLY GOING TO HATE THIS $1200: The FCC suggests entering your information on this list if your phone keeps blowing up with extended warranty calls the Do Not Call List
#8702, aired 2022-09-20BEFORE & AFTER PEOPLE $1600: Los Angeles Clippers all-star forward who composed the music for "West Side Story" Kawhi Leonard Bernstein
#8699, aired 2022-09-15SINGERS WHO ACT $2000: This rocker played Jareth, the Goblin King in the 1986 cult classic fantasy "Labyrinth" David Bowie
#8698, aired 2022-09-14THE LAW $800: In general, an NDA, short for this agreement, is not enforceable against you if you're testifying under subpoena non-disclosure agreement
#8697, aired 2022-09-13NFL OPENING WEEKEND $1000: (Jamie Erdahl of the NFL Network presents the clue.) The Panthers' opening game in 2011 showed off the arm of this flashy dresser, as he passed for 422 yards, an NFL record for a player's first game Cam Newton
#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
#8635, aired 2022-05-064 "N" $400: To show up somewhere you're not expected is to show up this way unannounced
#8610, aired 2022-04-01MADJECTIVES $600: If you're "ill-" this, you're mad at something, not a poorly made sword tempered
#8604, aired 2022-03-24THEN YOU SHOULD HAVE... $400: ...if you're Ford Motors, not sunk $350 million into this brand in the late '50s that became shorthand for a flop an Edsel
#8581, aired 2022-02-21BACK ME UP $1600: While her song "You're So Vain" is not about Mick Jagger, he did provide backing vocals Carly Simon
#10, aired 2022-02-15GAME TIME $1600: The name of this game from Mattel in which you make up phony definitions is another word for nonsense, & we're not bluffing Balderdash
#7, aired 2022-02-11OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES $600: On a summer day, you're not too old to run through these, such as the oscillating type a sprinkler
#1, aired 2022-02-08THAT'S QUITE A DORM ROOM $400: I know you're not getting along with your roommate, but did you have to re-create this 27-mile barrier built in Aug. 1961? the Berlin Wall
#1, aired 2022-02-08THAT'S QUITE A DORM ROOM $800: Tell me you're not keeping dirty socks in your cabinet from the reign of this longest-ruling French king Louis XIV
#8568, aired 2022-02-02YOU'RE THE DOG $1600: Sadly, Laika, the first living creature launched into orbit, aboard this Soviet satellite 2, did not survive the trip Sputnik
#8562, aired 2022-01-25WOMEN IN POLITICS $1000: In 2020 Keisha Lance Bottoms, when mayor of this city, said, "You're not going to out-concern me... about where we are in America" Atlanta
#8549, aired 2022-01-06"MAL" PRACTICE $600: I saw the hot-water bottle on the thermometer! You're not sick, you're doing this, pretending to be malingering
#8547, aired 2022-01-04"N" JOY $400: You're sure to enjoy this film in which Frances McDormand says she's not homeless, she's just houseless Nomadland
#8537, aired 2021-12-21SHAKESPEARE, YOU'RE DRUNK $800: A warning in "As You Like It": "Do not fall in love with me, for I am falser than vows made in" this intoxicant wine
#8512, aired 2021-11-16AMERICAN IDLE $600: Movie character Jeffrey Lebowski, a slacker mainly interested in drinking & bowling, prefers to be addressed as this "The Dude" (Duderino)
#8480, aired 2021-10-01THAT'S A BIG BOOK $400: If you're not a fan of long, long fiction, this 1862 Victor Hugo work will make you... what's the word... unhappy? Wretched? Les Misérables
#8462, aired 2021-08-10TV ROLES $2000: Lee Majors played a stuntman who had a side hustle as a bounty hunter on this 1980s series The Fall Guy
#8405, aired 2021-05-21PAINTING, NOT THE ART KIND $800: You can make good money if you're up for climbing 600-foot towers of this bridge over the Hudson to keep it looking good the George Washington Bridge
#8383, aired 2021-04-21NEWER WORDS & PHRASES $400: If you're "throwing" this, you're not giving someone protection from the Sun--you're dissing them shade
#8374, aired 2021-04-08FUNNY TV SONGS $2000: Sung of this feline on "Friends": "You may not be a bed of roses, and you're no friend of those with noses... what are they feeding you?" "Smelly Cat"
#8323, aired 2021-01-27WORDS WITH "FER" ENDS $400: If you ride waves on your chest & stomach, not a board, you're one of these a bodysurfer
#8310, aired 2021-01-08DOG IS MY COPILOT $1600: Known as the "Gray Ghost", & known for its obedience, this breed is ready to set sail a Weimaraner
#8301, aired 2020-12-14SEZ YOU, SHAKESPEARE! $4,200 (Daily Double): "Here in this island we arrived; and here have I, thy schoolmaster, made thee more profit" Prospero
#8277, aired 2020-11-10OXYMORONS $800: You're not telling us anything we haven't heard before; your story is this dated type of information old news
#8277, aired 2020-11-10MARIAH CAREY $2000: (Mariah Carey presents the clue.) I dug deep to share the story of my life in my new memoir, "The Meaning of Mariah Carey", which coincides with the 30th anniversary of my debut album; I had this--"and it was all that you've given to me" "Vision Of Love"
#8267, aired 2020-10-27DOCUMENTARY NOW! $400: "Happy Happy Joy Joy" is the story of this briefly wildly popular 1990s animated show The Ren & Stimpy Show
#8257, aired 2020-10-13TV THEME SONG LYRICS $1600: "You're not the boss of me now & you're not so big" Malcolm in the Middle
#8210, aired 2020-04-24MOVIE VILLAIN QUOTES $1600: Terence Fletcher (J.K. Simmons): "Not quite my tempo ...you're rushing... why do you suppose I just hurled a chair at your head?" Whiplash
#8197, aired 2020-04-07SILENT LETTER WORDS $200: If you're "in the red", you're in this, not where you want to be financially debt
#8192, aired 2020-03-31SIMILAR BRAND NAMES $1,000 (Daily Double): When you eat this brand's bars, make sure they're the chocolate ones., not the moisturizing ones Dove
#8172, aired 2020-03-03LUKE $3,000 (Daily Double): Unlike the other gospels, Luke has the story of this man who helped a wounded stranger after others passed him by the Good Samaritan
#8151, aired 2020-02-03STATE OF THE ESTATE $1000: James Buchanan's Wheatland Estate Pennsylvania
#8145, aired 2020-01-24HOLLYWOOD & LINE $600: "I am not Mr. Lebowski. You're Mr. Lebowski. I'm" this moniker The Dude
#8, aired 2020-01-14MATH TO ROMAN NUMERALS TO INITIALS TO NAMES $1,000 (Daily Double): (1,000 / 2) - 350 to this rock singer who was also a 1997 Golden Globe nominee Courtney Love
#7, aired 2020-01-14THE GOOD DOCTOR $3,800 (Daily Double): A vizier to Djoser, this Egyptian was one of the few mortals to be completely deified & was worshipped as the god of medicine Imhotep
#8131, aired 2020-01-06& DEAL THE CARBS $600: If you're counting carbs, this legume that's the main ingredient in hummus may not be your best choice a chickpea
#8071, aired 2019-10-14SPEAK SOFTLY $400: Kids, you're within the walls of the house, not out in the park, so stop shouting & "use your" this inside voice
#8068, aired 2019-10-09WEIRD FLEX $800: Flex your arms thusly, and you're doing this three-letter dance move dab
#8065, aired 2019-10-045-LETTER WORDS $800: This word denoting being simple or guileless is from Old French for "natural"; we hope you're not... naive
#8053, aired 2019-09-18CLASSIC METAL BANDS $7,600 (Daily Double): "We're Not Gonna Take It" by this Dee Snider band has some musical roots in "O Come, All Ye Faithful" Twisted Sister
#8040, aired 2019-07-19THAT'S HOT STUFF $400: If you're gonna try this activity AKA anastenaria, use cherry or maple embers so as not to burn your feet walking on coals
#7998, aired 2019-05-22WORDS FROM MYTHOLOGY $2,000 (Daily Double): This term for a cure-all bears the name of a daughter of Asclepius panacea
#7979, aired 2019-04-25CELEBS ON TWITTER $1000: This TBS talk show host noted, "If you can say happy Valentine's Day in Klingon you're probably not celebrating it" Conan O'Brien
#7958, aired 2019-03-27I'M WALKIN' HERE! $400: You're "out of" this walkin' word if you're not in rhythm or up on current events step
#7928, aired 2019-02-13A REAL HORROR STORY $1000: What not to expect when you're expecting: This title of a 1967 Ira Levin novel Rosemary's Baby
#7917, aired 2019-01-29A THIN CATEGORY $400: If you're not likely to succeed, your chances are this "to none" or this "and none" slim
#7911, aired 2019-01-21POET IDENTIFICATION, PLEASE $400 (Daily Double): "Death, be not proud, though some have called thee / Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so" (John) Donne
#7891, aired 2018-12-24LET'S PUT ON A SHOW $600 (Daily Double): No. 5 in this play says, "I'd like to change my vote to not guilty"; the foreman replies, "Are you sure?" 12 Angry Men
#7858, aired 2018-11-07QUOTING THE MOVIES $1200: 2009: "You're not in Kansas anymore, you're on Pandora" Avatar
#7849, aired 2018-10-25SERIOUS TALK $400: Not intoxicated, perhaps while you're calm in demeanor, too sober
#7826, aired 2018-09-24WORDS FROM THE COMICS $400: This character inspired a suit, a collar & shoe with his name Buster Brown
#7818, aired 2018-09-123 "E"s $800: We hope you're not one of these people who secretly listen in on private conversations an eavesdropper
#7809, aired 2018-07-19CLASSIC SONGS' FIRST LINES $1000: "You never close your eyes anymore when I kiss your lips" "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'"
#7791, aired 2018-06-25DON'T TELL ME $200: Malcolm, there's a reason Cole can see you in this 1999 film, & you're not gonna like it The Sixth Sense
#7774, aired 2018-05-31YOU SHALL NOT PASS! $1000: If you fail the test named after this British mathematician, you're not human, you backstabbing cyborg! the Turing test
#7774, aired 2018-05-31YOU SHALL NOT PASS! $2,000 (Daily Double): Oops, you crammed for the multistate bar exam but this state with laws deriving from the Napoleonic code doesn't use it Louisiana
#7763, aired 2018-05-16FAST FOOD $400: If you're not into the original recipe, as of 1995 this place serves chicken pot pies KFC
#7762, aired 2018-05-15FROM "B" TO "Y" $800: If you're having this 3-word episode, you might have to explain that you're not going for a mohawk or mullet a bad hair day
#7740, aired 2018-04-13A QUESTION OF FILM $1600: In a 2015 biopic this guy is told, "you can't write code, you're not an engineer, you're not a designer... what do you do?" Steve Jobs
#7724, aired 2018-03-22LET'S REWRITE THE CLASSIC NOVEL $800: "Pencey Prep apologizes for the mixup in grades... no, I'm not being phony. You're not expelled...you're valedictorian!" The Catcher in the Rye
#7697, aired 2018-02-13JAY LENO'S GARAGE $1000: (Jay Leno presents the clue.) With a top speed of more than 240 MPH, a central driving position & touches like an engine bay literally lined with heat-reflective gold, it's no surprise that this British company's F1 has been called the greatest car of the 20th century McLaren
#7693, aired 2018-02-07THE WASHINGTON POST $400: Donald L. Neiffer is the chief one of these doctors at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. veterinarian
#7689, aired 2018-02-01STAG, YOU'RE IT $2000: A famous 19th century image by Edwin Landseer is "Stag at" this, referring to being trapped, not the body of water bay
#7689, aired 2018-02-01ADJECTIVES $2000: If you can't pay certain fees, a court may declare you this synonym for needy indigent (destitute accepted)
#7673, aired 2018-01-10YOU ARE NOW ENTERING THE TWILIGHT ZONE $600: From Rod Serling's opening: "You're traveling through another dimension...not only of sight & sound, but of" this mind
#7625, aired 2017-11-03ALPHABET SOUP WHEN YOU'RE SICK $600: This is not a bill--it's an EOB, "explanation of" these benefits
#7623, aired 2017-11-01BORROWED WORDS $400: If you're found guilty but you're not present, you've been convicted this Latin way in absentia
#7617, aired 2017-10-24IN OTHER WORDS, DEAD $800: When you're "in" them, you're wealthy; cash them in, you're not healthy chips
#7601, aired 2017-10-02WELCOME BACK, U.S. SUPREME COURT $800: It's not Pig Latin you're hearing, it's this word from Old French threepeated by the marshal each time court begins oyez, oyez, oyez
#7590, aired 2017-09-15ANIMATED FELINES $800: Lake Bell voiced fat cat Chloe in this 2016 movie about what your animals do when you're not around The Secret Life of Pets
#7566, aired 2017-07-03YOU'RE GONNA MAKE IT $400: You're gonna make one of these, but perhaps not as big as the 97-foot-tall one Horace Burgess built in a white oak a tree house
#7527, aired 2017-05-09DECEMBER 2016 $2000: This European president declared that he would not seek re-election in 2017 François Hollande
#7474, aired 2017-02-23YOU KIDS TODAY! $400: You're not rushing to the plow, as the average age of this occupation is up from 51 in 1982 to near 60 today farming
#7454, aired 2017-01-26"DOO" OR "DY" $600: You're playing with this, which believe it or not its inventor called "safety powder" dynamite
#7443, aired 2017-01-11THE BOLD & THE BEAUTIFUL $800: (Thorsten Kaye and Jacob Young give the clue as Ridge Forrester and Rick Forrester from The Bold and the Beautiful.) "I'm running this company now, not you." "Ridge, you're just Iike this son of a river god who gazed longingly at his own reflection & died alone & unloved" Narcissus
#7438, aired 2017-01-04TV THEMES $400: "You're not the boss of me now", went the theme of this sitcom with Frankie Muniz as the title kid Malcolm in the Middle
#7424, aired 2016-12-15MOVING JOURNALISM $1,500 (Daily Double): British Airways' in-flight magazine has this name, like a Miller beer brand High Life
#7413, aired 2016-11-30SPORTS EQUIPMENT $1200: Lee Trevino said if you're afraid of lightning, hold up this lowest-number club of its type--not even God can hit one a 1-iron
#7391, aired 2016-10-31WHERE AM I? $800: (Kelly of the Clue Crew reports.) I'm on historic Boathouse Row along this river that flows into the Delaware; if you're not from here in Philadelphia, we'll give you some leeway in your pronunciation the Schuylkill River
#7376, aired 2016-10-10WORLD AIRPORTS $1,000 (Daily Double): The Tenzing-Hillary airport in this country is 9,200 feet above sea level Nepal
#7371, aired 2016-10-03THE "TIMES" OF YOUR LIFE $1600: In the 2007 film "I'm Not There" Mason Jennings sings this classic Bob Dylan tune "The Times They Are a-Changin'"
#7362, aired 2016-09-20FICTIONAL LANGUAGES $1600: Tolkien created these languages whose forms include Quenya before writing his books, not the other way around Elvin (or Elvish)
#7355, aired 2016-07-29U.S. CODE TALKING $600: Title 2, Sec. 4901: "A person shall not serve as" one of these "of the Senate before he has attained the age of 16 years" a page
#7352, aired 2016-07-26BOOKS BY CHAPTER TITLES $600: "The Battle of Hogwarts" Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
#7352, aired 2016-07-26THEOLOGY BRANCHES $2000: It's not saying you're sorry, it's the branch of theology dealing with the defense of established doctrine apologetics
#7348, aired 2016-07-20THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE $400: Electoral maps from these 2 years are seen here--what some called "Mr. Wilson's war" was in between 1916 & 1920
#7334, aired 2016-06-30WHERE AM I? $1000: (Kelly of the Clue Crew reports.) I'm on historic Boathouse Row, along this river that flows into the Delaware; if you're not from here in Philadelphia, we'll give you some leeway in your pronunciation the Schuylkill River
#7332, aired 2016-06-28METAPHORS BE WITH "U" $800: If you're sent here, it's not a water journey--it means you're going to prison up the river
#7330, aired 2016-06-24WORRIER PRINCESS $400: In a 1980 movie she says, "You're not actually going into an asteroid field" Princess Leia
#7330, aired 2016-06-24WORRIER PRINCESS $800: This animated princess says to her rescuer, "This is all wrong. You're not supposed to be an ogre" Fiona
#7303, aired 2016-05-18IT'S NOT ROCKET SCIENCE $800: You dilute a solution by watering it down; you do this to your pupils, 1 letter different, by making them expand dilate
#7302, aired 2016-05-17YOUR VOTE $1,000 (Daily Double): The scarecrow knows about this kind of unofficial vote held as a gauge of opinion straw vote (or straw poll)
#7286, aired 2016-04-25I'M INNOCENT $200: If you're on trial, you want to hear these 2 words follow "We the jury find the defendant..." not guilty
#7279, aired 2016-04-14HORNS YOU CAN'T PLAY $800: This fastest land mammal in the W. hemisphere is sometimes called an antelope, but they're not closely related a pronghorn
#7273, aired 2016-04-06"R" HOTEL $400: We're not puttin' you on: this luxury chain has hotels in McLean, Virginia & Bachelor Gulch, Colorado the Ritz
#7220, aired 2016-01-22POP HITS OF THE '80s $400: Don't say we're not deep! Here's Poison to tell you that "Every" this "Has Its Thorn" a rose
#7196, aired 2015-12-21NOPE, NOT BORN IN AUSTRALIA $800: "You're the One That I Want" hit No. 1 in 1978 for John Travolta & this Cambridge, England-born woman Olivia Newton-John
#7189, aired 2015-12-10ENDS IN DOUBLE LETTERS $2000: In "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport", Blue is implored to play this instrument a didgeridoo
#7184, aired 2015-12-03& YOU'RE "NOT" $400: Tediously unvarying; tediously unvarying; tediously unvarying monotonous
#7184, aired 2015-12-03& YOU'RE "NOT" $800: Remember-- the light blue flower of this plant is an emblem of friendship forget-me-not
#7184, aired 2015-12-03& YOU'RE "NOT" $1200: A 16th century Calvinist of France Huguenot
#7184, aired 2015-12-03& YOU'RE "NOT" $1600: 4-word saying that means if you don't toss stuff away, you won't be hurting for it later waste not, want not
#7178, aired 2015-11-25SO YOU WANT TO BE A TALK SHOW HOST $200: Whether they laugh or not, throw "You're a great audience" into this, from the Greek for "alone" & "speech" a monologue
#7177, aired 2015-11-24WEARABLES' OTHER MEANINGS $4,000 (Daily Double): In blackjack it holds multiple decks of cards shoe
#7171, aired 2015-11-16AMERICAN PLACE NAMES $1,200 (Daily Double): The name of this Minn. waterfall is Dakota for "waterfall"; Longfellow named a Native American woman for it Minnehaha
#7143, aired 2015-10-07I PREDICT YOU'RE WRONG $1,000 (Daily Double): This man, in 1860: "I see no good reason why the views given in this volume should shock... religious feelings" Charles Darwin
#7120, aired 2015-07-24NOT CHESS AGAIN! $1000: If a game opens d4 d5 c4 you're playing the queen's this, you schemer you a gambit
#7114, aired 2015-07-16HISTORY, OLD & NEW $3,200 (Daily Double): In effect the last battle of the Wars of the Roses was on this field on August 22, 1485 Bosworth
#7113, aired 2015-07-15AFTERNOON TEA $1,000 (Daily Double): It sounds appropriate to show a quartet of these tea cakes, though the French name does not refer to a number petit fours
#7082, aired 2015-06-028-LETTER WORDS $400: (Kelly of the Clue Crew demonstrates, with Jimmy nearby for support.) I'm literally walking on eggshells; the reason they're not breaking is the curve of the shell distributes this 8-letter term evenly pressure
#7081, aired 2015-06-01ENTERING $800: It's not necessary to subscribe to a magazine to enter this at pch.com Publishers Clearing House
#7063, aired 2015-05-06YOU $1600: ...have a fissure of Rolando in this organ, even if you're not named Rolando the brain
#7044, aired 2015-04-09WHERE THE DEVIL?! $1000: Cross Arizona's northern border into this state & you're not far from Hell's Backbone Utah
#7042, aired 2015-04-07WE LOVE YOU, TORONTO! $1000: Until 1992 there was a ban on Toronto stores opening on this day--we're not talking just once a year Sunday
#7039, aired 2015-04-02TEAM AKAs $1000: Blake Griffin helped turn this NBA team into "Lob City" the L.A. Clippers
#7037, aired 2015-03-31WE'RE ALL JEALOUS $2000: In a country No. 1, Tyler Farr tells his cheating girl, "You broke the wrong heart baby, and drove me" this kind of crazy redneck crazy
#7028, aired 2015-03-18TRUE CRIMEA $1,800 (Daily Double): It was British Secretary of War Sidney Herbert who sent this woman to the Crimea Florence Nightingale
#7023, aired 2015-03-11THE OSCAR-WINNING DIRECTOR $2000: 2012: "Life of Pi" was his second win, not his 3.14th Ang Lee
#7016, aired 2015-03-02BUT NOT CHILLY $1000: If you're being reprimanded, you're being "hauled over" these items--Ow! the coals
#7003, aired 2015-02-11FOREIGN WORDS & PHRASES $5,000 (Daily Double): It's the Italian word for "You're welcome", not "You're with child" prego
#7002, aired 2015-02-10WINDOW TO THE WORLD $800: Looks like a crisp, clear day in the neighborhood called Old this city, its country's second-largest Montreal
#6998, aired 2015-02-04BROADWAY MUSICALS BY SONG $1,400 (Daily Double): "We're Not Gonna Take It" & "Don't Stop Believin'" Rock of Ages
#6977, aired 2015-01-06MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS $1000: It's the smallest member of the orchestra's brass family & also the one with the highest-pitched notes trumpet
#6973, aired 2014-12-31THUMP! $200: Slump to the floor "like a bag of wet" this, a mix of clay & limestone, & you're not likely getting up soon cement
#6951, aired 2014-12-01VOCABULARY $11,000 (Daily Double): This instrument measures atmospheric pressure: its name is used to mean anything that indicates change a barometer
#6949, aired 2014-11-27THE DAWN OF THE ATOMIC AGE $1000: Surely you're joking! Not yet 28, he was a group leader in the theoretical division of the A-bomb push Richard Feynman
#6932, aired 2014-11-04AN AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL CATEGORY $1,800 (Daily Double): Marcus Luttrell wrote this memoir about being the only Navy SEAL to come home from Operation Redwing Lone Survivor
#6926, aired 2014-10-27ADD A LETTER $400: A 16-ounce measure of liquid; add a letter & you're not writing in script anymore pint & print
#6909, aired 2014-10-02ATLANTIC CITY $1,200 (Daily Double): It's fitting that this Atlantic City casino comps with its 24 Karat Club Golden Nugget
#6868, aired 2014-06-25INTERNET SLANG $1000: Eminem knows that if someone calls you a "stan" it's not a compliment, it means you're one of these an obsessive fan (or stalker fan)
#6854, aired 2014-06-05THE "BUL" PULPIT $800: Hope you're not too board to give us this word for a short note or memorandum bulletin
#6851, aired 2014-06-02YOU'RE A 3-LETTER ANIMAL $1200: What's this African antelope with curved horns, thin legs & a horselike tail? Not much... What's this with you? a gnu
#6833, aired 2014-05-07READ"ING" $1200: In this Judith Rossner novel, Theresa Dunn is murdered by a man she'd picked up in the title singles spot Looking for Mr. Goodbar
#6800, aired 2014-03-21SAFE WORDS $800: A fissure, or to tell a joke crack
#6777, aired 2014-02-18COUNTRY MATH $400: Number of premiers of Cuba in the 1960s plus number of monarchs of England in the 1980s 2
#6775, aired 2014-02-14ONLINE & TEXT ABBREVIATIONS $800: "IRL" is short for this phrase, what you're "in" when not gaming in real life
#6762, aired 2014-01-28YOU'RE NOT ON THE LISZT $400: If you want to get a good this on music, name the composer of the 1739 oratorio "Saul" Handel
#6762, aired 2014-01-28YOU'RE NOT ON THE LISZT $800: In 1867 this composer founded the Norwegian Academy of Music (Edvard) Grieg
#6762, aired 2014-01-28YOU'RE NOT ON THE LISZT $1200: Heard here, "Adagio for Strings" was prominently featured in this 1986 Best Picture Oscar winner Platoon
#6762, aired 2014-01-28YOU'RE NOT ON THE LISZT $1600: In 1794 this Austrian composer (Mozart died in 1791, so it's not him!) completed his "London" symphonies Joseph Haydn
#6762, aired 2014-01-28YOU'RE NOT ON THE LISZT $2000: Let's classical up the joint with Bach's third of these concertos Brandenburg Concertos
#6725, aired 2013-12-06PARTS OF THE CITY $2,000 (Daily Double): This Spanish word for "neighborhood" refers to a Latino enclave in a U.S. city barrio
#6712, aired 2013-11-19MAKING A BEE LINE $400: This kid lit bear said, "When you go after honey with a balloon, the great thing is not to let the bees know you're coming" Winnie the Pooh
#6664, aired 2013-08-01INTERESTED IN A JOB, KID? $400: Let's get you this govt. job... Wait! You're not 35 & you haven't lived in the U.S. at least 14 years, 2 of the 3 requirements president
#6649, aired 2013-07-11THE LAW $1000: Thanks for not leaving a will, grandpa! Now you're considered this, & your goods are distributed by state law intestate
#6641, aired 2013-07-01CELEBRITY PALS $200: Posh Spice said, "Mr. Snoopy, you're not taking my husband out", but this man & Snoop Dogg became buddies anyway (David) Beckham
#6641, aired 2013-07-01AGELESS QUOTES $1200: A Clairol slogan proclaimed, "you're not getting older, you're" doing this you're getting better
#6629, aired 2013-06-13WAR OF WORDS $1200: This term that goes back to a word for "boy" or "youth" referred to those soldiers too inexperienced for the cavalry infantry
#6628, aired 2013-06-12AN UNFINISHED CATEG $800: Whether using it to mean not total (as in credit on a test) or biased, the word you're looking for is... partial
#6619, aired 2013-05-30JOHNNY GILBERT GOES TO THE MOVIES $600: (Johnny Gilbert reads the clue.) "If...you're not with him, you'll regret it. maybe not today. maybe not tomorrow, but soon, & for the rest of your life" Casablanca
#6618, aired 2013-05-29WE'RE NOT IN KANSAS ANYMORE $2,000 (Daily Double): We're in this Missouri town visiting some of the unique shops like Pudd'n Heads & Aunt Polly's Treasures Hannibal
#6615, aired 2013-05-24JOCK-ULARITY $200: "I feel like I"m the best, but you're not going to get me to say that", said this 49er, the NFL's career reception leader Jerry Rice
#6615, aired 2013-05-24WE'LL NEED THE "RENT" $600: You're babbling, you're not making any sense, you're... incoherent
#6595, aired 2013-04-26I HAVE ISSUES $600: I'm an onychophagist, which means I do this, so you're safe--only my manicure is not bite your nails
#6592, aired 2013-04-23ALL-TIME 100 SONGS $1600: This Bee Gees tune "is an anthem to perseverance... all of a sudden, you're not strolling. You're strutting" "Stayin' Alive"
#6564, aired 2013-03-14FLAGS OF THE WORLD $1000: Honduras & this next-door neighbor to the south & east both have horizontally striped blue & white flags Nicaragua
#6550, aired 2013-02-22YOU'RE "PERFECT" $200: A person who is displeased by anything that does not meet very high standards a perfectionist
#6549, aired 2013-02-21HEAVY METAL HEROES $800: "We're not gonna take it" if you can't name this band fronted by Dee Snider Twisted Sister
#6544, aired 2013-02-14PUNNY & NOT-PUNNY DEFINITIONS $2000: "A school class for a prisoner", or a large open space for crowds at an airport a concourse
#6524, aired 2013-01-17THE RENAISSANCE $2,000 (Daily Double): Artisans who produced this stringed, pear-shaped instrument included Frei & Unverdorben the lute
#6498, aired 2012-12-12"G"EOGRAPHY $400: If you go west through this strait, you're not in the Mediterranean anymore the Strait of Gibraltar
#6473, aired 2012-11-07SIDE DISHES $800: Tostones are usually made by frying this fruit; if you're not in the Caribbean, bananas may be easier to come by plantains
#6426, aired 2012-07-23MENTAL STATES $200: We hope you're not in one of these, a thick cloud close to the ground that can precede "bank" or "light" fog
#6426, aired 2012-07-23CLASSIC CARTOONS $1000: The theme to this cartoon says, "You're not fooling me 'cause I can see the way you shake and shiver" Scooby-Doo
#6368, aired 2012-05-02IT'S NOT A MESS, IT'S A COLLECTION $400: You're not a loonie just because you collect loonies, shekels & other types of these coins
#6332, aired 2012-03-13A RED-HOT LATIN LAWYER $2000: If you're "not of sound mind" to stand trial, you're this 3-word Latin phrase non compos mentis
#6315, aired 2012-02-17THAT'S NOT GNEISS! $1200: You're looking at this silica mineral, widely used in clocks & watches quartz
#6315, aired 2012-02-17THAT'S NOT GNEISS! $3,000 (Daily Double): This porous volcanic rock floats; after the eruption of Krakatau, banks of it covered the ocean for miles pumice stone
#6280, aired 2011-12-30"RE"SEARCH $800: On an invitation, the phrase these "only" means we assume you're coming, but let us know if you're not regrets
#6263, aired 2011-12-07IT'S A "MAD" WORLD $3,000 (Daily Double): The volcanic soil of this Atlantic island helps give a distinctive rich flavor to the fortified wine named for it Madeira
#6260, aired 2011-12-02YOU'RE AN ANIMAL! $1600: Of the 6 living members of the camel family, it's the only one spelled with a tilde a vicuña
#6258, aired 2011-11-30NOT SO FAST, MY FRIEND $1000: If you're "as slow as" this product made by the open kettle method "in January"... you're pretty darn slow molasses
#6253, aired 2011-11-23RADIO FACES $1200: If you're happier listening to this NPR program not knowing what Michele Norris looks like, cover your eyes All Things Considered
#6238, aired 2011-11-02NOT OF GOOD CHARACTER $400: You're not yourself today; you're this 8-letter word OED defines as "one who assumes a false character" impostor
#6238, aired 2011-11-02NOT OF GOOD CHARACTER $800: One who speaks ill of you when you're not around, or who implants a dagger in your dorsal region a backstabber
#6228, aired 2011-10-19PLUMBING $800: If you're not connected to the city sewer system, your home will need this type of tank septic
#6220, aired 2011-10-07NAME CALLING $800: Not so computer savvy, are you? You're just a this--like a non-sorcerer in Harry Potter a muggle
#6212, aired 2011-09-27BEFORE & AFTER $800: The type of letter telling the second president of the United States you're not his girlfriend anymore Dear John Adams
#6189, aired 2011-07-07COMPUSTUFF $800: When an Internet page says "file not found", you're getting this 3-digit error a 404
#6171, aired 2011-06-13YOU'RE EXCOMMUNICATED $5,000 (Daily Double): Giving his name to a "razor" in logic, he was an Oxford prof. who stated church beliefs could not be proven logically (William of) Ockham
#6160, aired 2011-05-27YOU'RE THE TOP $800: A fictional co. that may or may not help in roadrunner chasing, or a word from the Greek for "highest point" acme
#6155, aired 2011-05-20BIBLICAL FORGIVENESS $3,000 (Daily Double): Jesus says there's forgiveness for this, from the Greek for "evil speech", but not if it's against the Holy Ghost blasphemy
#6150, aired 2011-05-13WELL, IT'S NOT SHAKESPEARE $1200: Last name of playwriting twins Anthony & Peter, who gave us "Sleuth" & "Amadeus" Shaffer
#6135, aired 2011-04-22THEY'RE ON CABLE $1200: (I'm Joel McHale.) When you're not watching "Community", you can catch me on this show on E! that satirizes other shows (though sometimes they do the job themselves) "Hint, hint. It's not the Kardashians." The Soup
#6128, aired 2011-04-13YOU'RE SO COLORFUL $1200: To do this is to bring your own lunch to work from home, not necessarily in a paper sack to brown bag
#6122, aired 2011-04-05SUFFIXES $2000: This suffix can mean "headed in the direction of" or "not headed anywhere because you're trapped by" -bound
#6117, aired 2011-03-29THE "G"-5 $200: If you're not moving too well, you've "got a hitch in" this your get-along
#6109, aired 2011-03-17DESCRIBING THE ARTWORK $6,600 (Daily Double): We're not sure if you'd call that teal or azure the young man with a feathered cap is wearing in this 1770 work Blue Boy
#6101, aired 2011-03-07QUOTED IN BARTLETT'S $400: On this date Rudy Giuliani said, "Show your confidence. Show you're not afraid. Go to restaurants. Go shopping" September 12th
#6080, aired 2011-02-04HAPPIER MOVIE ENDINGS $400: "You're not going to drown, Jack." "Why, Rose?" "I have an inflatable life raft. I probably should've said something earlier" Titanic
#6080, aired 2011-02-04HAPPIER MOVIE ENDINGS $800: "I see dead people, Dr. Crowe... but you're not one of 'em. You're very, very much alive & happily married" The Sixth Sense
#6076, aired 2011-01-31THE MUSIC OF CANADA $400: This country star from Windsor sang "The Woman In Me (Needs The Man In You)" & "(If You're Not In It For Love) I'm Outta Here!" Shania Twain
#6058, aired 2011-01-05IT'S NOT TV, IT'S "HBO" $1200: If your actions are open to public scrutiny, you're "living life in" one of these glass enclosures a fishbowl
#6034, aired 2010-12-02INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT $600: McCarran Las Vegas
#6031, aired 2010-11-29SHAKESPEAREAN PORTMANTEAU $2000: Tragedy about a Roman general who cuts off his own hand & throws it into an old word for a spittoon Titus Andronicuspidor
#6010, aired 2010-10-29COUNTRY CLUBS $4,000 (Daily Double): Members of this club formed in 1993 include Latvia, Lithuania & Luxembourg--sorry, Libya, you're not invited the European Union
#6007, aired 2010-10-26EUROPEANA $1200: In 1997 Ferrari bought this other fast car maker founded in Bologna in 1914 Maserati
#5958, aired 2010-07-07FANTASTIC MR. FOX $2000: Mr. Fox is not so fantastic if you're raising chickens; there's a proverb about not letting him near this "house" the henhouse
#5934, aired 2010-06-03COLONIAL NAMES FOR COUNTRIES $800: British Guiana Guyana
#5915, aired 2010-05-07BRANDS THAT SOUND LIKE VERBS $2,000 (Daily Double): This 6-letter telecom company sounds fleet of foot Sprint
#5894, aired 2010-04-08GET OUTTA TOWN! $1600: If you're in this Pennsylvania town May 31, 1889; that dam's not gonna hold Johnstown
#5880, aired 2010-03-19FINISH THE PALINDROME $1000: "Drab as a fool, aloof as a" this bard
#5872, aired 2010-03-09LITERARY LETTER DROP $400: Jules Verne title trip that's undergone a letter drop & been shortened by 90% Around the World in Eight Days
#5871, aired 2010-03-08ZORBA, THE GREEK TUTOR $800: OK, clearly we're not communicating in Greek, so let me try "Milas Anglika?", which means "Do you" do this speak English
#5861, aired 2010-02-22THE CENTRAL POWERS $2,000 (Daily Double): They're the favorite team of the U.S. president; Harold Baines is his favorite player (Chicago) White Sox
#5849, aired 2010-02-04OFF TO GRAD SCHOOL $400: Study up for your GRE, short for this test; you're probably not hittin' grad school without it Graduate Record Exam
#5846, aired 2010-02-01FROM THE GREEK FOR... $400: "Mythical bird", whether you're in Arizona or not a Phoenix
#5836, aired 2010-01-18TECH TIPS $1600: Want to watch your TV when you're not home? Get this "box", like the Solo, & make sure you have broadband access Slingbox
#5825, aired 2010-01-01IDEAS FOR TOURISM CAMPAIGNS $1000: We're one big island! (& several small ones); lemur entertain you! (Disclaimer: Lemurs will not, repeat not, speak to you) Madagascar
#5816, aired 2009-12-21FARM AID $1600: Tomatoes sometimes come in this "old" variety, meaning they're open-pollinated & not grown widely heirloom
#5807, aired 2009-12-08POLITICAL TALK $5,000 (Daily Double): According to the League of Women Voters, an "empty chair" one of these should be canceled debates
#5774, aired 2009-10-22OTHER PLANETS IN MOVIES $2000: "Forbidden Planet": ___ 4 (just like the first PC) Altair
#5773, aired 2009-10-21WHERE IN THE WORLD IS YOUR HQ? $200: Lloyd's; they're big in insurance, over on Lime St. England
#5766, aired 2009-10-12OH MICKEY, YOU'RE SO FINE $400: Actually not so fine; it's the 2-word name for a drink to which a drug has been added, leaving the drinker helpless a Mickey Finn
#5760, aired 2009-10-02ONLINE SLANG $1000: IANARS is a humorous caveat to your audience that you're not one of these, like Wernher von Braun a rocket scientist
#5755, aired 2009-09-25SHAKESPEARE: THE REALITY SHOW $600: This guy says to Cordelia, "Better thou hadst not been born than not t' have pleased me better" or... you're fired! King Lear
#5735, aired 2009-07-10BALLET $400: We're not toying with you: one of Andersen's fairy tales inspired the ballet "The Steadfast Tin" this Soldier
#5715, aired 2009-06-12THE MIRACLE OF VINEGAR $3,000 (Daily Double): We almost forgot, it's useful in cooking--try this aged type made from grapes in Modena balsamic
#5680, aired 2009-04-24I HEAR BANJOS $800: This banjo-heavy minstrel show favorite became the South's unofficial anthem during the Civil War "Dixie"
#5676, aired 2009-04-20NOT LITERALLY $400: No, if you're "literally climbing the walls" you'd be this boyfriend of Mary Jane Watson Spider-Man (or Peter Parker)
#5676, aired 2009-04-20NOT LITERALLY $600: You're "literally going to pieces"? Use this adhesive that stuck a worker's hard hat to a beam in an old ad Krazy Glue
#5671, aired 2009-04-13AFRICAN ANIMALS $5,000 (Daily Double): These animals, including the vervet type, spend a lot of their day looking through each other's fur a monkey
#5663, aired 2009-04-01ROME, THE ETERNAL CITY $1,000 (Daily Double): There are 138 of these "National" steps that lead up to the Trinita Dei Monti Church Spanish Steps
#5661, aired 2009-03-30IF THEY'D TAUGHT AEROBICS INSTEAD $1200: Reach, reach, reach for that truth of cessation! You're not leaving the Deer Park until you reach! Buddha
#5652, aired 2009-03-17YOU'RE IN THE CABI-NOT! $200: Bill Richardson, 2009 Commerce
#5652, aired 2009-03-17YOU'RE IN THE CABI-NOT! $400: Zoe Baird, 1993 Attorney General
#5652, aired 2009-03-17YOU'RE IN THE CABI-NOT! $600: Giuliani's pal Bernard Kerik, 2004 Homeland Security
#5652, aired 2009-03-17YOU'RE IN THE CABI-NOT! $800: Roger B. Taney, after fighting the Bank of the U.S., 1834 Treasury
#5652, aired 2009-03-17YOU'RE IN THE CABI-NOT! $1000: John Tower, 1989 Secretary of Defense
#5642, aired 2009-03-03IT'S NOT A CRIME! $800: If you've got oenomania, you're not a crook; you're just crazy for this, like muscat or syrah wine
#5635, aired 2009-02-20THE HUSTLER $800: The 4 H's on the 4-H Club's cloverleaf once stood for Head, Heart, Hands & Hustle; in 1911 this replaced Hustle Health
#5626, aired 2009-02-09RHYMES WITH DORA THE EXPLORER $400: If Dora makes rough, harsh breathing noises while taking a nap, she might just be this new character Dora the Snorer (Snora the Explorer accepted)
#5570, aired 2008-11-21GOOD APPLICATION ESSAY WORDS $200: Say that you're this, but not that you're this overzealous type of beaver eager
#5567, aired 2008-11-18YOU'RE HISTORY! $2,000 (Daily Double): At age 70, this Athenian was put on trial for "not believing in the gods the state believes in" Socrates
#5565, aired 2008-11-14URBAN DICTIONARY LINGO $600: We're not joshing when we tell you that "JK" stands for this just kidding
#5553, aired 2008-10-29GEOLOGIC TIME $2000: The supercontinent called this land was the southern part of the Paleozoic landmass Pangaea Gondwanaland
#5551, aired 2008-10-27TIBET YOUR LIFE $3,000 (Daily Double): After the Dalai Lama fled in 1959, this lama became titular spiritual leader of Tibet the Panchen Lama
#5549, aired 2008-10-23SHAKESPEARE GOES HAIKU $400: Talk to yourself much? / I, Claudius, killed your dad / You're not mad, are you? Hamlet
#5547, aired 2008-10-21"M": A NATION $0 (Daily Double): This nation comprises more than 2,000 small islands in the western Pacific Ocean Micronesia
#5547, aired 2008-10-21WHAT'VE YOU GOT THERE? $1200: So you're not neutral on having the Ranger type of this knife with a wood saw, can opener &, of course, toothpick a Swiss Army knife
#5522, aired 2008-09-16NOT TO BE CONFUSED $1200: If you're really smart you won't confuse these 2 words, meaning a really smart guy & a classification above species genius & genus
#5505, aired 2008-07-11"MIND" BLOWERS $1200: If you're legally non compos mentis, you're "not of" this sound mind
#5489, aired 2008-06-19AFRICAN ANIMALS $1200: Even though they're striped, thousands of these can be spotted migrating with their gnu friends zebras
#5436, aired 2008-04-07JEOPMARK CARDS FOR LITERARY CHARACTERS $2000: As we sail off in an 1851 novel, you're this man, a true friend (& thanks for laying off on the cannibalism) Queequeg
#5424, aired 2008-03-20AMERICAN LIT $2,000 (Daily Double): In a Whitman poem in memory of Abraham Lincoln, it's the title that precedes "Our fearful trip is done" "O Captain! My Captain!"
#5401, aired 2008-02-18BE A SPORT $400: It's not your fault if you're in the alley & you backhand your way cross-court in this sport tennis
#5363, aired 2007-12-26OSCARS WILD $1200: He's the "SNL" guy (& you're not) who opened the 1988 show with, "Good evening Hollywood phonies"; he never hosted again Chevy Chase
#5360, aired 2007-12-21ON OUR USO TOUR $1,500 (Daily Double): (Alex struts on the runway at the Atsugi NAF, Japan.) The F/A-18 was designed with both fighter & strike capabilities; pilots really love its maneuverability & its precision attack capability, traits it shares in common with this insect it's named for the hornet
#5360, aired 2007-12-21OLD MOVIE QUOTES $3,000 (Daily Double): 1944: "We were talking about automobile insurance, only you were thinking about murder" Double Indemnity
#5284, aired 2007-07-26WORLD HERITAGE SITES $1600: You can visit this North America country's L'Anse Aux Meadows historic park even if you're not a Viking Canada
#5268, aired 2007-07-04"IDI" I MEAN $800: The television is sometimes referred to as this kind of "box", though not when you're watching our show the idiot box
#5268, aired 2007-07-04MAKES THE HEART $2,000 (Daily Double): The mitral valve has 2 flaps & is also called this valve, just like a certain tooth a bicuspid
#5267, aired 2007-07-03FOOD FACTS $1600: The name of this long, wide loaf of bread is Italian for "slipper" ciabatta
#5262, aired 2007-06-26COMPLETES THE OLD PROVERB $800: "If you're not part of the solution..." you're part of the problem
#5240, aired 2007-05-25THIS MAY SURPRISE YOU $400: On March 29, 1952 he surprised Democratic leaders by saying he would not seek re-election Truman
#5238, aired 2007-05-23AMERICAN POLITICAL IDOL $400: In 1804 this guy killed a political foe with one shot in New Jersey... You're the V.P., not Tony Soprano! Act like it! Aaron Burr
#5218, aired 2007-04-25ELEMENTAL, MY DEAR $200: Atomic number 28; if you don't know 1 lb. of pure this can be drawn into a wire 80 mi. long, you're not worth a plugged one nickel
#5212, aired 2007-04-17LAST BUT NOT LEAST $600: In 1988 newspapers headlined the closing of the last of these in the U.S., putting bunnies out of work Playboy Clubs
#5210, aired 2007-04-13NOT TO BE CONFUSED $1000: "Hirsute" means "hairy"; "hircine" means "of or like this hairy animal" a goat
#5194, aired 2007-03-22ANAGRAMMED FOOD & DRINK $2,000 (Daily Double): If you're watching your carbs, eat these plain, not in cakes crabs (from carbs)
#5192, aired 2007-03-20COLLEGE TOWNS $2000: Creighton University Omaha
#5175, aired 2007-02-23SUPERSTITIONS $400: In Oxford's "Dict. of Superstitions", trimming nails is among the many things not to do on this day of the week Friday (Sunday also accepted)
#5175, aired 2007-02-23EXCELLENT ADVENTURE $800: In his final adventure, Gulliver meets these filthy & despicable brutes; do a web search if you're not sure the Yahoos
#5175, aired 2007-02-23YOU'RE A BEAST! $800: Not Rommel's but Ruppell's sand fox lives in this desert the Sahara
#5165, aired 2007-02-09THE GOOD EARTH $3,000 (Daily Double): Because it passes through a London borough, the Prime Meridian at 0 degrees longitude has this other name Greenwich (Meridian)
#5164, aired 2007-02-08YOU'RE NOT GOING OUT WEARING THAT $400: This suit... well, it's formal & the cummerbund & bow tie that go with it do seem a bit much for 4th period math a tuxedo
#5164, aired 2007-02-08YOU'RE NOT GOING OUT WEARING THAT $800: A suit of this, huh? Well, chain mail may be hip now, young man, but we all know the Maximilian type is the way to go! armor
#5164, aired 2007-02-08YOU'RE NOT GOING OUT WEARING THAT $1200: For gosh sakes, you're not really going to wear these paired equine accessories seen here, are you? blinders (or blinkers)
#5164, aired 2007-02-08YOU'RE NOT GOING OUT WEARING THAT $1600: Seriously? This type of plain-woven sack made of coarse jute or hemp fabric is your choice? Not today, mr.! burlap
#5164, aired 2007-02-08YOU'RE NOT GOING OUT WEARING THAT $2000: Maybe no one told you this whale-bone-stiffened undergarment went out of style around 1907, to women's relief a corset
#5131, aired 2006-12-25HOW TERRIBLY BRITISH $500 (Daily Double): If you're not happy saying your weight is 280 pounds, go to England where you're only 20 of these stones
#5123, aired 2006-12-13SOUTH AMERICA $800: You're not under a mis-concepcion if you know mate, a tea-like beverage, is also known as this country's tea Paraguay
#5123, aired 2006-12-13FROM THE LATIN $1,000 (Daily Double): From the Latin for "wedge", it means wedge-shaped writing & we're not just Babylon cuneiform
#5113, aired 2006-11-29A LITTLE DEITY $5,001 (Daily Double): This god was upset to find that the mortal girl Apemosyne could outrun him Mercury (or Hermes)
#5096, aired 2006-11-06THE LENGTHS YOU'LL GO $400: If you're lucky, you'll get one of these "in the door"; if not, you might have one "in the grave" a foot
#5079, aired 2006-10-12ITALIAN $2000: If you're not going sinistra or destra, you're going sempre diritto, meaning this always straight
#5044, aired 2006-07-13IT'S AN ILLUSION $1200: (Jon of the Clue Crew shows another illusion on the monitor.) You think the two green vertical lines are different lengths, but they're not--it's the illusion of depth created by the horizontal lines doing this, from the Latin for "inclined together" converge
#5040, aired 2006-07-07BOOKS & AUTHORS $800: Part one of this Carson McCullers novel says Frankie "belonged to no club and was a member of nothing in the world" The Member of the Wedding
#5035, aired 2006-06-30PALINDROMIC WORDS $2,000 (Daily Double): An important article of religious faith a tenet
#5006, aired 2006-05-22CLASSIC TV QUOTES $800: "As we say in the sewer, if you're not prepared to go all the way, don't put your boots on in the first place" The Honeymooners
#4999, aired 2006-05-11IT'S NOT ALEX TREBEK $1000: It's not me seen here, it's this World War II-era British politician Neville Chamberlain
#4972, aired 2006-04-04SESAME STREET EATS $400: (Alex visits Oscar the Grouch's aluminum abode on Sesame Street.) "You know what, Oscar? On my pizza, I'm one of those people who really likes this calcium-rich herring relative. What about you?" "Well, I like 'em in my milkshakes." "What? You're not serious." "Heh heh." anchovies
#4958, aired 2006-03-15I'LL HAVE THE BEEF $200: You're not ordering a prison weapon; it's this front leg of beef that requires braising a shank
#4940, aired 2006-02-17LET'S LOOK TO THE STARS $3,500 (Daily Double): In 1862 Alvan Clark discovered the first White Dwarf, a companion of this star also called Alpha Canis Majoris Sirius
#4932, aired 2006-02-07YOU'RE SUCH AN "IMP" $1000: To not provide enough of something to skimp
#4931, aired 2006-02-06"TEEN" SCENE $400: If you're triskaidekaphobic, you're afraid of this number, & not just on a Friday thirteen
#4925, aired 2006-01-27YOU'RE GOING "IN" $2000: From the Latin for "deceitful", it means "stealthily treacherous" insidious
#4908, aired 2006-01-04ABBOTS & COSTELLOS $3,000 (Daily Double): This founder of the Abbey of Clairvaux is not to be confused with the saint who founded Alpine hospices Bernard
#4892, aired 2005-12-13YOU'RE JUST "GR"EAT $600: Not only did Buck Henry pen this 1967 coming-of-age film classic, he played a hotel desk clerk, too The Graduate
#4885, aired 2005-12-02NEW HERE? $200: If you start an MLB season with 45 days' ML experience, you're not considered one of these any more a rookie
#4884, aired 2005-12-01COMEDIC CATCHPHRASES $1000: "I'm a victim of soicumstance!" Curly of the Three Stooges
#4874, aired 2005-11-17MISSING VOWELS $1600: A receptacle with a touch of glass: Q R M aquarium
#4854, aired 2005-10-20CHEESE $1600: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew presents in front of metal shelves stocked with cheese in Wisconsin.) This cheese making stage, also called ripening, can be as simple as keeping the cheese in a cooler until the flavors have matured aging
#4853, aired 2005-10-19FAMILIAR PHRASES $1,000 (Daily Double): The phrase "handwriting on the wall" goes back to this book of the Old Testament Daniel
#4850, aired 2005-10-14AMERICAN GOVERNMENT $1,200 (Daily Double): It's the minimum number of electoral votes that a state may have in the electoral college 3
#4840, aired 2005-09-30DOT $2000: Connect the dots; the British author of "Pilgrimage" or a 2-time U.S. Olympic gold medalist softball player Dot Richardson
#4831, aired 2005-09-19ART TECHNIQUE $800: (Kelly of the Clue Crew makes some cartoon trees grow.) By enlarging the nearest part of the image, this technique adds the illusion of depth foreshortening
#4831, aired 2005-09-192005 FICTION BESTSELLERS $2,200 (Daily Double): The CIA arranges a presidential pardon for mover & shaker Joel Backman in this John Grisham tale The Broker
#4827, aired 2005-09-1320th CENTURY POP CULTURE $1000: He's the 3 named character actor seen here in a 1930s film classic "Well, congratulations on your engagement, Miss Seton. You're not getting very much, but I'm sure you can improve him." Edward Everett Horton
#4823, aired 2005-07-20RESCUE ME! $800: If you're rescued from a deep-sea dive, you may go into this type of chamber, from the same root as "barometer" hyperbaric
#4794, aired 2005-06-09OH, WITTY WOMAN $800: Erma Bombeck advised, "Before you try to keep up with" them, "be sure they're not trying to keep up with you" the Joneses
#4786, aired 2005-05-30YOU'RE FIRED! $2,200 (Daily Double): In 1978 Handy Dan Hardware axed Arthur Blank--but he did okay, co-founding this chain in Atlanta Home Depot
#4775, aired 2005-05-13WE'RE GONNA MAKE YOU WINE $400: Wines in the U.S. labled with this "furniture" name may not have an alcohol content over 14% table
#4767, aired 2005-05-03THE JIMMY $2,200 (Daily Double): In 1922 he was the first pilot to cross the U.S. in under 24 hours Jimmy Doolittle
#4766, aired 2005-05-02SPELLINGE WYTH GEOFFREY CHAUCER $1600: One Chaucer poem is about "The Parliament" of these (spelled with a U in place of the W) Fowls
#4755, aired 2005-04-15A TIM ROBBINS FILM FESTIVAL $1200: Tim also felt the need for speed as Merlin in this 1986 blockbuster flick Top Gun
#4750, aired 2005-04-08VERBS $1,600 (Daily Double): This short form of a Biblical name can also mean to banter with or tease josh
#4736, aired 2005-03-21SKI $1000: (Cheryl of the Clue Crew skids to a stop on skis in Park City, UT.) Introduced in 1868, this turn that ski jumpers use to stop is named for what Norway's capital was then called christiania
#4724, aired 2005-03-03LET'S MESS WITH TEXAS $1000: Born in 1921, this Mission, Tex.-born senator served with Jack Kennedy, knew Jack Kennedy & hey! you're not Jack Kennedy! Lloyd Bentsen
#4700, aired 2005-01-28YOU HAD TO EXPECT OPERA $400: We're not stringing you along: "El Retablo de Maese Pedro" is meant to be peformed by these toys puppets
#4684, aired 2005-01-06NOW THAT'S INVENTIVE! $1,000 (Daily Double): In the '40s AT&T used a radio with no conventional vacuum tubes to demonstrate this device invented in its lab a transistor
#4683, aired 2005-01-05I'LL BE YOUR WAITER $800: Even if you're not all related, we serve our portions this "style", so get used to sharing family style
#4674, aired 2004-12-23"GO" FOR IT $1600: 1921 Heidelberg University graduate seen here Joseph Goebbels
#4673, aired 2004-12-22SHHHH! $400: This is the 3-letter word when you're told not to reveal something mum
#4667, aired 2004-12-14MED. ABBREV. $400: 2 of the 3 illnesses for which a DPT vaccination provides immunity diphtheria & pertussis (or tetanus)
#4667, aired 2004-12-14SNOWBOARDING $1200: (Sarah of the Clue Crew snowboards down Mammoth Mountain.) If you're doing well by cutting up the slopes, you could be called one of these, not to be confused with an office machine a shredder
#4615, aired 2004-10-01TAKE IN ORDER! $400: Now add this letter to get H. Rider Haggard's novel about an African sorceress E
#4613, aired 2004-09-29THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK $2000: In "You're The Top", this American wrote, "But if this ditty is not so pretty, at least it'll tell you how great you are" Cole Porter
#4599, aired 2004-09-09CONTRACTIONS $2000: If you're unable, use "can't", if you would rather not, use this word that rhymes with "can't" shan't
#4597, aired 2004-09-07GROCERY SHOPPING $400: If you're buying a whole fish, these (on the fish) should be clear & not sunken eyes
#4589, aired 2004-07-15STRONGMEN $6,000 (Daily Double): In 1995 this country's Franjo Tudjman signed a peace deal with the leaders of Serbia & Bosnia Croatia
#4582, aired 2004-07-06THE EMERALD ISLE $2,000 (Daily Double): At about 230 miles, it's not only the longest river in Ireland, it's the longest in the British Isles the River Shannon
#4579, aired 2004-07-01"B"EGINNINGS $2000: We're not being prejudiced; it's a line diagonal to the grain of a fabric a bias
#4560, aired 2004-06-04BUSINESSMEN $1,000 (Daily Double): In 1913 he spent some of those nickels & dimes to build in NYC what was then the world's tallest building Woolworth
#4559, aired 2004-06-03A GREEN THUMB $600: We hope you're not at a loess for words & can tell us that loess is a type of this deposited by the wind soil
#4541, aired 2004-05-10CROSSWORD CLUES "D" $800: He's the shadowy Watergate source (4,6) "Deep Throat"
#4522, aired 2004-04-13PICK UP YOUR CLOTHES $1000: The hours of the day you work; hopefully you're not on the night one shift
#4496, aired 2004-03-08NAUGHT'S LANDING $800: We hope you're not missing -- missing this CBS series with Anthony LaPaglia Without A Trace
#4495, aired 2004-03-05I LIKE "U" $800: It's a word meaning a salve or balm unguent
#4486, aired 2004-02-23SO. CAL. $400: On the Warner Bros. lot tour you can see the water tower that this cartoon trio calls home the Animaniacs
#4484, aired 2004-02-19MOM SAYS... $600: (Cheryl of the Clue Crew presents the clue.) Oh, you're not going anywhere, you're grounded. You came in at 2 A.M. when this six-letter limit was 10 P.M. curfew
#4484, aired 2004-02-19SPORTS $2000: (Hi, I'm Becky Hammon.) I'm carrying a torch--not for someone, but on my uniform as a member of this WNBA team the New York Liberty
#4480, aired 2004-02-13THE DRIVING TEACHER $200: You're 17, not 75! Turn this thing off--we made our right 4 blocks ago a turn signal
#4465, aired 2004-01-23TO A "TEE" $200: Type of ballot to file when you're not there to vote on election day an absentee
#4444, aired 2003-12-25WWI $1200: In a popular American song of 1917, this line immediately preceded "You're not behind a plow" "You're in the Army now"
#4435, aired 2003-12-12A LITTLE LATIN $600: If you're not of sound mind, you're this 3-word phrase, literally non compos mentis
#4432, aired 2003-12-09BETWEEN THE LIONS $1000: If you're standing between 2 lions at this country's Kruger National Park, let's hope they're not hungry! South Africa
#4427, aired 2003-12-02PLACES TO GO AFTER YOU'RE DEAD $1200: The Latin & Greek Churches agree it's a place of temporary suffering, but do not agree on the form of suffering purgatory
#4415, aired 2003-11-14LATIN $400: "Tempus Fugit" means this, & not just when you're having fun time flies
#4407, aired 2003-11-04CRIME $800: Under English law, having relations with the King's wife (if you're not the King) constitutes this crime treason
#4383, aired 2003-10-01IT'S NOT BRAIN SURGERY $800: If you're 160 lbs., 4 Bloody Marys in an hour would put you over this level, the blood alcohol limit in most states .08
#4337, aired 2003-06-10WHAT MOVES YOU? $1000: A helicopter can fly because its blades are curved to create differential in this above & below them air pressure
#4322, aired 2003-05-20QUOTABLE MOVIES $1600: 2002: "You do too much. You're not Superman, you know" Spider-Man
#4317, aired 2003-05-13NOT SO SIMPLE SIMON $200: Officer: "You folks live out of town?" Gwen: "Oh yes" Officer: "You're lucky" The Out-of-Towners
#4310, aired 2003-05-02WE'RE NOT MAKING THIS UP $200: In August you may see more than a million bats fly out from the Congress Ave. Bridge in Austin in this U.S. state Texas
#4282, aired 2003-03-25GET REAL $200: From a character in an 18th century play, to be genuine you're not Alvin-pure or Theodore-pure, but this Simon-pure
#4261, aired 2003-02-24NOT REALLY MARRIED $200: This country diva serenades this "Huck Finn" author with her hit "You're Still the One" Shania & Mark Twain
#4257, aired 2003-02-18SNICKERS $1000: 1950 film in which Judy Holliday tells Broderick Crawford, "You're just not couth!" Born Yesterday
#4256, aired 2003-02-17NOW YOU'RE COOKIN' $200: I scream when I hear this term for coagulating milk (not blood) curdling
#4254, aired 2003-02-13ALL IN YOUR MIND $2000: Erik Erikson's concept of this type of "crisis", in which you're not sure who you are, is associated with adolescence identity crisis
#4252, aired 2003-02-11POTPOURRI $2000: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew reports from a ski slope in Colorado) My snowshoes are keeping me from sinking by distributing this over a wide area weight
#4251, aired 2003-02-10FRENCH CLASS: THE BODY $2000: Fall "behind" in French class & you'll miss this term for "the behind" derriere
#4230, aired 2003-01-10ARE "WE" THERE YET? $600: If you're "under" this, you're not feeling well, or maybe getting rained on weather
#4229, aired 2003-01-09BOOK REPORT $400: If I were Rebecca, I'd have stayed on this farm & not let them send me off to the town of Riverboro Sunnybrook Farm
#4219, aired 2002-12-26C'EST CHEESE $800: The poem "What a Friend we Have in Cheeses!" says, "Claret, dear, not Coca-Cola, when you're having" this strong cheese gorgonzola
#4196, aired 2002-11-25SLANG $1600: If you hang a Ralph or hang a Louie, you're not dispensing justice but doing this making a turn (left or right)
#4175, aired 2002-10-25HOPE YOU'RE NOT CLAUSTROPHOBIC $200: As of 2001 all new passenger cars must have a release latch here (inside) the trunk
#4175, aired 2002-10-25HOPE YOU'RE NOT CLAUSTROPHOBIC $400: Restlessness after a period of confinement is called this dwelling's "fever" cabin fever
#4175, aired 2002-10-25HOPE YOU'RE NOT CLAUSTROPHOBIC $600: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew lies on a bunk bed in a submarine.) A submariner's bed, also called this, is narrow, but comfier than the torture instrument of the same name a rack
#4175, aired 2002-10-25HOPE YOU'RE NOT CLAUSTROPHOBIC $800: You stood a good chance of drowning if you worked on the Tanna, a Japanese one of these dug in the 1920s a railroad tunnel (subject to flooding)
#4175, aired 2002-10-25HOPE YOU'RE NOT CLAUSTROPHOBIC $1000: Per California's code, the number of people in these shall not exceed the rated load in pounds, divided by 150 elevator
#4139, aired 2002-09-05ALL I WANT FOR ISTHMUS $2000: To travel from this country's mainland to Sevastapol in the Crimea, traverse the Isthmus of Perekop Ukraine
#4135, aired 2002-07-19WE'RE NOT GOING FAR $3,000 (Daily Double): After Canada & Mexico, this country's territory is closest to the U.S. Russia
#4122, aired 2002-07-02FROM FRANCE $1,000 (Daily Double): Famed Socialist Eugene V. Debs was named for 2 socially conscious French authors: Eugene Sue & this man Victor Hugo
#4119, aired 2002-06-27CHINA TOWN $600 (Daily Double): This city lends its name to the most well-known Chinese beer in the world Qingdao
#4107, aired 2002-06-11SCOTLAND $2,000 (Daily Double): Hundreds of years old, the de facto national flag features this saint's cross Andrew
#4104, aired 2002-06-06THE LANGUAGE OF LOVE $1200: He wrote in a 1970 book, "Love means not ever having to say you're sorry" Erich Segal
#4094, aired 2002-05-23POKER NIGHT $1000: If you have a 5, 6, 8 & 9 of different suits, hope for a 7 to fill this type of straight inside straight
#4090, aired 2002-05-17JUST TO THE RIGHT $1200: At the start of a chess game, it's your piece just to the right of the white king bishop
#4085, aired 2002-05-10SO YOU WANT TO BE A 19th CENTURY HEROINE $600: Even if you're 27 & still single, like Anne in this author's "Persuasion", your life may not be over Jane Austen
#4084, aired 2002-05-09DOLLAR $2000: This revolutionary year (not the one you might think) appears on the front of all U.S. dollar bills 1789
#4059, aired 2002-04-04WHERE, OH WHERE? $400: This vast bay can be considered an arm of the Atlantic or of the Arctic Ocean, to which it's linked by Foxe Basin Hudson Bay
#4057, aired 2002-04-0220th CENTURY BRITAIN $5,000 (Daily Double): On Oct. 31, 1956 British & French bombs destroyed much of this country's air force Egypt
#4044, aired 2002-03-14YOU'RE AN ANIMAL $2,000 (Daily Double): The only species of bear found in Sri Lanka is this long-tongued, slow-moving (but not three-toed) variety a sloth (bear)
#4035, aired 2002-03-01CHAD & GERMANY $800: Of 200, 2,000 or 12,000, the approximate miles you would have to fly to get from Chad to Germany 2,000
#4022, aired 2002-02-12THE DEBATE CLUB $400: After an opponent's statement, you may get 2 minutes to do this, not to re-if or re-and rebut
#4021, aired 2002-02-11FAMILIAR PHRASES $600: To bring an end to something is to "ring down" this, whether or not you're in the theatre the curtain
#3993, aired 2002-01-02TOOL TIME $400: (Back to the garage.) These are all examples of this tool. (Mine's for big jobs.) chisels
#3983, aired 2001-12-19RHYME SPREE $1,600 (Daily Double): The name of one of the 3 Stooges rhymes with this synonym for the word muscular burly
#3973, aired 2001-12-05YOGI BERRA: PHILOSOPHER $800: Yogi warned that "You got to be careful if you don't know where you're going because you might not" do this get there
#3951, aired 2001-11-05DOUBLE LETTERS $800: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew enjoys a swimming pool.) Hey, Mom, watch me; if you're not watching, OK, I'm going to do this "ballistic" entry into the pool a cannonball
#3948, aired 2001-10-31TV OR NOT TV $200: Duuuuude, Ray Walston totally reprised his role as Mr. Hand, Spicoli's teacher, in the series based on this film Fast Times at Ridgemont High
#3942, aired 2001-10-23LET'S "C" WHAT YOU KNOW $400: In "Born Yesterday", Judy Holliday drops an "un" & tells boorish Broderick Crawford, "You're just not" this couth
#3935, aired 2001-10-12SNL CATCHPHRASES $100: 3-word phrase that followed "Good evening, I'm Chevy Chase..." and you're not
#3924, aired 2001-09-27I GOT AN "A"! $400: If you're a girl with a low singing voice, you're not a soprano, you're one of these an alto
#3906, aired 2001-09-03TV THEME SONGS $800: "You're not the boss of me now! You're not the boss of me now! You're not the boss of me now & you're not so big!" Malcolm in the Middle
#3882, aired 2001-06-19NOT REALLY RELATED $200: "You're So Vain" singer & pieman meeter Carly & Simple Simon
#3874, aired 2001-06-07STARTS WITH "S" $200: Around 1817 Giovanni Caviglia rescued the Great Sphinx from obliteration by this sand (a sandstorm accepted)
#3834, aired 2001-04-12MONEY SLANG $200: No "Wonder" you're on a "roll" -- you're not a "loaf"er & you're earning a lot of this Bread/dough
#3785, aired 2001-02-02BE AFRAID... $300: Lucrezia Borgia may not be a good choice as a dinner guest if you're toxiphobic, afraid of this poison
#3769, aired 2001-01-11ALL THE KING'S SONGS $500: "We're caught in a trap, I can't walk out, because I love you too much baby" "Suspicious Minds"
#3751, aired 2000-12-18TRAVEL & TOURISM $300: We're not stringing you along: this capital of the Czech Republic is famous for its puppet theatres Prague
#3705, aired 2000-10-13YOU'VE GOT... $200: You've got this sailor's disease if you're not getting enough vitamin C Scurvy
#3699, aired 2000-10-05NEW VIDEO GAMES $400: In "The World is Not Enough" you're this agent, secret agent James Bond
#3697, aired 2000-10-03QUOTATIONS $1,100 (Daily Double): In 1944 she wrote in her diary, "In spite of everything I still believe that people are really good at heart" Anne Frank
#3664, aired 2000-07-06"A" & "M" $100: When you're not home, it picks up the phone an answering machine
#3574, aired 2000-03-02"S" & "M" $2,500 (Daily Double): Georgia site seen here: Stone Mountain
#3564, aired 2000-02-17CLASSIC TEEN CINEMA $800: (Hi, I'm Wallace Langham) I played a weenie in this John Hughes film in which 2 kids create Kelly LeBrock Weird Science
#3547, aired 2000-01-25PSYCHOLOGICAL PROBLEMS $100: Just because you have this pervasive suspicion of others, doesn't mean they're not out to get you Paranoia
#3541, aired 2000-01-17DEUTERONOMY $100: You're not allowed to do this to the sun, moon, stars or graven images Worship
#3490, aired 1999-11-05IT'S EASY $100: Even if you're not a lumberjack, things can be as easy as falling off one of these a log
#3488, aired 1999-11-03THE 10 COMMANDMENTS $1000: From the Latin for "to desire", it's what you're not supposed to do to your neighbor's things Covet
#3464, aired 1999-09-3013-LETTER WORDS $700 (Daily Double): Kafka's title "Die Verwandlung" was changed to this The Metamorphosis
#3440, aired 1999-07-16NO. 1 COUNTRY HITS $200: In 1996 this Canadian-born woman sang, "If you're not in it for love, I'm out of here" Shania Twain
#3413, aired 1999-06-09ISLAND COUNTRIES $600 (Daily Double): We're not pulling the wool over your eyes when we tell you it was the first nation to grant women the right to vote New Zealand
#3366, aired 1999-04-05ASTROLOGY FOR SKATERS $200: A warning to Scorpio skaters: don't pick a partner of this "lion-like" sign, you're not compatible Leo
#3366, aired 1999-04-05ASTROLOGY FOR SKATERS $800: Born under this horned sign? You're likely to have weak knees, & we're not getting your "goat" Capricorn
#3322, aired 1999-02-02YOU'RE "NUT"s! $100: These handy items are named for their shape, not for being used on airplanes wing nuts
#3312, aired 1999-01-19WHEN IN SCOTLAND... $400: If you have this job, you're a flesher -- vegetarians need not apply Butcher
#3274, aired 1998-11-26GIVING THANKS $800: If you're genuinely thankful to a Frenchman, "The quality" of this word "is not strained" merci
#3270, aired 1998-11-20REUNIONS $3,100 (Daily Double): (Hey, what's happening? I'm Mark McGrath of Sugar Ray. The answer is…) While touring in 1996, we played with Johnny Rotten & this group who had reunited the Sex Pistols
#3260, aired 1998-11-06THE MAP OF EUROPE $200: Of Norway, Sweden & Denmark, this one is the largest in area Sweden
#3234, aired 1998-10-01"HIT" OR "MISS" $400: Even if you're not ordained, you may take a position as a "lay" one of these Missionary
#3224, aired 1998-09-17THE SMALL SCREEN $500 (Daily Double): (Hi, I'm Fred Savage. The answer is:) On "The Wonder Years" I played Kevin Arnold; this actor narrated the show as the adult Kevin Daniel Stern
#3160, aired 1998-05-01WALL STREET $800: If you're not in this biggest mutual fund, you missed the boat -- it closed to new investors in 1997 Fidelity Magellan
#3144, aired 1998-04-09FLINCHIUS THE GLADIATOR $100: Because he speaks Latin, Flinchius knows that "gladiator" means a "man of" this weapon sword
#3142, aired 1998-04-07G IS FOR GRAFTON $100: Not guilty, "I is for..." Innocent
#3133, aired 1998-03-25STOCK SYMBOLS $200: We hope you're not "stuck on" this company, JNJ, but they do Johnson & Johnson
#3130, aired 1998-03-20THEY'RE NOT IN KANSAS ANY MORE $200: This Kansan made her last known take-off from New Guinea; if you find out where she is, let us know Amelia Earhart
#3122, aired 1998-03-10YOU'RE "IN" $300: This phrase implies a person who's upset is like a sweaty horse, not that he's about to shave In a lather
#3116, aired 1998-03-02CUTE ANIMALS $400: Aw, wook at the doggy; this breed has been around China for over 2,000 years: chow
#3116, aired 1998-03-02PARTY TIME $500: Schussboomers know the name of this after-schussing party contains the French word for "after" Apres-ski
#3114, aired 1998-02-26BEARING WORDS $400: If you're oviferous, you bear these; hopefully not all in one basket eggs
#3105, aired 1998-02-13LOVE SONGS $3,100 (Daily Double): Henry Mancini topped the pop charts just once, with this movie theme heard here: "Love Theme From Romeo & Juliet"
#3100, aired 1998-02-06AROUND THE CASTLE WITH LANCE $200: Once Lance sees from the gatehouse that you're not hostile, he might lower this method of entry Drawbridge
#3096, aired 1998-02-02BLOCKBUSTERS $500 (Daily Double): In 1997 this film "married" itself to the hit list "You're not up for anything conventional, or anything that's assumed to be a female priority, including marriage, romance..." My Best Friend's Wedding
#3038, aired 1997-11-12MOVIE DEBUTS $200: She played an obsessive teen named Darian in her first film, "The Crush"; we hope you're not left "Clueless" Alicia Silverstone
#2998, aired 1997-09-17AROUND THE HOUSE WITH PIERRE $1000: As you're leaving, you're relieved that Pierre offers you this, his main & not the back of it Hand
#2977, aired 1997-07-08HODGEPODGE $600: A fool or madman card is among the 78 cards that make up this special fortune telling pack tarot
#2954, aired 1997-06-05AMERICAN FOOD $200: Onions preserved this way can be eaten within days; okra should mellow for a few weeks Pickling
#2941, aired 1997-05-19DESSERTS $200: This whipped egg white topping for lemon pies will "weep" or turn rubbery if you're not careful Meringue
#2938, aired 1997-05-14SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK $600 (Daily Double): Subject of the song that includes the following: "(Ow!) They're generally set apart from a sentence / By an exclamation point / Or by a comma when the feeling's not as strong (Mmmm...)" interjections
#2825, aired 1996-12-06HOMOPHONIC PAIRS $300: Contented performing kittens might be paid this way per purr
#2760, aired 1996-09-06AMERICAN AUTHORS $3,800 (Daily Double): A collection of his letters, "From Main Street to Stockholm", was published posthumously in 1952 Sinclair Lewis
#2697, aired 1996-04-30RECKLESS PHRASES $400: Bag in which you're not supposed to "buy a pig" poke
#2663, aired 1996-03-13FILMS OF THE '50s $1000: Film in which Judy Holliday tells Broderick Crawford, "You're just not couth!" Born Yesterday
#2653, aired 1996-02-28DECEMBER $1,500 (Daily Double): He married Mary Godwin in December 1816, 3 weeks after his first wife's body was recovered from a lake (Percy) Shelley
#2581, aired 1995-11-20SHAKESPEARE $1000: Character who says "Speak of me as one that love not wisely, but too well" Othello
#2571, aired 1995-11-06RHYME TIME $500: An all-important bet a major wager
#2513, aired 1995-07-05ALL ABOUT AUTHORS $400: "The Remains of the Day" author Kazuo Ishiguro was a grouse beater for this grandmother of Prince Charles the Queen Mother
#2440, aired 1995-03-24RIVERS $1,300 (Daily Double): Pakistan's fertile Punjab Plain is irrigated by this river & its tributaries the Indus River
#2419, aired 1995-02-23AFRICA $800: African leaders met in 1963 in Addis Ababa to form the OAU, which stands for this The Organization of African Unity
#2396, aired 1995-01-23GEOGRAPHIC ANAGRAMS $100: You're not likely to see many Danes in this South American mountain range the Andes (from Danes)
#2356, aired 1994-11-281980 $1000: This country's first president & prime minister were Rev. Canaan Banana & Robert Mugabe Zimbabwe
#2341, aired 1994-11-07POTPOURRI $600: Discoveryland is Euro Disney's equivalent of this futuristic land found in Disneyland & Disney World Tomorrowland
#2339, aired 1994-11-03THE FRENCH CONNECTION $200: If you see a sign that says "Non-fumeurs", you're not supposed to do this smoke
#2283, aired 1994-07-06GEOGRAPHIC ANAGRAMS $200: French, not Parsi, is the language you're most likely to hear in this capital Paris
#2268, aired 1994-06-15ANCIENT WISDOM $800 (Daily Double): Ovid said this form of literature "comes fine-spun from a mind at peace" poetry
#2246, aired 1994-05-16THE DINNER TABLE $400: Always used at very formal dinners, they're about 1 1/2" by 2 1/2" & use courtesy titles place cards
#2227, aired 1994-04-19SUPERSTITIONS $100: Rain or shine, you're not supposed to open this in the house an umbrella
#2175, aired 1994-02-04BIOLOGY $400: Doctors sometimes induce hypothermia, which is this, to reduce metabolic activity low body temperature
#2150, aired 1993-12-31U.S.A. $100: If you’re not up to climbing this NYC building’s 1,860 steps, you can take one of 73 elevators Empire State Building
#2130, aired 1993-12-03SCIENCE $500: He discovered that if nitroglycerin was absorbed by an inert substance it wouldn't explode from shock Alfred Nobel
#2129, aired 1993-12-02ANCIENT ATHENIANS $3,000 (Daily Double): This man whose law code replaced Draco's was called one of the Seven Wise Men of Greece Solon
#2122, aired 1993-11-23TV ROLES $100: Zachary Powers, Khan, Mr. Roarke Ricardo Montalban
#2088, aired 1993-10-06____ THE ____ $500: We're not telling tall tales when we tell you he was Charlemagne's dad Peppin the Short
#2065, aired 1993-07-23AGELESS QUOTES $600: Oscar Wilde wrote, "One should never trust a woman who tells one" this; she "would tell one anything" her real age
#2046, aired 1993-06-28AMERICAN HISTORY $200: This 1848 event made the California trail the most traveled pioneer road by 1850 gold strike
#2032, aired 1993-06-08AMERICAN HISTORY $1,400 (Daily Double): This Pilgrim couple was married around 1623 & had 11 children John & Priscilla Alden
#1998, aired 1993-04-21LEFTOVERS $400: Clark Gable sang this song on film in 1939, Taco sang it in 1983 & we're not "puttin'" you "on" "Puttin' On The Ritz"
#1995, aired 1993-04-16LEGENDARY CREATURES $500: According to legend, you're most likely to see a roc fly by in the area around this ocean the Indian Ocean
#1979, aired 1993-03-25FRUIT $3,400 (Daily Double): Used as a topping for peach Melba, Melba sauce is made mainly of this fruit raspberries
#1937, aired 1993-01-26BIRTHSTONES $100 (Daily Double): Cleopatra is said to have been fond of this November stone because it reminded her of honey topaz
#1877, aired 1992-11-03SAUCES $100: Many cooks make bechamel sauce with milk, but if you're not dieting you can add the "heavy" type of this cream
#1875, aired 1992-10-30OPERA $600: Part of this Rossini opera takes place on the shores of Lake Lucerne William Tell
#1871, aired 1992-10-26U.S. STATES $200: Hawaii's state seal features a shield flanked by the goddess of liberty & this king King Kamehameha
#1851, aired 1992-09-281953 $1000: He had 2 firsts in his life in 1953, reaching the top of Everest & seeing the sea Tenzing Norgay (Tenzing the Sherpa accepted)
#1773, aired 1992-04-22GREEN THINGS $500 (Daily Double): The character who sings the following: "It's not that easy bein' green Having to spend each day..." Kermit (the Frog)
#1742, aired 1992-03-10SUPERSTITIONS $200: Perhaps from its association with witches, you're advised not to take this item along when you move a broom
#1725, aired 1992-02-14COLORS $400: In heraldry, "vert" is the name for this color, even if you're not in France green
#1709, aired 1992-01-23HOBBIES $200: If this is your hobby, you're not into cutting hair but singing 4-part harmony barbershop quartet
#1681, aired 1991-12-16LETTER PERFECT $800 (Daily Double): In spelling out the numbers from 1-999 you never use this vowel A
#1643, aired 1991-10-23CLICHES $400: If you're "pushing up daisies", you're not arranging flowers, you're this dead
#1628, aired 1991-10-02COUNTRY MUSIC $100: In a Jerry Reed song, it's the line following "When you're hot, you're hot" When you're not, you're not
#1585, aired 1991-06-21AUTHORS' NICKNAMES $600: "The Fourth Musketeer" Alexandre Dumas père
#1581, aired 1991-06-17USA $200: You're not allowed to use this invention of Samuel Colt in the park named for him in Hartford, Connecticut a gun (revolver)
#1579, aired 1991-06-13FOREIGN WORDS & PHRASES $300: It's Italian for both "please" & "you're welcome", but not "spaghetti sauce" prego
#1555, aired 1991-05-10FIRST LADIES $600: We're not being wry when we tell you this first lady was born in Rye, New York in 1925 Barbara Bush
#1484, aired 1991-01-31TV ACT IT OUT $200: In the show's opening, Fred Flintstone's response to the 5:00 bird whistle "Yabba-Dabba-Doo!"
#1456, aired 1990-12-24BIBLICAL ZOO $1,100 (Daily Double): Noah sent this bird from the ark first, but it did not return raven
#1442, aired 1990-12-04WEATHER $100: You're in them where the trade winds meet near the equator, even if you're not down in the dumps the doldrums
#1437, aired 1990-11-27NMOɊ-ƎɊISԀ∩ $700 (Daily Double): In 1980 this singer had a No. 1 hit with the following: "Upside down / Boy, you turn me / Inside out / And round and round / Upside down / Boy, you turn me / Inside out / And round and round..." Diana Ross
#1432, aired 1990-11-20POP MUSIC $500: In a 1962 hit, Claude King warned not to go to this mountain if you're looking for a wife Wolverton Mountain
#1428, aired 1990-11-14DOGS $500: The Keeshond, or barge dog, is considered the national dog of this country the Netherlands
#1383, aired 1990-09-12COMPOSERS $200: We're not telling tales when we tell you Johann Strauss composed the tales from these woods the Vienna Woods
#7, aired 1990-07-28NEW TESTAMENT $1,300 (Daily Double): In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said, "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called" this the children of God
#1350, aired 1990-06-15RELIGION $100: Roman Catholics believe if you're too good for hell but not yet pure enough for heaven, you'll spend time here purgatory
#1346, aired 1990-06-11"P"s & "Q"s $100: Don't worry if you're sleeping under one of these: not all of them are "crazy" quilts
#1317, aired 1990-05-01WEIGHTS & MEASURES $600 (Daily Double): You're not wet behind the ears if you know this international unit equals 6,076.11549 feet Nautical Mile
#1307, aired 1990-04-17THE 4 SEASONS $400: If you're old you're not this type of chicken a spring chicken
#1301, aired 1990-04-09FOOD $800: If you're eating ostriche in Napoli, you're eating this seafood, not a big bird oysters
#1284, aired 1990-03-156-LETTER WORDS $100: "Sitting" this way you not only look good, you're in a good position pretty
#1282, aired 1990-03-13AMERICAN ART $1000: Leonard Craske's "The Man at the Wheel" statue in Gloucester, Massachusetts honors them fishermen
#1242, aired 1990-01-16MYTHOLOGY $400: In Hindu mythology the 3 main deities are Brahma, Vishnu & this one, called "The Destroyer" Shiva
#1193, aired 1989-11-08OLD TESTAMENT $1,000 (Daily Double): According to Exodus 20:17, 3 of the 6 specific things of your neighbor's you're not supposed to covet wife, house, ass (or man servant, maid servant, ox)
#1189, aired 1989-11-02GOLDEN OLDIES $100: In a Jerry Reed song, it's the line that follows "When you're hot, you're hot" when you're not, you're not
#1176, aired 1989-10-16THEATERS $900 (Daily Double): "Chapter Two" opened at the Eugene O'Neill Theater, which, not surprisingly, is owned by this playwright Neil Simon
#1176, aired 1989-10-16ANIMALS $1,000 (Daily Double): Called "the leopard cat of America", if taken young, it can be tamed: an ocelot
#1146, aired 1989-09-04"C.C." $100 (Daily Double): The song heard here is the only No. 1 hit this group has had in the U.S.: "Desert loving in your eyes all the way / If I listened to your lies would you say..." Culture Club
#1146, aired 1989-09-04"C.C." $400: It's a Maryland suburb of Washington, D.C., & you're not Chevy Chase
#1137, aired 1989-07-11SEXY SENIORS $500 (Daily Double): Former Cotton Club chorine heard here, singing her signature song: "Life is bare, gloom and misery everywhere..." Lena Horne
#1135, aired 1989-07-07QUESTIONABLE SONGS $1,000 (Daily Double): This song by The Shirelles was the 1st No. 1 hit of the rock era by any girl group: "Tonight, you're mine completely / You give your love so sweetly / Tonight, the light of love is in your eyes" "Will You Love Me Tomorrow?"
#1117, aired 1989-06-13RELIGION $2,000 (Daily Double): Seen here, it was built in the 7th century, not as a mosque but as a shrine for pilgrims: the Dome of the Rock
#1096, aired 1989-05-15PATRIOTIC SONGS $400: In the George M. Cohan song, it's "the emblem of the land I love" "You're A Grand Old Flag"
#1094, aired 1989-05-11U.S. STATES $300: This state, not Mississippi or Connecticut, has the longest 1-word name Massachusetts
#1074, aired 1989-04-13HOMOPHONES $500 (Daily Double): Truckin' the Quaker Company's products, or group performing the following: "But you can get along if you try to be strong / But you'll never be strong, 'cause / You're a rich girl / And you've gone too far / 'Cause you know it don't matter anyway / You can rely on the old man's money / You can rely on the old man's money" haulin' oats (Hall & Oates)
#1069, aired 1989-04-06"OUCH" $300: If you can come up with a question here, you're not this you're no slouch
#1027, aired 1989-02-07DRIVER ED. $500: A solid double yellow line means you're not allowed to do this pass
#1025, aired 1989-02-03LYRICS $300: Song in which Michael Jackson insults the opposition with "your talk is cheap, you're not a man" "Bad"
#1018, aired 1989-01-25ACTORS & ACTRESSES $100: On SNL's "Weekend Update" segment, his trademark line was "Good evening, I'm" this actor "& you're not" Chevy Chase
#1014, aired 1989-01-19UNCLES $200: He can be your critical mentor even if you're not his nephew & he's not from Holland Dutch uncle
#965, aired 1988-11-11SILLY SONGS $200: Two of the animals you're urged not to be like in "Swinging On A Star" (2 of) mule, pig, fish, monkey
#957, aired 1988-11-01"WOO" WORDS $100: You might have read her novel "Orlando" if you're not afraid of her Virginia Woolf
#935, aired 1988-09-30SAN FRANCISCO $100: If you're not sure of this official city song, just ask Tony Bennett "I Left My Heart In San Francisco"
#909, aired 1988-07-14COLE PORTER SONGS $200 (Daily Double): Late comedian heard here, singing a 1941 Cole Porter tune on B'way in "Let's Face It": "But honey, I suspect you all / Of bein’ intellectual / And so, instead of gushin’ on / Let’s have a big discussion on /Timidity, stupidity, solidity, frigidity / Avidity, turbidity, / Manhattan and viscidity / Fatality, morality, legality, finality / Neutrality, reality, or Southern hospitality / Pomposity, verbosity / You’re loosing your velocity / But let’s not talk about love" Danny Kaye
#888, aired 1988-06-15TRAVEL TIPS $100: Even if you're not employed by a company, hotels may give you a discount if you ask for this rate a corporate rate
#859, aired 1988-05-05GOVERNMENT $800: Adopted by Congress in 1913, this act completely reorganized the U.S. banking system the Owen-Glass Act (the Federal Reserve Act of 1913)
#853, aired 1988-04-27PROVERBS $500: It's the bough you're not supposed to cut the one you're standing on
#839, aired 1988-04-07LITERATURE $6,000 (Daily Double): Brom Bones dressed up as this to scare the schoolmaster away from Katrina the Headless Horseman
#820, aired 1988-03-1110-LETTER WORDS $200: A secret document you're not allowed to look at, or ad section in the newspaper that you are classified
#819, aired 1988-03-10TEXANS $700 (Daily Double): This Texan was so popular in Britain that when he toured w/the Beatles, they gave him equal billing: "Pretty woman, walkin' down the street / Pretty woman, the kind I'd like to meet / Pretty woman / I don't believe you..." Roy Orbison
#790, aired 1988-01-29STARTS WITH "B" $200: Phrase for the way a doctor talks to you, whether you're lying down or not bedside manner
#785, aired 1988-01-22BASEBALL $500: A film bio says St. Louis English teachers wanted this pitcher-turned-broadcaster off the air Dizzy Dean
#779, aired 1988-01-14GEOGRAPHIC COCKTAILS $300: If you order this cold drink on "Long Island", you're apt to get 5 distilled spirits, not brewed leaves (a Long Island) iced tea
#767, aired 1987-12-29PHOBIAS $1000: It's why a pogonophobic would have been afraid of Abe Lincoln after 1860 but not before afraid of beards
#758, aired 1987-12-16THE QUEEN'S ENGLISH $200: In England, if you're "riding to hounds", you're not headed for a dog show but engaged in this sport fox hunting
#746, aired 1987-11-30CONTAINERS $100: A sack or bag, you're advised not to buy a pig in one a poke
#745, aired 1987-11-27COUNTRY MUSIC $500 (Daily Double): 1 of the 2 singers heard in the following: "Hey, Louisiana woman" / "Mississippi man" / "We'll get together every time we can / The Mississippi River can't keep us apart" / "There's too much love in this Mississippi heart" / "Too much love..." (1 of) Conway Twitty & Loretta Lynn
#717, aired 1987-10-20U.S. HISTORY $300: John Paul Jones reply to Capt. Richard Pearson's Sept. 23, 1779 question "Have you struck?" I have not yet begun to fight!
#672, aired 1987-07-07VOCABULARY $200: Of a witch, waterfowl, or way out, what you're looking for if you're looking for a egress way out
#649, aired 1987-06-04MUSIC, "OVER" & "UNDER" $200: It's said you're cultured if you can hear this & not think of the Lone Ranger the William Tell Overture
#641, aired 1987-05-25SPACE & AVIATION $300 (Daily Double): Testor Corp. is selling a model kit for this plane the government won't even admit exists Stealth
#637, aired 1987-05-19OSCAR-LOSING SONGS $500 (Daily Double): Celestial songs losing '36 Oscars included "A Melody from the Sky", "When Did You Leave Heaven" & this: [Piano instrumental plays] "Pennies from Heaven"
#632, aired 1987-05-12ANATOMY $300: Whether you're Buddy Rich or not, your tympanic membrane is commonly called this eardrum
#623, aired 1987-04-29TOUGH TV TRIVIA $200: If you're watching "Fandango" or "You Can be a Star", you're watching TNN, which is this The Nashville Network
#615, aired 1987-04-17GET THE "POINT" $100: Impressing your boss will earn these, even if you're not a young Girl Scout brownie point
#596, aired 1987-03-23SEE THE USA $200: If you're into dogs, not horses, you can visit this racing hall of fame in Kansas Greyhound Hall of Fame
#584, aired 1987-03-05NEWSCASTERS $200: "Saturday Night Live"s original "Weekend Update" anchorperson Chevy Chase
#573, aired 1987-02-18RELIGION $400: Shh...we hope we're not overdue in telling you St. Jerome is patron saint of this profession librarians
#558, aired 1987-01-28TV NOSTALGIA $600: James Beard's "I Love to Eat" opened with a shot of, not a recipe for, this famous Borden symbol Elsie the Cow
#557, aired 1987-01-27LESSER-KNOWN NAMES $200: He's Cornelius Crane Chase, & you're not Chevy Chase
#551, aired 1987-01-19STARTS WITH "S" $200: To scrape the feet while walking, or the mark left on the kitchen linoleum after such a walk a scuff
#528, aired 1986-12-17SPINELESS JELLYFISH $300 (Daily Double): Title of the following: "Promise me, Son, not to do the things I've done / Walk away from trouble if you can / Now, it won't mean you're weak if you turn the other cheek / I hope you're old enough to understand..." "Coward Of The County"
#512, aired 1986-11-25THE '50s $1000: A prosecuting attorney in the Rosenberg case, he later assisted Sen. Joe McCarthy Roy Cohn
#511, aired 1986-11-24THE HUMAN BODY $400: This small organ makes white blood cells & stores red ones, whether you're venting it or not spleen
#504, aired 1986-11-13GAME SHOWS $300: The point value of the bonus question on "The Newlywed Game" 25
#494, aired 1986-10-30LABOR $1000: This agreement, not to join a union during a workers' employment, sounds like a colorful canine a yellow dog
#489, aired 1986-10-231979 $400 (Daily Double): Queen of the discotheques, she had her biggest hit with the following: "Go on now, go, walk out the door / Just turn around now, 'cause you're not welcome anymore / Weren't you the one who tried to hurt me with goodbye? / Did you think I'd crumble? Did you think I'd lay down and die?" Gloria Gaynor
#483, aired 1986-10-15GOLDEN OLDIES $400: On the "Eve of Destruction", "You're old enough to kill, but not" to do this vote
#465, aired 1986-09-19TV THEMES $200: One of these days, Alice, you're gonna hear its theme - "You're My Greatest Love" The Honeymooners
#440, aired 1986-05-163-LETTER PRODUCTS $400: Using a scent, not an extract, it's "lemon"ed for your nose's benefit, not your dishes' Joy
#425, aired 1986-04-25"CON"s $200: When Uncle Sam wants you, whether you want him or not conscription
#412, aired 1986-04-08SOAP OPERAS $300 (Daily Double): Show responsible for more hit singles than any other daytime soap, including the following: "Kissing you is not what I had planned / And now I'm not so sure just where I stand / I wasn't looking for true love / But now you're looking at me / You're the only..." General Hospital
#398, aired 1986-03-19FISH $600: Of salinity, temperature, or currents, the major factor controlling distribution of fish salinity
#395, aired 1986-03-14NO NO's $500 (Daily Double): According to this 1972 hit, 4th item in this list of things you shouldn't do: "You don't tug on Superman's cape / You don't spit into the wind / You don't pull the mask off that old Lone Ranger" Don't mess around with Jim
#391, aired 1986-03-10THE 1920's $600: Sons of millionaires who killed Bobby Franks as a "scientific experiment" Leopold & Loeb
#328, aired 1985-12-11HAIL TO THE CHIEF $400: Of Ford, Carter, or Reagan, the one to have a dam named after him Reagan
#328, aired 1985-12-11LEFT & RIGHT $500: "You're not nearly as obnoxious today as you normally are", for example a left-handed compliment
#295, aired 1985-10-25IT'S LATIN TO ME $800: Whether or not you're having fun, how "time flies" in Latin tempus fugit
#284, aired 1985-10-10FAMOUS SHIPS $1,000 (Daily Double): Comic opera where you hear this song: "We sail the ocean blue / And our saucy ship's a beauty / We're sober men and true / And attentive to our duty / When the balls whistle free / O'er the bright blue sea / We stand to our guns all day / When at anchor we ride / On the Portsmouth tide / We have plenty of time for play / Ahoy! Ahoy!..." H.M.S. Pinafore
#281, aired 1985-10-07SHAKESPEARE $600 (Daily Double): It's believed Shakespeare had to leave Stratford after he was caught doing this in a a private park poaching a deer
#265, aired 1985-09-13SPORTS $1000: In boating, some popular types are the yachtsman, the Danforth & the mushroom anchors
#182, aired 1985-05-21LITERATURE $600: Occupation of Silas, whose "Death" is title & subject of Robert Frost poem hired man
#173, aired 1985-05-08HOW TO... $300: Shut eyes and touch nose with finger, walk straight line, or breathe into a balloon how to prove you're either drunk or not drunk (a sobriety test)
#171, aired 1985-05-06FOOTBALL $500: Punt receiver's arm signal which says "I'm not gonna run, you're not gonna tackle" a fair catch
#165, aired 1985-04-26SILLY SONGS $500: Where K-K-K-Katy will be waiting at the k-k-k-kitchen door
#163, aired 1985-04-24THE '20s $300: Vernon Castle's dancing partner who originated the bob hairstyle Irene Castle
#158, aired 1985-04-17TOYS & GAMES $1,900 (Daily Double): Toy title of the following: "I should have known / You'd bid me farewell / There's a lesson to be learned from this / And I learned it very well / Now I know you're not the only starfish in the sea / If I never hear your name again..." a "Red Rubber Ball"
#157, aired 1985-04-16NOSTALGIA $500: Their baby chick still "hasn't scratched yet" Bon Ami
#156, aired 1985-04-15"UPS" & "DOWNS" $400 (Daily Double): Neil Sedaka proved it was easy twice, in '62 & '76 "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do"
#150, aired 1985-04-05SOUTH AMERICA $1000: The world's largest copper-exporting country Chile
#141, aired 1985-03-25SOCIAL STUDIES $600: Not a radioactive clan, but the core group of one's relatives the nuclear family
#129, aired 1985-03-07"T" TIME $300: To express gratitude or if you lisp, what happened to the Titanic thank
#88, aired 1985-01-09FASHION $400: Man's shoe topper attached by a strap spats
#72, aired 1984-12-18ANIMALS $200: Specifically, the only cat with a mane a male lion
#44, aired 1984-11-08WORLD LEADERS $2,300 (Daily Double): Not president, premiere or party chief, he is still China’s top leader Deng Xiaoping
#6, aired 1984-09-17SPACE $300: Shrunken star into which light & a Disney film disappear a black hole

Final Jeopardy! Round clues (75 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
#9050, aired 2024-03-01COUNTRIES OF THE WORLD: Fearful of independence in 1975, around 120,000 of this country's people, a third of the population, fled to the Netherlands Suriname
#20, aired 2023-11-15ARTISTS: Exhumed in 2017 to settle a paternity suit, his mustache had "preserved its classic 10-past-10 position" according to the Spanish press Salvador Dalí
#8950, aired 2023-10-13ROYALTY: Before his death in 2005, he said he was "probably the last head of state to be able to recognize all his compatriots in the street" Prince Rainier (III of Monaco)
#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!
#8935, aired 2023-09-22COMPOSERS: A fireworks display followed the April 27, 1749 premiere of a work by this man that had been commissioned by George II (George Frideric) Handel
#8766, aired 2022-12-19BRAND NAMES: Unable to make these candies perfectly round, the confectioner embraced this flawed name for the product Milk Duds
#8544, aired 2021-12-30EXPLORERS: Confirming a theory, fossils found with this explorer in 1912 included a plant from more than 250 million years ago (Robert Falcon) Scott
#8317, aired 2021-01-19THE BUSINESS OF TRAVEL: Adjusted for inflation, the nightly rate this company put in its name in 1962 is now $51 Motel 6
#8217, aired 2020-05-19ADVENTURE NOVELS: In this novel the surname of a pastor, his wife & 4 sons is not given in the text; the title was meant to evoke a 1719 novel The Swiss Family Robinson
#8164, aired 2020-02-20THE RACE TO SPACE: In the 1960s this Mideast country had a space program & one of its rocket launches, the Cedar IV, is commemorated on a stamp Lebanon
#8088, aired 2019-11-0620th CENTURY AMERICA: In 1939, turned down by 2 local theaters, Howard University was able to get an outdoor venue for this singer's yearly concert Marian Anderson
#8084, aired 2019-10-31NOVELISTS: In a 1952 novel, he wrote, "But there were dry years too, & they put a terror on the valley. The water came in a thirty-year cycle" John Steinbeck
#8058, aired 2019-09-25NATURAL GEOGRAPHIC FEATURES: Timely for 2018, in 1866 Mark Twain wrote of this landmark's "sputtering jets of fire" & "heat from Pele's furnaces" Mount Kīlauea
#8016, aired 2019-06-17NEW ENGLAND: Neighborhoods in this city include Federal Street, Gallows Hill & Witchcraft Heights Salem, Massachusetts
#8013, aired 2019-06-12POPULAR PRODUCTS: This product that brought virtual tourism into homes in 1939 introduced its first virtual reality device in 2015 View-Master
#7533, aired 2017-05-17ERAS IN U.S. HISTORY: On April 11, 1865 Abraham Lincoln spoke of "the mode, manner, and means of" this, which he would not live to see Reconstruction
#7459, aired 2017-02-02THE U.S.A.: The Empire State Building says that on a clear day you can see 5 states from the top: New York, New Jersey, Connecticut & these 2 Pennsylvania & Massachusetts
#7298, aired 2016-05-11STATE SONGS: Its state song rhymes "patriotic gore" with the name of its largest city Maryland
#7003, aired 2015-02-11REFERENCE BOOK MAKERS: In 1863 he used the epigraph "I have gathered... other men's flowers, & nothing but the thread that binds them is mine own" John Bartlett
#6959, aired 2014-12-11THE BIBLE: The first birthday celebration mentioned in the Bible takes place in Genesis 40 & is in honor of this ruler the Pharaoh in Egypt
#6943, aired 2014-11-1921st CENTURY BOOKS: Set in the Great Depression, this 2006 novel has an epigraph from "Horton Hatches the Egg" Water for Elephants
#6835, aired 2014-05-09FAMOUS BOOKS: It was published March 26, 1830; a very popular work with the same name premiered March 24, 2011 The Book of Mormon
#6793, aired 2014-03-12BRITISH ROYALTY: He was the last male monarch who had not previously been Prince of Wales George VI
#6713, aired 2013-11-20NOVEL TITLES: These are not found in the Koran, & the angel Gabriel told Muhammad that they were not revealed by God the Satanic Verses
#6557, aired 2013-03-05CLASSIC NOVELS: In this novel the title character says, "It is a bad omen" after a guard does not hear a train & is crushed Anna Karenina
#6505, aired 2012-12-21WORLD CAPITALS: One of the 3 national capitals made up of 2 words that begin with the same letter (1 of) Addis Ababa, San Salvador, or Phnom Penh
#6337, aired 2012-03-20HISTORICAL FACTS & FIGURES: This site was active from 1892 to 1954; its busiest day was April 17, 1907 when 11,747 were processed Ellis Island
#5568, aired 2008-11-19NONFICTION WRITERS: On July 21, 1944 she wrote, "I'm finally getting optimistic... an assassination attempt has been made on Hitler's life" Anne Frank
#5393, aired 2008-02-06WORLD AUTHORS: In 1898 he wrote, "As for the persons I have accused... they are... embodiments of social malfeasance" Émile Zola
#5269, aired 2007-07-05MEDICAL HISTORY: A patient who told this Frankfurt doctor "I have lost myself" was the basis for a paper he gave in 1906 Alois Alzheimer
#5165, aired 2007-02-09TOURISM: The 2 leading foreign destination countries for U.S. tourists Canada & Mexico
#5127, aired 2006-12-19THE ACADEMY AWARDS: When this man won, Richard Dreyfuss said goodbye to being the youngest ever to win the Best Actor Oscar Adrien Brody
#5044, aired 2006-07-13U.S. HISTORY: He was the commanding Union general at Bentonville, site of the last major Confederate offensive William Tecumseh Sherman
#5023, aired 2006-06-14POLITICAL QUOTATIONS: It was said that being with these 2 leaders, born 1874 & 1882, "was like sitting between 2 lions roaring at the same time" Winston Churchill & Franklin Delano Roosevelt
#5021, aired 2006-06-12U.S. NEWSPAPERS: During the American Revolution, this New England newspaper had the USA's highest circulation; it's still in the top 50 the Hartford Courant
#5007, aired 2006-05-23THE GLOBE: If you dig straight through the Earth's center from Canton, Ohio you'll end up not in China but in this body of water the Indian Ocean
#4998, aired 2006-05-10CHARACTERS IN SHAKESPEARE: Poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge referred to the "motiveless malignity" of this character Iago
#4918, aired 2006-01-18U.S. COMMERCE: Huntington, considered the USA's busiest inland port & largely shipping coal, is on this river the Ohio River
#4897, aired 2005-12-20AMERICAN BUSINESSMEN: This man who died in 1984 remarked, "We're not in the hamburger business, we're in show business" Ray Kroc
#4838, aired 2005-09-28THE 1980s: On May 18, 1980 its height was reduced from 9,677 feet to 8,364 feet Mount Saint Helens
#4732, aired 2005-03-15ARTISTIC MASTERPIECES: "Shouldn't the shining dots of the sky be as accessible as the black dots on the map of France?" the artist wrote of this work The Starry Night (by Vincent van Gogh)
#4719, aired 2005-02-24THE U.S. CENSUS OF 1790: It was the only state in the 1790 census to claim a slave population of zero Massachusetts
#4657, aired 2004-11-30BUSINESS & INDUSTRY: Most of this firm's 70,000 seasonal white-collar employees work only 4 months a year H&R Block
#4647, aired 2004-11-16OCCUPATIONS: While working as one, Charlotte Bronte complained that one of these "has no existence, is not considered as a living... being" a governess
#4632, aired 2004-10-26AUTHORS: After several decades off it, works by this man seen here returned to the New York Times Bestseller List in 2003 J.R.R. Tolkien
#4587, aired 2004-07-13HEADLINES OF THE LAST 40 YEARS: The first 2 New York Times headlines set in 96-point type were in these 2 years, 5 years apart 1969 & 1974
#4298, aired 2003-04-16THE SECRET SERVICE: This 20th century U.S. president was the first to receive full-time protection from the Secret Service Theodore Roosevelt
#4267, aired 2003-03-04MILITARY AVIATION: In 1911 this nation was the 1st to use powered aircraft for military purposes when it spied on Turkish activities in Libya Italy
#4244, aired 2003-01-30FICTIONAL CHARACTERS: A Nagasaki geisha who had a child with a man named Glover was the model for this title character Madame Butterfly
#4121, aired 2002-07-01FILMS OF THE 1930s: Parts of "I Pagliacci" & "Il trovatore" are performed in this 1935 comedy A Night at the Opera
#4062, aired 2002-04-09QUEENS: Of Henry VIII's wives, the 2 who were not English Anne of Cleves & Catherine of Aragon
#3994, aired 2002-01-03FAMILIAR PHARASES: This 2-word term entered the English language after a pilot reported seeing 9 of them near Mt. Rainier in June 1947 flying saucers
#3916, aired 2001-09-17FAMOUS PHRASES: This expression comes from a 1956 novel about Frank Skeffington's final run for mayor "the last hurrah"
#3874, aired 2001-06-07CHILDREN'S LITERATURE: 3 of the countries that make up this land are Gillikin, Winkie & Quadling Oz
#3760, aired 2000-12-29TRAVEL: By population, it's the largest city on a Caribbean island, though you may not be allowed to go there Havana, Cuba
#3071, aired 1997-12-29WOMEN IN POLITICS: In 1995 she became the first sitting governor to give the rebuttal to a State of the Union address Christine Todd Whitman
#2937, aired 1997-05-13CHILDREN'S BOOKS: It's the first in a trilogy of books that also includes "In the Night Kitchen" & "Outside Over There" Where the Wild Things Are
#2702, aired 1996-05-07THE ROMAN EMPIRE: Martial's "Book of Spectacles" in 80 A.D. was a book of poems published for this landmark's opening the (Roman) Colosseum (Coliseum)
#2571, aired 1995-11-06BUSINESS & LITERATURE: On March 24, 1994 this store held a breakfast to announce the new Truman Capote Literary Trust Tiffany's
#2244, aired 1994-05-12ALPHABETICALLY FIRST: Among the men who have walked on the Moon, his last name is alphabetically first (Buzz) Aldrin
#1532, aired 1991-04-09WORLD LEADERS: This woman, elected president of Ireland in 1990, used a 1968 Simon & Garfunkel hit in her campaign Mary Robinson
#1429, aired 1990-11-15SPACE EXPLORATION: Next pair in the sequence: Gumdrop, Spider; Charlie Brown, Snoopy;... the Columbia & the Eagle
#8, aired 1990-08-04SHAKESPEAREAN QUOTES: The famous line "Out, out, brief candle!" is spoken after the announcement of this woman's death Lady Macbeth
#1320, aired 1990-05-04THE SENATE: The 2 astronauts who went on to become U.S. senators John Glenn (Ohio) & Harrison Schmitt (New Mexico)
#1141, aired 1989-07-17OPERA: Based on a French novel by Henri Murger, its title refers to the carefree life artists lead La bohème
#791, aired 1988-02-01POP MUSIC: Solo or in a duet or group, this artist has had more Billboard #1 hits than any other, 29 in all Paul McCartney
#528, aired 1986-12-17KID STUFF: In tic-tac-toe, maximum number of X's you can have on the board without winning 5
#396, aired 1986-03-17MAN IN SPACE: This Space Shuttle, the only 1 named for a spaceship, is the only 1 not to have flown in space the Enterprise
#363, aired 1986-01-29U.S. CURRENCY: Besides "In God We Trust", the other word found on the face of all current U.S. coins Liberty
#280, aired 1985-10-04BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY: Over 1/2 of Fortune 500 and 42% of all N.Y. Stock Exchange companies are incorporated in this state Delaware
#279, aired 1985-10-03WORLD POLITICS: Last Communist party chief of the U.S.S.R. to leave office without dying Nikita Khrushchev
#264, aired 1985-09-12MISS AMERICA: He replaced Bert Parks as host of Miss America pageant for 1980 Ron Ely
#142, aired 1985-03-26PUBLIC HEALTH: Since vaccinations are not yet available, it’s most widespread of communicable childhood diseases chicken pox
#97, aired 1985-01-22THE THEATER: The musical "Hello Dolly!" was based on this Thornton Wilder play The Matchmaker

Players (242 results returned)

Joey Beachum, a senior from Mississippi State University 2010 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2008 College Championship winner: $100,000...
Max Johansen, a senior from the University of Miami "As a seventh grader, he was planning on a career in...
Patrick Tucker, a senior from the University of Notre Dame 2010 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2009 College Championship winner: $100,000...
Sid Chandrasekhar, a senior from the University of Pennsylvania from Saratoga, California 2010-B College Championship semifinalist: $10,000 + a Nintendo Wii + the...
Tom Toce, an actuary from New York, New York Season 26 2-time champion: $39,200 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
Roger Craig, a computer scientist from Newark, Delaware 2019 All-Star Games member of wildcard-match 2nd-place Team Austin: a share...
Eric Betts, a senior from Emory University 2009 College Championship first runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $50,000. 21 and...
Ariella Goldstein, a junior from Muhlenberg College 2009 College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. 20 and from Cortlandt Manor,...
Anjali Tripathi, a senior from MIT "Math and science were her favorite subjects in seventh grade. We're...
Danielle Zsenak, a senior from Marquette University 2008 College Championship 1st runner-up: $50,000. Last name pronounced like "zshen-NOCK"....
Jane Curtin, an actress from Kate & Allie and 3rd Rock from the Sun "One of Saturday Night Live's original Not Ready for Primetime Players,...
Yoni Freund, a Ph.D. student from Columbia University "He has always wanted to be a writer, and now that...
Jonathan Hawley, a sophomore from Harvard University 2008 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. 19 and from Oceanside, CA at...
Jordan Brand, an anesthesiologist from Westchester, New York Season 26 1-time champion: $24,405 + $2,000. The Sesame Street character...
Becky Anderson, a retired software specialist originally from Morganton, North Carolina Season 25 1-time champion: $16,401 + $2,000. Becky Anderson - A...
Ellen Eichner, a junior from the Ohio State University from Northbrook, Illinois 2010-B College Championship semifinalist: $10,000 + a Nintendo Wii + the...
Aisha Tyler, a comedienne, host and actress from Talk Soup, Friends, The 5th Wheel and Ghost Whisperer 2009 Celebrity Jeopardy! winner: $50,000 split between the International Rescue Committee/Congo...
Marty Scott, an assistant district attorney from Forney, Texas Season 26 3-time champion: $64,002 + $2,000. Marty won $250,000 on...
Danny Devries, a junior from the University of Michigan 2008 College Championship semifinalist: $10,000. 21 and from West Bloomfield, MI...
Christopher Meloni, a star from Law & Order: SVU and HBO's Oz "On TV, he's worked both sides of the law. Once a...
John Beck, an associate creative director from Torrance, California 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $29,000. 2004 Tournament...
Rachel Rothenberg, a senior from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 2009 Teen Tournament winner (semifinalist by wildcard): $75,000. Jeopardy! Message Board...
David Hudson, a junior from the University of Virginia "His musical taste has changed since he won $10,000 on Kids...
Cheech Marin, an actor, comedian, director, writer and musician from Lost "He's played a cop on Nash Bridges, voiced a 1959 Chevy...
Anthony Dedousis, a sophomore from Harvard University 2009 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. 19 and from Manhasset, New York...
Laura Myers, a senior from the University of Missouri 2009 College Championship second runner-up: $29,900. 22 and from Richmond, Virginia...
Dara Lind, a junior from Yale University 2008 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. 20 and from Cincinnati, OH at...
Larissa Charnsangavej, a senior from Rice University 2009 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. 21 and from Houston, Texas at...
Scott Menke, a senior from Johns Hopkins University 2009 College Championship semifinalist: $10,000. 21 and from Flemington, New Jersey...
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...
Elizabeth Perkins, an actress from Big and Weeds 2009 Celebrity Jeopardy! player: $25,000 to the New England Learning Center...
Dave Simpson, a pastor from Belcamp, Maryland 2009 Tournament of Champions wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Season 24 4-time champion:...
Chris Wallace, a TV host from Fox News Sunday "In March, this Fox News anchor was honored by the National...
Arthur Gandolfi, a commercial real estate executive from Pleasantville, New York 2004 Tournament of Champions 2nd runner-up: $25,000. Season 20 4-time champion:...
Elijah Granet, a 12-year-old from San Diego, California "Because he loves animals, biology, and helping others, he's thinking of...
Lea Tottle, a junior from Florida State University from Oldsmar, Florida 2010-B College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000 + a Nintendo Wii +...
Catherine Briley, a senior from Grand Prairie, Louisiana 2012 Teen Tournament 2nd runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $31,000. 17 at...
Dillon McCormick, a twelve-year-old from Erlanger, Kentucky "A politician, maybe. An archaeologist, perhaps. Or a psychologist like grandpa....
Catherine Whitten, a high school history teacher from Plano, Texas "This gifted teacher primarily teaches gifted students. From Plano, Texas, this...
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, a Basketball Hall of Famer and all-time leading scorer from the NBA "He's one of the greatest NBA players in history. Here's Hall...
Hope Landsem, from Tualatin, Oregon "She likes to win arguments, and that's why she's going to...
Sam Spaulding, a sophomore from Yale University from Wilmington, North Carolina 2010-B College Championship 1st runner-up: $50,000 + a Nintendo Wii +...
Brian Weikle, a project manager from Minneapolis, Minnesota 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Nifty Nine (players with byes into...
Ben Schenkel, a junior from Allentown, Pennsylvania 2007 Teen Tournament 1st runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $42,800. 17 at...
Michelle Clum, an executive assistant from Wichita, Kansas 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 player: $5,000. 2001 Tournament...
Steve Greene, a senior from UCLA from Elk Grove, California 2010-B College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000 + a Nintendo Wii +...
Leah Anthony Libresco, a junior from Yale University 2010-A College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Hometown: Mineola, New York. Jeopardy!...
Isaac Mizrahi, a fashion designer and TV personality from the QVC Network "His fashion designs are a favorite among celebrities on the red...
Kim Murphy, a minister and police chaplain from Glenbrook, Maine Season 24 player (2007-09-13).
Michelle Schrier, an 11-year-old from Potomac, Maryland "She plans on being a news reporter while waiting for her...
Aman Birk, from Irvine, California "He may not be the fastest swimmer on the team, but...
Solomon Howard, a freshman from St. Petersburg, Florida 2009 Teen Tournament wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. 14 at the time of...
Katie Baxter, a 10-year-old from Glenside, Pennsylvania "She has already won a presidential award. So why not the...
Jeff Huong, a recent law-school graduate from Sandy Springs, Georgia Season 29 player (2012-10-05).
John Lisiewicz, an assistant manager from Los Angeles, California Season 23 player (2007-05-18). Husband of Season 22 1-time champion Kathy...
Ben Ingram, an IT consultant originally from Florence, South Carolina 2024 Jeopardy! Invitational Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2019 All-Star Games member of...
Tristan Snell, a patent litigator from Boston, Massachusetts Season 25 player (2008-10-29).
Sven Sinclair, an economist and actuary from Burke, Virginia Season 24 1-time champion: $28,599 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user names: GnashEquilibrium, Gneq
Joan Belen, a homemaker from Brooklyn, New York Season 22 player (2006-06-26).
Sarah Horvitz, an attorney from Brooklyn, New York Season 31 player (2014-10-17).
Kathy Lisiewicz, a project coordinator from Los Angeles, California Season 22 1-time champion: $16,200 + $1,000. Wife of Season 23...
Jack Barry, a chief financial officer from Raleigh, North Carolina Season 30 player (2014-06-09). Not related to the late host of...
Ben Reiter, a sports writer from New York, New York Season 25 player (2009-01-02).
Diane Haltigan, a software engineer from Norfolk, Virginia Season 26 player (2010-01-25).
Jove Graham, a biomedical engineer from Lewisburg, Pennsylvania Season 26 1-time champion: $34,401 + $1,000. Jove's second contestant interview...
Chris Rodrigues, a personal banking representative from New Bedford, Massachusetts Season 26 3-time champion: $41,498 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
Aaron Wicks, a planning and evaluation manager from Rochester, New York Season 26 1-time champion: $18,001 + 1,000. Aaron Wicks Rochester, NY...
Christine Valada, a photographer and attorney originally from Walton, New York 2010 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 26 4-time champion: $68,703...
Dan Pawson, a legislative aide from Boston, Massachusetts 2024 Jeopardy! Invitational Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2014 Battle of the Decades...
Tom Nissley, an online books editor from Seattle, Washington 2014 Battle of the Decades invitee: $5,000. 2011 Tournament of Champions...
Melanie Baker-Streevy, a United Methodist pastor from Parma, Michigan Season 25 1-time champion: $26,900 + $1,000. Melanie Baker-Streevy - A...
Andy Srinivasan, a high school science teacher from Garner, North Carolina 2010 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000. Season 26 4-time champion: $69,600...
Colby Burnett, a high school world history teacher from Chicago, Illinois \"He teaches at a school started by the Dominicans of St....
Michael McKean, a Grammy winner, Oscar nominee and multi-talented performer from Hairspray and The Pajama Game "This multi-talented performer is a Grammy winner and Oscar nominee and...
Alyssa McRae, a gift card production designer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Season 25 3-time champion: $50,402 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Carolyn Young, a homemaker from Marietta, Georgia Season 25 1-time champion: $30,000 + $2,000. Mother of Season 32...
Fred Beukema, a structural engineer from Minneapolis, Minnesota Season 25 3-time champion: $69,401 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
Dave Belote, the base commander from Nellis Air Force Base, Las Vegas 2010 Tournament of Champions wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Season 26 5-time champion:...
Jennifer Broders, a junior high school social studies teacher from Stockton, Iowa Season 26 2-time champion: $59,801 + $1,000. Jennifer Broders - a...
James Erwin, a writer from Des Moines, Iowa Season 25 2-time champion: $22,598 + $1,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Kevin Wilson, a communications specialist from Toronto, Ontario, Canada Season 26 3-time champion: $76,998 + $1,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Judy Mermelstein, a Census field representative from Queens, New York Season 25 1-time champion: $38,401 + $1,000. Judy also appeared on...
Brian Muth, a headmaster from Napa, California Season 25 2-time champion: $43,800 + $1,000. Last name pronounced like...
Peter Severson, a senior from Sioux Falls, South Dakota 2005 Teen Tournament semifinalist: $5,000. 17 at the time of the...
Anderson Cooper, a news anchor and correspondent from CNN "He anchors his own prime-time news show, a syndicated daytime talk...
Charles Shaughnessy, an actor from Mad Men "As Shane Donovan on Days of Our Lives, he won three...
Lyndsey Romick, a sophomore from Lewis & Clark College 2010-A College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000. Hometown: Grants Pass, Oregon. Lyndsey Romick...
Erin McLean, a sophomore from Boston University from Danvers, Massachusetts 2011 Tournament of Champions wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. 2010-B College Championship winner:...
Stefan Goodreau, a video game tester from Los Angeles, California 2010 Tournament of Champions 2nd runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $50,000. Season...
Vijay Balse, a chemical engineer from Chatham, New Jersey 2014 Battle of the Decades invitee: $5,000. 2010 Tournament of Champions...
Loren Loiacono, a senior from Setauket, New York 2006 Teen Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000.
David Walter, a senior from Wilmington, Delaware 2007 Teen Tournament winner (semifinalist by wildcard): $75,000. 17 at the...
Harry Shearer, a humorist, Spinal Tap bassist, and voice from The Simpsons "He recently celebrated the 25th anniversary of This Is Spinal Tap...
Brooks Humphreys, a high school social studies teacher from Omaha, Nebraska "He teaches at an all-girls Catholic school operated by the Sisters...
Liz Murphy, a foreign service officer originally from Scranton, Pennsylvania 2010 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000. Season 25 5-time champion: $121,302...
Paul Kursky, a copywriter from San Francisco, California 2011 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 26 5-time champion: $109,411...
Carl Brandt, an investor originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 2009 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 25 4-time champion: $70,799...
Aiden Pink, a freshman from St. Louis Park, Minnesota 2007 Teen Tournament Summer Games semifinalist: $10,000. 15 at the time...
Dave Belote, a recently retired base commander from Woodbridge, Virginia 2010 Tournament of Champions wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Season 26 5-time champion:...
Mario Cantone, an actor and comedian from Sex and the City \"He played Anthony Marentino, the wedding planner with an attitude, on...
Justin Hofstetter, a sixth and seventh grade language arts and social studies teacher from Kansas City, Missouri "This sixth and seventh grade teacher is in his first year...
Suchita Shah, a senior from the University of Wisconsin-Madison 2008 College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. 20 and from Holmen, WI...
Yevgeny Shrago, a research assistant originally from Rochester, New York Season 26 1-time champion: $24,600 + $2,000. Name pronounced like "yev-GHEN-ee...
Pat Sajak, a game show host from Wheel of Fortune "A former TV weatherman, he's gone on to become the world's...
Amanda Walker, a junior at Gonzaga University from East Wenatchee, Washington 2005 College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user name:...
Gabrielle McMahan, a junior from Florida A&M University 2008 College Championship semifinalist: $10,000. 20 and from Springfield, VA at...
Robert Knecht Schmidt, a patent agent from Cleveland, Ohio Season 26 1-time champion: $12,799 + $1,000. Middle name pronounced like...
India Cooper, an actor and copy editor from New York City, New York \"A semifinalist in the Tournament of Champions in 1992, now an...
Andrew Chung, a sophomore from Harvey Mudd College 2008 College Championship 2nd runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $25,000. 20 and...
Sanders Kleinfeld, a publishing technology specialist from Cambridge, Massachusetts Season 25 1-time champion: $26,597 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Patrick Tucker, a graduate student of public policy from St. Louis, Missouri 2010 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2009 College Championship winner: $100,000...
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...
Josh Powell, a phone-based health coach from San Diego, California Season 27 3-time champion: $26,900 + $1,000.
Robert Gibbs, a former press secretary from the Obama White House "In 2004, he joined Barack Obama's senatorial campaign as communications director,...
Madeline Suchard, from Placentia, California "She has her sights set on becoming the Supreme Court Justice,...
Eric Newhouse, a director of technical assistance from Vermillion, South Dakota "He won both the 1989 Teen Tournament and the 1998 Teen...
Ingrid Nelson, a judicial assistant from Lake Mills, Wisconsin Season 25 2-time champion: $27,802 + $2,000. Ingrid Nelson - A...
Charles Temple, a high school English teacher from Ocracoke, North Carolina "He teaches at the smallest public school in North Carolina, and...
Elyse Mancuso, a junior from Omaha, Nebraska 2012 Teen Tournament winner: $79,600. 16 at the time of the...
Jesse Cuevas, a corporate lawyer originally from Leawood, Kansas Season 27 3-time champion: $65,981 + $2,000. Brother of Season 30...
Raynell Cooper, a senior from Rockville, Maryland 2011 Teen Tournament winner (semifinalist by wildcard): $75,000. 16 at the...
Sara Wilkinson, a country club concierge from Athens, Georgia Season 27 3-time champion: $72,701 + $2,000.
Paul Wampler, a web programmer from Knoxville, Tennessee Season 27 4-time champion: $72,001 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user name: paul5562
Claudia Perry, a sports copy editor from Jersey City, New Jersey "A pop music critic when she first appeared on Jeopardy!, she's...
Jimmy Miotto, an 11-year-old from Northborough, Massachusetts "He wants to be a Disney Imagineer and the president of...
Dr. Mehmet Oz, a cardiac surgeon and TV host from The Dr. Oz Show "He is a renowned cardiac surgeon who has written seven New...
Anthony Fox, an account executive from Arlington Heights, Illinois Season 27 4-time champion: $51,998 + $1,000. Playing as "Tony", Anthony...
Kyle Kahan, a senior from Texas A&M University from Houston, Texas 2010-B College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $10,000 + a Nintendo Wii +...
Melanie Bruchet, a senior from Bryn Mawr "Everyone wants to be an astronaut when they're a kid, but...
Ellen Kimmel, a school nurse from Nanuet, New York Season 27 2-time champion: $37,000 + $1,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user name: SkoolRN
Kerri Regan, a senior from Bethpage, New York 2005 Teen Tournament quarterfinalist: $2,500. 17 at the time of the...
Camille Bullock, a senior from New Orleans, Louisiana 2006 Teen Tournament wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user name: Camille88
Chloé White, a senior from Mission Hills, Kansas 2005 Teen Tournament quarterfinalist: $2,500. 17 at the time of the Teen Tournament.
Tom Nissley, a writer from Seattle, Washington 2014 Battle of the Decades invitee: $5,000. 2011 Tournament of Champions...
Bob Harris, an author, comedian, and radio commentator from Los Angeles, California "A 5-time champion and a finalist in the Tournament of Champions,...
Andrew Westney, a sports business writer from Charlotte, North Carolina "He was a high-school student from Atlanta when he won the...
Christian Haines, a college student originally from Newport News, Virginia 2007 Tournament of champions semifinalist: $10,000 + the Jeopardy! DVD Home...
Tony Nagatani, a junior at Ithaca College from Honolulu, Hawaii 2001 College Championship quarterfinalist: $2,500. Tony was 20 at the time...
Erin Bogart, a junior at Miami University of Ohio from Cincinnati, Ohio 2001 College Championship quarterfinalist: $2,500. Erin was 20 at the time...
Diane Wilshere, an actor and playwright from Manassas, Virginia Season 25 1-time champion: $18,801 + $1,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Iddoshe Hirpa, a junior from Louisville, Kentucky 2006 Teen Tournament semifinalist: $10,000.
Bill MacDonald, an attorney from Bonita Springs, Florida 2006 Tournament of Champions 2nd runner-up: $50,000. Season 22 4-time champion:...
Margaret Monroe, a junior from South Plainfield, New Jersey 2002 Teen Tournament quarterfinalist: $2,500. Margaret was 16 at the time...
Seth Disner, a senior from Los Angeles, California 2002 Teen Tournament 2nd runner-up: $28,900. Seth was 17 at the...
Susan Haarman, a sophomore at Marquette University from Louisville, Kentucky 2001 College Championship quarterfinalist: $2,500. Susan was 19 at the time...
Hill Harper, an author and actor from CSI: NY "As an award-winning author, he's written three New York Times best...
Erik Nelson, a grad student originally from Boston, Massachusetts 2009 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 25 4-time champion: $94,404 + $2,000.
Brad Selvig, a sophomore at Florida State from Jacksonville, Florida 2004 College Championship quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Dmitry Spivak, a junior from Northwestern University "The 11-year-old wasn't really kidding when he said he wanted to...
Eddie Timanus, a sports reporter from Arlington, Virginia "A 5-time champion, he went on to become a semifinalist in...
Naomi Senbet, an 11-year-old from Washington, D.C. "This sixth grader doesn't like to be late for anything; maybe...
Lindsey Bartlett, a junior from Winter Haven, Florida 2002 Teen Tournament semifinalist: $5,000. Lindsey was 16 at the time...
Blake Hernandez, a senior from Burke, Virginia 2002 Teen Tournament quarterfinalist: $2,500. Blake was 16 at the time...
Sam Weaver, a sophomore at Bradley University from Pleasanton, California 2001 College Championship quarterfinalist: $2,500. Sam was 20 at the time...
Matt Drury, a government analyst from New York, New York Season 26 1-time champion: $18,799 + $2,000. Matthew Drury - A...
Kate Waits, a law professor at the University of Tulsa from Tulsa, Oklahoma "A Harvard Law graduate when she competed in the 1988 Tournament...
Chuck Forrest, a lawyer and CEO from London, United Kingdom \"He became a winner of the second-ever Tournament of Champions in...
Lan Djang, a business analyst from Toronto, Canada 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Elite Eighteen (Round 2 winners) member:...
Ryan Moore, a partner in a start-up company from Venice, California 2001 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $5,000. Season 17 5-time champion: $39,800 + a Corvette.
Rick Knutsen, a musician and stay-at-home dad from Brooklyn, New York "A finalist in the 2001 Tournament of Champions, he's a musician...
Carson Kressley, a fashion maven from Queer Eye for the Straight Guy "This star of TV's Queer Eye for the Straight Guy says...
Larissa Kelly, a grad student from El Cerrito, California 2024 Jeopardy! Invitational Tournament semifinalist: $10,000. 2019 All-Star Games member of...
Justin Bernbach, a lobbyist from Brooklyn, New York 2010 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000. Season 25 7-time champion: $155,001...
Charlie Blatt, an 11-year-old from Scarsdale, New York "Besides cooking, working on the computer, and tap dancing, she likes...
Laura Ansley, a senior from Twinsburg, Ohio 2006 Teen Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000.
Matt Olson, a sophomore at Stanford University from Berkeley, California 2012 College Championship semifinalist: $10,000. 20 at the time of the...
Clarence Page, a journalist from The Chicago Tribune "His nationally syndicated column began as a local column for the...
Sebastian Johnson, a senior from Takoma Park, Maryland 2006 Teen Tournament wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Listed as "Sebi" on the...
Pranita Ramakrishnan, from Centreville, Virginia "Not only does this future neurologist enjoy swimming, drawing and spelling,...
Jim Scott, an attorney from Arlington, Virginia "He was a legal assistant living near D.C. when he won...
Carl Brandt, an investor originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 2009 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 25 4-time champion: $70,799 + $2,000.
Andrew Rostan, a writer and script reader originally from Boardman, Ohio 2007 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000 + the Jeopardy! DVD Home...
Will Schultz, a freshman from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 2007 College Championship semifinalist: $10,000. 19 at the time of the...
Doug Savant, an actor from Desperate Housewives "He plays Tom Scavo, the sometimes-befuddled husband of Felicity Huffman on...
Ryan Chaffee, a tutor from Los Angeles, California 2010 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 26 4-time champion: $91,900...
Grace Acton, from Harvard, Massachusetts "This competitive gymnast is hoping to score a perfect 10 for...
Vinita Kailasanath, a sophomore at Stanford University from Laurel, Maryland 2014 Battle of the Decades invitee: $5,000. 2005 Ultimate Tournament of...
Andy Kravis, a freshman from Farmington Hills, Michigan 2002 Teen Tournament wildcard semifinalist: $5,000. Andy was 13 at the...
Jaime Green, a sophomore at Brown University from Nanuet, New York 2001 College Championship quarterfinalist: $2,500. Jaime was 18 at the time...
Babu Srinivasan, a history professor at Prairie View A&M University from Houston, Texas "A five-time champion in 2001, he's now a history professor at...
Rick Knutsen, a musician from Brooklyn, New York 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $33,201. 2001 Tournament...
Pam Mueller, an entering law student originally from Chicago, Illinois \"Representing Loyola University, she won the College Championship in November, 2000....
Bernard Holloway, a junior from Mitchellville, Maryland 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 player: $5,000. 2002 Teen...
George Nelson, a senior from Montgomery, Alabama 2002 Teen Tournament 1st runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $29,497. George was...
Brett Dvorak, a junior at Indiana University from Granger, Indiana 2001 College Championship wildcard semifinalist: $5,000. Brett was 20 at the...
Leslie Shannon, a manager of a research lab from Sydney, Australia "A recent art history graduate when she became Jeopardy! champion in...
Terry Parker, a high school history teacher from Cutler Bay, Florida "Don't try to pin down this wrestling coach, history teacher, and...
Chris Miller, a retail specialist from Louisville, Kentucky 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Elite Eighteen (Round 2 winners) and...
Scott Renzoni, a bartender and actor from Burlington, Vermont 2004 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 20 4-time champion: $112,998 + $2,000.
Pam Mueller, a college student from Wilmette, Illinois 2024 Jeopardy! Invitational Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2019 All-Star Games member of...
Emily Karrs, a junior from Gibsonia, Pennsylvania 2002 Teen Tournament semifinalist: $5,000. Emily was 16 at the time...
Emily Heaney, a freelance costume designer from White Bear Lake, Minnesota Season 25 1-time champion: $2,200 + $1,000. Last name pronounced like...
Andy Yermack, a financial services compliance officer from East Rockaway, New York Season 20 player (2004-05-27).
John Krizel, a green community program coordinator from Beckley, West Virginia 2011 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 26 4-time champion: $105,204...
Alison Stone Roberg, an administrative assistant from Kansas City, Missouri Season 26 3-time champion: $85,102 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Celeste DiNucci, a recent graduate student from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 2024 Jeopardy! Invitational Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. 2014 Battle of the Decades...
Anderson Cooper, an anchor from CNN's Anderson Cooper 360° "As a baby, he was photographed by Diane Arbus of Harper's...
Gary Bechtold, a garage door company owner from St. Cloud, Minnesota Season 26 3-time champion: $42,001 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
Inta Antler, a retired computer programmer from Scarborough, Ontario, Canada Season 25 1-time champion: $12,700 + $2,000. Inta Antler - A...
David Rozenson, a lawyer from Newton, Massachusetts 2006 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 21 3-time champion: $76,000 + $1,000.
Chuck Todd, a journalist and chief White House correspondent from NBC News and Meet the Press "Chief White House correspondent and political director for NBC News, he...
Kara Spak, a newspaper reporter from Chicago, Illinois 2011 Tournament of Champions wildcard semifinalist: $10,000. Season 27 5-time champion:...
Andy Richter, an actor/comedian from The Tonight Show \"This multitalented actor/comedian is now back on the couch with Conan...
Julie Bowen, a TV and film actress from Boston Legal, Lost and Modern Family "For two seasons, she played attorney Denise Bauer in Boston Legal....
Kimberly Jantz, an attorney from Tulsa, Oklahoma Season 26 1-time champion: $22,200 + $2,000. Kimberly Jantz - an...
Matt DeTura, a recent law school graduate from Washington, D.C. Season 27 3-time champion: $61,601 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user name: MDT
Mandy Berry, an 11-year-old from Baltimore, Maryland "She wants to dedicate her life to helping animals by becoming...
Brooke Martin, an eleven-year-old from Galway, New York "It looks like smooth sailing for this marine biologist. From Galway,...
Meryl Federman, a senior from Livingston, New Jersey 2007 Teen Tournament Summer Games champion (semifinalist by wildcard): $75,000. 18...
Andrew Kreitz, a senior from Huntington Beach, California 2006 Teen Tournament 1st runner-up: $25,000.
Brenton Montie, a sixth grade social studies teacher from South Lyon, Michigan "He teaches at a school ranked in the top 5% in...
David Skaar, a research scientist from Raleigh, North Carolina Season 25 3-time champion: $102,000 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user...
Cliff Galiher, a sophomore from UCLA 2007 Tournament of Champions 2nd runner-up (semifinalist by wildcard): $50,000 +...
Cathy Lanctot, a law professor from Wilmington, Delaware 2007 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000 + the Jeopardy! DVD Home...
Doug Lach, a marketing manager from Columbus, Ohio "He was the biggest winner of the 1999-2000 season. A marketing...
Mitchell Vogel, from Madison, Wisconsin "This future governor of Wisconsin enjoys rollerblading, reading, and playing saxophone....
Neil Patrick Harris, an actor from How I Met Your Mother "He's received critical acclaim on Broadway and on TV, and his...
Vito Cortese, a software engineer and Italian translator from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Season 27 3-time champion: $68,485 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
Larry Cloud, a bookkeeper and computer consultant from Inglewood, California "He won five times in 2001, allowing him to make a...
Stephen Fritz, a sophomore from Lexington, Kentucky 2007 Teen Tournament 2nd runner-up: $25,460. 15 at the time of the Teen Tournament.
Aisha Tyler, an actress, comedian, author and reality-show host from Archer "In addition to film and TV roles, she performs comedy at...
Marissa Goldsmith, a web developer from Springfield, Virginia Season 27 3-time champion: $44,100 + $2,000. Jeopardy! Message Board user name: marteena
Steve Gratz, a freelance artist from Washington, D.C. Season 27 2-time champion: $30,999 + $1,000.
Nick Swezey, a publisher from Washington, D.C. 2007 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000 + the Jeopardy! DVD Home...
Steve Robin, a writer and producer from Miami, Florida "He finished second place in the 1991 Tournament of Champions. He's...
Ryan Elkins, a 12-year-old from Bensalem, Pennsylvania "He wants to study physics and unlock the mysteries of the...
Neha Embar, a 12-year-old from Alpharetta, Georgia "No kidding--she wants to be a pediatrician when she grows up....
Mollie Haycock, a senior from Rocklin, California 2008-A Teen Tournament quarterfinalist: $5,000. 17 at the time of the Teen Tournament.
Mary Ann Stanley, a high school chemistry and physical science teacher from Statesboro, Georgia "She's been teaching for 22 years and is now teaching the...
Katie Orphan, a freshman at Whitworth College from Reno, Nevada 2002 College Championship semifinalist: $5,000.
Paul Glaser, a research scientist from Albany, New York 2007 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000 + the Jeopardy! DVD Home...
Tom Morris, a substitute teacher and grad student from Irvine, California 2009 Tournament of Champions quarterfinalist: $5,000. Season 24 4-time champion: $100,801...
Catherine Carson, a fourth grade language arts, math, and social studies teacher from Washington, D.C. "She is new to teaching--she's in her second year. From Washington,...
Jill Bunzendahl Chimka, a speech and language pathologist from Washington, D.C. 2003 Tournament of Champions semifinalist: $10,000. Season 18 4-time champion: $85,099...
India Cooper, a copy editor from Madison, Indiana \"She was an actor and copy editor in New York City...
Katty Kay, a Washington, D.C. anchor from BBC World News America "She's the Washington, D.C. anchor for BBC World News America, as...
Emily Jusino, a Ph.D. candidate in Greek literature originally from Fredericksburg, Virginia Season 27 1-time champion: $18,801 + $1,000. Last name pronouned like "hoo-SEE-no".
Mike Marmesh, a veterinarian from Miami, Florida Season 26 1-time champion: $4,700 + $2,000. Last name pronounced like...
India Cooper, an actor and copy editor from New York, New York \"She became a 5-time champion in 1991. An actor and copy...
Katie Gill, a sophomore from Jackson, Mississippi 2008-A Teen Tournament semifinalist: $10,000. 15 at the time of the Teen Tournament.
Kyle Hale, a college student from Katy, Texas 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions Round 1 winner: $25,000. 2003 Tournament...
Sandra McClellan, a granny nanny from Arlington, Texas Season 27 1-time champion: $4,199 + $2,000.



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