Show #8504 - Thursday, November 4, 2021

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Sri Kompella, a corporate strategy professional from Frisco, Texas

Cindy Zhang, a user experience designer from New York, New York

Tony Freitas, a project director from Los Angeles, California (whose 1-day cash winnings total $16,200)

[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

PRIME NUMBER, PLEASE
19th CENTURY AFRICAN AMERICANS
INSTITUTIONS
REGULAR VERBS
ZOMBIETHON
CHARTED
    $200 24
Like Rome, Edinburgh & Istanbul are known as cities of this many hills
    $200 25
When Victoria Woodhull ran for president in 1872, she chose as her running mate this famed orator & activist
    $200 26
In 1985 a team from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution found this vessel more than 12,000 feet underwater
    $200 29
I'm here to certify
it means to versify
    $200 30
In 1998 this animated Great Dane & the gang explored new mysteries "on Zombie Island"
    $200 28
In the 1760s this pair worked to delineate a territorial boundary between Maryland & Pennsylvania
    $400 2
Idiomatically, it precedes "skidoo"
    $400 5
In 1870, Hiram Revels was elected to the United States Senate from this state once represented by Jefferson Davis
    $400 1
A prestigious think tank, the Brookings Institution is headquartered in this city
    $400 10
To cut a material to form something; you can do it to ski turns, meat & statues
    $400 27
"Train to Busan" is set in this Asian country during a zombie outbreak there
    DD: $3,000 12
Scientists created the map seen here showing Challenger Deep in this deepest part of the Pacific
    $600 3
The OED found the University of Buffalo was the first to use this number denoting an introductory course, in 1929
    $600 6
In 1870 Robert Fox' treatment on a segregated streetcar sparked protests & a boycott in this largest Kentucky city
    $600 9
Raffles Institution is a co-educational school established back in 1823 in this city-state
    $600 20
To beat with a strap, or what a party leader does to get votes lined up in Congress
    $600 11
Glenn & Maggie were just a young couple trying to make it work in a zombie-filled world on this TV series
    $600 13
In the 1840s this Army surveyor & future Republican presidential candidate mapped much of the American West
    $800 4
These are the 3 prime numbers in the 40s
    $800 7
In 1898 Black troops known as Buffalo Soldiers fought alongside the Rough Riders during the battle of this hill
    $800 19
If you want to learn German, maybe your town has a branch of this institute founded in 1951 & named for a famous writer
    $800 21
This mild word that can follow goal- & bar-means to offer formally for acceptance, like with a resignation
    $800 16
In "Zombieland" he starred as himself & when asked if he had any regrets, said, "'Garfield,' maybe"
    $800 14
Louis de Freycinet mapped much of this large Australian island due south of Melbourne
    $1000 23
The treaties formally ending the American Revolution were signed in this year
    $1000 8
In 2020, this journalist seen here was posthumously awarded a Pulitzer citation for reporting on the era of lynching
    $1000 18
Rice University's Institute for Public Policy bears the name of this man who was George H.W. Bush's Secretary of State
    $1000 22
From the Latin for "price", it's what your new car's value does shortly after you drive off the lot
    $1000 17
Seth Grahame-Smith wrote this send-up of Jane Austen
    $1000 15
His 16th c. charts made longitude lines straight instead of curving to the poles; easier for navigators, but distorts distances

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

Tony Cindy Sri
$3,200 $7,400 $1,400

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Tony Cindy Sri
$5,000 $8,200 $1,000

Double Jeopardy! Round

THAT'S OUR FACTORY
EPONYMOUS -ISMs
OLD LITERATURE
"ANTI" UP
DARK MATTER
RE-CHARTED
    $400 28
It wasn't until after his 479 B.C. death that the "ism" named for him became China's leading philosophy
    $400 27
Epinician odes, from the word Nike, include a series about this event, such as ones praising the boxer Diagoras
    $400 26
In Italian cuisine, it's cold food you eat at the start of a meal
    $400 25
In the Harry Potter books, he's the dark lord
    $400 29
Come on, baby, & name this man seen here who had a No. 1 hit with "The Twist" in 1960 & again in 1962
    $800 24
The Ocotillo campus making semiconductors in Chandler, Arizona
    DD: $5,000 23
A 1950 L.A. Times column said the "defect of" this seemed to be the senator for whom it was named
    $800 5
The Panchatantra animal fables were written in this ancient language of India & used to teach princes
    $800 12
Carly Simon had a hit song about this feeling of excitement
    $800 8
Traditionally the black keys on a piano are made of this hard dark wood
    $800 17
Of course this novelty hit by Bobby "Boris" Pickett was a hit for Halloween 1962, but why did it chart again in the summer of 1973?
    $1200 20
This beauty company whose name partly means "gold": the Lassigny plant north of Paris
    $1200 21
Strong nationalism & anti-labor policies were elements of this, named for a 1980s U.K. prime minister
    $1200 2
This hero of Virgil's famous work escapes with a handful of survivors after the fall of Troy
    $1200 13
It's the type of missile used against missiles in flight
    DD: $4,000 7
This 14th century poet who gave his name to a type of sonnet is often credited with the term the Dark Ages
    $1200 16
Aerosmith did indeed "sing for the years" with this song, re-charting in 1976 when it hit No. 6; it charted again in 2018
    $1600 9
A "New" factory of the future in Massachusetts for its made-in-the-USA sneakers
    $1600 1
The philosophical & political "ism" named for this 15th & 16th century man reflects his characteristic unscrupulousness
    $1600 6
Spell 125 in this collection of funerary texts involves Anubis weighing the deceased's heart in the hall of truth
    $1600 3
It's one who studies ancient relics, or a type of bookstore dealing in old & rare volumes
    $1600 4
You get a "B" if you know it's the most common volcanic rock in the Earth's crust
    $1600 15
Seen here, this man had a hit twice with "Stand By Me", his signature song
    $2000 19
The Akashi motorcycle plant, not far from the Good Times World Corporate Museum
    $2000 22
A controversial 18th century German physician created this early form of hypnotism
    $2000 10
In an ancient Mesopotamian epic, this king of Rruk meets the goddess Ishtar
    $2000 11
Term for two points on Earth such as the poles or such as Spain & New Zealand
    $2000 14
In the early 1800s Joseph Niépce created some of the first photos using one of these, Latin for "dark chamber"
    $2000 18
One of the many Prince songs that re-charted after his 2016 death was this opening track of "Purple Rain"

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Tony Cindy Sri
$7,800 $16,200 $16,400

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

OFFICIAL LANGUAGES
It's the only U.N. member state outside Europe with Dutch as an official language

Final scores:

Tony Cindy Sri
$300 $16,600 $30,000
3rd place: $1,000 2nd place: $2,000 New champion: $30,000

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Tony Cindy Sri
$11,800 $13,600 $12,200
15 R,
3 W
(including 1 DD)
21 R
(including 1 DD),
2 W
14 R
(including 1 DD),
2 W

Combined Coryat: $37,600

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

Game tape date: 2021-09-24
The J! Archive is created by fans, for fans. Scraping, republication, monetization, and malicious use prohibited; this site may use cookies and collect identifying information. See terms. The Jeopardy! game show and all elements thereof, including but not limited to copyright and trademark thereto, are the property of Jeopardy Productions, Inc. and are protected under law. This website is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or operated by Jeopardy Productions, Inc. Join the discussion at JBoard.tv.