Show #9175 - Friday, October 4, 2024

Ryan Manton game 5.

Contestants

[<< previous game]

Mark Fitzpatrick, a content manager from Riverside, Connecticut

Anne Singleton, an executive director from Williamstown, Massachusetts

Ryan Manton, a systems administrator from Columbus, Ohio (whose 4-day cash winnings total $83,179)

Jeopardy! Round

QUOTH THE WOMAN
CITIES ON THE RIVER
METONYMS
RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN
AN OCEAN OF LOTION
BOOKS REVAMPED
    $200 17
With pride, she said, "The Montgomery boycott became the model for human rights throughout the world"
    $200 15
Rotterdam & Düsseldorf
    $200 26
Metonymy replaces a concept with a word associated with it, like using this TV title headwear to mean "queen"
    $200 2
Richard Rodgers & Oscar Hammerstein attended this NYC university where they both worked on 1920s varsity shows, vo-de-oh-do
    $200 30
The isopropyl type of this is used in aftershave & hand lotions
    $200 6
In "The Weight of Blood", which reimagines this Stephen King tale, there's also a prom & revenge
    $400 18
Malala Yousafzai: "I don't want to be thought of as 'the girl who was shot by"' this group "but 'the girl who fought for education"'
    $400 14
Juárez & Albuquerque
    $400 25
This 2-word thoroughfare traditionally reps regular ol' middle class folks
    $400 8
The only musical the pair wrote for TV was a 1957 live production of this fairy tale starring Julie Andrews & Jon Cypher as the prince
    $400 29
Sounding like a bullfighting cry, this company's super serum offers "visibly smoother lines"
    $400 5
Found dead in a floating frame house, this character's infamous dad Pap was reimagined in a Jon Clinch novel
    $600 19
"I'm not offended at all by the blonde jokes", said Dolly Parton; "I know I'm not dumb... & I also know that" this 3-word punchline
    $600 13
Iquitos & Macapá
    $600 24
An entree may metonymically become what it's served on, as in "revenge is" this "best served cold"
    $600 9
Their last written song was this one from "The Sound of Music" in which Baron von Trapp sings, "bless my homeland forever"
    $600 28
The Coasters song "Poison Ivy" says, "You're gonna need an ocean" of this pink lotion, "You'll be scratchin' like a hound"
    $600 4
In John Gardner's "Grendel", the title beastie thinks he sees this warrior sprout wings
    DD: $2,400 20
A retort from her was "You want me to tell you what my husband thinks? My husband is not the secretary of state"
    $800 12
Manchester & Liverpool
    $800 23
Proverbially, "you can't fight" it, it being a metonym for local government
    $800 10
Rodgers & Hammerstein won a Pulitzer Prize for this 1949 musical that starred Mary Martin as Nellie Forbush
    $800 27
Obtained from beans, this fat that's used to make chocolate is also used in a Nivea body lotion
    $800 3
Neil Gaiman's "The Graveyard Book", about a boy raised by ghosts, was inspired by this Kipling work with a similar theme
    $1000 21
"You can lead a horticulture but you can't make her think" is one of her snappy lines
    $1000 11
Nanjing & Shanghai
    $1000 22
This expression meaning that the written word will defeat attempts to suppress it contains 2 metonyms
    $1000 16
Before teaming with Hammerstein, Rodgers wrote with this lyricist on such hits as "Blue Moon" & "My Funny Valentine"
    $1000 7
"E" is for this type of chemical additive found in lotions that helps with suspension of one liquid in another
    $1000 1
"Demon Copperhead" has a villain named U-Haul standing in for this "David Copperfield" bad guy who has the initials U.H.

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

Ryan Anne Mark
$2,400 $2,800 $1,800

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Ryan Anne Mark
$4,000 $7,000 $1,800

Double Jeopardy! Round

THE BRITISH MONARCH WHEN HE BECAME PRESIDENT
ON "FOOT"
HISTORIC BOOKS OF SCIENCE
U.S. MUSEUMS
TALL TALES
MOVIES VAMPED
    $400 24
Ulysses S. Grant
    $400 10
A cryptid is a creature not proven to actually exist, like this one of western North America
    $400 30
Robert Hooke devised a compound one of these that helped him look at his subjects for his 1665 book "Micrographia"
    $400 4
You can learn all about this company & even do some tastings at its museum on Chocolate Avenue in Pennsylvania
    $400 27
Powerful steel worker Joe Magarac bent that alloy with his bare hands in tales from this city, the Paris of Appalachia
    $400 28
As the title character in this film, Wesley Snipes' character rescues Karen Jenson, a hematologist
    $800 11
George Washington
    $800 9
A habitual hurrier in a hot rod
    $800 29
His 1632 "Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems" got him in hot water
    $800 21
Boarding his Air Force One plane is a highlight of his library & museum in Simi Valley, California
    $800 20
In an original tall tale by Pat Mora, Doña Flor is a southwestern giant who makes these baked items that can be used as rafts
    $800 17
Other famous roles in this spoofy 2012 flick include Harriet Tubman, Jefferson Davis &, of course, Mary Todd
    $1200 3
JFK
    $1200 7
A greenhorn or a Boy Scout of the lowest rank
    $1200 26
Perhaps a question for his theoretical cat, "What Is Life?" by this physicist inspired Watson & Crick in their DNA research
    DD: $3,000 12
Her story is told in 9 galleries through photos, drawings, paintings & personal possessions at her museum in downtown Santa Fe
    DD: $5,000 13
Able to produce enough dairy products for an entire logging camp, Bessie the Yeller Cow was the mate of this other colossus
    $1200 14
Kiefer Sutherland had to deal with meddling kids, including 2 Coreys, in this 1987 thriller
    $1600 2
Harry Truman
    $1600 6
To avoid doing or saying anything because of nervousness
    $1600 5
After "The Selfish Gene", this British atheist evolved enough to publish "Unweaving the Rainbow"
    $1600 22
At Hawaii's Bishop Museum, you can see the still vivid yellow feathered cloak of this great warrior king
    $1600 19
Mose the fireman once extinguished a raging NYC fire by tunneling to New Jersey & using this water source to douse the flames
    $1600 15
This "Game of Thrones" actress accepted "The Invitation" in 2022 & found her new family as kind of batty
    $2000 1
Theodore Roosevelt
    $2000 8
75,000 casualties among World War I British forces were attributed to this hitherto unknown condition
    $2000 25
Outlining some of his philosophical ideas, this German mathematician & rival of Newton published "Discourse on Metaphysics"
    $2000 23
In 2023 the National Museum of African American History & Culture acquired a major collection relating to this 18th c. female poet
    $2000 18
This African-American railroad man raced & defeated a steam drill in a contest, but died with his hammer in his hand
    $2000 16
In a 2004 film Hugh Jackman played the title vampire hunter with this last name; he headed to Transylvania

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Ryan Anne Mark
$15,200 $10,200 $23,400

[wagering suggestions for these scores]

Final Jeopardy! Round

LITERARY CHARACTERS
A fragment from a nautical tool found on a Chilean island in 2005 was likely left by the Scot who partly inspired this character

Final scores:

Ryan Anne Mark
$9,999 $5,000 $30,401
2nd place: $3,000 3rd place: $2,000 New champion: $30,401

Game dynamics:

Game dynamics graph

Coryat scores:

Ryan Anne Mark
$15,200 $10,200 $20,200
20 R,
0 W
13 R,
1 W
22 R
(including 2 DDs),
4 W
(including 1 DD)

Combined Coryat: $45,600

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

Game tape date: 2024-06-04
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.