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Jeopardy! - Season Episode 130 -Richard Nguyen, Robyn Masella, Ben Crockett engsub fullmovie🍿 Secret Engagement
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00:03From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:16Let's meet today's contestants.
00:19A director of data analytics originally from Laurel, Washington, Ben Crockett.
00:25A victim advocate from Porvalis, Oregon, Robin Masella.
00:30And our returning champion, a research attorney from Placentia, California, Richard Nguyen,
00:37whose one-day cash winnings totaled $20,801.
00:44And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:50Thank you, everyone. Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
00:53And welcome to Jeopardy! where yesterday we witnessed the defeat of a super champion
00:57as Richard Nguyen here came from behind to defeat 12-game winner Adam Remsen.
01:02After the game, when I asked Richard about his correct response in Final Jeopardy! about the novel Exodus,
01:06he credited his dad, who owned a VHS tape of Exodus when Richard was little.
01:11You never know when childhood memory will come into play here on the Alex Rebeck stage,
01:14but I assume that's an even happier memory for you now, Richard.
01:17Made you a Jeopardy! champ, and you're back today to defend against Robin and Ben.
01:21Good luck to all three of you.
01:22Think about your childhood VHS tapes, and we'll move into the Jeopardy! round with these categories.
01:28We have first an operatic demise, followed by internal rhyme words, then defense.
01:36Defense, you name the sport.
01:38After that, ends in Z.
01:41Then we have money, and doesn't grow on trees.
01:45Richard is the champ now, you go first.
01:47Defense, 600.
01:49Stuff block, digging, and pancake.
01:52A flat hand sliding palm down on the floor in a last-ditch effort to make a play.
01:57Richard.
01:57What is volleyball?
01:58That's the sport.
01:59Defense, 800.
02:01Flat back four and park the bus, as directed by Nick Muhammad on a certain TV show.
02:07Ben.
02:07What is Ted Lasso?
02:08No.
02:09Richard.
02:10What is soccer?
02:11Ted Lasso's the show, but we needed the sport, yes.
02:13Defense, 1,000.
02:15Total chances and the wheel play, which is a chancy move, but looks amazing when executed correctly.
02:21Richard.
02:21What is baseball?
02:22Another thousand for you.
02:24Money, 600.
02:25New Zealand's $5 banknote features Aoraki, the nation's highest peak, next to this native
02:31son who first climbed Aoraki in 1948.
02:34Richard.
02:35Who is Everest?
02:36No.
02:37Robin.
02:38Who is Hillary?
02:38Hillary climbed Everest, that's right.
02:40Internal rhyme words for 600.
02:42In a classic Twilight Zone episode, the extraterrestrial tome to serve man is actually one of these.
02:48Yikes.
02:49Richard.
02:50What is a cookbook?
02:51It's a cookbook.
02:52You got it.
02:52Internal rhyme words, 800.
02:54It sounds like it involves yelling, but it's actually public praise or acknowledgement,
02:59maybe while accepting an award.
03:01Richard.
03:02What is a shout out?
03:03You got there, yes.
03:04Internal rhyme words, 1,000.
03:06A wild miss from a pistol or a hurtful comment made it random.
03:11Robin.
03:13Sorry.
03:14Doesn't have it.
03:16Richard or Ben?
03:17What is a pot shot?
03:19Back to Richard.
03:20Money, 800.
03:21Switzerland uses this unit, and its notes illustrate Swiss qualities like organizational talent.
03:27Richard.
03:28What is the franc?
03:29Swiss franc is right.
03:30Money, 1,000.
03:31This country's 200 peso note honors the martyred Mirabal sisters, who led a resistance movement
03:37against dictator Rafael Trujillo.
03:41In the Dominican Republic.
03:43Back to Richard.
03:44Doesn't grow on trees, 600.
03:46Unlike the eggs made the same way, this is an elegant dessert rather than a breakfast item.
03:52Robin.
03:52What is poached pear?
03:55That's right.
03:55Pears grow on trees, but poached pears do not.
03:58Doesn't grow on trees for eight.
04:00Thanks to marketing whiz Ed Gelsthorpe, Ocean Spray introduced this, its first blended juice
04:05product in 1964.
04:07Richard.
04:08What is V8?
04:09No.
04:09Robin.
04:10What is cranberry apple?
04:11No.
04:15The name of the product is cran apple.
04:17So close, Robin.
04:18Back to you.
04:19Enzin Z for 600.
04:21Amethyst is a purple variety of this.
04:24Richard.
04:25What is topaz?
04:26No.
04:27Ben.
04:27What is quartz?
04:28Correct.
04:29Enzin Z 800.
04:31With more than 2,500 residents, Givat Brenner is one of the largest of this type of Israeli
04:36collective community.
04:37Richard.
04:38What is a kibitz?
04:39Correct.
04:40Enzin Z 1000.
04:42On its return from space, this Russian craft makes a hard landing somewhere on the steps
04:46of Kazakhstan.
04:48Ben.
04:48What is Soyuz?
04:49Yes.
04:49Pulling you out of the hole.
04:50Operatic demise, 600.
04:53Dialogue des Carmelites is set during the French Revolution, so the title nuns climb its
04:58scaffold to face their deaths.
04:59Richard.
05:00What is a guillotine?
05:01Nuns getting guillotined.
05:03That's correct.
05:04You've got to love opera.
05:04You're in the lead with $4,000, Richard.
05:06And we've come to our first break.
05:08Jeopardy will continue in a moment.
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05:36Ben Crockett is the director of data analytics, originally from Laurel, Washington.
05:40Tell me about the program you wrote that's relevant to my life in Seattle, Ben.
05:44I was very interested in how King County Metro, the local bus system in Seattle, would issue
05:49its old paper transfers, which, as you may know, used to have a color and a letter on
05:54it.
05:55Okay.
05:55It was from a finite pool, so there were only so many possible combinations
05:58of tickets there could be.
05:59So I wrote a program, which I actually used for my master's degree.
06:03To solve this urgent problem.
06:04To look at historical data and try to predict future transfers.
06:07And did it work?
06:08No.
06:09Okay.
06:09Well, after all that buildup, Ben, maybe I will not be using your program.
06:12But welcome to Jeopardy!
06:14Robin Macella from Corvallis, Oregon, is a victim advocate and a musician.
06:18I want to hear about your hockey career here.
06:19A poor musician.
06:20When I was in college, my roommate and all of my friends were in the marching band, so
06:25I decided I would also learn an instrument to join the pep band and go to all of the
06:30hockey games that I could stomach.
06:31So I learned the malaphone.
06:33I am no Mozart, but I did get to play my malaphone at Madison Square Garden and also in the
06:39snow
06:39at Fenway Park.
06:40In the snow at Fenway?
06:41Yes.
06:41Not a lot of snowy Fenway events.
06:43Very exciting.
06:44Our returning champion is Richard Nguyen from Placentia, California, a research attorney
06:48with an unusual childhood nickname.
06:50What did they call you on the streets, Richard?
06:52When I was about eight or nine, I used to have a phase when I was carrying Tic Tacs all
06:57the time.
06:58Okay.
06:58So I would be rattling in my pockets, and that's how I got the name Tic Tac.
07:01Do they still call you Tic Tac?
07:03Absolutely not.
07:04And they can't hear you coming.
07:06Now you're stealthy.
07:07You also have control of the board.
07:09Tic Tac, go ahead and select for us.
07:12Operatic demise, 800.
07:13Answer.
07:14A daily double.
07:15Look at that.
07:19Are you a fan of opera, Richard?
07:21What do you want to wager?
07:23I'm not really a fan of opera, but let's wager 3,000.
07:26Okay.
07:26Almost everything at stake.
07:277,000 if you're right in an operatic demise.
07:31In a Verdi opera, Radames is condemned to be buried alive, and this heroine joins him
07:36in the tomb.
07:38Who is Aida?
07:39Aida is correct.
07:41Maybe you do like opera.
07:423,000 more for you.
07:44Defense, 400.
07:46Nickel and dime packages, which are totally legal, man.
07:50Richard?
07:50What is football?
07:51That's the sport.
07:52Doesn't grow on trees, 1,000.
07:55The ghost of Christmas present shows Scrooge a feast, including this.
07:58More like a cake than something you spoon up.
08:01Robin?
08:02What is figgy pudding?
08:03No.
08:04Richard or Ben?
08:07Close again, Robin, but it's plum pudding.
08:09Back to Richard.
08:11Defense, 200.
08:12Box in one and 113 zone.
08:15An 8'6 wingspan also helps.
08:17Richard?
08:18What is basketball?
08:19Yes.
08:19Manute Bull with the 8'6 wingspan.
08:22Ensign Z, 400.
08:23Wynton Marsalis describes this style of music as freedom of expression with a groove.
08:28Ben?
08:29What is jazz?
08:30Right.
08:30Operatic demise, 1,000.
08:32Well, that took a turn.
08:34La commedia è finita, indeed, when Canio stabs his wife Netta and her lover Silvio in this opera.
08:40Ben?
08:41What is Pagliacci?
08:42You add 1,000.
08:43Operatic demise, 400.
08:44The title libertine of this Mozart opera gets dragged to hell to be punished for his villainous deeds.
08:50Richard?
08:50Who is Don Giovanni?
08:51Yes.
08:52Money, 400.
08:54After a treasury official put himself on a five-cent bill, outcry led to a new 1866 rule.
09:00To be on U.S. money, you had to be this.
09:02Ben?
09:03What is a president?
09:04No.
09:05Robin?
09:05What is dead?
09:06You had to be dead.
09:07Well done.
09:07Ensign Z for 200.
09:09For Valentine's Day 2026, an exclusive alien one of these candy dispensers was introduced.
09:15Robin?
09:16What is a Pez dispenser?
09:17Correct.
09:18Doesn't grow on trees for 400.
09:20In 1987, chef Andy Kau invented it at a Panda Express location in Hawaii.
09:25Robin?
09:26What is orange chicken?
09:27Their famous orange chicken is right.
09:28Internal rhyme words for 400.
09:31It's the term for a low-altitude pass at an air show.
09:35Ben?
09:35What is a flyby?
09:36Good.
09:37Internal rhyme, 200.
09:39Vantayan is the French name of this game.
09:41Robin?
09:42What is crazy eights?
09:44No.
09:45Richard or Ben?
09:48Vantayan, 21.
09:49We call it blackjack.
09:50Three clues left, Ben.
09:52Operatic demise, 200.
09:54Don't sing opera in the Alps.
09:56In Catalani's La Valle, Agenbach does, triggering one of these disasters, killing him.
10:02Richard?
10:02What is an avalanche?
10:03Yes.
10:04Finnish money.
10:04This future queen was just an eight-year-old princess in 1935 when Canada became the first
10:10country to feature her on its currency.
10:12Richard?
10:13Who is Queen Elizabeth II?
10:15That is correct.
10:16And the final clue doesn't grow on trees.
10:17This seven-letter beverage is a great ingredient in a pitcher of margaritas.
10:22Robin?
10:23What is limeade?
10:23It is limeade, yes.
10:25That takes you back very close to the starting line.
10:27You'll be selecting first when we come back.
10:29Double Jeopardy, up next.
10:33Pose captioning sponsored in part by...
10:35Eggs make all our family moments better, especially when they're Eggland's best.
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10:51Give your dog the real ingredients in Blue Buffalo Treats.
10:56Richard had such a strong Jeopardy! round, but this is the round where Robin and Ben can
11:00make a move.
11:01Lots of cash on the board.
11:02These categories for you.
11:04We have epistolary novels first, then word origins, a category about science, followed
11:11by film and TV cameos, then we head to Central America, and finally, boxes full of boxes.
11:19Robin?
11:20Let's try film and TV cameos for 12.
11:22This game show hosts New York Times obituary called his butt-whipping cameo in Happy Gilmore
11:27his most memorable film appearance.
11:30Richard, who is Barker.
11:31Yes, the price is wrong.
11:33Film and TV cameos, $1,600.
11:35In the film version of 21 Jump Street, Peter DeLuise and this other star of the TV series
11:40make brief cameos and are promptly killed off.
11:46Small appearance by Johnny Depp.
11:48Back to you, Richard.
11:49Science, $1,600.
11:51Rocks frozen into a glacier's body carve these parallel grooves as the glacier makes its
11:56slow journey.
11:57Richard?
11:58What is, uh, moraine?
12:00No.
12:01Robin or Ben?
12:03They're called striations, and we go back to Richard.
12:05Science, $1,200.
12:07Y-type brown dwarfs are cool enough to theoretically touch, as this sun-powering process isn't happening
12:13in their cores.
12:14Ben?
12:15What is fusion?
12:15Yes.
12:16Word origin, $1,200.
12:18It's from Spanish for wine shop.
12:20You can stop by one in New York City and pick up some vino, and a bacon, egg, and cheese
12:24sandwich,
12:25a lottery ticket.
12:26Robin?
12:27What is a bodega?
12:27At the bodega.
12:28Yes, you're out of the hole.
12:29Uh, word origins for $16.
12:30Answer.
12:31A daily double for you.
12:33To celebrate your new positive score, here's a daily double.
12:37You can bet up to $2,000.
12:39Robin?
12:39Um, let's bet $2,000.
12:41Why not?
12:42You'll have $2,600 if you're correct.
12:44A clue for you now in word origins.
12:47This word first appeared on 16th century Dutch maps as the name of a whirlpool in the Arctic
12:53Ocean.
12:58What is Bermuda?
13:01I'm afraid not.
13:02What is maelstrom?
13:03Where are we getting maelstrom?
13:04So you have a little bit of work to do now?
13:06Select again, Robin.
13:07Uh, cameos for $2,000.
13:09Answer.
13:10The other daily double.
13:12You found them back to back.
13:14Now, maelstroms weren't your thing, but it seemed like you liked this film in TV cameos.
13:19We'll go for $2,000.
13:21Going to try it again.
13:21For $2,000, here's your clue.
13:23Let's run this back.
13:25Martin Scorsese directed this De Niro film and makes a creepy cameo as a disturbed passenger
13:31plotting to harm his wife.
13:35What is Throw Mama from the Train?
13:38No, I'm afraid not.
13:39He's a passenger in a cab in Taxi Driver.
13:41All right, so you dropped $2,000 again, but no more daily doubles, Robin, so start building.
13:46Central America for $1,200.
13:48In 1979, decades of dictatorship by Nicaragua's Somoza family ended with a revolution led by
13:54this rebel coalition.
13:55Richard.
13:56Who are the Sandinistas?
13:57Yes.
13:58Boxes full of boxes, $1,600.
14:00The box variety of this sea creature has a deadly venom that can cause heart failure in humans.
14:06Richard.
14:06What is a jellyfish?
14:07Box jellyfish is right.
14:09Boxes full of boxes, $2,000.
14:11The name of this box, in which a single meal is usually served, is Japanese for lunch package.
14:17Richard.
14:17What is bento?
14:18That's the right box.
14:19Central America, $2,000.
14:22Over 85% of El Salvador's population belongs to this ethnic group, defined as having a mix
14:27of European and indigenous ancestry.
14:29Richard.
14:30What is mestizo?
14:31You add $2,000 more.
14:32Science, $2,000.
14:34Richard Evans Schultes, father of ethnobotany, showed that this poison on arrows in the Amazon
14:39came from plants of the genus Strychnose.
14:42Ben.
14:44What is strychnine?
14:45No.
14:46Richard or Robin?
14:49What is curare?
14:50Back to Richard.
14:51World Origins, 2000.
14:53This parchment that has writing removed to make room for new writing is from ancient Greek
14:58for scraped again.
14:59Richard.
15:00What is vellum?
15:01No.
15:02Robin or Ben?
15:05That word is palimpsest.
15:07Richard.
15:08Epistolary novels, 1,200.
15:10A senior devil writes to a junior one in this Christian author's The Screwtape Letters.
15:15Richard.
15:16Who is C.S. Lewis?
15:17Good.
15:18Epistolary novels, 1,600.
15:20One of the many letters in Dracula is credited to this man.
15:23M.D., D.P.H., D.L.I.T., etc., etc.
15:27Richard.
15:27Who is Van Helsing?
15:28Dr. Van Helsing, yes.
15:30Epistolary novels, 2,000.
15:32The title character and letter writer of this 1964 novel by Saul Bellow is a professor of
15:37English, not a German film director.
15:43Not a German film director, but his name is still Herzog.
15:46Back to you, Richard.
15:47Central America, 1600.
15:49This disputed strip of land on the Caribbean Sea was a British protectorate until 1860,
15:54when it was ceded to Nicaragua.
15:59What is the Mosquito Coast?
16:00Richard, select.
16:01Boxes full of boxes, 1,200.
16:03This Nirvana song begins,
16:05She eyes me like a Pisces when I am weak.
16:09Ben.
16:09What is Heart-Shaped Box?
16:10You got it.
16:11Word Origins, 800.
16:13These billowing pantaloons were named after a U.S. feminist who helped popularize the flowery
16:18fashion.
16:19Robin.
16:19What are bloomers?
16:20Correct.
16:21Novels for 800.
16:22This noble wrote the racy epistolary novel Aline and Valcour while imprisoned in the Bastille.
16:28Richard.
16:29Who is the Marquis de Sade?
16:30You got it.
16:31Science, 800.
16:32Brits save this band for rubber band.
16:35It's also the type of deformation a rubber band undergoes, meaning it regains its shape.
16:39Robin.
16:40What is stretch?
16:41No.
16:42Richard or Ben?
16:44They call them elastic bands.
16:47Back to Richard.
16:48Film and TV cameos, 800.
16:50Michelle Obama shouted out military families in a cameo on this Nickelodeon series starring
16:55Miranda Cosgrove as an Air Force brat.
16:57Robin.
16:57What is iCarly?
16:58That's the show.
16:59Central America for eight.
17:01El Castillo is the dominant structure at Xunantunich, a site in Belize featuring ruins of this civilization.
17:07Ben.
17:08What is Mayan?
17:09Correct.
17:10Boxes, 800.
17:11A box, one of these is handy in the kitchen.
17:14Besides shredding cheese, it may have a side for zesting.
17:17Robin.
17:17What is the box grater?
17:18Right.
17:19Cameos for four.
17:20Ed Sheeran referred to King's Landing as the worst place in the world in his 2017 cameo on this TV
17:26series.
17:27Richard.
17:27What is Game of Thrones?
17:28Yes.
17:29Central America, 400.
17:31This country adopted the U.S. dollar as its paper currency in 1904, as a certain construction project was picking
17:37up steam.
17:38Ben.
17:39What is Panama?
17:39Right.
17:40Boxes, 400.
17:42Aviation pioneer Lawrence Hargrave invented the box type of these.
17:45He got a string of four to fly up about 16 feet.
17:48Richard.
17:49What is a kite?
17:50Box kite is correct.
17:51Science, 400.
17:52A study out in 2024 profiled a cell from 4.2 billion B.C. called the Luka, the last universal
17:59common this of all living things.
18:02Robin.
18:02What is ancestor?
18:03Correct.
18:04Word origins for four.
18:05From a Bantu word for ghost, it's a reanimated dead person, especially a malevolent one.
18:11Richard.
18:11What is a zombie?
18:12That's correct.
18:13And we have one more epistolary novel.
18:16Rousseau's 1761 Julie was subtitled The New This 12th Century Nun and Lover of Abelard.
18:22Sounds like bad news for Julie.
18:24Richard.
18:25Who's Heloise.
18:26Abelard and Heloise.
18:27Yes, you finished with 18,000.
18:28Robin, you fought bravely after the Daily Doubles, but you couldn't quite make it back.
18:31Thank you for joining us today.
18:33You'll finish in third.
18:34Richard and Ben, here's your final Jeopardy! category.
18:37Names in entertainment.
18:38Doesn't tell us much.
18:40We'll find out more after the break.
18:44The wagers are in, and today's final Jeopardy! category is names in entertainment.
18:49Let's show these two the clue.
18:52Among his numerous accolades are three Tonys, three Emmys, five Grammys, and a 2016 Pulitzer Prize.
18:5930 seconds starting now, players.
19:00Good luck.
19:05Good luck.
19:31We'll begin with Ben Crockett, who had $3,800 to play with in Final Jeopardy.
19:36He wrote down who is Lin-Manuel Miranda, and that is correct.
19:412016 was the year of Hamilton, so you'll be adding to that, Ben.
19:44You wagered $2,200, taking you to a nice even $6,000.
19:48Richard Nguyen, though, had $18,000.
19:50Hard to catch today.
19:51Will he be adding to it?
19:52Does he have Lin-Manuel?
19:54No, he was going to start something else.
19:56He wagered just $2,000.
19:58That drops him down to $16,000.
20:00And it makes him today's Jeopardy! champion for a second time in a row.
20:03A total now of $36,801.
20:07Congratulations, Tic Tac.
20:10We'll see you back here on the Alex for Next Stage tomorrow.
20:12Thanks for joining us.
20:34Today we'll be back here.
20:36Today we'll see you back here on the Alex.
20:37We'll be back tomorrow.
20:38второй
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