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Jeopardy! - Season Episode 114 engsubtitle fullepisode🔥🍿❤️
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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:13Please welcome today's contestants.
00:17A software engineer from Jersey City, New Jersey, Dan Lane.
00:21A VP of Regulatory Reporting from Woodside, New York, Wilson Lee.
00:26And our returning champion, an energy industry professional from Corona, California, Peter McFerrin,
00:34whose six-day cash winnings total $147,399.
00:42And now, here is the host of Jeopardy! Ken Jennings.
00:48Thank you so much, Johnny. Welcome to Jeopardy!
00:51Following his sixth win yesterday, I asked our champion, Peter McFerrin,
00:55if the $147,399 he's won so far would take care of that McFerrin family debt that he said he
01:02wanted to pay off.
01:03Peter's response? Boy, howdy! Which I assume is a yes.
01:07Peter can add to the pot again today, but to do that, he'll have to get through Wilson and Dan,
01:11who I think would like to start a little Jeopardy! champion fund of their own, right?
01:15I wish you all good luck. Let's get right into the game.
01:17The categories we have for you in the first round will be, first, good and bad dads in history.
01:24Then, say the celebs name right.
01:27We have on the green, magazines by recurring feature, words from TV,
01:34and finally, the wonder twins activate.
01:38Actually, these are not even siblings in this category, just partners in invention.
01:42Peter, you're up first.
01:43All right, let's do wonder twins six.
01:45In the early 20th century, psychologists Binet and Simone developed the granddaddy of these
01:51for kids struggling in école.
01:54Wilson.
01:54What are standardized tests?
01:57Be more specific.
01:59What are IQ tests?
02:00That's correct.
02:02Good and bad dads in history, 800.
02:05This Tudor statesman and saint had his daughters educated.
02:09One paid him back by retrieving his severed head for a decent burial.
02:13Peter.
02:13Who's Cromwell?
02:14No.
02:15Wilson or Dan?
02:17That's Sir Thomas More.
02:19Back to you, Wilson.
02:20Let's do good and bad dads in history, 600.
02:24Also known as Dracul, the second prince of Wallachia of this name gave up two sons to an Ottoman
02:30sultan with little intention of getting them back.
02:32Peter.
02:33Who is Vlad the Impaler?
02:37Vladislav?
02:37That is not correct.
02:39Wilson or Dan?
02:42It is Vlad, not both of the Impaler, however.
02:45Back to you, Wilson.
02:47Say the celebs name right for 600.
02:50The first part of the surname of this actress, Cosette on film, is said like a weary exhale.
02:56The second, like Mr. Armisen.
02:59Peter.
02:59What is Seyfried?
03:00Yes, Amanda Seyfried.
03:02Celebs, eight.
03:03The second syllable and the single name of this actress is not to die for, but rather sounds
03:09like a part of the calendar.
03:13It is Zendaya, not Zendaya.
03:16Peter.
03:17Magazine, six.
03:19Heroes Among Us, British Royal Family News.
03:22Dan.
03:23What's the son?
03:24No.
03:26Peter or Wilson?
03:28Features in People Magazine.
03:29Peter.
03:30Words from TV for eight.
03:32Star Trek gave us this alliterative term for a state of deep understanding between two
03:37people.
03:37It's now also the name of a party game.
03:40Dan.
03:40What's a mind meld?
03:42Yes.
03:43Twins, 800.
03:45Cook and Wheatstone's version of this had early popularity, sending a message in 1845
03:50from Slough to Paddington to help catch a killer.
03:53Wilson.
03:53What's a telegraph?
03:55Yes.
03:56Uh, Wonder Twins, a thousand.
03:58Cousteau and Gagnon's diving invention, first dubbed the Scaffendra Autonome, gained fame
04:03under this anatomical name.
04:05Peter.
04:06What is the Aqualong?
04:07Yes, you're out of the hole.
04:09Magazines, four, eight.
04:11Healthy you, big five, oh.
04:16Are in AARP, the magazine.
04:19Peter.
04:20On the green for six.
04:21In 1775, Ethan Allen no longer led this Vermont militia, but not because at 37, Mr. Allen
04:28didn't quite fit the title anymore.
04:30Dan.
04:31Who are the Green Mountain Boys?
04:32That's correct.
04:33Green 1000.
04:35Vertigris is a type of this thin layer formed by acidic reactions.
04:39It's that greenish hue on weathered copper.
04:41Peter.
04:42What is a patina?
04:43That's right, for a thousand.
04:44All right, good and bad dads for a thousand.
04:46Spanish King Philip IV and his niece wife let their infanta shine in the center of this
04:52Velázquez painting.
04:53Wilson.
04:54What is Las Meninas?
04:55Good for a thousand.
04:56On the green, 400.
04:58Home of the masters, this golf course has a subterranean cooling system to cool its greens
05:03during hot summer months.
05:05Dan.
05:05What's Augusta?
05:07Can you be more specific?
05:11Sorry, no.
05:11Wilson.
05:12What is Augusta National?
05:13That's the name of the course.
05:14All right.
05:15Uh, good and bad dads, 400.
05:18In 1884, he left his infant daughter, Alice, with his sister while he lived on a ranch in
05:23the Dakotas.
05:24Peter.
05:24It was Theodore Roosevelt.
05:25That is correct.
05:26Peter, you're in second place.
05:27Wilson has the lead, and we need to take a quick break.
05:29But we'll be right back.
05:30You're watching Jeopardy.
05:32Dan, my name is a software engineer from Jersey City, New Jersey.
05:35And a TV veteran already, kind of.
05:38Right, Dan?
05:39Yes.
05:39In middle school, I was an extra on Saturday Night Live for two consecutive weeks.
05:44Wow.
05:44The hosts were LeBron James and Seth Rogen, but they do a dress rehearsal before the
05:49show, and they cut the skits that aren't very funny.
05:51And I guess mine weren't, or Lorne Michaels doesn't like the way that I look.
05:55So, unfortunately, neither of them made it into the actual show.
05:57You were cut after rehearsal twice.
06:00Indeed.
06:00So, you're still waiting for that SNL debut.
06:02But I believe in you, Dan.
06:03It's going to happen for you.
06:04Wilson Lee is with us from Woodside, New York, a VP of regulatory reporting.
06:08And your name, Wilson, was chosen by not your parents, but by you, right?
06:12Yeah.
06:12So, when I first came here from China, I had my, you know, Chinese name on my passport.
06:19About sixth grade, I decided, my family decided, you know, actually, it was about time for me
06:24to have an English name.
06:25And I thought about, I spent a summer in Washington, D.C. with my grandfather, who was a visiting
06:32scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Center.
06:35And I decided, oh, Wilson actually sounded a little bit like my Chinese name.
06:39And so, Wilson sounded like a good name to have.
06:43You're named after Woodrow Wilson.
06:45Uh, the Woodrow Wilson Center, let's say.
06:47Good call.
06:48Our returning champion is Peter McFerrin, an energy industry professional, we keep saying.
06:53What does that mean?
06:53What do you do, Peter?
06:54Okay, I work for Southern California Edison, the big electric utility here.
06:59I work with developers to help them hook up generators to our grid.
07:06Anything from, you know, solar carports in, like, big box store parking lots to gigawatt
07:12scale batteries.
07:13I've got one of those in the hopper right now.
07:15I love that.
07:15You have control of the board?
07:17Make a selection.
07:18All right.
07:19Words from TV for sex.
07:20Chris Jenner has trademarked this word she coined for her role as a working parent who
07:25wears multiple hats.
07:29She is a momager.
07:31Peter?
07:32Words from TV for a thousand.
07:35Bugs Bunny used this name of Noah's great-grandson, a mighty biblical hunter, to refer to Elmer Fudd.
07:40Now it's a synonym for idiot.
07:42Wilson?
07:43What is Nimrod?
07:44That's where Nimrod comes from.
07:45Words from TV 400.
07:47American Idol judge Randy Jackson bestowed many dogs upon us, in addition to popularizing
07:52this synonym for off-key.
07:54Peter?
07:54What is Pitchy?
07:55That's right.
07:56Uh, Celeb, Thousand.
07:58This succession actress has her last name looks like look or book, but it's pronounced
08:03with an ooh.
08:04Peter?
08:05Who is Sarah Snook?
08:06Snook, right.
08:07Uh, Green, eh?
08:08Shakespeare mentions this song by name twice in The Merry Wives of Windsor.
08:13Wilson?
08:13What is Greensleeves?
08:14You're right.
08:15Uh, Wonder Twins 4.
08:17A 1969 video shows creators Bear and Harrison playing an early version of this back-and-forth
08:22video game when we ought to be working.
08:24Peter?
08:25What is Pong?
08:26That's right.
08:26Magazines, Thousand.
08:27The answer there is the Daily Double in the round.
08:29Peter?
08:31You find it in second place, but obviously with a shot at the lead here.
08:34I'm gonna do...
08:36Oh, sorry, 1600.
08:38All right, going for 5,000 even and a narrow lead.
08:41Magazines by Recurring Feature is the category.
08:44The Talk of the Town, Shouts and Murmurs.
08:50What is The Hollywood Reporter?
08:52No, those are longtime fixtures of The New Yorker.
08:55Wrong coast, I'm afraid.
08:57You lose a little bit, but select again, Peter.
08:59Celeb 4.
09:00A type of drink leads folks to screw up this Hamnet star's name, but put the stress on
09:05the first syllable instead.
09:09Not Mezcal, Paul Mescal.
09:12Peter?
09:12Green, too.
09:13This organization, founded in 1971, has protected animals in various ways, including guiding
09:19boats between whales and harpooners.
09:21Dan?
09:22What's Greenpeace?
09:23Right.
09:24Celebs 200.
09:25Wait, what?
09:26This Oscar-nominated actress said her family says her last name with an E sound, not A.
09:31Now that's wicked.
09:33Peter?
09:33Who is Ariana Grande?
09:34Grandy, apparently.
09:37Words TV, too.
09:39Later co-opted by surfers and turtles, this expression of enthusiasm was first popularized
09:44by the TV series Howdy Doody.
09:45Peter?
09:46What is Cowabunga?
09:47Cowabunga, dude.
09:49Ah, Wonder Twins, too.
09:50He thought his most important invention was the photophone, which he and Charles Tainter
09:55created to send calls over a beam of light.
09:57Wilson?
09:58Who's Edison?
09:59No.
10:00Peter or Dan?
10:01Peter?
10:02Who's Alexander Graham Bell?
10:03That's correct.
10:04All right.
10:05Good and bad dads, too.
10:07With the best of intentions, Tsar Nicholas II left health care of his only son Alexei to
10:11this mad monk.
10:12Wilson?
10:13Who is Rasputin?
10:14Right.
10:14Uh, magazine features 200.
10:17Cheers and jeers, fall preview.
10:19Wilson?
10:20What's the TV Guide?
10:21That's correct.
10:22Final clue, magazines by recurring feature, Spy vs. Spy, The Fold-In.
10:26Wilson?
10:27Who is Mad Magazine?
10:28That's correct.
10:28And it ensures you have the lead at the end of the Jeopardy! round, but we'll be back
10:31with Double Jeopardy! in just a moment.
10:34Dan will make the first selection in Double Jeopardy! with two Daily Doubles on the board
10:38this time.
10:39Categories are, at left, Georgiography, followed by some Beach Reads, then we have Saints Be
10:47Praised, Touch Grass, followed by Five Letter Words, and Rap Sheet.
10:54Dan, what looks good?
10:55Beach Reads, 2000.
10:57This Ian McKeown book references the Dorset Seashore in its title, but doesn't make a great
11:02case for honeymooning there.
11:04Peter?
11:04What is on Chesil Beach?
11:06Very good.
11:07Georgiography, 12.
11:09Answer.
11:09A Daily Double just like that.
11:13You're less than a thousand bucks off the lead right now, Peter.
11:15All right.
11:16Uh, let's go with $1,600.
11:19All right.
11:20Going for $6,000 if you're correct in Georgiography.
11:24This 700 square mile wetland in Southeast Georgia is the largest blackwater swamp in
11:30North America.
11:31What is the Okefenokee?
11:32Correct.
11:33You move into the lead with $6,000.
11:38Georgiography for $2,000.
11:40This country's scenic garden route stretches 100 plus miles along the Indian Ocean and includes
11:46the city of George, founded in 1811.
11:49Peter?
11:50What is Malaysia?
11:51No.
11:52Wilson or Dan?
11:54That's in South Africa.
11:55Peter?
11:56All right.
11:56Georgiography, 16.
11:57The earliest known vintners were making wine as early as 6,000 B.C. at Gatatriligora,
12:03just south of this Georgian capital.
12:05Peter?
12:06What is Tbilisi?
12:07Right.
12:08Saints be praised for 12.
12:10In his Summa Theologica, this scholastic saint presented his five famous proofs for the
12:15existence of God.
12:16Peter?
12:17Who is Thomas Aquinas?
12:18Yes.
12:19Touch grass for 16.
12:21With sharp seeds that can self-plant in your coat, purple needle grass is its official
12:25grass seen statewide, including the Channel Islands.
12:31Those are the Channel Islands of California.
12:34Peter?
12:35Rap sheet, 12.
12:37In 2025, this artist asked, am I the drama, feuded with Nicki Minaj, and had a baby with
12:43Stefan Diggs.
12:44Peter?
12:45Who's Cardi B?
12:45Yeah.
12:46Rap sheet, 2000.
12:48Known for songs like Sugar On My Tongue, he also swatted some ping pong in Marty Supreme.
12:54Peter?
12:54Who is Tyler the Creator?
12:56It is.
12:57Rap sheet, 16.
12:58This guy with the first name Jermaine had Kendrick Lamar feeling some kind of way with
13:02his verse on 2023's first-person shooter.
13:05Dan?
13:06Who's J. Cole?
13:07Yes.
13:08Five-letter words, 2000.
13:10It's a Russian word for a boreal forest with many pine trees.
13:13Wilson?
13:14What is taiga?
13:15Right.
13:16Georgiography, 8.
13:17Finding the name of Lake George in this state too commonplace, James Fenimore Cooper instead
13:23used the name Huracan.
13:25Peter?
13:25What is New York?
13:26Correct.
13:27Rap sheet, 8.
13:29Tim Burton's artwork is on the cover of Don't Be Dumb, a 2026 album by this partner of a
13:34lingerie mogul.
13:35Peter?
13:36Who's ASAP Rocky?
13:37You got it.
13:37Rap sheet, 4.
13:39He's the lucky guy who finally gets to punch Vincent Chase in Entourage, and IRL opened
13:44up the eatery Mom's Spaghetti.
13:46Peter?
13:47Who's Eminem?
13:48Yes.
13:49Five-letter word, 16.
13:51It's a synonym for mother of pearl.
13:53Wilson?
13:53What is nacre?
13:54You got it.
13:55Five-letter word, 12.
13:57This adjective can describe your upset friend after you roast them.
14:00It also describes the taste of Old Bay seasoning.
14:03Peter?
14:04What is salty?
14:04Both are salty.
14:06Touch grass, 12.
14:06This grass, a forage and cover crop with types called perennial and Italian, is not
14:12to be confused with a grain.
14:14Wilson?
14:14What's wild rice?
14:15No.
14:16Peter or Dan?
14:18That's rye grass.
14:20Back to you, Peter.
14:21Saint, 16.
14:23Saint Catherine of this Tuscan city was a twin and the youngest of 25 children.
14:28Dan?
14:28What's Florence?
14:30No.
14:31Peter or Wilson?
14:33Catherine of Siena.
14:35Peter, we go back to you.
14:36Saints too.
14:37Answer there is the final daily double of the game.
14:41You pulled out in front, Peter.
14:43All right, I'm gonna do $5,400.
14:46Okay, a pretty big wager for you, going for $18,600 in Saints Be Praised.
14:51Not surprisingly, this apostle is the patron saint of bookkeepers, accountants, and tax collectors.
14:57Who is Paul?
14:59Sorry, no.
14:59It's Saint Matthew.
15:01Matthew was the tax collector.
15:02That's right.
15:02He was the publican.
15:03Okay, so that drops you down a little bit.
15:05You're still on the lead, but just by $200.
15:06All right.
15:07Beach Read, 16.
15:08A Colson Whitehead novel is set in the summer of 1985 at this title Long Island Village,
15:13the center of the Black Hamptons.
15:18The book is called Sag Harbor.
15:20Peter?
15:21Saints eight.
15:22As seen here, this patron saint of travelers is often depicted carrying the Christ child.
15:27Peter?
15:28Who's Saint Christopher?
15:29That's right.
15:30Uh, five letter words, eight.
15:32The word for this flavor, sometimes called the fifth basic taste, comes from Japanese for deliciousness.
15:38Wilson?
15:38What is umami?
15:39You got it.
15:40Touchgrass, 2000.
15:42Bourbon is one of the roughly 15 counties that make up this region.
15:46Peter?
15:47What is the bluegrass country of Kentucky?
15:49Yes.
15:50Saints, four.
15:51In 2026, the 800th anniversary of his death, the remains of this saint of Assisi were put on
15:57public display for only the second time.
15:59Peter?
15:59Who's Francis?
16:00Yes.
16:01Grass, eight.
16:02From Houston in 1966, Roger Angel wrote,
16:06I tried to pull up a blade of this to chew on, but the stuff is pluck proof.
16:10Wilson?
16:11What is AstroTurf?
16:11You got it.
16:13Uh, five letter words, 400.
16:15The Lovers, the Wheel of Fortune, and the Knight of Wands are examples of these cards.
16:20Dan?
16:20What are tarot cards?
16:21Right.
16:22Finished grass.
16:23Pink mully grass is often called by the name of this fairground treat.
16:27Don't eat it, but it's tempting to touch it.
16:30Dan?
16:30What's cotton candy?
16:31Right.
16:32Finished Georgiography.
16:34There's a Mount George and a Mount George winery in this California county.
16:38Dan?
16:39What's Sonoma?
16:40No.
16:41Wilson?
16:41What's Napa?
16:42That's correct.
16:43Uh, Beach Reads Four?
16:45Finds Print of Man's Foot on the Sand is chapter 11 of this 18th century classic.
16:50Peter?
16:50What is Robinson Crusoe?
16:52Right.
16:52Beach Reads 12.
16:54This novel unfolds on the pleasant shore of the French Riviera, a locale for which F.
16:58Scott Fitzgerald had a soft spot.
17:01Dan?
17:01What's Tender as the Knight?
17:03Well done.
17:03Final clue from Beach Reads will be two chapters of this Joyce novel take place on the Sandy
17:08Mount Strand, a tidal flat on the east edge of Dublin, not Troy.
17:12Wilson?
17:12What's Ulysses?
17:13That's right.
17:14Taking you up to 10,400.
17:15A thousand behind Peter.
17:16Close game heading into Final Jeopardy.
17:18Here's your category, players.
17:20Alternative Medicine.
17:21We'll be back with the real clue right after this.
17:25Alternative Medicine is today's Final Jeopardy!
17:28category.
17:28This is the clue.
17:30Honoring the brother of the Greek god Thanatos, this alternative medical practice got its
17:36name in the 19th century.
17:37Thirty seconds.
17:38Good luck.
18:09Dan Lane on the end with $2,200, wrote down homeopathy.
18:14I'm afraid not, Dan.
18:15You wagered just $7, leaving you with $2,193.
18:19Wilson Lee has $10,400.
18:22His response was euthanasia.
18:25That is a very alternative treatment, I guess, but it's not correct.
18:29You wagered $8,599.
18:32He went big, so he's dropped down to $1,801.
18:35Peter McFerrin, in the lead with $11,400, had his response, says he got nothing and he
18:41didn't.
18:42No, Thanatos was the god of death.
18:43His brother, the god of sleep, was hypnos.
18:46What is hypnotism or hypnosis, hypnotherapy?
18:49So what's the wager, Peter?
18:50It all comes down to this.
18:52$9,401 drops you down to $1,999 and look what just happened.
18:56From third place, Dan Lane is our new Jeopardy!
18:58champion with $2,193.
19:04We'll be seeing Peter in the Tournament of Champions, but we'll see you back here on the Alex
19:08for the next stage tomorrow.
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