Here are today's contestants:
- Micah Fritz, a teacher from Milwaukee, Wisconsin;
- Nicholas Moline, an attorney from Mooresville, Indiana; and
- Emily Croke, a stay-at-home mom from Denver, Colorado. Emily is a one-day champ with winnings of $13,201.
Jeopardy!
FLORIDA HISTORY // CHAPTER & NON-VERSE // LOOK WHAT THE CAT DRAGGED IN // SCAMMERS // ALL KINDS OF SPORTS // ADD A LETTER
DD1 - $1,000 - SCAMMERS - After prison, this man whose last name is synonymous with a type of scam was said to have become a business manager for Mussolini (Micah lost $1,000.)
Scores at first break: Emily -$200, Nicholas $200, Micah $400.
Scores entering DJ: Emily $1,800, Nicholas $1,600, Micah $2,200.
Double Jeopardy!
COLORFUL GEOGRAPHY // GLOBAL MUSIC // AVIATION GLOSSARY // MOVIE TITLE PROFESSIONS // WORDS ABOUT NERDS // LIVING DOLLS
DD2 - $1,600 - WORDS ABOUT NERDS - A hyperintelligent nemesis of Superman in comic books likely gave us this portmanteau word for someone who's crazy smart (Emily dropped $5,000 from her score of $5,400.)
DD3 - $1,600 - COLORFUL GEOGRAPHY - Amid a real estate boom in the 1950s, an Australian tourist destination called the South Coast was rechristened this (Micah improved his leading score by $3,000 to $10,000.)
Emily made a strong bet on DD2 but missed while Micah was correct on DD3, leading to a FJ runaway for Micah at $15,200 vs. $6,800 for Emily and $1,600 for Nicholas.
Final Jeopardy!
WEBSITES - A 2006 WSJ article described this website as having “row after row of blue…hyperlinks & nary another color or graphic in sight”
Everyone was incorrect on FJ. Micah dropped $1,000 to win with $14,200.
Final scores: Emily $6,800, Nicholas $1,600, Micah $14,200.
Judging the writers: Let's put aside for the moment if this FJ clue provided enough information to fairly lead the players to the correct response. Why did they think what a newspaper said about the appearance of a website nearly 20 years ago was interesting or important enough to be written up in a clue? It's one thing for a FJ clue to stump the contestants, but it shouldn't also make us go "Who cares?"
Tough category of the day: The players missed four in a literature category, including one about the chapter "The Black Bird" being part of "The Maltese Falcon".
One more thing: Even though it was part of a top-row clue in the first round, I don't feel bad for not knowing Ted Lasso loves darts.
Correct Qs: DD1 - Who was Ponzi? DD2 - What is brainiac? DD3 - What is Gold Coast? FJ - What is Craigslist?
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