The Jeopardy thread [was James Holzhauer][contains spoilers]

My thoughts were basically the same, but I was also pretty sure it was Harding just because there weren’t that many Republican presidents in the 20th century. I also could not associate any of the others with newspaper publishing, so I was left with Harding by default.

I take that back. Turns out there were 11 Republican presidents in the 20th century vs 7 Democrats.

I think the figures are a bit skewed, though, since FDR was elected four times. Two terms were covered by FDR and Truman, and another two by Kennedy and Johnson. Carter served only one term.

Of the Republicans, McKinley and TR covered two terms, as did Harding and Coolidge and Nixon and Ford. Taft, Hoover, and Bush Sr all served only one term.

I just threw out Garfield since I had no idea. My husband, who is from Ohio, said yeah - he’s from Ohio! Turns out he was 19th century. :smiley:

New record low total?

Brian

Ken was diplomatic about his suckitude.

Tuesday’s FJ was easy for me. “Capital Cities” - "This city has the Rideau Canal, and a festival called ‘Winterlude’:. What is Ottawa? The two eligible contestants both got it wrong (one guessed Paris, the other Amsterdam).

I’ve never seen a final score as low as -$6400. A record?

(no - not a record. It’s $7400, set back in July).

I was thinking Amsterdam - you know Hans Brinker and all that.

Brian

He started selecting the highest-value clues, and when that didn’t work, he switched to a different category and selected the highest-value clues there. He knows you don’t have to start at the bottom of the board, right?

Proof once again that we USAmericans don’t know a thing about Canada.

Easy for me, also. Of course, I am a Canadian.

I’ve heard, but cannot confirm, that Alex stipulated that at least one clue or response in every game had something to do with Canada. Since I saw nothing in the actual game that fit those parameters, I figured that FJ would. And when I saw the category, I immediately knew what the proper response would be.

What is the customary minimum standard for making a Tournament of Champions? Obviously Amy Schnieder, having now won five games, will be there. But they need 15 players; do they have 15 5-time winners every year? That would surely be LESS likely in years when you have one or two really long running champs. How many 3 or 4 game winners typically get to go?

(I’ll put money right now on Matt Amodio.)

My understanding is that they don’t have a ToC every year; just when they have enough.

I think it’s the other way around; they have a Tournament of Champions every year and take the 15 most successful players of that year. I don’t know how they determine “most successful”; probably the most wins.

Fun fact; the TOC format (fifteen players; five games select five winners and four wild cards, playing three shootout semifinals to select 3 players for a two day championship) was Alex Trebek’s idea.

If they have less than 15 five day winners, I think they go to highest winners among 4 day champs. (repeat as needed). Are there enough episodes to have more than 15 five day champs?

Brian

Close, but not quite. The record lowest score is -$7,400, set by Patrick Pearce back in July. It was LeVar Burton’s first episode as guest host, and Matt Amodio’s fourth game.

It feels like the frequency of players ending in the red has increased lately.

I think there is more of a gambling approach now, after some successful contestants seem to have proven that it is the dominant strategy (I’m not convinced, but this is hard to prove one way or the other)

As I said, I think this guy’s mistake was starting with the most difficult clues first.

According to jeopardy.com, beginning on January fifth of this year, any contestant who wins at least FOUR games is eligible for the TOC.

But, here’s a quote from the site:

*All 4-time and over winning players starting from 01/05/21 will be eligible for a future Tournament of Champions

Presence on this list does NOT guarantee an invitation to compete in the Tournament of Champions. Other eligibility rules apply and final selection is up to the producers’ sole discretion.