Jump to content

Type keyword(s) to search

Jeopardy! Season 34 (2017-2018)


Athena
  • Start Topic

Recommended Posts

Quote

My fave Austin quote: "So @Jeopardy follows me on #twitter. And I follow @realDonaldTrump because I like to diminish my vocabulary."

Dammit. Now I have to like him for that! :)

Couldn't believe he risked Clavining it yesterday. "Who is a guy who's never been in my kitchen?"

  • Love 3
Link to comment
3 minutes ago, bad things are bad said:

Couldn't believe he risked Clavining it yesterday. "Who is a guy who's never been in my kitchen?"

As for FJ, it was 20th Century World Leaders. While there were a lot of them, there's only a small fraction (50 or so at most) that Jeopardy! would ask. There was a good chance he'd know or at least figure it out by context. Besides, he was going to be in the TOC anyway no matter what.

If it were something very broad like Literature or like Cliff Clavin, Movies, I'm not sure he would have made such a big wager. 

  • Love 2
Link to comment

I find it suspicious that Chewbacca always manages to land on both DD's in Double Jeopardy.  I also think it's strange that a bartender never seems to know about alcoholic drinks or liquor.  I don't care how you mispronounce sherbet in NY.  My loathing for him continues.

I didn't get any TS or FJ.  I guess my enthusiasm for the game is waning.

  • Love 8
Link to comment
3 minutes ago, CarpeDiem54 said:

I find it suspicious that Chewbacca always manages to land on both DD's in Double Jeopardy.  I also think it's strange that a bartender never seems to know about alcoholic drinks or liquor.  I don't care how you mispronounce sherbet in NY.  My loathing for him continues.

I didn't get any TS or FJ.  I guess my enthusiasm for the game is waning.

Haha, I loved it when Alex declared Austin's answer was incorrect due to pronunciation and he got all huffy. Highlight of the game right there. 

  • Love 11
Link to comment
20 minutes ago, CarpeDiem54 said:

I find it suspicious that Chewbacca always manages to land on both DD's in Double Jeopardy.  I also think it's strange that a bartender never seems to know about alcoholic drinks or liquor.  I don't care how you mispronounce sherbet in NY.  My loathing for him continues.

I didn't get any TS or FJ.  I guess my enthusiasm for the game is waning.

And I thought his DD's were super easy. 

  • Love 3
Link to comment

There have been many discussions through the years about the pronunciation sherbert vs. the spelling sherbet, so I knew Austin was toast as soon as he said it incorrectly. I grew up saying "sherbert," just as it's common here to "worsh the car" and "go fer groceries." I do, however, know how to pronounce all those words correctly so listeners can't guess where I live.

Opus, as that no doubt is some raspberry SHERBET in your cone, you must learn to spell/pronounce it correctly from now on!

  • Love 3
Link to comment
1 hour ago, CarpeDiem54 said:

also think it's strange that a bartender never seems to know about alcoholic drinks or liquor.

A lot of bartenders only know the basics, no idea where he works but it could be mostly beers and basic bar drinks.

As for getting DDK he controls the board a lot so it's not surprising.

  • Love 3
Link to comment
3 hours ago, PaulaO said:

As soon as I saw the FJ! category of American Plays, I shouted out "Our Town". Sometimes I impress myself

I wasn't quite that fast, but when I saw narrator and 1938 I shouted it out. 

2 hours ago, ClareWalks said:

Word. I'm Midwestern, we say "sherbert" here too, but I would never pronounce it "sherbert" on Jeopardy, where they are known sticklers about that sort of thing. 

I think if the clue hadn't specifically mentioned that the two end with the same three letters, they might have given  him some leeway. But the key to the pronunciation was in the clue.

Did Austin seem a little lackluster today? He did well, but not as well, and his voice seemed a bit hoarse to me.

  • Love 7
Link to comment

The game started for us at the contestant interviews due to a Las Vegas news conference, so I missed Austin mispronouncing sherbet & getting huffy. Darn.

I ran the LA & dental categories, and TS I got were derivative, pi, and tangent. Blind guessed FJ, because American Plays = Our Town or Death of a Salesman.

Austin shrugged off his winnings of $278,300. What a tool. 

  • Love 2
Link to comment
1 hour ago, biakbiak said:

A lot of bartenders only know the basics, no idea where he works but it could be mostly beers and basic bar drinks.

As for getting DDK he controls the board a lot so it's not surprising.

I'm sure he only knows drinks we've never heard of. He's much too cool for a Kir Royale. 

  • Love 6
Link to comment
57 minutes ago, Clanstarling said:

I wasn't quite that fast, but when I saw narrator and 1938 I shouted it out. 

Just 'narrator' gave me Our Town. Is there another play with a narrator?

I will never ever again pronounce it as sherbert. I am cured!

I was tickled that M.D. in a diner is a Dr Pepper.

I was surprised that none of them knew the author of Watership Down. I came up with the last name only. No way to tell if the judges would have accepted just Adams.

I hadn't been paying attention to how much money Austin had been winning, so I was amazed that he's now over $278,000 in 7 days! 

Oh, and I've been meaning to say that whoever noted that he looks like John Larroquette hit the nail on the head.

Edited by peeayebee
  • Love 6
Link to comment
19 minutes ago, peeayebee said:

Oh, and I've been meaning to say that whoever noted that he looks like John Larroquette hit the nail on the head.

Dr. Toothbrush said John Larroquette also, but I was stuck on a Will Ferrell character. Then someone upthread posted that their sister said he looked like the Unabomber, and I realized I had been picturing Will Ferrell as the Unabomber on SNL 

  • Love 3
Link to comment
5 hours ago, peeayebee said:

Just 'narrator' gave me Our Town. Is there another play with a narrator?

I will never ever again pronounce it as sherbert. I am cured!

I was tickled that M.D. in a diner is a Dr Pepper.

I was surprised that none of them knew the author of Watership Down. I came up with the last name only. No way to tell if the judges would have accepted just Adams.

I hadn't been paying attention to how much money Austin had been winning, so I was amazed that he's now over $278,000 in 7 days! 

Oh, and I've been meaning to say that whoever noted that he looks like John Larroquette hit the nail on the head.

I was surprised about Watership Down as a TS too, especially since Richard Adams died so recently.

I don't think it's necessarily wrong to say "sherbert," but as the explanation mojoween cited shows, pronouncing it that way made it not fit the clue about the last three letters. I never thought of it as a New York thing. I thought about the episode of Mad Men where Don Draper was trying to introduce his trophy wife Megan to the joys of Howard Johnson's orange "sherbert." He's living in NYC but wasn't born there, so it's hard to use that as evidence one way or another. 

As for plays with narrators, I thought of Neil Simon's semi-autobiographical plays Brighton Beach MemoirsBiloxi Blues, and Broadway Bound. There's also Lanford Wilson's Talley's Folly. Apparently lots of musicals have them, as this discussion shows. There are probably many lesser-known plays that use narrators also. It can be a sign of lazy writing, so they're lesser known for a reason.

  • Love 2
Link to comment
6 hours ago, Toothbrush said:

TS I got were derivative, pi, and tangent.

Pi and tangent weren't TS. Derivative and integration were though. I said taking an integral for the calculus operation.  Would they count that? 

I always pronounced it sherbert. I would have screwed that up 

5 hours ago, 17wheatthins said:

Was Austin "talking" on an old-timey candlestick phone in his intro today? LMAO

Yeah, what the hell was that?

I miseed FJ. I'm not good with American plays. 

  • Love 2
Link to comment
17 minutes ago, Stacey1014 said:

Austin was on GMA this morning. [Snip]

I know you're speculating,  but you may want to use a spoiler tag for posts like this in the future.

  • Love 3
Link to comment
3 hours ago, GreekGeek said:

I don't think it's necessarily wrong to say "sherbert," but as the explanation mojoween cited shows, pronouncing it that way made it not fit the clue about the last three letters. I never thought of it as a New York thing. I thought about the episode of Mad Men where Don Draper was trying to introduce his trophy wife Megan to the joys of Howard Johnson's orange "sherbert." He's living in NYC but wasn't born there, so it's hard to use that as evidence one way or another. 

I took it more as the kind of excuse I used to make as a 13 year old American student in a German school - they taught British English, so if I misspelled a word, I'd say "it's the way we spell it in America!" I got away with it more times than I should have. The teacher hated me, but would trot me out when the inspectors came to visit and observe (never mentioning I was an American), so I didn't feel particularly guilty. 

Edited by Clanstarling
  • Love 5
Link to comment
4 hours ago, GreekGeek said:

As for plays with narrators, I thought of Neil Simon's semi-autobiographical plays Brighton Beach MemoirsBiloxi Blues, and Broadway Bound. There's also Lanford Wilson's Talley's Folly. Apparently lots of musicals have them, as this discussion shows. There are probably many lesser-known plays that use narrators also. It can be a sign of lazy writing, so they're lesser known for a reason.

Thanks for the info.

  • Love 1
Link to comment
Quote

I think if the clue hadn't specifically mentioned that the two end with the same three letters, they might have given  him some leeway. 

This! As soon as he said it, I thought, they just gave you the last three letters, which you screwed up! I enjoyed the petulant look on his face when he got dinged for it. And of course he had to make a defensive remark. Tool.

I respect Austin's smarts and playing abilities, but he's still the smuggest smug who ever smugged and he can't lose fast enough for me.

  • Love 11
Link to comment

For me FJ was an instaget with the year, narrator and New Hampshire in the clue but American Plays  (at least 20th Century) would be a dream category for me.  Since I had to work late and only saw second half, Austin didn't irritate me as much as usual but  I was irked by his cutesy pie "what is a taco?"  Just leave a blank screen dude, you ain't all that and a bag of chips.

  • Love 5
Link to comment
5 hours ago, DrScottie said:

Pi and tangent weren't TS. Derivative and integration were though. I said taking an integral for the calculus operation.  Would they count that? 

You're right - it was integration not tangent. I was incredulous that Dr. Toothbrush did not get pi, so that is why it was on my mind as a TS. 

  • Love 1
Link to comment

Jeopardy reruns are on here an hour before the new show. A fellow named Seth has been winning on that all week, and he looks a twin for Austin. Same color hair, build. clothes. Except Seth is well-groomed and a good player w/o being the look-at-me tool that is Austin. I wonder if Austin IS Seth, and came back hairy, uncombed, disheveled and a smart ass so he could have a second run at TOC and more $. Also: Consider that "bartender" might be code for "unemployed." Sort of like "personal trainer" is a popular non-occupation on The Bachelor.

I guess our modern society dictates that if you are a self-centerred dick, you get to be interviewed on morning news shows and be the center of promotional commercials. So much for how I was raised.

  • Love 4
Link to comment

I say Sherbert. 

According to my yahoo newsfeed comments some people love Austin.  I don't see it, I find him more smug and annoying, but I respect him as a player.  No doubting his skills. 

I know next to nothing about American theater and got Our Town.  Though mostly I just know that play from Growing Pains, its the one Mike was in that convinced him to try and be an actor.  I also read recently that its consistently one of the most popular plays high schools perform for well over 5 decades now. 

I say "sherbert". 

  • Love 4
Link to comment
1 hour ago, DrSpaceman73 said:

I know next to nothing about American theater and got Our Town.  Though mostly I just know that play from Growing Pains, its the one Mike was in that convinced him to try and be an actor.  I also read recently that its consistently one of the most popular plays high schools perform for well over 5 decades now.

Our Town was also used in The Wonder Years and My So-Called Life, so it's popular in high schools and shows about high school!

Edited by dcalley
  • Love 1
Link to comment
2 hours ago, saber5055 said:

A fellow named Seth has been winning on that all week, and he looks a twin for Austin.

Really? To me they look absolutely nothing alike. I did noticed that when Seth lost he was in the top 5 most game winners but had less money than Austin's current 7 day total.

  • Love 1
Link to comment

Aww, man. I like Austin. I always feel bad when Jeopardy contestants get so much hate. They're not fictional TV characters or TV personalities, they're real people who have put themselves out there to entertain us with their trivia knowledge (and win some money.) And today, people can be bullied over the internet. I hope most of the personal responses they get are positive. I guess some people are just off-putting, I probably identify with that because a lot of people think I'm stuck up but I just think I'm aloof. 

  • Love 11
Link to comment
Quote

 I hope most of the personal responses they get are positive.

The ones I've seen are. In fact, I've read very few negative comments. Except here :)

A fellow Jeptestant -- Pasha? -- said Austin was funny and quirky backstage, "just as he appears on the show." Pasha (?) compared Austin to Matt and said Austin was always polite while Matt was rude, especially to Alex. I'll take quirky over rude any day.

Quote

Also: Consider that "bartender" might be code for "unemployed."

Wow, where did that come from?

He's live-tweeting while the show is on, from a bar that I believe is the one he worked at (or still works at).

  • Love 3
Link to comment
42 minutes ago, Robert Lynch said:

That guy in the middle did not shake his hand at all! Am I the only one that noticed that?

Yeah that was really awkward...Austin turned all ready to shake hands and the other two just stood staring at the front. Then Alex came over to shake Austin's hand and made it less awkward.

  • Love 5
Link to comment

I missed the show today and was disappointed that I didn't get the pleasure of seeing Austin lose. Then I find out here that I'm still disappointed, but now because Austin is still on the show. Either way, that tool is a disappointment to me. Mystery Author, I'm the one that suggested Austin might be an (unemployed) bartender since most poster here have commented on the fact Austin knows nothing (or not too much) about alcoholic beverages. People use or are given fake occupations all the time on reality shows.

  • Love 1
Link to comment

Yes, it did look as if Austin were going to be bested by Todd for awhile. I was surprised that two out of three went for contemporary actors in FJ. Branagh wasn't a bad guess, but I had to google Hopkins to see if he had done any filmed Shakespeare.  (One film--Titus, Shakespeare's goriest and possibly not by him at all.) 

  • Love 2
Link to comment
26 minutes ago, opus said:

Bummer. Had Olivier, switched to Branagh. Once Alex said the '40s, knew I was done.

I did the opposite.  Thought Branagh first, switched to Olivier.  

I loathe Austin.  

  • Love 4
Link to comment
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
×
×
  • Create New...