Final Jeopardy: Historic Names (4-24-25)

The Final Jeopardy question (4/24/2025) in the category “Historic Names” was:

He was riding back from the conquest of Granada when he was summoned to a royal meeting that would change history

4x champ Liam Starnes, an undergraduate student from Barrington, IL, has now won $81,801. In Game 5, his/her challengers are: Raguell Couch, an undergraduate student from Durham, NC; and Harold Goldston III, a karaoke bar owner from Knoxville, TN.

Round 1 Categories: Anatomical Phrases – 18th Century America – TV Title References – In the Cards – From Whence They Came – “OK”, Boomer

Liam found the Jeopardy! round Daily Double in “From Whence They Came” under the $1,000 on the 18th pick of the round. He was in the lead with $2,600, $800 more than Raguell in second place. Liam made it a true Daily Double and he was RIGHT.

In 1820 this British medical worker was herself delivered in the Italian city that became her name show

Liam finished in the lead with $5,600. Raguell was second with $2,600 and Harold was last with negative $1,400. All clues were shown.

Round 2 Categories: Blank Verse – Movie Genres – Objection, Your Honor! – Tripping – The Light – Fantastic

Raguell found the first Daily Double in “Movie Genres” under the $1,600 clue on the 7th pick of the round. She was in second place with $4,600, $1,400 less than Liam’s lead. Raguell bet $2,000 and she was RIGHT.

This term is said to date to a 1940s French article about “Double Indemnity”, “Laura” & “Murder My Sweet” show

Liam found the last Daily Double in “The Light” under the $1,600 clue on the 13th pick of the round. He was in second place with $7,600, $1,800 less than Raguell’s lead. Liam bet $4,000 and he was RIGHT.

Converting light to electrical signals, rods & cones are the 2 main types of these cells, partly from Greek for “light” show

Liam finished in the lead with $16,000. Raguell was second with $10,600. At negative $2,200, Harold was out of the game at this point. All clues were shown.



Only ONE of the contestants got Final Jeopardy! right.

WHO IS CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS?

In the beginning of his journal, Christopher Columbus wrote about seeing the “Moorish King” (Muhammad XII aka Boabdil) “kiss the royal hands” when surrendering to Spanish monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella in Grenada on January 2, 1492. However, the Bishop of León claimed Boabdil didn’t kiss anybody’s hands because his mother wouldn’t let her boy be humiliated that way.

Columbus further related how he got his marching, er, sailing orders when the monarchs “resolved to send me, Cristóbal Colon, to the said parts of India … and ordered that I should not go by land to the eastward, as had been customary, but that I should go by way of the west, whither up to this day, we do not know for certain that any one has gone.”



Raguell tried Winston Churchill. She lost $10,502 and finished with $98.

Liam got it right. He bet $5,201 and won the game with $21,201. Liam’s 5-day total is $103,002.

Final Jeopardy (4/24/2025) Liam Starnes, Raguell Couch, Harold Goldston III

A triple stumper from each round:

FROM WHENCE THEY CAME ($600) Oh, what an artist is born in me! “Me”, being this Mediterranean port city, & the artist, Joan Miró

THE LIGHT ($2000) This international standard unit of luminous intensity sounds like a taper with an extra A

More clues on Page 2

2 years ago: Only ONE of the players got this FJ in “HISTORIC FIGURES”

Dante gives him, born to a Kurdish family in the 12th century, a place of honor in limbo along with the war heroes of Rome & Troy show

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3 Responses

  1. Ryan McClelland says:

    So Harold joins Eric as this week’s second Griffin cardinal sinner as he was unable to get things going and the two undergrads were way much faster on the signaling device as him and so we have to play a sad tune for the karaoke bar owner.

  2. Kevin Cheng says:

    For the second day in a row, we had another dismissal. Harold never got himself out of hole and got dismissed. Liam and Raguell were faster than him. This game belonged to two undergraduate students and not the karaoke bar owner.

  3. VJ says:

    That poem stanza that starts ‘what is so rare’ is often read aloud as if it is a standalone poem but it is part of a larger work by James Russell Lowell: The Vision of Sir Launfal.

    He sets the stage for that verse by listing all the things that we have to pay for in the world 😲
    “Earth gets its price for what Earth gives us;
    The beggar is taxed for a corner to die in,
    The priest hath his fee who comes and shrives us,
    We bargain for the graves we lie in”

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