Final Jeopardy: Design (9-11-18)

Today’s Final Jeopardy question (9/11/2018) in the category “Design” was:

Switching the syllables in the German word for building of a home gave this design & architecture school its name

3x champ Rick Terpstra, an English teacher from Havertown, PA, has now won $60 grand. In his 4th game, he takes on these two ladies: Lori Goodman, a nonprofit executive director from Goleta, CA; and Becky Warren, a rock musician from Nashville, TN.

Round 1 Categories: Science Around Us – Go Fly a Kite! – Numerical Cinema – I’m Allen – U.S. History – That Ended “Well”

Lori found the Jeopardy! round Daily Double in “Go Fly a Kite!” under the $1,000 clue, with just 2 clues left after it worth $600. She was in second place with $5,200, $1,400 less than Rick’s lead. She bet $3,000 and she was RIGHT.

On Dec. 12 1901 he used a kite to raise an antenna & claimed to received the first wireless signal from over the Atlantic. show

Lori finished in the lead with $8,200. Rick was second with $7,000 and Becky was last with $400. A reversal (see below) before the second round began changed Lori’s score to $8,800 and Becky’s to $1,600.

Round 2 Categories: Religious Leaders – Authors’ Second Novels – The Secret of -nym – “V”acation Spots – Broadway Replacements – Under Studies

Lori found the first Daily Double in “Religious Leaders” under the $1,200 clue on the 13th pick. She was in second place with $13,600 at this point, $200 less than Rick’s lead. She bet $3,400 and she was RIGHT.

John Carroll, the first Roman Catholic bishop in the U.S. founded this D.C. university in 1789. show

Rick found the last Daily Double in “The Secret of -nym” under the $1,600 clue, with 2 clues left after it worth $4,000. In the lead with $15,800, he had $800 more than Lori in second place. He bet $4,000 and he was RIGHT.

Members of the organization known by this acronym run alphabetically from Algeria to Venezuela. show

Lori finished in the lead with $19,000. Rick was next with $17,800 and Becky was in third place with $3,200.

ALL of the contestants got Final Jeopardy! right.

WHAT IS BAUHAUS?

“The name Bauhaus was chosen by [Walter] Gropius in 1919. The previous year, he had written to a friend… explaining that he was thinking of starting a new school, which he described as a “Bauhütte,” or a medieval Masonic workshop. Soon afterward, Gropius was invited to become director of the Academy of Fine Art in Weimar, and insisted on merging it with the nearby School of Arts and Crafts and adding an architecture department. On March 20, 1919, he made a formal request for the new school to be named the Staatliches Bauhaus in Weimar. “Staatliches,” or “state,” was only ever used for official purposes, and Gropius is thought to have invented Bauhaus, which combines the German words for ‘build” and “house” as a more modern version of Bauhütte, stripped of its Masonic origins.” From Deconstructing an Important Name (New York Times)

A prior clue from 2013 noted that “this school of design & its sites in Weimar & Dessau have been designated World Heritage Sites.” So remember that!



Becky didn’t bet anything so she stayed at $3,200.

Rick bet $11,399, finishing with $29,199.

Lori bet $15,401 bet so she won the game with $34,401, a fantastic win! Lori’s cheering section in the audience went wild as she became the new Jeopardy! champion.

Final Jeopardy (9/11/2018) Rick Terpstra, Lori Goodman, Becky Warren

Reversal: GO FLY A KITE! ($600) the 1822 “charvolant” was this type of passenger vehicle pulled at up to 20 mph by kites instead of horses – Becky said chariot, Lori said train. Rick got it with carriage. Becky’s answer was accepted and Lori’s was treated like it never happened.

A triple stumper from each round:

I’M ALLEN ($1000) This 1960 Pulitzer Prize winner by Allen Drury told about the inner workings of the U.S. Senate

BROADWAY REPLACEMENTS ($1600) “The Little Mermaid” preceded this show as a Disney movie, but followed it at the Lunt-Fontanne as a musical

2 years ago: Only ONE of the players got this FJ in “19th Century Military Men”

In 1895 he wrote to his family that with “superhuman strength” he would “discover the truth… on the tragic affair” show

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18 Responses

  1. John B./I. says:

    Herman Wouk being a triple stumper is kind of a little shock. From “Don’t Stop the Carnival” to the double “The Winds of War & “War and Remembrance” to “The Caine Mutiny” etc etc. Pulitzer, still alive at 103 years old…one of my favorite writers. So maybe I am prejudiced?

  2. AlarmGuy says:

    In the second novel category, did Rick say Robinson Caruso instead of Crusoe?

  3. klm says:

    If Rick had bet it all, Lorie wouldn’t be dancing but rather ruing her bad math.

  4. Lou says:

    Wow at least this is the second triple solve by all the contestants. But Becky couldn’t keep up with Lori or Rick today. Furthermore, I wish Rick would have won again today but hopefully Lori can win more this week and maybe take one of the spots in the toc. Also never forget 9/11 VJ. We will remember the victims lost on that tragic day. I wonder if Bauhaus could also mean an apartment or perhaps a townhouse in german?

    • VJ says:

      @Lou, yeah, I saw that coming as soon as he bet $2,000 on that last DD. Lori was certainly a strong competitor and a worthy winner. In this one game, she made more than half of what Rick got in 3 games and I hope she continues to do just as well for several more games.

      LINK: 9 more clues from this game

    • John B./I. says:

      @Lou
      Yes. I mentioned 9/11 before. Let’s all say a prayer.

  5. William Weyser says:

    Looking for a 4-time champion, looking for a definite Tournament Of Champions player, and waiting for the Good Champion Material to stop being so stinkin’ difficult.

  6. John Christian Ambion says:

    Alex said it was a scary category, but nevertheless, all three got it right. However, we have seen the VERY first champion of the new season. Has anyone used BAUHAUS as a font, or lived a BAUHAUS style of architecture?

    • VJ says:

      I guess Alex didn’t think there’d be many solves either. My first instinct was to say 2/3 but I changed to one when I saw how hard everyone thought it was, except Rhonda. Oh well…

      I have the Bauhaus 93 font on my computer, John Christian, but I don’t like it much. The capital F and the lowercase F look too much alike to me. As for architecture, if I was building a house, I would follow Practical Pig’s example and use bricks.

  7. John B./I. says:

    @JJ
    Well, cover me with honey and put me in an ant hill. Didn’t see that coming! But I rather be wrong by everybody getting it than the other way around. Astonishing, since BAUHAUS was closed down in 1933! Congratulations to Lori, though her bet should conservatively have been 18.601. But a win is a win and a great one at that!
    Too bad for Rick, he missed his chance yesterday to get on the ToC list by betting 4 K. Well, life sometimes sucks (sorry)…

    So we are back on the countdown and it looks more and more likely that we will have 3 time winners in the ToC. And all of us are wearing the dunce cap today, except VJ came closest with ONE correct. Who would have thought????? J never seizes to amaze me. You have an easy FJ and a triple whiff and then something you deem difficult and bingo!! All 3 get it. Go figure…

    On an unrelated note: Let’s remember all the victims who were murdered 17 years ago and celebrate the passengers who overcame the terrorist who wanted to slam the plane into the White House. That plane crashed in PA, avoiding another disaster. Let’s take a minute and pray for all the innocent victims and all the rescue workers. God bless them.

  8. JJ says:

    WOW! You posted this early! I thought I was clicking on the “Who Won…” thing that you usually do this time of day, but I didn’t expect the whole recap. Awesome!
    And boy, oh boy… The bunny & you were on the mark re: the lack of difficulty w/ today’s FJ! What’s the German that comes immediately to mind to describe my take on the clue?! Oh yea, DUMMKOPF!!! 😖

    • John B./I. says:

      @JJ
      I see you know some German. In Austrian/Viennese it would be “TROTTEL”, a rather VERY derogative term… But then Viennese never hold back! DUMMKOPF is the polite version, TROTTEL is as insulting as can be. I feel like one today!

      • Richard Corliss says:

        What is Trottel and Dummkopf?

        • John B./I. says:

          TROTTEL ist somebody who is stupid beyond all measure and DUMMKOPF is just a silly person, who made one mistake too many. TROTTEL is an absolute insult while DUMMKOPF can be meant even in a “friendly”, teasing way.