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Jeopardy: Questions
built 787 days ago
Scoring for Water Jeopardy can be done by any method. A suggested scoring system is to use three large rain gauges or other clear water measuring containers of equal size. Small drinking cups of water can be used to fill the gages as teams answer questions correctly. Before play starts, divide the groups into three teams. Place a bell on three separate tables or desks and situate a team around each table.
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The final scores of the episode of Jeopardy! that was broadcast on March 16, 2007.  The three contestants (L to R: Scott Weiss, Jamey Kirby & Anders Martinson) finished with identical final scores of $16,000. Usually, it is only one contestant (if any) that is eliminated before Final Jeopardy! However, on rare occasions, two contestants have been disqualified from playing, leaving the first-place player to provide a question to the Final Jeopardy! answer alone. The last show where two contestants finished in the red aired on February 23, 2005 during the Ultimate Tournament of Champions (only Jeff Richmond advanced to Final Jeopardy!).[6]
Jeopardy update: No, Ken Jennings isn’t coming back, but a man who once beat him is still alive. That would be SI.com’s own James Quintong. Fantasy producer extraordinaire JQ fulfilled a lifelong dream by appearing — and winning — on Jeopardy! Wednesday night. (And he really did beat Ken, albeit as part of a team-vs.-team contest several years back.) On Wednesday, JQ executed a Bears-like playbook to perfection in taking a low-scoring slugfest over two-day champ Vicky, a school psychologist, and flight attendant Christi. JQ avoided turnovers by answering only one question incorrectly and not losing dollars, a problem that plagued the scattershot Vicky.
You can make a Jeopardy board out of a large piece of cardboard. You could ... use pieces of construction paper and hang them on the board with magnets. (The questions go underneath each dollar amount)
Jeopardy If you've never seen "Jeopardy!", it's played in a unique answer/question format. Three contestants vie to answer a series of questions, on a wide variety of subjects, but the show's questions are provided in the form of an "answer", while the contestants must phrase their answers in the form of a "question".
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