The planet is called Endor too. And they only ask for the planet. The forest moon of Endor is describing the moon OF Endor. Endor being the moon alone is some form of the Mandela Effect
@@TheAxeman225 Weird... on the Wikipedia page about Endor there is an explanation that Endor is a moon of the planet Tara. Hard to say where this information comes from, but the phrase "forest moon of Endor" is ambiguous: it can mean "forest moon that belongs to Endor" or "forest moon that is called Endor". I was a kid when the original Star Wars was released and a teenager when ROTJ was released. At that time -- when Endor made its first public appearance -- we were all pretty sure that Endor was a moon of a larger planet, simply from how it was presented in the movie. The debate will rage on, I'm sure.
In the standalone film "Ewoks: The Battle for Endor" the movie takes place in the same forest. Sounds like "forest moon of Endor" means "the forest moon named Endor"
It's interesting how the sets have improved over the years. I had forgotten how the rostra were once one long counter, but now they're widely separated.
I would have legitimately guessed Guppy as a joke because I had no idea. Priceless. Got Treasure Island, Lucille Ball and was wondering WTF the planet was in ROTJ because, as I'm sure a million snarky emails told the producers, Endor is a moon.
Lucille Ball and Treasure Island were the only ones I got as well. I guessed Tatooine (sp?) because that is literally the only place name I know in Star Wars. I was also 100% certain that Tatooine does not appear anywhere in the Bible, but it was all I had lol
@@stacymar684 I got Endor by the Witch of Endor. I was puzzled over Unreal Estate until I remembered who Captain Kidd was. Totally missed the opera because I'd never heard of it.
Totally got the Innovations question. By the way, there is a mathematics video in which the poster takes the government (British, I think, though possibly local) for indicating the way to a soccer stadium by showing a ball which is all hexagons, which is impossible. (You must have some tiles that have fewer sides; if they are all pentagons, there must be twelve, which there are on a soccer ball or the simplest Buckyball, but you could also have squares or triangles.) Then they proceeded to make a ball that looked like the one on the sign by an optical illusion, since the tiles on the back side, and some on the front side, weren't actually pentagons. Sorry, I'm a geometer by training. You can all wake up now.
0:00 - October 2, 2003 1:39 - September 29, 2022 3:15 - April 1, 1997 5:14 - June 8, 1999 7:08 - January 22, 2003 8:45 - February 25, 2008 10:20 - February 6, 2018 12:01 - March 23, 2018 13:46 - February 15, 2007 15:56 - June 13, 2022
I once again got three of these correct: Brazil (stretchest furthest south of any country on the equator). Treasure Island (the novel). Lucille Ball (mentored by Buster Keaton). For an 'uber-amateur' who has terrible recall......I'm fairly satisfied...
Got the following: 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10 Admittedly, one was a pure guess meant to be funny but ended up being current. Endor was a moon, not a planet.
At first I did but then was like nah must be something different and got soccer ball a second later. at one point they did add a "trail" to hockey pucks on TV to make it easier to see. Maybe like 15-20 years ago? Not sure if the timing fits but they definitely did.
That first one about the VP is kindda misleading. Actually LBJ was the First VP born in the 20th Century. (1908) - Nixon was born in 1913. If they meant the first VP elected born in the 20t Century, then it is correct.
Nixon was the first VP born in the 1900's who was elected that served 2 terms. LBJ only served under 3 years before becoming president because of JFK assassination.
I’ll try. This contestant knew he wasn’t gonna win, and he had no idea what the correct response was. So, he wrote it down, just to be funny, and he got a laugh out of it.
Ha you youngins! Rand McNally was a brand of maps and atlasas. They had stores at the malls in the 80s. I think that was the parting gift. Thats funny that a nerd show like Jeopardy would give out free atlases!
I'm decent at Jeopardy, but considering that one of these might be a joke - the guppy one - I shouldn't be able to get 7 of the 9 "Hardest" final jeopardy questions/answers right. A couple of these were pretty easy.
Well, of the ten, I missed "Apologia" (never heard of it) and Endor, because I forgot about the Ewoks. Should have gotten it, though. Some I guessed at (guppy) but got lucky.
@@IdRatherBeDiving-vr5gk Yep, I intuited the answer from the SW title referenced would be most relatable to human root language. It’s how I guess most answers from this show. I really didn’t know Endor was biblically referenced until yesterday. It’s about a 40/100 random thing with no existing knowledge but it rewards intuition.
The first question is pretty easy if you play bar trivia regularly. We get a lot of questions about presidents and VPs, have to practically memorize all of it. Harry Truman was the two-term VP before Nixon, and Truman was too old in 1945 to have been born in the 20th century.
Harry Truman was Vice President for less than one term: January to April, 1945. He was preceded by Henry Wallace who only served one term, 1941-1945. The VP before him, John Nance Garner, served two terms, 1933-1941, then quit. He was famous for saying, "The Vice Presidency ain't worth a pitcher of warm spit."
One of the few drawbacks of being good looking, confident, and able to get a hot girlfriend... is that have ZERO knowledge of the Star Wars shtick beyond the original film. Was Endor where all the cute little teddy bear creatures lived? I couldn't care less if it was a moon, a planet, or a profiterole.
@@KeithOtisEdwards The word was that Ken was busy with other projects and couldn't commit to full time at first. That was why they split duties for a time.
I don't know who at Sony is running this channel, but they are too rude. Like the questions, but the attitude stinks. Clicking on don't recommend channel.
I don’t know why the first and last question were included here. You’re obviously looking for someone who served as vice president for two terms in the last half of the 20th century. Only 3 men fit: George Bush, Al Gore, and Richard Nixon. Gore is younger than Bush, and to exclude Nixon, he would’ve had to have been over 50 when he became VP, putting him well into his 90’s when he died. Only two women really fit for the answer to the last question, and unlike Lucille Ball, Mary Tyler Moore would’ve been way too young to be a fan of Buster Keaton, who was a silent film star.
They kind of screwed up the ROTJ "planet" question; EVERYONE knows Endor is a moon, not a planet.
"the forest moon of Endor" could be read as the forest moon called Endor or the forest moon of the planet Endor, because English
The planet is called Endor too. And they only ask for the planet. The forest moon of Endor is describing the moon OF Endor. Endor being the moon alone is some form of the Mandela Effect
@@TheAxeman225 Weird... on the Wikipedia page about Endor there is an explanation that Endor is a moon of the planet Tara. Hard to say where this information comes from, but the phrase "forest moon of Endor" is ambiguous: it can mean "forest moon that belongs to Endor" or "forest moon that is called Endor".
I was a kid when the original Star Wars was released and a teenager when ROTJ was released. At that time -- when Endor made its first public appearance -- we were all pretty sure that Endor was a moon of a larger planet, simply from how it was presented in the movie.
The debate will rage on, I'm sure.
In the standalone film "Ewoks: The Battle for Endor" the movie takes place in the same forest. Sounds like "forest moon of Endor" means "the forest moon named Endor"
I literally said answering that question: "What is Endor? ....But that's a moon...."
It's interesting how the sets have improved over the years. I had forgotten how the rostra were once one long counter, but now they're widely separated.
I would have legitimately guessed Guppy as a joke because I had no idea. Priceless.
Got Treasure Island, Lucille Ball and was wondering WTF the planet was in ROTJ because, as I'm sure a million snarky emails told the producers, Endor is a moon.
Lucille Ball and Treasure Island were the only ones I got as well.
I guessed Tatooine (sp?) because that is literally the only place name I know in Star Wars. I was also 100% certain that Tatooine does not appear anywhere in the Bible, but it was all I had lol
@@stacymar684 I got Endor by the Witch of Endor. I was puzzled over Unreal Estate until I remembered who Captain Kidd was. Totally missed the opera because I'd never heard of it.
Totally got the Innovations question. By the way, there is a mathematics video in which the poster takes the government (British, I think, though possibly local) for indicating the way to a soccer stadium by showing a ball which is all hexagons, which is impossible. (You must have some tiles that have fewer sides; if they are all pentagons, there must be twelve, which there are on a soccer ball or the simplest Buckyball, but you could also have squares or triangles.)
Then they proceeded to make a ball that looked like the one on the sign by an optical illusion, since the tiles on the back side, and some on the front side, weren't actually pentagons.
Sorry, I'm a geometer by training. You can all wake up now.
They probably did get a lot of (incorrect) snarky emails. The action took place on the forest moon of Endor, so yes, Endor was a planet.
Humuhumunukunukuāpuaʻa
0:00 - October 2, 2003
1:39 - September 29, 2022
3:15 - April 1, 1997
5:14 - June 8, 1999
7:08 - January 22, 2003
8:45 - February 25, 2008
10:20 - February 6, 2018
12:01 - March 23, 2018
13:46 - February 15, 2007
15:56 - June 13, 2022
I once again got three of these correct:
Brazil (stretchest furthest south of any country on the equator).
Treasure Island (the novel).
Lucille Ball (mentored by Buster Keaton).
For an 'uber-amateur' who has terrible recall......I'm fairly satisfied...
I got all of them.............................................................................................The second time watching it
I got 5 of these. A lot better than the 1 I got on another of these 10 hardest final Jeopardy videos
More of that, please
I happen to have known the guy in the Innovations category who was the champion in that clip. Crazy how life works out sometimes.
I totally remember the name Kit Salisbury. He was the Ken Jennings of Tic Tack Dough. Didn't know he was in Jeopardy!
Got the following:
1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10
Admittedly, one was a pure guess meant to be funny but ended up being current.
Endor was a moon, not a planet.
I got 4.. I feel like a genius now.
Nixon, Brazil, Endor, Treasure Island, Laffite, Lucille Ball, 6 out of 10. Better than I thought I'd do!
We must think alike, because those were the ones that I got correct.
I need them to start putting at least the year the episode aired or something in the corner so I have more context
06/13/2022 (Eric Ahasic game 06.)
09/29/2022 (David Sibley game 04.)
Some of those were pretty easy!
I also guessed 'hockey pucks' for the second one and felt really dumb until the guy who won had the same bad guess.
At first I did but then was like nah must be something different and got soccer ball a second later. at one point they did add a "trail" to hockey pucks on TV to make it easier to see. Maybe like 15-20 years ago? Not sure if the timing fits but they definitely did.
That first one about the VP is kindda misleading. Actually LBJ was the First VP born in the 20th Century. (1908) - Nixon was born in 1913. If they meant the first VP elected born in the 20t Century, then it is correct.
Nixon was the first VP born in the 1900's who was elected that served 2 terms. LBJ only served under 3 years before becoming president because of JFK assassination.
I was expecting much harder. I got half of them correct.
I would have bet my last penny on the Bible question. I got unreal estate and vice president, but the category was iffy.
You wager before you hear the question, otherwise if you know the answer you would always wager everything.
I got 4 of 10 right, thought they would be harder
6:12 Great response.
I don’t get it, can you explain?
I’ll try. This contestant knew he wasn’t gonna win, and he had no idea what the correct response was. So, he wrote it down, just to be funny, and he got a laugh out of it.
@@theweysermanisback5205 but is that a reference to something? The reaction seemed way too much for it not to be.
I don’t know.
Ha you youngins! Rand McNally was a brand of maps and atlasas. They had stores at the malls in the 80s. I think that was the parting gift. Thats funny that a nerd show like Jeopardy would give out free atlases!
Again, I ask, where do you get your clips?
@@Margann1987 The Sony archive!
@@WorldofJeopardy Interesting 😊 Where do you find that?
@@Margann1987 We're an official channel!
@@WorldofJeopardyYes, the channel has not been immediately struck down by Sony.
@@WorldofJeopardy I cannot find it. Do you have a link?
I'm glad that they don't sponsor the second and third place contestants anymore.
I got one, Pagliacci.
I'm decent at Jeopardy, but considering that one of these might be a joke - the guppy one - I shouldn't be able to get 7 of the 9 "Hardest" final jeopardy questions/answers right. A couple of these were pretty easy.
@nunyabizness5391 look at the description!
@@WorldofJeopardy Apparently the description is also incorrect.
@@cityofsonora Feel free to enter, Brad Rutter!
The clip with Sajak must be a parody, everyone knows the clue is the answer not a question. The contestants have to come up with the correct question.
Endor is a MOON
I do just as well with the top hard ones as I do with the easy ones . With about half correct. I thought the Nixon one was one of the easiest .
The most difficult is watching and listening to Bialek. Thank goodness she is gone!
I got Nixon, Endor, Apology, and Treasure Island. Yeah, not the hardest for sure.
Well, of the ten, I missed "Apologia" (never heard of it) and Endor, because I forgot about the Ewoks. Should have gotten it, though. Some I guessed at (guppy) but got lucky.
Well.....at least I got Nixon and LaFitte correct.
The last question was the easiest... ;)
The equator question and the Kidd novel quests were both very, very easy.
Yup.... actually thought Treasure Island would be wrong because it was TOO obvious. Lucille Ball was a pretty obvious guess as well
The Endor question was straightforward as well.
@@excrono I’m guessing that’s from whence Bewitched got Endora.
@@excrono But Endor in ROTJ is a moon, not a planet.
@@IdRatherBeDiving-vr5gk Yep, I intuited the answer from the SW title referenced would be most relatable to human root language. It’s how I guess most answers from this show.
I really didn’t know Endor was biblically referenced until yesterday. It’s about a 40/100 random thing with no existing knowledge but it rewards intuition.
Could you just do a whole video of player introductions?
I don't know why the Lucille Ball question was included. It was so obvious!
Aileen didn’t win much money on the last regular game before the Teen Tournament.
The soccer one was a gimmie. I'm not even into sportsball, but how do you not know soccer balls have Pentagon's on them?
WHAT is sportsball
I got 4 of them.
These were pretty difficult I only got one.
They were no harder than the ones they were calling easy on another video.
I got 3!!! PRESIDENTS, ENDOR AND BOOKS. (Nerd).
Oh yes, Pat Sajak 97
Yep. April Fool's Day. Sajak hosted Jeopardy and Trebek hosted Wheel.
5/10... sheesh
Endor was a moon not a planet. Apologia means defense, not apology, so the clue was misleading.
Why would you bet money with no answer.....
They wager before they see the questions.
The one guy lost by a dollar..... I think his math was wrong......
The first question is pretty easy if you play bar trivia regularly. We get a lot of questions about presidents and VPs, have to practically memorize all of it. Harry Truman was the two-term VP before Nixon, and Truman was too old in 1945 to have been born in the 20th century.
Harry Truman was Vice President for less than one term: January to April, 1945. He was preceded by Henry Wallace who only served one term, 1941-1945. The VP before him, John Nance Garner, served two terms, 1933-1941, then quit. He was famous for saying, "The Vice Presidency ain't worth a pitcher of warm spit."
@@KeithOtisEdwards Ahh, good to know. Thanks!
Pfeh, The Globe wasn't hard if you have a mental map. It was just a matter of guessing the right one.
I just picked the biggest and was right lol
13:15 Did the 1st place contestant botch the math?
8/10 including GUPPY
That was my guess and it was a guess
Allen Jeffrey Gonzalez Patricia Perez Lisa
One of the few drawbacks of being good looking, confident, and able to get a hot girlfriend... is that have ZERO knowledge of the Star Wars shtick beyond the original film. Was Endor where all the cute little teddy bear creatures lived? I couldn't care less if it was a moon, a planet, or a profiterole.
I got eight right.
These were pretty damn easy…
Crap, 4 out of 10: Richard Nixon, Pagliacci, Treasure Island, Lucille Ball.
wow blossom sounded very flat and computer generated
Yeah. She had no humor. I'm amazed that Ken Jennings had to compete with her for the permanent host position.
@@KeithOtisEdwards The word was that Ken was busy with other projects and couldn't commit to full time at first. That was why they split duties for a time.
I'm glad blossom isn't the host of jeopardy any more....her weird voice is annoying.
Several of these weren't that hard, especially the last one.
Some of these contestants use some bad math when they make their bet..... I don't get it.......
It just doesn't add up.🤣
They were all difficult except your first one. Can’t believe anyone would not be able to get Nixon.
Too easy
Thank god they got rid of Blossom.
I second that. I hated her as much. Too robotic for me.
I didn't mind her .
She was awesome
Taylor Shirley Thompson Melissa Miller John
You could know Pagliacci and not know the correct spelling.
You don't have to spell it correctly in Final Jeopardy, you just can't change the pronunciation. "Paliacci" or "Paliachi" would be accepted.
Useless knowledge pays off
@@Scottwilkie18 No such thing!
i'm so glad they ditched Mayim Bialik, she sounds like a robot reading everything, completely wrong cadence for the show.
Dumb luck
I don't know who at Sony is running this channel, but they are too rude. Like the questions, but the attitude stinks. Clicking on don't recommend channel.
I don’t know why the first and last question were included here. You’re obviously looking for someone who served as vice president for two terms in the last half of the 20th century. Only 3 men fit: George Bush, Al Gore, and Richard Nixon. Gore is younger than Bush, and to exclude Nixon, he would’ve had to have been over 50 when he became VP, putting him well into his 90’s when he died. Only two women really fit for the answer to the last question, and unlike Lucille Ball, Mary Tyler Moore would’ve been way too young to be a fan of Buster Keaton, who was a silent film star.
Yeah, the Lucille Ball one seemed like a layup. The only other option is Gracie Allen but she wasn't as much of a physical comedienne.
@@pronkb000 Good catch. I completely forgot about Gracie Allen.