Today’s Final Jeopardy – Thursday, April 29, 2021

Happy Thursday! Thus far this week, $78,796 has been raised for Justice Defenders through Anderson Cooper’s guest-hosting. Here’s today’s Final Jeopardy (in the category Odd Words) for Thursday, April 29, 2021 (Season 37, Game 154):

A homophone of a letter in the alphabet, this 5-letter word sounds the same if you remove its last 4 vowels

(correct response beneath the contestants)


Today’s contestants:

Emily Sands, a vice president of operations from Chanhassen, Minnesota
Emily Sands on Jeopardy!
Colin Beazley, a private investment professional from West Palm Beach, Florida
Colin Beazley on Jeopardy!
Leah Caglio, a product manager originally from Phoenix, Arizona (1-day total: $17,595)
Leah Caglio on Jeopardy!

Andy’s Pregame Thoughts: Leah picked up $17,595 yesterday and a heartwarming moment when Anderson Cooper asked her how long she had waited to be called Jeopardy! champion. It really humanized the moment for me and I really liked how Anderson handled it.


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Correct response: What is queue?


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More information about Final Jeopardy: (The following write-up is original content and is copyright 2021 The Jeopardy! Fan. It may not be copied without linked attribution back to this page.)

“Queue” is a term most often used in Britain to refer to a line (generally of people, but data can be queued as well in computing). Obviously, it’s a homophone for the letter Q.

One thing I find interesting about line terminology: in New York City, you don’t say “I’m in line”; “I’m on line” is said instead.


We have many new offerings at The Jeopardy! Fan Online Store! Proceeds from the sale of the “Doctor Oz’s Fast-Acting Snake Oil Elixir” T-shirt are being donated to The Trevor Project:


Looking to find out who won Jeopardy! today? Tonight’s results are below!

Scores going into Final:
Emily $18,600
Leah $17,200
Colin $17,200


Tonight’s results:
Colin $17,200 + $7,000 = $24,200 (What is queue?)
Leah $17,200 + $13,000 = $30,200 (What is queue?)
Emily $18,600 + $18,000 = $36,600 (What is queue?) (1-day total: $36,600)


Emily Sands, today's Jeopardy! winner for the April 29, 2021 game.)


Scores after the Jeopardy! Round:
Emily $8,000
Colin $5,200
Leah $4,200



Opening break taken after: 15 clues


Daily Double locations:
1) GEOGRAPHIC TOP 10s $400 (clue #7)
Colin 1000 +1000 (Leah 1400 Emily 800)
2) POP CULTURE PRIESTS $1600 (clue #19)
Leah 13000 +2200 (Colin 11600 Emily 8800)
3) HISTORIC GOVERNORS $1600 (clue #28, $3200 left on board)
Emily 9600 +9000 (Leah 17200 Colin 14000)
Overall Daily Double Efficiency for this game: 211


Unplayed clues:
J! Round: None!
DJ! Round: None!
Total Left On Board: $0
Number of clues left unrevealed this season: 180 (1.17 per episode average), 2 Daily Doubles


Game Stats:
Emily $11,200 Coryat, 19 correct, 2 incorrect, 33.33% in first on buzzer (19/57), 1/1 on rebound attempts (on 1 rebound opportunity)
Leah $16,600 Coryat, 16 correct, 0 incorrect, 26.32% in first on buzzer (15/57), 0/0 on rebound attempts (on 3 rebound opportunities)
Colin $16,600 Coryat, 21 correct, 1 incorrect, 33.33% in first on buzzer (19/57), 2/2 on rebound attempts (on 2 rebound opportunities)
Combined Coryat Score: $44,400
Lach Trash: $6,600 (on 4 Triple Stumpers)
Coryat lost to incorrect responses (less double-correct responses): $3,000

Leah Caglio, career statistics:
34 correct, 1 incorrect
1/1 on rebound attempts (on 7 rebound opportunities)
28.18% in first on buzzer (31/110)
1/1 on Daily Doubles (Net Earned: $2,200)
2/2 in Final Jeopardy
Average Coryat: $15,200

Colin Beazley, career statistics:
22 correct, 1 incorrect
2/2 on rebound attempts (on 2 rebound opportunities)
33.33% in first on buzzer (19/57)
1/1 on Daily Doubles (Net Earned: $1,000)
1/1 in Final Jeopardy
Average Coryat: $16,600

Emily Sands, career statistics:
20 correct, 2 incorrect
1/1 on rebound attempts (on 1 rebound opportunity)
33.33% in first on buzzer (19/57)
1/1 on Daily Doubles (Net Earned: $9,000)
1/1 in Final Jeopardy
Average Coryat: $11,200

Emily Sands, to win:
2 games: 55.523%
3: 30.828%
4: 17.117%
5: 9.504%
6: 5.277%
Avg. streak: 2.248 games.

Andy’s Thoughts:

  • Thus far, $118,396 has been raised for Justice Defenders.

Contestant photo credit: jeopardy.com

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8 Comments on "Today’s Final Jeopardy – Thursday, April 29, 2021"

  1. Very impressive correct/incorrect ratios today for all three contestants…
    Emily 19/2
    Leah 16/0
    Colin 21/1

  2. very easy….. not exactly sure why… didn’t even have to go through the alphabet.

    I think maybe it’s something they’ve featured in non-FJ many times……….. and this doesn’t have to do with this particular FJ, I think they repeat correct responses too much. Susan B Anthony, Rachel Carson, Liberia come to mind. or maybe it’s the same thing as tonight’s FJ, they do that response so much in non-FJ that we all know it right away.

    • center ice | April 30, 2021 at 2:10 am |

      “Who is Sylvia Plath?” is a frequent correct response, too.

      • Often the answers are those of names of my cats present and past – Diogenes, Deuteronomy, Copernicus, Archimedes, Persephone, Robespierre

  3. First of all, instant classic game. Tight match, few wrong answers/triple stumpers, and three very likeable contestants. I loved Emily from her first response, she was just so happy to be there!

    Second, the Daily Double betting. Early DJ wagers are hard and I’m not going to fault Leah for underbetting there–“Pop Culture Priests” is a bit of an oddball category, even if it did ultimately cost her the game. But Cooper calling Emily’s bet at the end of the game “gutsy” when it was the clear percentage play drove me crazy. Alex often did the same. I get that they’re catering to the folks at home, but there are lots of other ways to emphasize a big bet without being misleading. (“For the lead…”, “An aggressive move…”)

    Re: FJ, that’s a fun word fact (kind of like how “bookkeeper” has three double letters in a row, or “strengths” is the longest word in English with only one vowel) but too easy to work out in 30 seconds (reminiscent of the “What is -40F in Celsius?” question on Millionaire years back. Nice to see a wordplay FJ, but probably not the best choice here.

  4. Mary A Rose | April 30, 2021 at 2:56 am |

    That may well be the best episode of Jeopardy that I have ever seen. It was so fast and furious, with three very likable and bright contestants. It’s a shame that two of them will not be back. I was somewhat surprised that none of the three knew “Papal Nuncio,” but then perhaps my parochial school education helped with that.

    The show was well worth waiting for (at 10:30 p.m. here in the L.A. area).

    • Yes, I was also surprised that no one got “Nuncio”; but, like you, I have a Catholic background. That’s got to be the difference.

  5. Pizza Face Fred | April 30, 2021 at 12:46 pm |

    I think Anderson is a natural. He’s easy to understand, has great cadence, or whatever you guys are calling it, is witty, and gets a nice rapport going with the contestants. If I was to have a problem, it would be that there’s sometimes a little delay when he’s letting the contestants know if they’re right or wrong.

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