"Jeopardy!" Hero-Villain Arthur Chu Struggles Early, But Wins Again - East Idaho News
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“Jeopardy!” Hero-Villain Arthur Chu Struggles Early, But Wins Again

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HT arthur chu tk 140203 16x9 992?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1394583390625“Jeopardy!”(LOS ANGELES) — Polarizing Jeopardy! champ Arthur Chu won an 11th straight game, though not without early struggles and a few testy exchanges with show host Alex Trebek.

Chu, 30, an insurance compliance worker and voiceover actor from Broadview Heights, Ohio, who has been live-tweeting his winning streak, didn’t really take off until the “Double Jeopardy!” round, which he began in second place, $400 behind the leader, Kirsten Albair.

But, in a familiar story, Chu pulled away from his rivals by controlling the board with rapid-fire picks of high-value squares chosen out of the game’s conventional sequence — a playing style drawn from game theory that has prompted some traditionalists to dub him the “Jeopardy! Villain” and others to cheer him via the Twitter hashtag #ChuChuTrain.

Chu’s strategy once again allowed him to secure all three of the hidden “Daily Double” boxes, to place big bets on them and to keep them away from his opponents.

In the first round, Chu was able to double his score to $2,000 using a “Daily Double.” In the second round, already securely in the lead, he picked up an additional $4,000 by hitting a “Daily Double,” but he soon lost $5,000 on another one by mispronouncing the name of the actress Frances McDormand. Chu’s response would have been correct, but Trebek said he heard Chu say “McDarmand.”

On a subsequent clue, a seemingly annoyed Chu emphatically pronounced the name of another actor, Sam Waterston.

But he lost another round of the pronunciation wars when he pronounced the politician Elbridge Gerry’s name with a soft “g.” Trebek noted it should have a hard “g,” prompting Chu to protest that the term gerrymandering has a “soft-g” pronunciation and is derived from Gerry’s last name. Trebek declared it an anomaly of the English language and moved on.

Nevertheless, by the “Final Jeopardy!” question on “Novel Titles,” Chu led Albair $17,000 to $5,200. Both got the question right but Chu easily coasted to victory. His $20,000 take for the game brought his 11-day winnings to $297,200.

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