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In Taxis, a Version of ‘Jeopardy’ Not Quite as Seen on TV

The Chang W. Lee/The New York Times The “Jeopardy” clues that appear inside New York City taxis are easier to answer than those on the television version, as some regular cab riders have suspected.

For three years, “Jeopardy,” the popular game show, has been running quiz-like advertisements in New York City’s yellow taxis, offering passengers clues and prompting them to answer in the form of a question the way contestants on television do. Much like the experience of watching “Jeopardy” from home, there’s no buzzer to ring or jackpot to win. Whether or not you know the answer, it will appear on-screen a few seconds after each clue.

But New Yorkers have noticed something strange about the version of “Jeopardy” they get while weaving through traffic. The clues that blink across back-seat screens in 6,600 of the city’s 13,237 taxis are easier than their televised counterparts.

“I take cabs a couple of times a week and I also watch ‘Jeopardy,’ so you can tell,” said Erin Booth, 23, who lives in the West Village, as she waited in line for a taxi outside Pennsylvania Station. Consider this clue from a taxi: “Cities around the country are using sprays to kill these insects in an effort to curb the West Nile virus.” (The correct response: What are mosquitoes?)

Now compare that with a recent televised clue: “Founded in 1839, this Lexington, Va., school is the U.S.A.’s oldest state-supported military college.” (What is Virginia Military Institute?)

Here’s another taxi clue: “In 2013 Jeff Bezos of Amazon fame agreed to purchase this newspaper that has won more than 60 Pulitzer Prizes.” (What is The Washington Post?) And one from the actual show: “Of the British surrender at Yorktown, he said, ‘The play is over. The fifth act has just come to an end.’” (Who is Marquis de Lafayette?)

Liz Day, who lives in Chelsea, was in a taxi going to Kennedy International Airport for an early-morning flight when she noticed how much easier “Jeopardy” seemed to be from the back of a taxi.

“It was something like, ‘This seaweed is eaten by whales,’” she said. “The answer was ‘krill.’ I like ‘Jeopardy’ but the taxi questions are just â€" it made me laugh. They must dumb it down on purpose because there are a lot of tourists.”

Harry Friedman, the longtime executive producer of “Jeopardy,” says clues written for New York taxis are meant to be “passenger friendly,” regardless of who’s riding. The idea is to make people feel confident about their ability to answer correctly rather than intimidate them out of watching the show. “The clues in the taxis are really for fun,” he said. “They’re meant to be, well, not overly challenging.”

A team of eight writers and six researchers develop clues for the show’s 46 weeks of new programming each year, and that same group comes up with 12 new clues for taxi spots each month. Hail a cab in Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Chicago or San Francisco, and you’ll find taxi “Jeopardy” in those cities, too.

(Regular readers of The New York Times may notice that “Jeopardy” also publishes a separate clue-based advertisement in the paper each day. “Sometimes we worry those ones are too easy,” Mr. Friedman said. “We never have to hold back with New York Times readers.”)

Ken Jennings, the winner of the most money ever on “Jeopardy,” says he has yet to encounter a clue from the back seat of a taxi. But a decade after winning 74 straight times and netting about $3 million in prize money, that may be just as well.

“I love the show but I find that now when I hear the music or Trebek’s voice, I get stressed,” he said, referring to the game’s host, Alex Trebek.

Mr. Jennings, from Washington State, says he still gets asked about the secret to his success. In other words, is there a way to make televised “Jeopardy” seem as simple as some of the clues that appear in taxis?

“People always ask how you know all that stuff, like there’s some secret I could teach them in 10 seconds, some memory trick, or an ancient Chinese herb that would make them ‘Jeopardy’ whizzes,” Mr. Jennings said. “There’s not a secret other than paying attention to the world. That’s the right answer, but it’s not the one people want to hear.”



New York Today: Turned Away

Ulysses S. Grant and his wife get some peace and quiet in their tomb during the government shutdown.Bryan Thomas for The New York Times Ulysses S. Grant and his wife get some peace and quiet in their tomb during the government shutdown.

And on the seventh day, Horst and Kristine Sahlmann of Hamburg, Germany, attempted to visit Grant’s Tomb.

It, too, was closed.

As the federal shutdown drags on, travelers and history buffs are discovering it isn’t just icons like the Statue of Liberty that are off-limits.

There are at least half a dozen shuttered sites across Manhattan, islands of federal dysfunction in a bustling city.

They include the National Museum of the American Indian; Federal Hall, the nation’s first capitol; the African Burial Ground; Alexander Hamilton’s colonnaded old house; and Teddy Roosevelt’s birthplace.

On Monday at Grant’s Tomb, the imposing granite mausoleum in Riverside Park, a neon-orange jacket that said “security” sat unused in a guard booth. The flags still flew at full mast.

Tour buses stopped, but no passengers got off â€" not even to take a picture.

“People are just disappointed,” said Louis Jimenez, a lonely bus-company sentinel at the drop-off point.

This included the Sahlmanns, who had already tried to visit the Lady Liberty.

“For tourists, it’s not good,” Mr. Sahlmann said. “It’s very frustrating.”

Here’s what else you need to know for Tuesday.

WEATHER

Back to sunshine for two more days, with a high of 68 today. Yesterday’s quarter-inch of rain in Central Park was the first measurable precipitation in more than two weeks.

COMMUTE

Subways: O.K. so far. Click for latest status.

Rails: Fine so far. Click for L.I.R.R. and Metro-North status.

Roads: Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect all week.

COMING UP TODAY

- The candidates for comptroller, the Democrat Scott M. Stringer and the Republican John Burnett, face off in a debate televised on NY1 at 7 p.m.

- The mayor addresses the annual conference of the International Downtown Association, a group dedicated to the vitality of cities, at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.

- The presumed winner of the public advocate race, Letitia James, talks at noon about her plans for the office.

- Advocates for charter schools (and their children) rally in Brooklyn and march across the Brooklyn Bridge to City Hall, starting at 7:30 a.m.

- The mayoral candidates, Bill de Blasio and Joseph J. Lhota, both speak at an “Urban Solutions to Global Challenges” summit in Battery Park City.

- Mr. Lhota will also speak at an Association for a Better New York breakfast and attend the charter school rally.

- Diana Nyad begins her 48-hour marathon swim in a pool in Herald Square to raise money for Hurricane Sandy victims. 8:30 a.m.

- Ralph Nader, a former Japanese prime minister, and a former Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman take part in a panel: “The Fukushima-Daiichi Nuclear Accident: Lessons for New York,” at the 92nd Street Y. 9:30 a.m.

- Free lobster rolls in Midtown â€" only 100 of them, though â€" from Luke’s Lobster, to promote the lobster-referencing novel “The Rosie Project.” East 46th Street and Vanderbilt Avenue. 11:30 a.m.

- District Attorney Charles J. Hynes of Brooklyn, defeated in the Democratic primary, formally launches his campaign for re-election as a Republican.

- A photo exhibit, “The Raging ’70s: Latino New York as Seen by El Diario’s Bolivar Arellano,” opens at Columbia University’s Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race. 5 p.m. [Free]

- A panel on the global influence of hip-hop, “I Reminisce (So You Never Forget This)” at the Pregones Theater in the Bronx. 6 p.m. [Free]

- The CBGB Music and Film Festival kicks off with, among other things, the theatrical premiere of “CBGB: The Movie” at Landmark Sunshine Cinema.

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

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