David Stewart goes for the $2.14 million dollar jackpot on April 1, 2001. Think this was one of the very first episodes I recall taping back when I was doing the majority of my recording.
I love that he was on Jeopardy and Regis made the same "Peanuts!!" comment to him that he made to Ken Basin in 2009 (who was also a Jeopardy contestant)
It’s a tough call, but the psychologist is the good choice since we are talking about psychological symptoms that HAPPEN to deal with art. That’s like asking about arachnophobia. Would you call someone who is an expert on insects or an expert on psychology? At the end it’s a gamble. We don’t know if the art or psychology guys just know the subject or they have Master’s. Still a gamble lol
I have a strategy suggestion if you happen to have the Audience life line for a high value question left (not ideal): Pick one answer you think is least likely correct, and tell the audience to pick that UNLESS they are above 90% sure... Say he designated A as the "IDK choice". Audience votes - A:89% B:2% C:9% D:0%. Pick C and profit. Wonder if this would work with proper cooperation and ego-less voting 🤔
It would never work. Sometimes people vote for A when 50/50 was chosen and only B and C were left. The audience doesn't really care and votes even when they have no clue about the answer. I would ask them to vote only if they are sure of their answer.
@@jairomy That's exactly what Moe Cain did on his million dollar question. He used PAF first, no answer was given, then the Audience. Before they voted, he requested "Please, no wild guesses." And guess what? Just like this video, the audience was right by a very small margin on that question too. But he understandably walked away because he didn't know.