Thursday, May 14, 2026
ADVT 
International

Indian-American Teen Avi Gupta Wins USD 100K Quiz Show Prize In US

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Jul, 2019 01:42 AM

    An Indian-American youth has won the 2019 Teen Jeopardy contest taking the $100,000 prize in America's most-watched individual quiz show.


    Avi Gupta's victory televised on Friday marks a near-clean sweep of popular student contests in the past year by Indian-Americans.


    He is from Portland, Oregon, and completed high school recently, although he was still a high schooler when the programme was pre-recorded several weeks ago.


    He beat out three other Indian-American teens in the contest, which featured a total of 15 students.


    During the show, he told the host, Alex Trebek, that people questioned the value of accumulating a trove of trivia when they could be googled. But he said that building a wide range of knowledge was important because arguments and ideas can be built only on facts.


    The 2018 College Jeopardy, which also carried a prize of $100,000, was won by Dhruv Gaur.


    The 2019 National Geography Bee, which tests knowledge of geography, was won by Nihar Janga.


    In the 2019 National Spelling Bee last month seven of the eight co-winners were of Indian descent. In the previous 10 years, only Indian-Americans had been winners.


    Indian-Americans have made their mark in science contests also. Although there were no winners among them, 16 of the 30 finalists in the nation's top contest, the Regeneron National Science Talent Search, were on Indian descent.


    In the Broadcom Masters science contest for middle school students, eight of the 30 finalists were Indian-Americans.

     

    MORE International ARTICLES

    From Selling BMWs To Buffaloes, How Imran Khan Is Tackling Pak's Debt

    From Selling BMWs To Buffaloes, How Imran Khan Is Tackling Pak's Debt
      Apart from luxury cars, the government, facing huge debts and liabilities, plans to auction eight buffaloes kept by deposed and jailed former prime minister Nawaz Sharif at the PM House for his "gastronomic requirements", a senior aide to Mr Khan said last week.

    From Selling BMWs To Buffaloes, How Imran Khan Is Tackling Pak's Debt

    India-Born Nobel Winner Calls 'Sensible' Post-Brexit Immigration System

    India-Born Nobel Winner Calls 'Sensible' Post-Brexit Immigration System
    LONDON: UK-based Nobel Prize winning biologist Sir Venkatraman (Venki) Ramakrishnan has called for a "sensible" post-Brexit immigration system to ensure that mobility of scientists is maintained when Britain leaves the European Union (EU).

    India-Born Nobel Winner Calls 'Sensible' Post-Brexit Immigration System

    UK Police Conduct Series Of Anti-Terror Raids Related To ‘Extremist Activity’ In India

    UK Police Conduct Series Of Anti-Terror Raids Related To ‘Extremist Activity’ In India
    Britain’s counter-terrorism officers on Tuesday conducted a series of raids on homes in central England in connection with what it described as allegations of extremist activity in India and fraud offences.

    UK Police Conduct Series Of Anti-Terror Raids Related To ‘Extremist Activity’ In India

    Scotland Yard's First Indian-Origin Counter-Terror Chief Neil Basu Wins Award In UK

    Scotland Yard's First Indian-Origin Counter-Terror Chief Neil Basu Wins Award In UK
    Scotland Yard's first Indian-origin counter-terrorism chief has won the Asian Achievers' Award in the Uniformed and Civil Services category for his contribution to policing in the UK.

    Scotland Yard's First Indian-Origin Counter-Terror Chief Neil Basu Wins Award In UK

    Singapore Football Coach Apologises For Turban Remark

    Singapore Football Coach Apologises For Turban Remark
    Singapore’s national football coach has apologised for his racist comments made to a Sikh reporter during a pre-match press conference here last week, a media report said on Friday.

    Singapore Football Coach Apologises For Turban Remark

    Americans Don't Trust Trump: Indian-American Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal

    Americans Don't Trust Trump: Indian-American Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal
    Americans are recognizing that they don't trust the US President who has maintained that he knew nothing about what was went on in his campaign, Indian-American Congressman Pramila Jayapal has said.

    Americans Don't Trust Trump: Indian-American Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal