Show #4877 2005-11-22 (taped 2005-08-17) Regular

Bill MacDonald game 1.

Contestants

Bill MacDonald — an attorney from Bonita Springs, Florida

Jeanne McDougall — a communications consultant from San Diego, California

Michael Cramer — a graduate student from Virginia Beach, Virginia (whose 1-day cash winnings total $22,600)

Scores

Player First Commercial End of Jeopardy! End of Double Jeopardy! Final Coryat
Michael $1,200 $2,600 $-600 $-600
3rd place: $1,000
$3,400
16 R, 6 W (including 1 DD)
Jeanne $-600 $0 $5,200 $5,000
2nd place: $2,000
$6,400
9 R, 4 W (including 1 DD)
Bill $200 $4,200 $14,300 $18,199
New champion: $18,199
$11,400
17 R (including 1 DD), 3 W

Jeopardy! Round

EUROPE CLASSIC TV AMERICAN WOMAN PRESIDENTIAL FAST FACTS A BEASTLY CATEGORY RHYME TIME
$200 [1]
In 1993 this country became a federal state with 3 regions: Flanders, Wallonia & one for the capital city
Belgium
Michael
$200 [7]
In 1952 the title character of this show asked, "Do you pop out at parties? Are you unpoopular?"
I Love Lucy
$200 [14]
A dollar says you can't name this American heroine seen here
(Susan B.) Anthony
Bill
$200 [8]
In September 2004 he had heart-bypass surgery
Bill Clinton
Michael
$200 [16]
In a sensational 1980s police case in Australia, Lindy Chamberlain claimed one of these "took my baby!"
a dingo
Jeanne
$200 [4]
TIGI has a line of hair products called this, to give you that tousled, just woken up look
Bed Head
Michael
$400 [2]
Ettelbruck, Luxembourg has a monument to this U.S. general known as "Old Blood and Guts"; he liberated it
Patton
Jeanne
$400 [23]
This show's Rev. Jim: "What does a yellow light mean?""Slow down!""OK... what... does... a... yellow... light... mean?"
Taxi
Jeanne
$400 [21]
She was the "Plains" Jane seen here
Calamity Jane
Michael
$400 [9]
In the 1970s he had the campaign slogan "He's making us proud again"
Gerald Ford
$400 [17]
The Semites called an early version of the letter Q "qoph", their word for this tailed animal
the monkey
$400 [13]
Glow with nostalgia & name this brandseen here
Lite-Brite
Michael
$600 [3]
In 447 A.D., Huns burned the town of Serdica, which stood on the site of this present-day Bulgarian capital
Sofia
Bill
$600 [24]
In 1985 this show's 200th episode set sail with Andy Warhol & had Teri Hatcher as a "mermaid"
The Love Boat
Bill
$600 [22]
Thishigh-flying Atchison, Kansas native once remarked, "Women must try to do things as men have tried"
(Amelia) Earhart
Bill
$600 [10]
He was the first president to be inaugurated in Washington, D.C.
Thomas Jefferson
Michael Bill
$600 [18]
Starting in the 1950s, one of these animals emerged from the NYC subway in TV ads for Dreyfus mutual funds
the lion
$600 [15]
This candy, taffy with a peanut butter center, comes in a yellow & black checkered wrapper
Abba-Zaba
Jeanne
$800 [5]
No doubt members of the European parliament enjoy some goose liver when they meet in this Alsatian city
Strasbourg
Michael
$800 [25]
Uh, sir, just one more thing... a 1971 episode of this drama was written by Steven Bochco & directed by Steven Spielberg
Columbo
Bill
$800 [27]
The American lady seen here, she knew all that jazz & more
Billie Holiday
Bill
$800 [11]
He died in September 1881, 2 months after he was shot
Garfield
Jeanne
$800 [19]
Kumis, a national specialty of Kazakhstan, is the fermented milk of this animal
the horse
Michael Bill
$800 [29]
This kids' show features the colorful character seen here
Blue's Clues
Michael
$1,000 [6]
This Alpine principality is the HQ for some 25,000 corporations, & 40% of its workforce is foreign
Liechtenstein
$1,000 [26]
Sammy Davis, Jr. was asked, "Do you take cream & sugar in your eye?" appearing as himself on this '70s sitcom
All in the Family
Bill
$1,000 [28]
The former editor & Playboy bunny seen here, she spent time in India & learned about nonviolent activism
(Gloria) Steinem
Bill
DD $1,200 [12]
He was the only 20th century president who didn't attend formal college
Harry Truman
Jeanne
$1,000 [20]
(Jeff Probst reads from Guatemala.) Many Mayan temples and works of art were devoted to this cat, Panthera onca, revered as a god of the underworld
the jaguar
$1,000 [30]
Allen Ginsberg is said to have coined this phrase for the peaceful goals of the '60s counterculture
flower power
Michael

Double Jeopardy! Round

THE CRUSADES AUSSIE ENTERTAINERS SCULPTORS GET A GRIP ALSO A STATE CAPITAL SOFT "G"
$400 [1]
The Second Crusade's only success was the capture of this city, now Portugal's capital
Lisbon
Bill
$400 [8]
Born in Hobart, he became a Hollywood swashbuckler but was undone by his "wicked, wicked ways"
(Errol) Flynn
Bill
$400 [3]
This master's works include the Florentine Pieta, the St. Peter's Pieta, & the Rondanini Pieta
Michelangelo
Michael
$400 [2]
A strong grip may be compared to this clamping item that holds a piece in place for carpenters
a vise
Michael
$400 [13]
English cliff site
Dover
Bill
$400 [20]
A type of film, like Western or gangster, having similar elements of plot & character
genre
Bill
$800 [18]
This English king wed Berengaria in 1191 & went on a honeymoon of conquest & pillage in Cyprus
Richard I (the Lionhearted)
Jeanne
$800 [9]
Naomi Watts is described in the press as the best friend of this Oscar-winning Aussie actress
Nicole Kidman
Michael
$800 [4]
In the 1950s this American known for his mobiles began to devote more time to stabiles such as "Ticket Window"
(Alexander) Calder
Michael
$800 [28]
(Sarah of the Clue Crew shows off a spray bottle of window cleaning fluid.) From its trigger & the way it fits in my hand, it's the term for this grip, even on a nonmenacing bottle of cleaning fluid
a pistol grip
Michael Jeanne
$800 [14]
Indian tribe of the Great Plains
Cheyenne
Jeanne
$800 [21]
In Latin it means the guardian spirit of a place; in English it means someone of great talent & intelligence
genius
Michael
$1,200 [19]
In April 1204 armies of the Fourth Crusade seized this city now part of Turkey
Constantinople (or Istanbul)
Michael
$1,200 [10]
Toddlers worship Greg, Murray, Jeff & Anthony, this singing & dancing quartet
The Wiggles
Bill
$1,200 [5]
There are Lincoln sculptures by him at a Newark, N.J. courthouse, the Capitol Rotunda & Mt. Rushmore
Gutzon Borglum
$1,200 [30]
You grab pressure points in a fierce grip in Eagle Claw, a Shaolin type of this martial art
kung fu
Bill
$1,200 [15]
Last name of Bob, who played Maynard G. Krebs
Denver
Bill
$1,600 [23]
The lines & shapes on ancient Greek pottery like the itemseenheregave the art of the period this name
Geometric
$1,600 [25]
Between the 4th & 5th Crusades came the one known as this in which thousands were sold into slavery or died
the Children's Crusade
Michael
$1,600 [11]
This Sydney-born actress, now on U.S. TV, has sisters named Rosie, Lily, Daisy & Marigold
Poppy Montgomery
$1,600 [6]
His bronze equestrian monument to Gen. Gattamelata was sculpted in Padua between 1445 & 1450
Donatello
$1,600 [29]
The everyday type of it is calcite; the type rock climbers use to get a grip is magnesium carbonate
chalk
Jeanne Bill
$2,000 [17]
Plain where games were played in ancient Greece
Olympia
Jeanne
$2,000 [27]
The blue type of this flower seenhereis common in the Eastern U.S.
gentian
Michael Jeanne
$2,000 [24]
Crusaders brought back the Damson variety of this fruit from Damascus to plant in France
a plum
Michael Jeanne
$2,000 [12]
Dave Navarro & Brooke Burke hosted the 2005 show "Rock Star", which aimed to get a new singer for this group
INXS
Bill
$2,000 [7]
This Greek's "Aphrodite of Cnidus" from 350 B.C. was the first classical portrayal of a nude goddess
Praxiteles
Michael
$2,000 [26]
(Jimmy of the Clue Crew pretends to play ping-pong.) Intable tennis, this grip named for the way you hold something else gives you a good forehand but an awkward backhand
the penholder grip
DD $4,500 [16]
Another word for a peace treaty
Concord
Bill
DD $4,000 [22]
Meaning "fitting" or "pertinent", it's a homophone of a famous pop quintet member
germane
Michael

Final Jeopardy!

20th CENTURY BOOKS

This 1972 book, a bestseller in 2005, begins, "We were somewhere around Barstow... when the drugs began to take hold"

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (by Hunter Thompson)

Jeanne "What is ?" — wagered $200
Bill "What is Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas?" — wagered $3,899

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