Suggest correction - #5099 - 2006-11-09

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    $1200 4
In teaching this sport, Gary McCord says, "For a driver, place the ball opposite your left armpit"
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Show #5099 - Thursday, November 9, 2006

2006 Celebrity Jeopardy! game 2.
From Radio City Music Hall in New York City.

Contestants

Curt Schilling, a pitcher from the Boston Red Sox

Jane Kaczmarek, an Emmy-nominated actress from Help Me Help You

Doug Savant, an actor from Desperate Housewives

Jeopardy! Round

STARRING ROLLS
SHILLING
(Alex: This is about advertising... Advertising catchphrases--name the brand.)
STAN THE CONTRACTOR
SAVANTS
ORSON WELLES
A "HOPE"FUL CATEGORY
    $200 6
What we call this doughy breakfast roll, sometimes lathered with gravy, refers to a cookie in the U.K.
    $200 16
"Just do it"
    $200 11
Stan put this 4-letter castle-surrounding trench at his British client's home
    $200 1
In January 1904 these 2 inventors issued a statement about their success at Kitty Hawk, but it got little attention
    $200 9
This 1941 Orson Welles film has set a standard by which all other films made since are judged
    $400 7
Pillsbury is famous for these lunar-named rolls that you bake yourself
    $400 17
"The best part of wakin' up"
    $400 12
For the living room, instead of track or recessed types of these, Stan went for flood
    $400 2
"A fanatic is one who can't change his mind & won't change the subject", said this wartime British P.M.
    $400 10
This 1949 classic featured Orson Welles as the mysterious Harry Lime
    $600 8
You can prepare mini-pizzas on this product made famous by Samuel B. Thomas
    $600 18
"Just for the taste of it"
    $600 13
Stan can give you the mansard, gable & flat types of this for the house
    DD: $1,000 3
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere", he wrote in his 1963 "Letter from Birmingham Jail"
    $600 21
In 1952 Orson took on the Shakespearean film role of this Moor of Venice
    $800 19
"Sorry, Charlie"
    $800 14
Stan follows the unwritten contractor code: no matter the job, always say it'll take a fortnight, this long, to do
    $800 4
This Austrian learned to play harpsichord at age 4, was composing at 5 & played for his Empress at 6
    $1000 20
"The San Francisco treat"
    $1000 15
Oops! Stan's assistant damaged the bathroom floor while installing this sharp type of tub seen here
    $1000 5
One of you will look like a savant when you I.D. this ancient Greek who used Socrates as a spokesman in his "Republic"

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 13):

Doug Jane Curt
$2,800 $1,600 $200

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Doug Jane Curt
$4,000 $4,400 -$200

Double Jeopardy! Round

MALCOLM X IN THE MIDDLE
SHINY THINGS
SPORTS
NOVELS
THE BIRDS & THE BEES
SOUNDS THE SAME TO ME
    $400 12
On 29, 39 or 49, the age at which Malcolm X died, the same as Martin Luther King, Jr.
    $400 17
Sirius,
Rigil Kent
or Antares
    $400 2
In NASCAR, it's the number of the turn at the end of the front straightaway
    $400 7
Paul Scott's WWII service in this country inspired his "Raj Quartet"
    $400 1
A French resort city, or the daughter of a person's sister
    $800 13
After serving time in prison for burglary, Malcolm X joined the "Nation of" this & also became a minister
    $800 18
This old monetary unit of Britain was 1/20 of a pound
    $800 3
On March 2, 1962 Wilt Chamberlain scored this unbelievable record point total in an NBA basketball game
    $800 8
Edith Wharton's hero Ethan Frome is crippled by a suicidal run on this winter Olympic vehicle
    $800 26
Seen here is the laughing type of this "sea" bird--sorry, no audio for you
    $800 22
You have the right to do this regarding arms, but your arms will be this without sleeves
    $1200 14
Though Malcolm X spent much of his life in New York City, he was born in this largest city in Nebraska
    $1200 19
St. Louis' Gateway Arch is concrete covered in this alliterative metal with chromium for shine
    $1200 4
In teaching this sport, Gary McCord says, "For a driver, place the ball opposite your left armpit"
    $1200 9
"Ralph 124C 41+" is a novel by Hugo Gernsback, known as a "father of" this futuristic genre
    $1200 23
If you hurt this body part, put your feet up & it will do this, over time
    DD: $3,800 15
He directed the 1992 film "Malcolm X" & also played Malcolm's pal Shorty
    $1600 20
This Egyptian-themed Las Vegas hotel says it's "crowned with the world's brighest beam of light"
    $1600 5
If you serve in tennis & win the first point, you traditionally call out the score as 15- this
    $1600 10
In this Jack London novel, a dog named Buck is stolen from the Miller family & reduced to mush dog in Alaska
    DD: $2,200 24
Shed this drop of saline, watery fluid if you don't know this term for layer or level
    $2000 16
In 1964, Malcolm X journeyed to Mecca in this country as part of a religious pilgrimage
    $2000 21
You get more than 200 colored pegs with this flat-screen Hasbro toy
    $2000 6
For a team killing a penalty in this sport, icing isn't a violation
    $2000 11
(Sarah of the Clue Crew reports from the Charles Bridge in Prague, Czech Republic.) This Milan Kundera novel says "the saints were shaking their fists and lifting their stone eyes to the clouds. Prague was the most beautiful city in the world"
    $2000 25
One side in an athletic contest, or a word meaning to abound

Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:

Doug Jane Curt
$9,600 $12,600 $4,400

Final Jeopardy! Round

CELEBRITY RELATIVES
Her great-great-grandmother Louisa Lane Drew once appeared in a play with the father of John Wilkes Booth

Final scores:

Doug Jane Curt
$18,200 $5,600 $0
Winner: $50,000 to the Desi Geestman Foundation 2nd place: $25,000 to the Clothes Off Our Back Foundation 3rd place: $25,000 to Curt's Pitch for ALS & the SHADE Foundation of America

Game dynamics:

Coryat scores:

Doug Jane Curt
$9,200 $10,400 $3,800
15 R
(including 1 DD),
2 W
15 R
(including 1 DD),
3 W
7 R
(including 1 DD),
2 W

Combined Coryat: $23,400

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