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00:00This is Jeopardy!
00:05Let's meet today's contestants.
00:07A radio broadcast producer from Santa Clarita, California, Steve Ostini.
00:13A teacher, originally from Salt Lake City, Utah, Maria Wenglenski.
00:19And our returning champion, an actor and improviser from Chicago, Illinois, Joey Bland,
00:27whose two-day cash winnings total $48,200.
00:34And now, here is the host of Jeopardy! Alex Trebek!
00:40Thank you, Johnny. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to our show.
00:44Maria, Steve, good to have you here.
00:46You're going against a very good young player, so watch yourselves.
00:49Pick up your signaling devices.
00:51We will get the board in motion and start the first round, the Jeopardy! round, with these categories.
00:56On the Map, followed by Sports Legends, Fibers, Victorian Verse.
01:06Hey, there's a first time for everything.
01:08And finally, Chin Up, with C-H-I-N in quotation marks.
01:12All right, Joey, go.
01:14On the Map for $200.
01:15Hope there's enough gravy for this bi-continental nation.
01:19Joey.
01:20What is Turkey?
01:21Yes.
01:22On the Map for $400.
01:23Before the Euro, this country used the Escudo.
01:27Joey.
01:28What is Portugal?
01:29Yes.
01:30Map for $600.
01:31It can get cold in this country, around 40 degrees in July in Puerto Montt.
01:37Joey.
01:38What is Chile?
01:39Yes.
01:40Map for $800.
01:41Hey guys, don't get angry identifying this nation.
01:45Joey.
01:46What is Madagascar?
01:47Right.
01:48On the Map for $1,000?
01:49Put on your outerwear when visiting this country.
01:52Joey.
01:53What is Kazakhstan?
01:56No.
01:57Maria.
01:58What is Outer Mongolia?
01:59That's right, for $1,000 and a tie for the lead.
02:02You select now.
02:03Victorian Verse for $200, please.
02:05Joey.
02:06Beware this, my son, the jaws that bite, the claws that catch.
02:10Beware the jub-jub bird.
02:13Joey.
02:14What is the Jabberwocky?
02:15No.
02:16Maria.
02:17What is the Jabberwock?
02:18The Jabberwock.
02:19Beware the Jabberwock.
02:20Correct.
02:22Victorian Verse for $400, please.
02:24The last verse of the first version of this Tennyson poem begins,
02:28When can their glory fade?
02:30Oh, the wild charge they made.
02:33Joey.
02:34What is the charge of the Light Brigade?
02:35Correct.
02:36Victorian Verse for $600.
02:37In his Departmental Ditties, Kipling wrote,
02:41A woman is only a woman, but a good cigar is this.
02:46Maria.
02:47What is a smoke?
02:48Yes.
02:49Victorian Verse for $800, please.
02:50I never saw a man who looked with such a wistful eye upon that little tent of blue,
02:55which prisoners call this.
02:58Maria.
02:59What is the sky?
03:00Yes.
03:01Victorian Verse for $1,000, please.
03:02When I was one and twenty, I heard a wise man say,
03:05Give crowns and pounds and guineas, but not this away.
03:10Maria.
03:11What is your heart?
03:12Well done.
03:13You know your Victorian Verse, and you have the lead with $3,600.
03:17Chin, please, for $200.
03:18This soft furry rodent seen here has become an increasingly popular house pet.
03:24Steve.
03:25What's the chinchilla?
03:26You are right.
03:27Chin up for $600.
03:28Add a Y to a common drapery fabric, and you'll get this word meaning cheap or gaudy.
03:35Joey.
03:36What is chintzy?
03:37Yes.
03:38Chin for $400.
03:39It's the cherry of choice for garnishing a cocktail.
03:43Joey.
03:44What is a maraschino?
03:45Yes.
03:46Chin for $800.
03:47Seen here is a display of these dolls made by the Navajo.
03:51Maria.
03:52What are kachinas?
03:53That's it.
03:54Chin for $1,000, please.
03:55In 1982, he choreographed his final ballet, a new version of Stravinsky's variations for
04:01orchestra.
04:02Joey.
04:03Who is Balanchine?
04:04Yes.
04:05George Balanchine is right, and that takes you to $3,200.
04:07You're close to Maria.
04:08And Steve on the board now with $200.
04:10And we take our first break for this.
04:21Steve Ostini from Santa Clarita.
04:25That's just up Highway I-5 from where we stand today.
04:29Has the wife that husbands dream of.
04:33Beautiful?
04:34Young?
04:35Good cook?
04:36Rich?
04:37Oh.
04:38Most of those things.
04:39Not rich.
04:40Beautiful.
04:41Love her to death.
04:42Big sports fan.
04:43Big sports fan.
04:44And she'll be involved in the games even more than I will.
04:48And if I'm not home, I can call up and she's going nuts sometimes.
04:52Yeah, but if the two of you are watching the same sports event, and there are other events
04:57on at the same time, it's a fight over the TV tuner, no?
05:02We're like-minded enough, and that makes for a good marriage.
05:04We watch the same sports.
05:05Okay, great.
05:06Maria Wenglinski?
05:07Yes, sir.
05:08Originally from Salt Lake City, Utah.
05:11Teacher whose dog can follow simple commands in Latin?
05:16Yes.
05:18Why?
05:20Do you have a problem with English?
05:23Well, I am a Latin teacher.
05:24No, the dog is bilingual.
05:26The dog is bilingual.
05:27The dog will follow the same commands in Latin as she follows in English.
05:31Really?
05:32Really.
05:33Which is more than I can say for some of my students.
05:34So if-
05:35Yeah.
05:36Alright.
05:37Joey Bland, actor and improviser, performed improv in Malaysia and Singapore.
05:44Right.
05:45Two of the hotbeds for comedy shows.
05:47Yeah, I mean, it goes without saying you perform in Southeast Asia.
05:50But yeah, one of the theaters that I work with sent a group over.
05:53We were told we were the first western comedy show to perform in Malaysia.
05:58And the audiences were great, they were really receptive.
06:00Well done.
06:01Alright, pick up your signaling device and you make a selection, please.
06:05Great.
06:06There's a first time for everything for 200.
06:08In 1931, Pangborn and Herndon landed a Belenka CH-200 at Wenatchee, Washington, ending the first non-stop flight across this.
06:19Joey.
06:20What is the Pacific?
06:21That's right.
06:22First time for 400.
06:23We're sick but intact.
06:24In 1797, André-Jacques Garnarin became the first aeronaut to make one of these descents.
06:30Maria.
06:31What is a parachute jump?
06:33That's it.
06:34Fibers for 200, please.
06:36Mesothelioma is a rare cancer strongly linked to long-term exposure to this fibrous mineral.
06:43Maria.
06:44What is asbestos?
06:45You're right.
06:46Fibers for 400, please.
06:47The name of this elastic synthetic fiber is an anagram of Xpanz.
06:52Steve.
06:53What is spandex?
06:54Yes.
06:55Sports legend, 600.
06:56The USA's top amateur athlete in 1930.
07:00This golfer retired and helped design the Augusta National Golf Course.
07:05Maria.
07:06Who is Sam Snead?
07:07No.
07:08Steve.
07:09Who is Bobby Jones?
07:10Bobby Jones, yes.
07:11Sports legend, 800.
07:12This catcher retired at the end of 63, managed the Yankees to a pennant in 64, and played
07:18four games for the Mets in 65.
07:21Steve.
07:22Who is Elston Howard?
07:23No.
07:24Joey or Maria?
07:26Ah, it's the wit and wisdom of Yogi Berra.
07:30Steve, back to you.
07:31Sports legend is a thousand.
07:321974's top money-winning horse was named for this U.S.-born woman who won 157 tennis singles
07:40titles.
07:41Steve.
07:42Who is Billie Jean King?
07:43No.
07:44Joey or Maria?
07:46Who is Chris Everett?
07:48Steve, back to you, though.
07:49Get out of the hole.
07:50Come on.
07:51Sports, 400.
07:52This large pool hustler wanted his epitaph to be, beat everybody living on earth.
07:58Now, St. Peter, rack them up.
08:00Joey.
08:01Who's Minnesota Fats?
08:02Yes.
08:03Sports legends, 200.
08:04The great one.
08:05This record-setting center became coach of the NHL's Phoenix Coyotes in 2005.
08:10Joey.
08:11Who's Gretzky?
08:12Wayne Gretzky.
08:13Right.
08:14First time for 600.
08:15Answer.
08:16Daily double.
08:17We have a minute to go, Joey.
08:19Let's do 1,500.
08:211,500.
08:22All right.
08:23For the lead, here is the clue.
08:24This overture, first heard on August 3rd, 1829 in Paris, debuted as a radio show's theme
08:33in 1933.
08:34What is the William Tell overture?
08:35Yes, sirree.
08:36Lone Ranger's theme.
08:37First time, 800.
08:38Probably the first emergency use of this device was on January 15th, 1878 to alert doctors
08:52to a train wreck.
08:53Steve.
08:54What's the telephone?
08:55Yes.
08:56First time for everything, 1,000.
08:57In 1824, this first foreigner to address a joint session of Congress congratulated the
09:03U.S. on its growth.
09:05Joey.
09:06Who's Tocqueville?
09:07No.
09:08Maria or Steve?
09:10Correct response.
09:11Who was the Marquis de Lafayette?
09:13Three more clues up there, Steve.
09:15Five or 600.
09:17DuPont coined this term, but chose not to trademark it, so it could enter the lexicon as a synonym
09:24for stockings.
09:25Joey.
09:26What's nylon?
09:27Right.
09:28Fibers, 800.
09:29The soft white fibers attached to the seeds of plants belonging to the genus Gossypium
09:34of the Mallow family.
09:36Joey.
09:37What's cotton?
09:38Cotton is right.
09:39Now the last clue.
09:40Before becoming a successful poet, Robert Burns worked in the linen industry as a dresser
09:44of this plant fiber.
09:46Maria.
09:47What is flax?
09:48Flax.
09:49That's $1,000 more for you.
09:50You didn't catch Joey, but you're just behind him by 500.
09:53Steve, you go first in Double Jeopardy right after this.
09:58Clyde Pangborn's days as a barnstorming aviator paid off during his 1931 nonstop transpacific
10:05flight.
10:06At 14,000 feet, he had to leave his co-pilot and perform a wing walk to free the landing gear struts,
10:12making a safe landing possible.
10:15All right, Steve, if you're ready, here come the categories for the Double Jeopardy round.
10:22An Ovid reader.
10:25Vampire slayers, since we're close to Halloween.
10:28Fruits and vegetables.
10:30Music, M in quotation marks.
10:32New world explorers.
10:34And finally, you'll have fun, we hope, with words.
10:37Where do we start?
10:38Music 400.
10:39It can be a synonym for bar or a stately English dance of old.
10:44Joey.
10:45What's a measure?
10:46That's it.
10:47Music for eight.
10:48Many opera overtures are these, sequences of tunes from the opera to follow.
10:53Joey.
10:54What are motifs?
10:55No.
10:56Maria.
10:58What is a melange?
10:59No.
11:00Steve doesn't want to ring in to try to come up with medley.
11:04They are medleys.
11:05Joey, you select and we'll continue.
11:07Music for 1200.
11:09Answer.
11:10Daily double.
11:11Oh boy.
11:12You have a $900 lead over Maria at the moment.
11:16Try a thousand.
11:18A thousand dollars.
11:19All right.
11:20This is a video.
11:21Take a look at the screen.
11:22Renowned Australian born diva, seen here around 1900.
11:31Who is Maria Callas?
11:32No.
11:33Who is Dame Nellie?
11:34Melba.
11:35Melba.
11:36Very famous operatic star.
11:38You now trail Maria by a hundred.
11:40Select.
11:41Music for 16.
11:42In 1723, Bach wrote a setting for this part of Vespers, from the Latin for to extol.
11:52Maria.
11:55What is Talare?
11:56No.
11:57Joey or Steve?
11:59What is Magnificat?
12:01Magnificat.
12:02Magnificat.
12:03All right.
12:04Remember, it had to start with the letter M.
12:05Joey, back to you.
12:06Music for 2000.
12:07The harmonica company Hohner trademarked the name for this instrument that plays single notes
12:12or chords.
12:16And that is the melodica.
12:17All right.
12:18Let's go somewhere else.
12:19Great.
12:20Vampire Slayers for 400.
12:21The Watcher's Guide and the Sunnydale High Yearbook are official book companions to this
12:26TV show.
12:27Maria.
12:28What is Buffy the Vampire Slayer?
12:30Yes.
12:31Ovid for 400, please.
12:33Now there are cornfields where this ancient city, temporary home to Helen, once was.
12:39Joey.
12:40What is Troy?
12:41Right.
12:42Ovid for 800.
12:43Tempus Idax Rerum.
12:45This is the devourer of all things.
12:48Joey.
12:49What is Time?
12:50Yes.
12:51Ovid for 12.
12:52Every lover is a warrior and this Roman god has his camps.
12:57Maria.
12:58Who is Cupid?
12:59Correct.
13:00Ovid for 1600.
13:01Ovid says he was scarcely able to find his way back to the entrance.
13:04So confusing was the maze he constructed.
13:08Joey.
13:09Who's Daedalus?
13:10Right.
13:11Ovid for 2000.
13:12Ovid relates how this hero sailed homewards in triumph and, with his wife Medea, came
13:17to Iolkus' harbor.
13:19Joey.
13:20Who's Jason?
13:21Jason.
13:22Right.
13:23Vampires for 800.
13:24In 2004, he was back as the title Vampire Slayer in Blade Trinity.
13:29Joey.
13:30Who's Wesley Snipes?
13:31Correct.
13:32Vampires 12.
13:33Roger Cushing, Anthony Hopkins, and Laurence Olivier have played this nemesis of Dracula.
13:39Joey.
13:40Who's Van Helsing?
13:41Right.
13:42Vampires 16.
13:43Title time during which George Clooney and Quentin Tarantino ran into some vampires in
13:49Mexico.
13:50Joey.
13:51What is From Dusk Till Dawn?
13:52Correct.
13:53Vampires 2000.
13:54In this 1985 classic, Roddy McDowell hunts down vampire Chris Sarandon.
14:01And that was Fright Night.
14:03Joey, back to you.
14:04Uh, Explorers for 400.
14:06In 1579, he anchored the Golden Hind for repairs on the west coast of North America.
14:12No one knows where.
14:13Maria.
14:14Who is Francis Drake?
14:15Right.
14:16Fruits, please, for 400.
14:18Beefsteak is an often misshapen but delicious type of this.
14:23Maria.
14:24What is a tomato?
14:25Right again.
14:26Fruits for 800.
14:27This variety of lime grown only in southern Florida is best known as an ingredient in
14:32a certain pie.
14:34Joey.
14:35What is a key lime?
14:36Correct.
14:37Uh, let's try New World Explorers for 8.
14:39After discovering the Mississippi River on May 8th, 1541, he took several weeks to build
14:45barges to cross it.
14:47Maria.
14:48Who is De Soto?
14:49Yes.
14:50Explorers for 1200.
14:51Answer.
14:52The other Daily Double.
14:58Joey has more than twice your total, so consider that.
15:01I will make it a true Daily Double.
15:03Alright.
15:0412,400 will be your total if you are correct on this.
15:07In April, 1524, he sighted the Hudson River.
15:12His bridge hadn't been built yet.
15:16Who is Verrazano?
15:17Well done.
15:18Doubling your score to 12,400.
15:25Explorers for 1600, please.
15:27On February 20th, 1521, he set sail from Puerto Rico with 200 men.
15:33Days later, he landed near Charlotte Harbor, Florida.
15:37Maria.
15:38Who is Pose de Leon?
15:39Yes.
15:40Explorers for 2000.
15:41He discovered San Diego Bay and Catalina Island in 1542 and is said to be buried there.
15:48Steve.
15:49Who is Balboa?
15:50No.
15:51Maria or Joey?
15:54Maria.
15:55Who is Drake?
15:56Not Drake.
15:57No, Maria.
15:58Joey?
15:59No.
16:00Who is Juan Cabrillo?
16:02Juan Cabrillo.
16:03Back to you, Maria.
16:04Fruits and vegetables for 1200, please.
16:06The California French variety of this dried fruit can be juiced,
16:10stewed or eaten out of hand.
16:13Maria.
16:14What is a prune?
16:15That's it with a minute to go.
16:16Fruits for 1600.
16:17Cauliflower and Kohlrabi, probably developed from a wild European coastal type of this vegetable.
16:23Maria.
16:24What is cabbage?
16:25Yes.
16:26Fruits for 2000, please.
16:27There are two species of this fruit native to the United States.
16:31Vitis labrusca and Vitis rotondifolia.
16:34Maria.
16:35What is the grape?
16:36Correct.
16:37Fun with words for 400.
16:39In the 1939 film of The Wizard of Oz, the medal presented to the cowardly lion has this single word on it.
16:46Joey.
16:47What is courage?
16:48Right.
16:49Words for 2000.
16:50In 2003, President Bush said, Saddam Hussein is not this.
16:55An adjective meaning engaging or full of charm.
16:58He is not disarming.
17:03Joey, back to you.
17:041600.
17:05It's the one word title of the classic game show that debuted in 1961 in which you gave one word clues one at a time.
17:13Steve.
17:14What is password?
17:15Yes.
17:161200.
17:17This two word term for a rundown area of town originally referred to a logging road paved with logs.
17:22Maria.
17:23What is Skid Row?
17:24Yes.
17:25Now the last clue.
17:26Oh, we won't get to it.
17:27And that's unfortunate for Steve particularly because he is in the red and that means he will not participate in Final Jeopardy.
17:34Steve, you'll get $1,000 for a third place finish.
17:37And in the final, Joey and Maria, you have to deal with this category.
17:4120th century Republicans.
17:43We're back with a clue in a moment.
17:46The possibility of a very big payday for either Joey or Maria as we deal with 20th century Republicans.
17:53Here's the clue, players.
17:55Never president.
17:56He was the youngest man ever to receive the Republican presidential nomination.
18:0130 seconds.
18:02Good luck.
18:18joey we'll start with you you have fourteen thousand one hundred which republican did you
18:38think of barry goldwater no not even close that'll cost you everything well it's looking pretty good
18:44for you maria you've got eighteen thousand and what was your response wilkie who was wendell wilkie
18:52no the correct response is who was dewey dewey he was just forty two all right what are you going to
19:00lose twelve thousand well if there was the possibility of a big payday but you have six
19:06thousand which is pretty good because you get to come back and defend as champion we'll see you
19:10tomorrow and you also so long everybody
19:40you
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