Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion [SPOILERS]
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Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion [SPOILERS]
Game Recap for Show #6395, 2012-06-08
CONTESTANTS
Aaron Cappocchi, a writer from Burbank, California
Rosanne Lightstone, an automotive quality engineer from Royal Oak, Michigan
Sarah Fowlkes, an attorney from Brooklyn, New York (whose 1-day cash winnings total $9,800)
OPENING REMARKS
Alex:
Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
Hello, ladies and gentlemen.
Nice to have you with us today for another half-hour of answers and questions.
Sarah is smiling because she's the returning champion.
She led throughout most of the game yesterday.
Had a little trouble in final, but still had enough money at the end to be declared the champion.
Rosanne and Aaron, welcome aboard.
Let's put all three of you to work right now in the Jeopardy! Round.
And here are the categories...
JEOPARDY! ROUND CATEGORIES
A BARE BONES CATEGORY (5/5)
DENMARK (3/5)
DA TRAIN! DA TRAIN! (5/5, including 1 correct Daily Double)
THE TV CHARACTER WHO WASN'T THERE (5/5) (Alex: We're talking about shows where the--one of the characters was rarely if ever seen on camera)
PROVERBIAL NUMBERS (5/5)
THINGS YOU HAVE TO DO (4/5)
THE RIGHTS & THE WRONGS
Aaron: 12 R (including 1 DD), 0 W
Sarah: 9 R, 2 W
Rosanne: 7 R (including 1 rebound), 1 W
Clues revealed: 30
Triple Stumpers: 3
Jeopardy! Round Potential Lach Trash: $2,200
JEOPARDY! ROUND DAILY DOUBLE
Aaron found the Daily Double on the 10th clue. Sarah had $1,200, Rosanne had $800, and Aaron was at $1,200. Aaron made it a True Daily Double, wagering $1,200.
DA TRAIN! DA TRAIN! $800: On April 30, 1900 this engineer died with one hand on the brake lever, saving all but himself in an unavoidable crash
SCORES AT THE FIRST BREAK
Aaron: $3,600
Rosanne: $1,800
Sarah: $800
CONTESTANT INTERVIEWS
Alex:
Aaron Cappocchi is a writer from Burbank, California, but a writer who has issues with certain parts of his computer.
What, specifically?
Aaron:
Uh, the caps lock key, which I hit by mistake far too often.
Alex:
So what do you do?
Aaron:
I yank it out and throw it away from every keyboard that I own.
I just make do...
Alex:
that means a little thing that can hurt your finger when you...
Aaron:
it's better than typing in all caps and looking like I'm yelling all the time.
Alex:
All right.
You'll get over this, you know, someday.
Maybe.
Make fewer mistakes.
Alex:
Rosanne Lightstone from Royal Oak, Michigan.
Now when you get, as we all do, get a song in your head and it begins to annoy you, it sticks with you for a day or two days, how do you get rid of it?
You have an interesting method.
Roseanne:
Yes, I-I sing "The Victors", the Michigan fight song.
Alex:
And that does it?
Roseanne:
Uh, yes, it does.
Alex:
No matter what tune has been hanging around your brain, the Michigan fight song will get rid of it?
Roseanne:
It takes over.
Alex:
Oh.
Okay, yes.
The "Victor" song.
Alex:
Sarah Fowlkes is an attorney from Brooklyn.
We've all had this experience.
In fact, George Carlin once did a routine talking about telling a joke while somebody was drinking a glass of milk to see if you could get 'em to have the milk come out of his nose.
You had a similar experience, but with a twist.
Sarah:
Sort of.
Uh, I once laughed so hard at "The Daily Show" that, uh, milk spurted out of my nursing baby's nose.
[Laughter]
Alex:
She has a great sense of humor.
Obviously.
[Laughs]
TRIPLE STUMPERS IN THE JEOPARDY! ROUND
DENMARK $400: This most important naval battle of World War I took place off Denmark's coast
THINGS YOU HAVE TO DO $800: If you're Catholic, attend Mass on All Saints' Day, as it's a "holy day of" this
(Sarah: What's communion?)
(Alex: It's a holy day of [*]. That's why you have to attend.)
DENMARK $1000: This 11th century "Great" Dane united Denmark, England & Norway
(Roseanne: Who is Harold?)
SCORES AT THE END OF THE JEOPARDY! ROUND
Aaron: $7,800
Rosanne: $3,400
Sarah: $2,800
CONTESTANTS
Aaron Cappocchi, a writer from Burbank, California
Rosanne Lightstone, an automotive quality engineer from Royal Oak, Michigan
Sarah Fowlkes, an attorney from Brooklyn, New York (whose 1-day cash winnings total $9,800)
OPENING REMARKS
Alex:
Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
Hello, ladies and gentlemen.
Nice to have you with us today for another half-hour of answers and questions.
Sarah is smiling because she's the returning champion.
She led throughout most of the game yesterday.
Had a little trouble in final, but still had enough money at the end to be declared the champion.
Rosanne and Aaron, welcome aboard.
Let's put all three of you to work right now in the Jeopardy! Round.
And here are the categories...
JEOPARDY! ROUND CATEGORIES
A BARE BONES CATEGORY (5/5)
DENMARK (3/5)
DA TRAIN! DA TRAIN! (5/5, including 1 correct Daily Double)
THE TV CHARACTER WHO WASN'T THERE (5/5) (Alex: We're talking about shows where the--one of the characters was rarely if ever seen on camera)
PROVERBIAL NUMBERS (5/5)
THINGS YOU HAVE TO DO (4/5)
THE RIGHTS & THE WRONGS
Aaron: 12 R (including 1 DD), 0 W
Sarah: 9 R, 2 W
Rosanne: 7 R (including 1 rebound), 1 W
Clues revealed: 30
Triple Stumpers: 3
Jeopardy! Round Potential Lach Trash: $2,200
JEOPARDY! ROUND DAILY DOUBLE
Aaron found the Daily Double on the 10th clue. Sarah had $1,200, Rosanne had $800, and Aaron was at $1,200. Aaron made it a True Daily Double, wagering $1,200.
DA TRAIN! DA TRAIN! $800: On April 30, 1900 this engineer died with one hand on the brake lever, saving all but himself in an unavoidable crash
SCORES AT THE FIRST BREAK
Aaron: $3,600
Rosanne: $1,800
Sarah: $800
CONTESTANT INTERVIEWS
Alex:
Aaron Cappocchi is a writer from Burbank, California, but a writer who has issues with certain parts of his computer.
What, specifically?
Aaron:
Uh, the caps lock key, which I hit by mistake far too often.
Alex:
So what do you do?
Aaron:
I yank it out and throw it away from every keyboard that I own.
I just make do...
Alex:
that means a little thing that can hurt your finger when you...
Aaron:
it's better than typing in all caps and looking like I'm yelling all the time.
Alex:
All right.
You'll get over this, you know, someday.
Maybe.
Make fewer mistakes.
Alex:
Rosanne Lightstone from Royal Oak, Michigan.
Now when you get, as we all do, get a song in your head and it begins to annoy you, it sticks with you for a day or two days, how do you get rid of it?
You have an interesting method.
Roseanne:
Yes, I-I sing "The Victors", the Michigan fight song.
Alex:
And that does it?
Roseanne:
Uh, yes, it does.
Alex:
No matter what tune has been hanging around your brain, the Michigan fight song will get rid of it?
Roseanne:
It takes over.
Alex:
Oh.
Okay, yes.
The "Victor" song.
Alex:
Sarah Fowlkes is an attorney from Brooklyn.
We've all had this experience.
In fact, George Carlin once did a routine talking about telling a joke while somebody was drinking a glass of milk to see if you could get 'em to have the milk come out of his nose.
You had a similar experience, but with a twist.
Sarah:
Sort of.
Uh, I once laughed so hard at "The Daily Show" that, uh, milk spurted out of my nursing baby's nose.
[Laughter]
Alex:
She has a great sense of humor.
Obviously.
[Laughs]
TRIPLE STUMPERS IN THE JEOPARDY! ROUND
DENMARK $400: This most important naval battle of World War I took place off Denmark's coast
THINGS YOU HAVE TO DO $800: If you're Catholic, attend Mass on All Saints' Day, as it's a "holy day of" this
(Sarah: What's communion?)
(Alex: It's a holy day of [*]. That's why you have to attend.)
DENMARK $1000: This 11th century "Great" Dane united Denmark, England & Norway
(Roseanne: Who is Harold?)
SCORES AT THE END OF THE JEOPARDY! ROUND
Aaron: $7,800
Rosanne: $3,400
Sarah: $2,800
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion [SPOILERS]
DOUBLE JEOPARDY! ROUND CATEGORIES
THE LOVELY BEANS (5/5)
LATIN NAMES FOR CITIES (4/5, including 1 correct Daily Double)
POETRY, THY NAME IS HIM (3/5)
"OCK" IT TO ME (5/5) (Alex: That's comin' up in each correct response.)
PRESIDENTIAL ALUMS (4/5)
THE TONY AWARDS (5/5, including 1 correct Daily Double)
THE RIGHTS & THE WRONGS
Aaron: 11 R (including 1 rebound and 1 DD), 0 W
Rosanne: 8 R (including 1 DD), 0 W
Sarah: 7 R, 2 W
Clues revealed: 30
Triple Stumpers: 4
Double Jeopardy! Round Potential Lach Trash: $6,400
FIRST DOUBLE JEOPARDY! ROUND DAILY DOUBLE
Aaron snagged the next Daily Double on the 12th clue. Sarah had $5,200, Rosanne had $5,400, and Aaron was at $14,200. Aaron wagered $3,000.
LATIN NAMES FOR CITIES $1600: A city on the Danube:
Vindobona
(Alex: [*] is right--surprise, surprise! An educated guess that paid off handsomely.)
SECOND DOUBLE JEOPARDY! ROUND DAILY DOUBLE
It was Rosanne who snatched up the last Daily Double of the game on the 19th clue. Sarah had $5,200, Rosanne had $10,200, and Aaron was at $18,400. Rosanne wagered $3,000.
THE TONY AWARDS $1200: The 1956 Best Musical award went to this show that was mad about baseball
TRIPLE STUMPERS IN THE DOUBLE JEOPARDY! ROUND
LATIN NAMES FOR CITIES $1200: A seaport:
Massilia
(Alex: That would be [*] in France.)
POETRY, THY NAME IS HIM $1200: "Death be not proud... Die not, poor death; nor yet canst thou kill me"
(Alex: Going back quite a few years--[*].)
POETRY, THY NAME IS HIM $2000: "That is no country for old men.
The young in one another's arms, birds in the trees"
(Alex: The poet is [*].)
PRESIDENTIAL ALUMS $2000: This man who succeeded a slain president was a quartermastedr for the Union & an alum of, duh, Union College
(Sarah: Who is Johnson?)
SCORES ENTERING FINAL JEOPARDY!
Aaron: $21,600
Rosanne: $14,400
Sarah: $8,400
FINAL JEOPARDY! CATEGORY
CLICHES
VENUSIAN MONOLOGUES/MARTIAN CHRONICLES
Two-thirds (exactly) for first place.
Aaron: Wager $7,200 for the tie. Rosanne has cause to bet either nothing or everything, and you can't afford to lose by $1 to a nothing bet.
Rosanne: Normally in this scenario you would wager all or nothing, but in this case a $0 wager isn't an optimal option because it doesn't cover Sarah's doubled score. Wager all $14,400.
Sarah: You do have some slim hope of taking 1st place, and it's most likely to happen in the event that you're the only one to respond correctly to Final. Wager between $6,001 and $8,399.
FINAL JEOPARDY! CLUE
In an 1873 Thomas Hardy serial, a chapter ends with a character dangling from an "enormous sea-bord" this
FINAL SCORES
Sarah: $8,400 - $8,300 = $100 (What is a tender hook?) (3rd place: $1,000)
Rosanne: $14,400 - $2,401 = $11,999 (What is a wooden plank) (2nd place: $2,000)
Aaron: $21,600 + $7,200 = $28,800 (What is a cliff?) (New champion: $28,800)
(Alex: [revealing Aaron's response] Yes, [*] hanger.)
Total Potential Lach Trash: $8,600
GAME DYNAMICS
CORYAT SCORES
Aaron: $19,800, 23 R (including 2 DDs), 0 W
Rosanne: $12,600, 15 R (including 1 DD), 1 W
Sarah: $8,400, 16 R, 4 W
Combined Coryat: $40,800
BATTING AVERAGES
Aaron: 24/60 = .400
Sarah: 16/58 = .276
Rosanne: 15/59 = .254
Team: 55/63 = .873
MISCELLANEOUS INTERESTING CLUES
A BARE BONES CATEGORY $600: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew points to bones in a skeleton)
The uniquely evolved bones of this down-under denizen allow it to achieve its distinctive locomotion
A BARE BONES CATEGORY $800: This larger bone of the forearm is the most commonly broken arm bone
(Sarah: What's the humerus?)
PROVERBIAL NUMBERS $400: The last possible moment for doing something is called this hour
(Aaron: What is zero hour?)
[Aaron was initially ruled incorrect, but this was reversed at the start of Double Jeopardy]
PROVERBIAL NUMBERS $800: A 5-word bit of wisdom begins, this many's company
(Roseanne: What's "[*]'s company, three's a crowd"?)
(Alex: We'll accept that. You gave us more than we needed.)
THE LOVELY BEANS $1200: It's "bedtime for" this bean also known as the chickpea
(Alex: Not Bonzo but [*].)
LATIN NAMES FOR CITIES $2000: At the mouth of the Tagus river:
Olisipo
(Alex: [*], in Portugul, correct.)
POETRY, THY NAME IS HIM $400: "There he sang of Hiawatha, sang the song of Hiawatha, sang his wondrous birth and being"
(Sarah: Who is Tennyson?)
CORRECT RESPONSES
Casey Jones
the Battle of Jutland
obligation
Canute the Great
Vienna
Damn Yankees
Marseilles
John Donne
William Butler Yeats
Chester Arthur
a cliff
a kangaroo
radius
eleventh hour
two
garbanzo
Lisbon
(Henry Wadsworth) Longfellow
THE LOVELY BEANS (5/5)
LATIN NAMES FOR CITIES (4/5, including 1 correct Daily Double)
POETRY, THY NAME IS HIM (3/5)
"OCK" IT TO ME (5/5) (Alex: That's comin' up in each correct response.)
PRESIDENTIAL ALUMS (4/5)
THE TONY AWARDS (5/5, including 1 correct Daily Double)
THE RIGHTS & THE WRONGS
Aaron: 11 R (including 1 rebound and 1 DD), 0 W
Rosanne: 8 R (including 1 DD), 0 W
Sarah: 7 R, 2 W
Clues revealed: 30
Triple Stumpers: 4
Double Jeopardy! Round Potential Lach Trash: $6,400
FIRST DOUBLE JEOPARDY! ROUND DAILY DOUBLE
Aaron snagged the next Daily Double on the 12th clue. Sarah had $5,200, Rosanne had $5,400, and Aaron was at $14,200. Aaron wagered $3,000.
LATIN NAMES FOR CITIES $1600: A city on the Danube:
Vindobona
(Alex: [*] is right--surprise, surprise! An educated guess that paid off handsomely.)
SECOND DOUBLE JEOPARDY! ROUND DAILY DOUBLE
It was Rosanne who snatched up the last Daily Double of the game on the 19th clue. Sarah had $5,200, Rosanne had $10,200, and Aaron was at $18,400. Rosanne wagered $3,000.
THE TONY AWARDS $1200: The 1956 Best Musical award went to this show that was mad about baseball
TRIPLE STUMPERS IN THE DOUBLE JEOPARDY! ROUND
LATIN NAMES FOR CITIES $1200: A seaport:
Massilia
(Alex: That would be [*] in France.)
POETRY, THY NAME IS HIM $1200: "Death be not proud... Die not, poor death; nor yet canst thou kill me"
(Alex: Going back quite a few years--[*].)
POETRY, THY NAME IS HIM $2000: "That is no country for old men.
The young in one another's arms, birds in the trees"
(Alex: The poet is [*].)
PRESIDENTIAL ALUMS $2000: This man who succeeded a slain president was a quartermastedr for the Union & an alum of, duh, Union College
(Sarah: Who is Johnson?)
SCORES ENTERING FINAL JEOPARDY!
Aaron: $21,600
Rosanne: $14,400
Sarah: $8,400
FINAL JEOPARDY! CATEGORY
CLICHES
VENUSIAN MONOLOGUES/MARTIAN CHRONICLES
Two-thirds (exactly) for first place.
Aaron: Wager $7,200 for the tie. Rosanne has cause to bet either nothing or everything, and you can't afford to lose by $1 to a nothing bet.
Rosanne: Normally in this scenario you would wager all or nothing, but in this case a $0 wager isn't an optimal option because it doesn't cover Sarah's doubled score. Wager all $14,400.
Sarah: You do have some slim hope of taking 1st place, and it's most likely to happen in the event that you're the only one to respond correctly to Final. Wager between $6,001 and $8,399.
FINAL JEOPARDY! CLUE
In an 1873 Thomas Hardy serial, a chapter ends with a character dangling from an "enormous sea-bord" this
FINAL SCORES
Sarah: $8,400 - $8,300 = $100 (What is a tender hook?) (3rd place: $1,000)
Rosanne: $14,400 - $2,401 = $11,999 (What is a wooden plank) (2nd place: $2,000)
Aaron: $21,600 + $7,200 = $28,800 (What is a cliff?) (New champion: $28,800)
(Alex: [revealing Aaron's response] Yes, [*] hanger.)
Total Potential Lach Trash: $8,600
GAME DYNAMICS
CORYAT SCORES
Aaron: $19,800, 23 R (including 2 DDs), 0 W
Rosanne: $12,600, 15 R (including 1 DD), 1 W
Sarah: $8,400, 16 R, 4 W
Combined Coryat: $40,800
BATTING AVERAGES
Aaron: 24/60 = .400
Sarah: 16/58 = .276
Rosanne: 15/59 = .254
Team: 55/63 = .873
MISCELLANEOUS INTERESTING CLUES
A BARE BONES CATEGORY $600: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew points to bones in a skeleton)
The uniquely evolved bones of this down-under denizen allow it to achieve its distinctive locomotion
A BARE BONES CATEGORY $800: This larger bone of the forearm is the most commonly broken arm bone
(Sarah: What's the humerus?)
PROVERBIAL NUMBERS $400: The last possible moment for doing something is called this hour
(Aaron: What is zero hour?)
[Aaron was initially ruled incorrect, but this was reversed at the start of Double Jeopardy]
PROVERBIAL NUMBERS $800: A 5-word bit of wisdom begins, this many's company
(Roseanne: What's "[*]'s company, three's a crowd"?)
(Alex: We'll accept that. You gave us more than we needed.)
THE LOVELY BEANS $1200: It's "bedtime for" this bean also known as the chickpea
(Alex: Not Bonzo but [*].)
LATIN NAMES FOR CITIES $2000: At the mouth of the Tagus river:
Olisipo
(Alex: [*], in Portugul, correct.)
POETRY, THY NAME IS HIM $400: "There he sang of Hiawatha, sang the song of Hiawatha, sang his wondrous birth and being"
(Sarah: Who is Tennyson?)
CORRECT RESPONSES
Casey Jones
the Battle of Jutland
obligation
Canute the Great
Vienna
Damn Yankees
Marseilles
John Donne
William Butler Yeats
Chester Arthur
a cliff
a kangaroo
radius
eleventh hour
two
garbanzo
Lisbon
(Henry Wadsworth) Longfellow
- CAPS LOCK
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
I'm at the rightmost podium on today's show. I'd just like to say that I'm spectacularly un-proud of my contestant interview. It went from being "I need a fifth contestant tidbit to put on this form!" (I am sure I had a different one when I auditioned nearly 2 years ago) to "Why are they putting that one on Alex's card?" (he chooses from 3 on each card of his own volition) to "Oh, man, why is he asking me about this boring thing on live TV!?". I always feared the chat-with-contestants moment - and I'm one of those people who fast-forwards through it 99% of the time - but at least it's not embarrassing or confusing, just kind of flat.
In stark contrast, today's returning champ, Sarah Fowlkes, today has one of the funniest contestant stories I have ever heard.
In stark contrast, today's returning champ, Sarah Fowlkes, today has one of the funniest contestant stories I have ever heard.
-----Live by the signaling device, die by the signaling device.-----
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
I was wondering who you were, but the interview pretty much gave it away. The good FJ wager in a 2/3 game also clued me in you were a student of wagering theory.
Now is the time for the Orient Express.
I had cliffhanger for FJ, but scratched out hanger at the last second.
Now is the time for the Orient Express.
I had cliffhanger for FJ, but scratched out hanger at the last second.
- jeff6286
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
Cliches
In an 1873 Thomas Hardy serial, a chapter ends with a character dangling from an "enormous sea-bord" this.
Aaron Cappocchi: $21,600+$7,200=$28,800...now a 1-day champion with $28,800
Rosanne Lightstone: $14,400-$2,401=$11,999
Sarah Fowlkes: $8,400-$8,300=$100
In an 1873 Thomas Hardy serial, a chapter ends with a character dangling from an "enormous sea-bord" this.
Spoiler
What is a cliff? Sarah said a tenter hook; Rosanne said a wooden plank.
Rosanne Lightstone: $14,400-$2,401=$11,999
Sarah Fowlkes: $8,400-$8,300=$100
Last edited by jeff6286 on Fri Jun 08, 2012 8:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
So explain to me why the hell edamame is $400 material.
Pelvic girdle and Elsinore also seemed way out there.
"Sixes and sevens" was a total NHOI. I wonder what the etymology of that is?
Can't believe I didn't get shamrock even with "ock" and "symbol of Ireland". I was thinking Blarney stone/rock, but couldn't figure out how such a thing could be used to explain the Trinity.
"Enormous sea-bord" + cliché = I got nothing. Was expecting it to be something man-made for some reason. I don't think of the term "cliffhanger" as a cliché, either.
Pelvic girdle and Elsinore also seemed way out there.
"Sixes and sevens" was a total NHOI. I wonder what the etymology of that is?
Can't believe I didn't get shamrock even with "ock" and "symbol of Ireland". I was thinking Blarney stone/rock, but couldn't figure out how such a thing could be used to explain the Trinity.
"Enormous sea-bord" + cliché = I got nothing. Was expecting it to be something man-made for some reason. I don't think of the term "cliffhanger" as a cliché, either.
- xxaaaxx
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
6's and 7's!? OK...
First it was the baseball category, now it's the TV category that they keep switching away from. Stop making me wait for my 5/5 damnit!
Super-duper-ultra-instaget FJ. Absolutely stunned it was only a single get.
First it was the baseball category, now it's the TV category that they keep switching away from. Stop making me wait for my 5/5 damnit!
Super-duper-ultra-instaget FJ. Absolutely stunned it was only a single get.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
Wouldn't have got "cliff" ever. Never, ever. I didn't even know how to process that clue.xxaaaxx wrote:Super-duper-ultra-instaget FJ. Absolutely stunned it was only a single get.
Stunned that "zero hour" was credited. It is NOT the same thing as "eleventh hour". "Zero hour" is the time an operation commences. It has nothing to do with the last minute.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
FJ reminded me of the "stupid answers" category - you have to fight the urge to discard the too-obvious answer. I instagot it, but totally understand how someone might miss it.
Congrats to the appropriately-usernamed CAPS LOCK on your victory, even if I was making fun of you for your "interesting" story.
Congrats to the appropriately-usernamed CAPS LOCK on your victory, even if I was making fun of you for your "interesting" story.
4-time pool swimmer - last audition June 2019
Follow me on Twitter @JakeMHS
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
I'm with Econgator in that I could barely even process the clue. "Bord"?zakharov wrote:FJ reminded me of the "stupid answers" category - you have to fight the urge to discard the too-obvious answer. I instagot it, but totally understand how someone might miss it.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
I've already forgotten the exact phrasing but "dangling" plus "Cliches" as the category clued me in.TenPoundHammer wrote:I'm with Econgator in that I could barely even process the clue. "Bord"?zakharov wrote:FJ reminded me of the "stupid answers" category - you have to fight the urge to discard the too-obvious answer. I instagot it, but totally understand how someone might miss it.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
And Aaron acted like he maxed out the Perry Card SHarks Money Cards with his one-day total, like Norma Brown did in 1978, and he even bet to tie if second went all in and both were right.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
CONGRATS TO CAP LOCK! (Sorry, I just had to shout it.) Speaking of keyboards, many years ago I used to switch the '3' and '5' on my numeric pads, which drove people crazy whenever they used my machine. If you don't know why I did that, there's no hope for you.
I agree, it took me a few seconds to process the FJ clue, but then I formed a mental image and it came right together. I was somewhat surprised it wasn't a triple get, truth be told.
Yes, Sarah's story was quite amusing. Not sure it's one I'd share on national television, but funny nonetheless.
I agree, it took me a few seconds to process the FJ clue, but then I formed a mental image and it came right together. I was somewhat surprised it wasn't a triple get, truth be told.
Yes, Sarah's story was quite amusing. Not sure it's one I'd share on national television, but funny nonetheless.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
I easily ran the TV category as well. My precall of Carlton the doorman didn't show up, however. Nor did Mrs. Wolowitz.xxaaaxx wrote:6's and 7's!? OK...
First it was the baseball category, now it's the TV category that they keep switching away from. Stop making me wait for my 5/5 damnit!
Super-duper-ultra-instaget FJ. Absolutely stunned it was only a single get.
Sixes and Sevens was new to me as well.
I got FJ from the image of someone dangling from something, which led me to hanging from a cliff. I guess its something that you either get or it just doesn't click. A rare word origins get for me.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
EVen if I had thought of cliff, I'm not sure I would have used it. How is "cliffhanger" a cliche?Bamaman wrote:I got FJ from the image of someone dangling from something, which led me to hanging from a cliff. I guess its something that you either get or it just doesn't click. A rare word origins get for me.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
Ditto.Bamaman wrote:I easily ran the TV category as well. My precall of Carlton the doorman didn't show up, however. Nor did Mrs. Wolowitz.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
This tells you how much you can forget in four months - "sixes and sevens" is the only one of those I can clearly recall being an answer on the board. I thought about buzzing in for that one (If I remember right, no one got it?) but I thought '6's and 7's? Could it be 6's and tens? Or 7's and 8's?", and then time was up, though I could have just gone with my gut instinct and been right. As you might be able to tell, I was very much in a "don't ring in to guess, ring in to give a correct answer" mindframe.TenPoundHammer wrote:So explain to me why the hell edamame is $400 material.
Pelvic girdle and Elsinore also seemed way out there.
"Sixes and sevens" was a total NHOI. I wonder what the etymology of that is?
Can't believe I didn't get shamrock even with "ock" and "symbol of Ireland". I was thinking Blarney stone/rock, but couldn't figure out how such a thing could be used to explain the Trinity.
It was very oddly worded, and Cliches really seems a misleading and unspecific category for it - much better would have been Literary Terms, or Word Origins (they just had that as an FJ category last week). It seems like it's one you either get immediately or not at all. I thought of it immediately and then spent the other 28 seconds making sure it couldn't be anything else, wasn't too simple, incorrectly formatted, etc.TenPoundHammer wrote: "Enormous sea-bord" + cliché = I got nothing. Was expecting it to be something man-made for some reason. I don't think of the term "cliffhanger" as a cliché, either.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
HEY, THANKS A LOT, ALIETR... Crap, I mean thank you very much. Clearly I haven't gotten around to custom modifying this keyboard yet. (It's a lot harder on a laptop nowadays - on a plastic desktop keyboard you can just pop out any key with a Bic pen or a paperclip).alietr wrote:CONGRATS TO CAP LOCK! (Sorry, I just had to shout it.)
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
This. When I think of "cliché", I think of a tired phrase like "busy as a beaver" or "old hat", or any lyric ever written by Diane Warren. The phrase "cliffhanger" is not, by itself, a cliché.econgator wrote:EVen if I had thought of cliff, I'm not sure I would have used it. How is "cliffhanger" a cliche?Bamaman wrote:I got FJ from the image of someone dangling from something, which led me to hanging from a cliff. I guess its something that you either get or it just doesn't click. A rare word origins get for me.
Dangling had me briefly thinking "hanging by a thread", but that didn't seem to fit the rest of the clue.
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Re: Friday, June 8, 2012 Game Recap & Discussion (SPOILERS)
Glad to see you were able to make it on the show, Aaron, after you got bumped from that Wednesday taping in mid-November (oh, the joys of being a local). I figured once you got the opportunity to play you would do very well. Did they guarantee that you would be on the show the second time? It can't be too fun to wait around all day and not get to play by the 5th game of the day.