|
DIRECTORS' FIRST FEATURES |
|
YOU GOT MY LITERARY NUMBER |
|
|
WE MAKE MONEY THE OLD-FASHIONED WAY |
|
|
|
|
"Citizen Kane" (1941) |
(Orson) Welles
|
|
|
Chapter 9 of this 1851 Hawthorne novel is titled "Clifford and Phoebe" |
The House of the Seven Gables (House of Seven Gables accepted)
|
|
|
The hero of Vicksburg is on it |
(David: What is the twenty?) ... (Alex: [*], yes, Grant.)
the fifty-dollar bill
|
|
|
This co., owner of NBC Universal, Inc., showed its "imagination at work" in 2003 with revenues of $134.2 billion |
(Steve: What is Disney?) ... (Alex: [*], yes. NBC, not ABC.)
General Electric
|
|
|
In 2003 Jason Schmidt led the NL in this stat with 2.34 |
earned run average (earned runs average accepted)
|
|
|
|
"Play Misty for Me" (1971) |
Clint Eastwood
|
|
|
This 1961 title became a term for illogical bureaucratic rule |
(Alex: All three of you are now on the plus side and Vinita, you trail David by $2200.)
Catch-22
|
|
|
It features the author of "Notes on the State of Virginia" |
(Alex: The author of Notes on the State of Virginia was Thomas Jefferson, and he's on [*], you're right.)
the two-dollar bill
|
|
|
"Nobody doesn't like" this bakery group that had $3.4 billion in 2001 sales |
Sara Lee
|
|
|
The 4 words that follow the classic "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses..." |
(Vinita: What is yearning?)
yearning to breathe free
|
|
|
|
"sex, lies, and videotape" (1989) |
Steven Soderbergh
|
|
|
The Buendia family lives in the isolated jungle town of Macondo in this 1967 novel |
100 Years of Solitude
|
|
|
As president, the man on this bill crushed the Whiskey Rebellion |
(Alex: Yes, Washington.)
the one
|
|
|
"Dude, you're getting" a lot of this computer company's products, judging by its $41.4 billion in FY 2004 revenues |
Dell
|
|
|
This federal program, EITC for short, is financed by the IRS |
the Earned Income Tax Credit
|
|
|
When what's now Pittsburgh's tallest building was completed in 1970, it was named for this company |
U.S. Steel
|
|
|
"Eraserhead" (1978) |
(David) Lynch
|
|
|
It's the classic 1949 novel by the writer born Eric Blair |
(Alex: Yes, you know him better as George Orwell.)
1984
|
|
|
It shows a man who wrote, "I... confess plainly that events have controlled me" |
(Alex: The words of Lincoln, on [*].)
the five-dollar bill
|
|
|
This Conn. co. was No. 130 on the 2003 Fortune 500; this Conn. co. was No. 130 on the 2003 Fortune 500 |
(Alex: You're gonna love it... what is [*]? That's why I read it twice and they wrote it twice.) [Laughter]
Xerox
|
|
|
This play satirizing the shallowness of British society was first produced in 1895 |
The Importance of Being Earnest
|
|
|
Henry Hobson Richardson designed the structure called this county's Courthouse & Jail |
(David: What is Monroe?)
Allegheny
|
|
|
"The 400 Blows" (1959) |
Truffaut
|
|
|
Weep not for this 1966 Thomas Pynchon book that detailed the Tristero system |
The Crying of Lot 49
|
|
|
At age 80, the man on the face of this bill was president of his state's executive council |
(Alex: Yes, Benjamin Franklin was the individual.)
the one-hundred
|
|
|
In 2003 this "Maine hunting shoe" company took more than 56,000 orders at its website in a single day |
(David: What is Bass?)
L.L. Bean
|
|
|
There is a branch of the University of Nebraska at this city on the Platte |
Kearney
|
|