>1>Show #8834 - Thursday, March 23, 2023>div>
>Melissa Klapper game 4.

Contestants

>[&lt;< previous game]

> href="showplayer.php?player_id=15459" rel="external">Daisy Donohue>, an actor and artist originally from St. Paul, Minnesota

> href="showplayer.php?player_id=15460" rel="external">Alec Chao>, a management and program analyst from Fort Lauderdale, Florida

> href="showplayer.php?player_id=15450" rel="external">Melissa Klapper>, a professor from Merion Station, Pennsylvania (whose 3-day cash winnings total $59,100)

>[next game >>]

Jeopardy! Round

ble class="round"> <tr> <tr>able>
>THAT'S COLD!
>td>
<tr> <tr>able>
>ON THE "J.V." SQUAD
>(Ken: We're gonna need the first and last names of these famous "J.V."s.)
<tr> <tr>able>
>WITH A SCULPTURE ON TOP
>td>
<tr> <tr>able>
>5-LETTER LITERARY CHARACTERS
>td>
<tr> <tr>able>
>POST
>td>
<tr> <tr>able> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr>
>APOCA-LIPSTICK
>td>
<tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454019" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">3>td>
>This chilly word can precede shoulder, daiquiri or yogurt <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454026" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">10>td>
>This Navy SEAL later went into the wrestling ring, movies & Minnesota politics <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454037" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">16>td>
>A classical statue called "Freedom" sits atop the dome of this Washington, D.C. building <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454022" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">6>td>
>In "The Maltese Falcon" his name is this. Sam this. <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454043" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">28>td>
>Originally a French cavalry call, the bugle song known as "Call To The Post" is commonly heard several times a day at one of these <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454046" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">29>td>
>Blend in with the other rampaging monsters with Le Monster Lip Crayon, fittingly from this pop superstar <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454033" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">20>td>
>This word precedes "hare" in the name of the animal shown>, or "Dreams" in the title of Barry Lopez's book that mentions the critter <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454034" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">19>td>
>He played Dawson Leery on "Dawson's Creek" & his last name means "of the creek" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454021" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">7>td>
>Philly's city hall is topped by a 37-foot tall statue of this> colony founder; for a time no building there was built higher than his hat <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454023" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">5>td>
>Shakespeare's Goneril kills herself after poisoning this sister <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454044" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">26>td>
>In addition to her classic works on etiquette, she wrote the 1949 book "Motor Manners" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454031" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">12>td>
>As society crumbles around you, you'll look posh in the vice lipstick line from the edgy company called "Urban" this <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454020" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">4>td>
>Outside, this tapered spike is formed by solid water; inside, one can be found on a Christmas tree <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454027" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">14>td>
>Someone dropped a statue of this "Friday the 13th" slasher in a lake in Minnesota; not cool, man <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454039" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">24>td>
>The colossal Christ the Redeemer Statue on Mount Corcovado towers over this South American city <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454018" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">1>td>
>He teaches the wolf cubs & Mowgli the law of the jungle <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454045" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">30>td>
>John Rewald's book about this movement is subtitled "From van Gogh to Gauguin" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454032" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">11>td>
>Did aliens cause the fuss? In that case, try this numeric lipstick shade whose name comes before "from Outer Space" in a 1957 film title <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454038" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">21>td>
>In 1998 Michael Keaton was nipping at your nose as this title guy, a dad brought back to life as a snowman <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454035" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">17>td>
>He's been nominated for 4 Oscars, winning for 1978's "Coming Home" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >DD: $1,000 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454040" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">23>td>
>Commissioned by brewer Carl Jacobsen, a sculpture of this fairy-tale figure sits atop a rock in Copenhagen harbor <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454028" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">8>td>
>Last name of Edith Wharton's title farmer Ethan <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454024" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">2>td>
>I do say, dear courier, please complete your task in this manner that ends with a word meaning speed <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454047" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">27>td>
>You can still look good in the end times with the lipstick shade named this, the word young Danny repeats in "The Shining" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1000 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454025" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">13>td>
>The purchase of Alaska was derided as "Seward's Folly" & "Seward's" this kitchen appliance <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1000 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454036" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">18>td>
>Seen here> off the mound, this downtown man eventually married an Upton girl <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1000 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454041" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">22>td>
>A column topped by a 17-foot statue of this man is the centerpiece of London's Trafalgar Square <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1000 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454029" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">9>td>
>Unstable skipper of the minesweeper U.S.S. Caine who faces a mutiny <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1000 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454030" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">15>td>
>In 2017 the Washington Post adopted the slogan this "dies in darkness" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1000 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454042" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">25>td>
>Hail Cthulhu, this> tattoo artist & model may have opened up a portal to another dimension with her lipstick shade Lovecraft

Scores at the first commercial break (after clue 15):

Melissa Alec Daisy
-$600 $4,400 $2,400

Scores at the end of the Jeopardy! Round:

Melissa Alec Daisy
$3,200 $7,200 $3,400

Double Jeopardy! Round

ble class="round">
<tr> <tr>able>
>HISTORIC NAMES
>td>
<tr> <tr>able>
>SCIENCE
>td>
<tr> <tr>able>
>PULITZER PRIZES
>td>
<tr> <tr>able>
>TV SHOW LINGO
>td>
<tr> <tr>able>
>FOREIGN WORDS & PHRASES
>td>
<tr> <tr>able> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> <tr> </tr> able> >Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:
> href="https://www.j-archive.com/media/2023-03-23_DJ_Cat6.jpg" target="_blank">THE LINCOLN HIGHWAY>td>
>(Amor: I'm Amor Towles, my latest novel is The Lincoln Highway>, and I'll have clues about the book and the U.S.A.'s first coast-to-coast road.)
<tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454053" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">7>td>
>For his services in fighting this fleet, British explorer Martin Frobisher was knighted in 1588 <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454075" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">30>td>
>The mass of gas around a planet, this word is also used as the unit of air pressure equal to 14.7 psi at sea level <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454076" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">28>td>
>Seen here>, he was the first to win a Pulitzer Prize for film criticism, doing so in 1975 <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454058" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">11>td>
>Plinko was unveiled on this game show in 1983 <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454077" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">29>td>
>When Don Quixote says, "He owes you nothing", he uses this as the last word <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$400 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454060" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">13>td>
>(<a href="https://www.j-archive.com/media/2023-03-23_DJ_13.jpg" target="_blank">Amor Towles presents the clue.>) The Lincoln Highway, which starts at Times Square, originally included a ferry across this> river <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454054" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">6>td>
>While in the service of the Dutch East India Company, he became the first European to sight New Zealand & the Fiji islands <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454051" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">3>td>
>There are more than 3,000 species of this insect in 3 main genera; genus Culex carries encephalitis <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454067" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">21>td>
>In 1947 a special Pulitzer went to this university's graduate school of journalism, for its administration of the Pulitzer prizes <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454062" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">16>td>
>This Roy family epic taught us "prekend", starting Thursday after lunch <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454073" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">26>td>
>Coup de foudre, literally "stroke of lightning", is the French equivalent of this 4-word phrase for instantaneous romance <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$800 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454057" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">8>td>
>(<a href="https://www.j-archive.com/media/2023-03-23_DJ_08.jpg" target="_blank">Amor Towles presents the clue.>) Figuring prominently in my novel is a 1948 Studebaker Land Cruiser>, a car manufactured in this> Lincoln Highway Indiana city, which is also home to students attending Notre Dame <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454048" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">1>td>
>As queen of the Netherlands, she saw her country through both World Wars <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454061" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">14>td>
>Sulfur dioxide & nitrogen oxides react with other elements to create this harmful precipitation <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454055" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">9>td>
> href="https://www.j-archive.com/media/2023-03-23_DJ_09.jpg" target="_blank">This> historian, noted for his biographies of John Adams & Harry Truman, won 2 Pulitzers <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454052" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">4>td>
>Marshall, played by him on "How I Met Your Mother", coined "Revertigo" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454059" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">12>td>
>Italian for what you say when squeezing past someone in a theater, it rhymes with "juicy" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1200 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454074" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">27>td>
>(<a href="https://www.j-archive.com/media/2023-03-23_DJ_27.jpg" target="_blank">Amor Towles presents the clue.>) Near the end of the book, Emmett & Billy finally set out for the Western Terminus> of the highway, which is still at the Palace of the Legion of Honor in this> city <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454049" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">2>td>
>After his troops captured the Alamo, this Mexican general was captured after the Battle of San Jacinto <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454065" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">24>td>
>Of the 3 main types of rock, it's what shale is <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454056" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">10>td>
>In 2014 Jason Szep & Andrew R.C. Marshall shared a Pulitzer for reporting on the violent persecution of this Muslim minority in Myanmar <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1600 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454063" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">15>td>
>This substance powers spaceships on "Star Trek" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >DD: $4,000 > href="suggestcorrection.php?clue_id=454069" title="Suggest a correction for this clue" rel="nofollow">19>td>
>An Architectural Digest headline said this term "dictated the layout of" a "light-filled residence in Beijing" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >$1600 25>td>
(>Amor Towles presents the clue.) In Pennsylvania, the >Lincoln Highway follows the route of the Lancaster, one of these toll roads which back in its day was also an innovative long-distance highway <tr> <td>
>&#160;   $2000 5>td>
Before he got the boot for good in 41 A.D., this emperor wanted a statue of himself placed in the Temple in Jerusalem <tr> <td>
>&#160;   >DD: $4,000 22>td>
Atomic number 87, this element named for a country by Marguerite Perey is the heaviest of the alkali metals <tr> <td>
>&#160;   $2000 18>td>
Early in his career, this playwright won 3 Obies; he also won a Pulitzer for his play "Buried Child" <tr> <td>
>&#160;   $2000 17>td>
In the '60s this comedy mishmash from Dan Rowan & Dick Martin introduced bippy, as in "You bet your sweet..." <tr> <td>
>&#160;   $2000 20>td>
It comes before "Ukraini" to mean "glory to Ukraine"; it's also a common nickname <tr> <td>
>&#160;   $2000 23>td>
(>Amor Towles presents the clue.) The setting for my novel's first chapter & also for Willa Cather's "O Pioneers!", where I got my epigraph, is in >this state, which happens to be the midpoint of the Lincoln Highway
Melissa Alec Daisy
>$6,800 >$15,200 $4,600
>td> >(<a href="help.php#lock">lock game>)</td>
> href="wageringcalculator.php?a=15200&b=6800&c=4600&player_a=Alec&player_b=Melissa&player_c=Daisy">[wagering suggestions for these scores]

>Final Jeopardy! Round
</table> </tr> <tr>
>MOVIE THEME SONGS
>td>
<tr> <td id="clue_FJ" class="clue_text">Monty Norman, the composer of this character's theme, said the staccato riff conveyed sexiness, mystery & ruthlessness able> >Final scores:
Melissa Alec Daisy
>$1,800 >$15,505 $2,100
>3rd place: $1,000 >New champion: $15,505 2nd place: $2,000
>Game dynamics: Game dynamics graph

>Coryat scores:

Melissa Alec Daisy
$14,600 >$15,200 $4,600
17 R
>(including 1 DD),
5 W
>(including 2 DDs)
>26 R,
6 W
7 R,
1 W
> href="help.php#combinedcoryat">Combined Coryat>: $34,400 > href="showgameresponses.php?game_id=7777&highlight=..." rel="external">[game responses]> <a href="showscores.php?game_id=7777&highlight=..." rel="external">[game scores]> <a href="suggestcorrection.php?game_id=7777" rel="nofollow">[suggest correction]>h4>
>Game tape date: 2023-01-10
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