|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Résumés including Gap ads & "The Super Models" on Apple TV+ include Naomi Campbell's, Christy Turlington's & this Illinois native's |
Cindy Crawford
|
|
|
This volcano rises about 4,000 feet (volcano heights tend to change) from the Plain of Campania |
(Amy: What is Mount Etna?)
Vesuvius
|
|
|
"What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a ____ in the sun?" |
a raisin
|
|
|
This adjective describes the Calvinist religious views of the people who settled Mass. as well as the people themselves |
puritanical
|
|
|
Senegal president Léopold Senghor was a noted poet in this language & in 1983 became the first African elected to its academy |
French
|
|
|
We're not sure if lawyers still do this, but in "Middlemarch", Mr. Standish does, to relatives after a rich man's death |
read the will
|
|
|
"You live, you learn, you love, you learn" & this singer did all those between her 2005 Gap campaign & the one for Christmas 2023 |
Alanis Morisette
|
|
|
In 1956, President Juscelino Kubitschek de Oliveira began construction of an artificial lake in what would become this capital |
Brasília
|
|
|
Blake: "Tyger Tyger, burning bright, in the ____ of the night" |
(Laura: What is a forest?) (Ken: No.) (Laura: [*].) ... (Ken: Yes, it's plural; I think, Laura, you added the "S" after I had already ruled against you, I heard "forest" first.)
the forests
|
|
|
It's another word for pharmacist |
apothecary
|
|
|
Born in Addis Ababa in 1950, Sahle-Work Zewde became this country's first female president in 2018 |
Ethiopia
|
|
|
Deliberately picking a Communist celebration, in the 1950s the president of this org. chose May 1 as Law Day |
the American Bar Association
|
|
|
Before playing the fellow alliterate Lois Lane starting in 2013, she told Gap shoppers about specials on t-shirts |
(Laura: Who is Margot Kidder?)
Amy Adams
|
|
|
The historic castle of Chillon stands on the shore of this lake that's formed by the Rhone River |
(Bryan: What is Constance?)
Lake Geneva
|
|
|
By Jenny Joseph: "When I am an old woman, I shall wear ____ with a red hat which doesn't go" |
purple
|
|
|
A Polish trade union, or a feeling of like-mindedness among any union members |
Solidarity
|
|
|
Jimmy Kruger, this country's minister of justice, tried to cover up the 1977 murder of activist Steve Biko by police |
South Africa
|
|
|
In 1919, around when Prohibition began, New Mexico enacted a $1,000 fine for this, applied to the passenger too |
driving while intoxicated (drunk driving)
|
|
|
Her career includes Gap commercial singing with Madonna & first woman rapper in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame |
(Amy: Who is Queen Latifah?)
Missy Elliott
|
|
|
Kabuki theater traces its origins to this city, Japan's capital when kabuki began in the 1600s |
Kyoto
|
|
|
Robert Browning: "That's my last ____ painted on the wall, looking as if she were alive" |
duchess
|
|
|
In law they're the type of damages based on your proven loss, like the value of that flugelhorn |
compensatory
|
|
|
This last name of Jomo, the first prime minister of independent Kenya, contains the name of his country |
Kenyatta
|
|
|
As we've all been told, federal law--14 CFR 135.127 if you're curious--prohibits tampering with, disabling or destroying these |
(Amy: What are voting machines?) (Laura: What are--is currency?) ... (Ken: You often hear the warning on airplanes--those are [*].)
the lavatory smoke detectors
|
|
|
In happier times (1989), Joan Didion did a Gap ad with this daughter who was named after a state in the Yucatán |
Quintana Roo
|
|
|
Surrounded by 5 others, it's central to the Central Asia "stans" |
Uzbekistan
|
|
|
Shelley: "O, wild ____ ____, thou breath of autumn's being" |
(Ken: That's from his "Ode to the [*]".)
West Wind
|
|
|
Fassi in Rome is this type of shop where we guess Italian kids are taken for sweet treats after the soccer match |
a gelateria
|
|
|
Julius Nyerere was the first president of this country that in 1964 merged with Zanzibar to become Tanzania |
Tanganyika
|
|
|
The Atlantic says courts have consistently ruled police have no specific duty to protect anyone except them |
(Amy: Who are themselves?)
prisoners (people in their custody)
|
|