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  | CELEBRITY NAME RECOGNITION |  |
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  | CALIFORNIA, HERE YOU COME! |  |
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    | Steve Buscemi (yes, "boo-SEH-mee") played Atlantic City as Nucky Thompson on this HBO show | Boardwalk Empire 
 
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    | The age of the great cathedrals, about 1150 to 1250, helped form this architectural style | Gothic 
 
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    | Though piercing wasn't common among them, the name of this Native American tribe means "pierced nose" | (Jen: What is Perce Nez?) [Originally ruled correct; reversed before the Daily Double at clue 20]
 
 Nez Perce
 
 
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    | In 1959 Pat Brown added a pool to the governor's mansion in this city; as governor his son refused to live in the house | (Alex: You are right, with a minute to go.) 
 Sacramento
 
 
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    | Try explaining to your kids how this 1972 4-letter arcade game from Atari was the coolest thing ever for a while | Pong 
 
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    | Change the first syllable in "denotation" to get this, for implied meaning | connotation 
 
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    | Amanda Seyfried's last name rhymes with "my bread", which is a factor in this 2012 pic with Amanda as Cosette | Les Misérables 
 
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    | This 4-letter art movement began in Zurich in 1916 | Dada 
 
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    | This phrase means to forcefully remind someone of what they've done wrong, much like how a puppy might be trained | rub their nose in it 
 
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    | Do you know the way to this city once big in fruit, now high on tech? Head to the southern end of I-280 | San Jose 
 
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    | Introduced in 1982, this sequel had as big an appetite as her male predecessor | Ms. Pac-Man 
 
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    | If you say, "To slowly remember", you're doing this, leaving the verb all alone | splitting an infinitive 
 
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    | It's Groening as in "raining" if you meet Matt, who co-created this show with roots in both 1999 & 2999 | Futurama 
 
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    | Op art--the term & the movement--came about in this decade | the '60s 
 
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    | These are the 4 groups of air-filled chambers in the facial bones near the nose | the sinuses 
 
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    | He was a bouncing orange critter with a big nose & an asterisk in his name | Q*bert 
 
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    | When we say someone let out a stream of Anglo-Saxon words, we usually mean he used this type of word | (Penny: What is [*]?) (Alex: Yeah. You like that. Makes you laugh, huh?)
 (Penny: I wouldn't give examples.)
 
 cursing
 
 
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    | We "sez" that the middle of Martin Scorsese's last name is not "sayz" & that he directed this 1973 Harvey Keitel "road" movie | [The end-of-round signal sounds.] 
 Mean Streets
 
 
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    | This delicate style that evolved from the Baroque is linked in France with Louis XV (1710-1774) | Rococo 
 
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    | In the movie "Foxcatcher", Steve Carell donned a prosthetic nose to play John of this wealthy family | (Jen: What is Rockefeller?) 
 du Pont
 
 
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    | Appropriately, the highest lance won in this classic game; less appropriately, there were flying ostriches | Joust 
 
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    | If the heroine of your 18th century romance novel says, "Text me", you've used this -ism | anachronism 
 
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    | When talking about great Trecento art, like the example seen here, Trecento means this period | (Mikki: What is medieval?) (Alex: We need more than that.)
 [Mikki shakes her head.]
 (Alex: Gotta be specific.)
 (Jen: What is 13th century?)
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 (Alex: Both of you are hovering around the correct response.  Trecento refers to [*], which means [**].)
 
 the 1300s (the 14th century)
 
 
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    | This creature seen here has quite the nose | the proboscis monkey 
 
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    | You had left, middle & right fire buttons in this game, also the name of a U.S. Army unit known as MICOM | Missile Command 
 
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    | A group of words including a subject & a predicate constituting one unit of a compound sentence | (Penny: What is a phrase?) 
 the clause
 
 
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