Steve-Paulette-Amanda, 10/05

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00:00Are indictments going to be handed down? NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams, next week.
00:07This is Jeopardy!
00:11Here are today's contestants.
00:13A law student from Austin, Texas, Amanda Traphagen.
00:18A writer from Tacoma Park, Maryland, Paulette Beat.
00:23And our returning champion,
00:25a communications consultant from Naperville, Illinois, Steve O'Connor,
00:30whose two-day cash winnings total $33,401.
00:38And now, here is the host of Jeopardy!, Alex Trebek.
00:47Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
00:49Looks like Amanda's ready to hook horns with Steve.
00:51What about you, Paulette? Are you ready for this?
00:53I'm ready.
00:53All right, let's put all three of you to work in the Jeopardy! round, shall we?
00:59Hope you like the categories. Here they are.
01:01Name that autocrat.
01:04Beat lyrics, presidential daughters, multiple choice.
01:09We want you to bring your A game. Notice the quotation marks.
01:12And finally, we'll deal with the boys in blue. Steve.
01:15Bring your A game for $200, please.
01:18This artery branches off into the coronary arteries, which supply the heart with blood.
01:23Steve.
01:24What is the A order?
01:25That's right. A game, $400.
01:26The city of Hopewell in eastern Virginia is bounded by the James and this courthouse river.
01:33Paulette.
01:34What is the Allegheny?
01:35No, sorry. Amanda.
01:37What is the Appomattox?
01:38Yes.
01:39A game for $6.
01:40Give him a beer. This patriot became tax collector of Boston in 1756.
01:46Amanda.
01:47Who is Samuel Adams?
01:48Right.
01:49A game for $8.
01:50This mid-Atlantic island group was uninhabited when discovered by Diego de Senil of Portugal around 1427.
01:58Steve.
01:59What are the Antilles?
02:00No.
02:01Paulette or Amanda?
02:02What are the Azores?
02:04Amanda, you're the only one with money.
02:06A game for $1,000.
02:08The Liberty Bell was hidden in this Pennsylvania town in 1777.
02:13Amanda.
02:14What is Allentown?
02:15Correct. You double your score.
02:16Beat lyrics for $2.
02:18This 1967 hit begins,
02:21Love, love, love. Love, love, love. Love, love, love.
02:28Amanda.
02:29What is All you need is love?
02:30Correct.
02:31Beat lyrics for $4.
02:32I saw a film today. Oh boy, the English army had just won the war.
02:40That was a day in the life.
02:42Amanda.
02:43Beat lyrics for $6.
02:44Well, the Ukraine girls really knock me out. They leave the West behind.
02:49Amanda.
02:50What is Back in the USSR?
02:51Correct.
02:52Beat lyrics for $8.
02:54Let me tell you how it will be.
02:56There's one for you, 19 for me, because I'm this guy. Yeah, I'm this guy.
03:04The tax man. Amanda, back to you.
03:06Beat lyrics for $1,000.
03:07Expert, textpert, choking smokers, don't you think the Joker laughs at you?
03:14Amanda.
03:15What is Come Together?
03:16No. Steve or Paulette?
03:20I am the walrus. Well, I used to be. Amanda, let's go somewhere else.
03:26Name that autocrat for $200.
03:28Spain, 1939 to 1975. Paulette.
03:32Who is Franco?
03:33Right.
03:34Multiple choice, $200.
03:36Of king, queen, or jack, the one that's a six-pronged metal object. Paulette.
03:41What is a jack?
03:42Yes.
03:43Choice $400.
03:44Of lock, stock, or barrel, the one that's the handle of a whip. Paulette.
03:49What is a stock?
03:50Yes.
03:51Same category, $600.
03:53Of punt, pass, or kick, the one that's the former currency of Ireland. Steve.
03:59What's the punt?
04:00Yes. Autocrat for $400.
04:02Argentina, 1946 to 1955. Amanda.
04:06Who is Perón?
04:07Juan Perón is right, and that takes you up to $2,200.
04:09Takes us to break number one.
04:11Back in a moment.
04:15Football.
04:16Silas, who can't sing a note. Amanda Traphagen from Austin, Texas.
04:21You have a twin sister.
04:22Yes, that's true.
04:23You guys didn't go to the same school.
04:25No, she went to Texas A&M, which is our biggest rival.
04:28I know that. How did that happen?
04:30Well, she's a meteorologist, and that was the only school in Texas that had the major,
04:34because clearly otherwise she would have gone to UT.
04:36What's your major?
04:37Journalism and government.
04:38Good for you. Nice to have you here.
04:40Paulette Beat from Tacoma Park, Maryland.
04:43A woman who has her own theme song.
04:45I do. A few years ago, after a lifetime of not even knowing how to sew on a button,
04:50I learned to sew pillows and curtains and cook great meals,
04:54so I decided I was a single housewife, and I needed my own theme song,
04:58you know, in case I got my own show someday.
05:00And who created your theme?
05:02Oh, I wrote it myself. I'm still working on the lyrics.
05:04Have a few calls into John Williams, but he hasn't gotten back to me yet.
05:08Okay. You have a good sense of humor. I love that.
05:11Steve O'Connor is our champion.
05:13Steve was going to pick up some fast food, was in the lane, in his car, and what happened?
05:19I accidentally wound up rear-ending a Chicago police cruiser.
05:23Well, I'm sure it was accidental, because I don't think you would do something like that deliberately.
05:27I sure didn't, no.
05:28Serious damage? Not much damage?
05:29Not much damage, but I had an officer step out with an ice cream cone stuck right to her bulletproof vest,
05:35and she wasn't too happy about it, as you may imagine.
05:39You're lucky it was a woman.
05:41Perhaps...
05:42One of the guys would have come out with the ice cream cone and a baton, I'm telling you.
05:44Could have been.
05:45All right, let's get back into this. Amanda, you have command of the board.
05:48You select, please.
05:49Autocrat for six.
05:50Norway, 1942 to 1945.
05:56That was the great traitor, Vidkun Quisling. Amanda.
05:59Let's stick with Autocrat for eight.
06:01Nicaragua, 1967 to 1972, and 1974 to 1979.
06:10That would be Somoza. Amanda.
06:12What the heck? Let's finish it out for a thousand.
06:14The Soviet Union, 1964 to 1982. Amanda.
06:19Who is Khrushchev?
06:20No. Steve?
06:22Who's Brezhnev?
06:23Brezhnev, who came after Khrushchev. Yes, you go.
06:26Poison Blue for 200.
06:28Some sources say policemen were informally called this because of what their badges were made from.
06:34Steve.
06:35Or cops or coppers.
06:36Yes.
06:37400, Poison Blue.
06:38First used in police work by Berkeley, California's Chief August Vollmer in the 1920s,
06:43this tool measures pulse, blood pressure, and respiration. Amanda.
06:48What is a lie detector?
06:49Correct.
06:50Multiple choice for eight.
06:52Of Peter, Paul, or Mary, the one who converted Lydia in the Bible.
06:57Paulette.
06:58Who is Paul?
06:59Right.
07:00Multiple choice, a thousand.
07:01Of Leonardo, Michelangelo, or Tintoretto, the artist who was not in Florence in 1504.
07:10That would be Tintoretto.
07:12Paulette, back to you.
07:13Poison Blue, 600.
07:15Booking a suspect means entering his or her information into the daily record called the police this.
07:21Paulette.
07:22What is the log?
07:23No.
07:24Oh yeah, we'll accept that. The police blotter is what we're going for.
07:26800, Poison Blue.
07:28Police now use speed guns with this technology, first constructed by Theodore Maimon using a ruby rod. Steve.
07:36What is a laser?
07:37Laser, yes.
07:38And Poison Blue for a thousand.
07:39The bulletproof shields used by police departments are called this type of shield, from the Greek for to throw.
07:48They're called ballistic shields. Steve.
07:51Presidential Daughters, 200.
07:53She graduated from Stanford and was impersonated by Julia Sweeney on Saturday Night Live. Amanda.
07:59Who is Chelsea Clinton?
08:00Yes.
08:01Daughters for four.
08:02Answer, Daily Double.
08:05You and Paulette tied at 1800.
08:10A thousand.
08:11All right, here is the clue.
08:12They were kids when she met her future husband at Ike's inauguration.
08:20Who are the Kennedys?
08:21No, who is Julie Nixon?
08:23Julie Nixon Eisenhower, no.
08:25And you're down to 800. Go again.
08:27Daughters for six.
08:28A Columbia Law School graduate, she married museum designer Edwin Schlossberg in 1986.
08:34Paulette.
08:35Who is Caroline Kennedy?
08:36Correct.
08:37Daughters, 800.
08:39The press dubbed her Watusi Lucy because she loved to dance the Watusi, also the frug and the monkey. Amanda.
08:47Who is Lucy Johnson?
08:48Yes.
08:49Daughters for a thousand.
08:50Known as Princess Alice.
08:52She married a congressman who became speaker of the house in the 1920s.
09:00And that would be Teddy Roosevelt's daughter, Alice Roosevelt.
09:04Amanda, you're in third place with 1600.
09:06You select first when we come back to play Double Jeopardy.
09:09Paulette, an $800 lead over you.
09:12Stay with us.
09:14You're watching Amanda. She wants you to do well in this Double Jeopardy round.
09:18Here are the categories.
09:20Historic American Documents.
09:23Sports USA.
09:25Diseases. Oh, gosh.
09:27Other Stars and Stripes.
09:30Poo-pourri. Notice the quotation marks there.
09:34And finally, The Boys Are Blue.
09:37Amanda, where do we start?
09:38Poo-pourri for four.
09:40A Native American infant.
09:42Paulette.
09:43What is a papoose?
09:44Yes.
09:45Poo-pourri for 800.
09:46Once used at sea, it's a spear-like weapon with a barbed head.
09:50Amanda.
09:51What is a harpoon?
09:52Correct.
09:53Poo-pourri for 12.
09:54Unjust or dishonest conduct.
09:56It sounds like a contaminated backyard swimming hole.
10:02That's when you engage in dirty pool.
10:05Amanda.
10:06Poo-pourri for 16.
10:07It's the 1741 publication that contains the line,
10:10Beauty, like supreme dominion, is but supported by opinion.
10:16Paulette.
10:17What is poor Richard Dalmanach?
10:18Yes.
10:19Poo-pourri for 2,000.
10:21In the 50s, all the best-clad girls wore bobby socks, saddle shoes,
10:25and one of these canine creations.
10:28Paulette.
10:29What is a poodle skirt?
10:30You got it.
10:31Let's go to Other Stars and Stripes for 400.
10:34The stripes are for the 11 signers of its Declaration of Independence.
10:39The star means it's a western-style African state.
10:43Steve.
10:44What is Liberia?
10:45That's it.
10:46Let's go to Historic American Documents for 400.
10:491863.
10:51All persons held as slaves within any state shall be then,
10:55thenceforward, and forever free.
10:57Amanda.
10:58What is the Emancipation Proclamation?
11:00Correct.
11:01Documents for 8.
11:021620.
11:03We whose names are underwritten combine ourselves together into a civil body politic.
11:09Steve.
11:10What is the Mayflower Compact?
11:12Right.
11:13Historic Documents for 12.
11:14Answer.
11:15Daily Double.
11:17You have exactly half of Paulette's total.
11:22What the heck.
11:23Let's make it a true deal.
11:24You were tempted there.
11:25I know.
11:26Good.
11:27Let's see if it works out.
11:281918.
11:29Number 2.
11:30What constitute freedom of navigation upon the seas outside territorial waters?
11:42What is the...
11:44Oh, I...
11:46Say something.
11:47No?
11:48No.
11:491918 was the important part of the clue.
11:51Wilson's 14 points.
11:5314 points.
11:54All right.
11:55You have to build again.
11:56Go.
11:57Okay.
11:58Documents for 16.
11:59It retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence.
12:03Amanda.
12:04What are the Articles of Confederation?
12:05Correct.
12:06Documents for 2,000.
12:071783.
12:08His Britannic Majesty acknowledges the said U.S. to be free, sovereign, and independent.
12:16Steve.
12:17What is the Treaty of Paris?
12:20Right.
12:21$2,000 for you.
12:22Okay.
12:23The Boys Are Blue, 400.
12:25Of marital woes that led to a 1996 royal divorce, a biography said,
12:30his gaiety of spirit was stifled by melancholy.
12:34Amanda.
12:35Who is Prince Charles?
12:36He's the one.
12:37Other Stars and Stripes for 8.
12:40The stripes are the Union Jack.
12:42The stars form the Southern Cross.
12:45Amanda.
12:46What is Australia?
12:47No.
12:48Paulette.
12:49What is New Zealand?
12:50Yes.
12:51Australia has two additional stars.
12:52Paulette.
12:53Boys for 800.
12:54About his blues, he wrote,
12:56I traveled to the moon, but the most significant voyage began when I returned.
13:03Amanda.
13:04Who is Neil Armstrong?
13:05No.
13:06Steve or Paulette?
13:08It was his buddy, Buzz Aldrin.
13:10Back to you, Paulette.
13:11Boys for 1,200.
13:13This Adonais poet suffered from depression after several family tragedies.
13:22And that poet was Percy Shelley.
13:24Paulette.
13:25You knew that, Steve.
13:26Yeah.
13:27Too bad you didn't bring it.
13:28Boys, 1,600.
13:29This artist's 1909 University of Oslo murals were done after receiving electroshock
13:35and contain no scenes of personal anguish.
13:39Amanda.
13:40Who is Goya?
13:43No.
13:44Steve.
13:45Who is Munch?
13:46Edvard Munch.
13:47Yes, indeed.
13:48He painted The Scream.
13:50Goya, of course, was Spanish.
13:51Steve, go.
13:52Okay, let's get out of there and go to Sports USA for 400.
13:55The name of this hat worn by Packer fans was originally a term of derision.
13:59Amanda.
14:00What is a cheese head?
14:01Correct.
14:02Other stars and stripes for 12.
14:04The red stripes and star still symbolize its commitment to communism.
14:08The blue is peace.
14:10The white is purity.
14:12Amanda.
14:13What is North Korea?
14:14Good.
14:15Other stars and stripes for 16.
14:16The star is a guide.
14:17The blue is sky.
14:19The red is the blood of patriots.
14:21The white is the Andean snow.
14:24Amanda.
14:25What is Chile?
14:26Yeah.
14:27Other stars and stripes for 2,000.
14:28The tricolor was adopted when it was part of Gran Colombia.
14:32The stars are its seven original provinces.
14:39And that is the flag of Venezuela.
14:41Amanda, back to you.
14:43Diseases for four.
14:45October 21, 2005 is the national day for this.
14:49Done every one to two years starting at 40.
14:51It can reduce risk of breast cancer death.
14:55Steve.
14:56What is a mammogram?
14:57Yes.
14:58Diseases for 800.
14:59By dispensing just enough vaccine,
15:01the bifurcated needle is the only medical instrument to eradicate a disease.
15:06This one eliminated in 1979.
15:09Amanda.
15:10What is smallpox?
15:11Right.
15:12Diseases for 12.
15:13Answer.
15:14Daily double.
15:16Little by little, you've made your way back into this.
15:19You trail Paulette by a mere 1,600.
15:21You could take a big lead.
15:231,700.
15:24All right.
15:25Here is the clue for you.
15:26The first outbreak of this serious form of pneumonia occurred in southeastern China in November 2002.
15:35What is SARS?
15:36SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome.
15:39You are right.
15:40You have 7,300.
15:41Select again.
15:43Diseases for 16.
15:44Joint pain and fever are results of this three-word blood disease occurring chiefly among African-Americans.
15:53Paulette.
15:54What is sickle cell anemia?
15:55That's it.
15:56Boys for 2,000.
15:58He wrote a 1779 coronation mass though depressed over his mother's death,
16:03his failed relationship and unfulfilled goals.
16:10And that would be your buddy Wolfie.
16:12Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
16:13Less than a minute to go now, Paulette.
16:15Diseases 2,000.
16:16Basically, chickenpox 2 with a vengeance.
16:19This painful rash is outbreak number 2 of the varicella zoster virus.
16:25Amanda.
16:26What is shingles?
16:27Shingles, yes.
16:28Sports for 800.
16:29Hyphenated term for a tournament pairing, say, Phil Nicholson with, say, 15 handicapper Richie Tycoon.
16:36Steve.
16:37What's a pro-am?
16:38Right.
16:391,200.
16:40Here's John.
16:41I'm a proud citizen of this, a phrase popularized and used in a book subtitle by sports writer Dan Shaughnessy.
16:51He's a proud member of the Red Sox Nation.
16:54Didn't you see all the paraphernalia?
16:56Steve, pick again.
16:571,600.
16:58In the programs of AYSO, short for this, every kid gets to play at least half of every game.
17:05Steve.
17:06What is the American Youth Soccer Organization?
17:07That's it.
17:08Now the last clue.
17:09Oh, darn.
17:106,400 is where you wind up, Steve.
17:12And Amanda leading, 9,300.
17:14Final Jeopardy! category coming up, 19th century literary characters.
17:19Okay, sounds tough.
17:20We'll have a clue.
17:23If you are my...
17:24In 20 years, National Breast Cancer Awareness Month has been educating women about breast cancer detection, diagnosis, and treatment.
17:31In the U.S., one in seven women will develop breast cancer in her lifetime, but early detection saves lives.
17:37There are more than two million breast cancer survivors in the United States, thanks in large part to annual mammography screenings for women over 40.
17:46So get screened today.
17:49I'm Catherine...
17:50...in part by...
17:51Time for the seventh inning stretch.
17:53Somebody get that man some Bayer Back and Body.
17:56It's Bayer Aspirin plus a special pain relief booster.
17:59Bayer Back and Body.
18:0119th century literary characters.
18:04Here we go with the clue.
18:05Hanged in an 1837 novel, he so angered some Londoners that his creator toned him down in future editions.
18:1430 seconds, good luck.
18:35The novel was by Charles Dickens.
18:49Let's start with Steve O'Connor.
18:51Which character did you come up with?
18:53Who is Darnay?
18:54Charles Darnay is incorrect.
18:56It will cost you $6,400.
18:58Let's go to Paulette now.
19:00Which character?
19:03Captain Kidd is incorrect.
19:05It'll cost you $5,000, dropping you down to $3,800.
19:09Let's go to Amanda.
19:10$9,300.
19:11Which character?
19:13Tom Jones.
19:14No, Oliver Twist.
19:16Fagin.
19:17And it will cost Amanda how much?
19:20$4,000.
19:21That'll leave her with $5,300.
19:23That's enough.
19:24She becomes the new Jeopardy! champ.
19:27She'll be back on Monday.
19:28See you all next time.
19:29Promotional consideration provided by...
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20:00Only from Jennifer's.
20:01Thank you for allowing us to be a part of your family for the past 25 years.
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20:11Live with menopause or worry about the drugs I take for it.
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20:21My mom's making rich chocolate Ovaltine.
20:24Yeah!
20:25Mom, we're back!
20:26Who wants Ovaltine?
20:27Me!
20:28Let's make more.
20:29More Ovaltine, please!
20:34Seconds away on the Channel 13 News at 5,
20:36Wilma has made landfall.
20:38Where will she head next?
20:40An important question with no certain answer right now will explain.
20:44Plus, a murder case that's a decade old.
20:47When do investigators close the file?
20:49Join us next for the Channel 13 News at 5.
20:59This programme contains some strong language.

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