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00:00This is Jeopardy!
00:05Here are today's contestants.
00:07An attorney from North Hills, California, Jamie Ball.
00:12A retired police sergeant from the Bronx, New York, Jim O'Malley.
00:18And our returning champion, a student originally from Ridgewood, New Jersey, David Madden,
00:25whose two-day cash winnings total $35,200.
00:31And now, here is the host of Jeopardy!, Alex Trebek.
00:37All right, I'm eager, I'm ready.
00:39I hope Jamie and Jim, the challengers, are as well.
00:42Let's go to work. Players, pick up those signaling devices,
00:45and we'll get the dollar figures into the screens, and now we will reveal these categories.
00:50In the first round, we deal with Peru.
00:53Sixties TV actors.
00:56Animal, also known as a food attitude.
01:00By the hundreds, and finally, some rhyme time.
01:03David, you start us off. You're the champ.
01:05Peru for 800, please.
01:08He served as Peru's first ambassador to the Soviet Union
01:12before moving his diplomatic skills to the United Nations.
01:16David.
01:17Who is Perez de Cuellar.
01:18Correct.
01:19Peru for 1,000, please.
01:20Several Indian languages are spoken in Peru,
01:23including this one that's now an official language.
01:26David.
01:27What is Quechua?
01:28Quechua, correct.
01:29Peru for 6, please.
01:30Lima's Palacio de Gobierno was built in 1938
01:34on the site of this Spanish conquistador's palace.
01:37David.
01:38Who is Pizarro?
01:39Right.
01:40Peru for 4, please.
01:41The Uro Archipelago in this lake
01:43consists of about 40 inhabitable islands
01:46made of woven totora reeds.
01:49Jim.
01:50What is Lake Titicaca?
01:51That's right.
01:52Peru for 200.
01:53Peru's national drink is Pisco Sour,
01:56a blend of lime juice, syrup, bitters,
01:59and a heady brandy made from this vine fruit.
02:03David.
02:04What is grape?
02:05Yes.
02:06By the hundreds for 800, please.
02:09The queen might enjoy polishing off
02:12forties of this old malt liquor from Miller Brewing Company.
02:17Jim.
02:18What is Old English?
02:20800.
02:21That's it.
02:25Sixties TV actors for 200.
02:28Tony Dow as Wally and this guy as the beaver.
02:33Jamie.
02:34Who is Jerry Mathers?
02:35Correct.
02:36TV actors for 400, please.
02:37Bonanza featured Michael Landon,
02:39Purnell Roberts, and this man as Ben.
02:43Jim.
02:44Who is Lorne Green?
02:45Correct.
02:46For TV actors, 600.
02:48Adam West was Bruce Wayne.
02:50This man played Dick Grayson.
02:53David.
02:54Who is Ward?
02:55Burt Ward, yes.
02:56By the hundreds for 600, please.
02:58It's the shortest distance in the Summer Olympics track events.
03:02David.
03:03What is the hundred meters?
03:04Yes.
03:05By the hundreds for 1,000, please.
03:06When it began to flood in Genesis,
03:08Noah had reached this advanced age.
03:13He had reached the age of 600.
03:15David, back to you.
03:16Okay.
03:17Rhyme time for 800, please.
03:18Salute that grand old university in New Haven.
03:22David.
03:23What is hail?
03:24Yale.
03:25Yes.
03:26Rhyme time for 1,000.
03:27Answer?
03:28Nearly double.
03:29You have $3,000 more than Jim.
03:35I'll wager 1,400, please.
03:38Okay.
03:39For $6,000 as your total.
03:40Here is the clue.
03:42One who steals a legal document like a summary or abstract.
03:46What is a brief thief?
03:48That's it.
03:51And you move up.
03:55Animal aka for 200, please.
03:57How much wood would a woodchuck chuck on February the 2nd
04:00when it's known by this name?
04:03David.
04:04What's a groundhog?
04:05Yes.
04:06Animal aka for 400.
04:07What is the name for the critter also known as a puma, a cougar,
04:10and a catamount?
04:12David.
04:13What's a mountain lion?
04:14That's it.
04:15And that 400 takes you to 60.
04:16600 takes us to our first break.
04:18So we'll pause and we'll come back shortly.
04:24Paul is an attorney in North Hills, California.
04:27Good news comes in multiples.
04:30You found out you were going to be on Jeopardy!
04:32the same day you found out?
04:34That I had passed the California bar exam.
04:36I hope this is not an embarrassing question.
04:38Did you pass it on the first try?
04:40In fact, I did.
04:41That makes you feel a lot better, doesn't it?
04:42Indeed.
04:43Yeah.
04:44What kind of law do you practice?
04:45Right now I'm doing medical malpractice defense.
04:47Medical malpractice defense?
04:49Yes.
04:50Okay.
04:51You represent doctors and hospitals?
04:52Yes.
04:53Okay.
04:54Jim O'Malley, a retired police sergeant from the Bronx,
04:56he and his wife addicted, ladies and gentlemen, to online shopping.
05:01Not worried about identity theft, obviously?
05:04No.
05:05It's just mushrooming out of control.
05:07It is?
05:08It started with little figurines for the kids.
05:10Oh, no.
05:11You're not one of those.
05:12Little things for the house.
05:13Yeah?
05:14Then bigger things for the house.
05:15Like what?
05:16Well, stuff for the kitchen,
05:18but then when we got past the motorcycles and the cars,
05:22and we haven't bought one yet,
05:24but we've been bidding unsuccessfully on a couple of houses.
05:27All right.
05:28Do you get mileage for when you purchase things on your credit cards?
05:31Make it pay off two ways.
05:33Never thought of that.
05:34All right.
05:35Good.
05:36Glad to help.
05:37David Madden is our champion.
05:38We keep introducing you as a student.
05:39I know you're studying in Germany.
05:41What are you studying?
05:43I'm pursuing a master's in international relations,
05:45and half the courses are in English and half are in German.
05:48So, obviously, you are fluent in both languages.
05:50Mm-hmm.
05:51And you are dating.
05:52You mentioned your girlfriend, Valerie, on our last program.
05:56Would I be correct in assuming she is German?
05:58She is German.
05:59I met her on a train about two and a half years ago.
06:01She was studying in the middle of the summer, which struck me as very bright,
06:04so I just went up to her point-blank and asked her out to dinner.
06:07She said yes, and we're together.
06:08Oh, those German girls.
06:09I love them.
06:10All right.
06:11Let's get back into this.
06:12David, you make the selection.
06:13Okay.
06:14Animal A.K.A. for $600.
06:15Answer.
06:16Felis pardalis, this small wildcat of South America,
06:20is also known as a painted leopard.
06:26You know it better, perhaps, as the ocelot.
06:28David, back to you.
06:29Animal A.K.A. for $800, please.
06:30Due to its appetite, the wolverine is also known as this,
06:33as if it committed one of the seven deadly sins.
06:39It's also known as the glutton.
06:41You don't want to get in its path.
06:42David.
06:44Animal A.K.A. for $1,000.
06:45Wapiti is a Native American term for this second-largest deer of the Americas.
06:51David.
06:52What is elk?
06:53Elk is right.
06:54Buy the hundreds for $400.
06:56Roman numeral D.
06:58David.
06:59What is 500?
07:00Yes.
07:01Buy the hundreds for $200.
07:02The first paper call service with this prefix
07:05let viewers give their views on a 1980 presidential debate.
07:09David.
07:10What is 1-900?
07:11900, yes.
07:12Rhyme time for $600.
07:15A story with a moral about Adam and Eve's second son.
07:20Jamie.
07:21What is an able fable?
07:22That's right.
07:23Rhyme time for $400, please.
07:25What drawing of a curly-haired dog?
07:29David.
07:30What is a poodle doodle?
07:31Right.
07:32Rhyme time for $200.
07:33A sentimental song about a Waldorf or Caesar.
07:37David.
07:38What is a salad ballad?
07:39Right.
07:40Food attitude for $200.
07:42James Brown could tell you that lemon is a popular variety of this flat-bodied food fish.
07:48David.
07:49What is soul?
07:50Soul, yes.
07:51Food attitude for $400.
07:52Describing food that is unclean.
07:55Tref is the Yiddish opposite of this term.
07:58David.
07:59What is kosher?
08:00Correct.
08:01A food attitude for $600.
08:02Take a look at the monitor, players.
08:03One of these of lamb should provide about seven chops.
08:08David.
08:09What is a rack of lamb?
08:10Yes.
08:11A food attitude for $800, please.
08:12Sliders and cheese sticks are highlights of the cuisine offered at this hamburger chain.
08:18Jim.
08:19What is White Castle?
08:20Yes.
08:22$60.
08:23TV actors for $800.
08:24On Mission Impossible, Martin Landau played Roland Hand and this real-life wife was Cinnamon Carter.
08:33Jim.
08:34Dorothy Baines?
08:36No.
08:37Sorry.
08:38David or Jamie?
08:39Who is Barbara Bain, not Baines?
08:42Jim, you pick again.
08:43Two clues left.
08:44TV actors for $1,000.
08:46He bewitched us as Uncle Arthur.
08:50Jamie.
08:51Who is Paul Lynde?
08:52Correct.
08:53And now the last clue.
08:54In the dark of a movie theater, you can taste the sunshine with this chewy Nestle chocolate candy.
09:00Jamie.
09:01What are Raisinets?
09:02Yes.
09:03That's $1,000 more your way.
09:04And you're in third place, so you go first when we come back, Jamie.
09:07David in the lead, though, with an even $10,000.
09:09It'll be tough to catch.
09:11Jamie, get ready.
09:22Here are the categories awaiting your selection.
09:25Andrew Jackson's Hermitage.
09:29Read the Book.
09:32Liquids.
09:33Rock and Roll.
09:35Bands.
09:36B-A-N-D in quotation marks.
09:38And finally, Let's Dance.
09:40All right.
09:41Where do we start?
09:42Let's try Let's Dance for $400, please.
09:45Grab your baby and do this dance as its kings play songs of love.
09:50Jim.
09:51What is it?
09:52Mambo?
09:53Mambo is right.
09:54Read the Book for $400.
09:56The Beautiful and Damned.
09:57His second novel takes place during the Jazz Age.
10:01David.
10:02Who is F. Scott Fitzgerald?
10:03Correct.
10:04Read the Book for $800.
10:06Schoolboys survive a plane crash and create their own society on an island.
10:10In this work by William Golding.
10:13David.
10:14What is Lord of the Flies?
10:15Right.
10:16Read the Book for $1200.
10:17This novel by Thomas Hardy is subtitled A Pure Woman.
10:21David.
10:22What is Tess of the D'Urbervilles?
10:23Correct.
10:24Read the Book for $16.
10:25This nearly 700-page work begins Howard Rourke laughed.
10:31David.
10:32What's the Fountainhead?
10:33Yes.
10:34Read the Book for $1,000.
10:35According to the title of a book by George Eliot, the Doralcoat Mill is on this river.
10:40David.
10:41What is the Floss?
10:42Mill on the Floss.
10:43You're right.
10:44Well done.
10:45You've obviously done a great deal of reading.
10:46And it's paid off.
10:49Go again.
10:50Okay.
10:51Let's go for Andrew Jackson's Hermitage for $400, please.
10:54To get to the Hermitage from Nashville, you take a road called this.
10:59Same as Jackson's nickname.
11:00David.
11:01What is Old Hickory?
11:02Correct.
11:03Andrew Jackson's Hermitage for $1,600, please.
11:05Answer.
11:06Daily Double.
11:07Now, you have $13,400 more than Jim.
11:17You might consider a sizable wager.
11:21$100, please.
11:23You chicken.
11:24All right.
11:26Here we go.
11:29During his last months of life, Jackson was troubled by the low price of this,
11:34the Hermitage's cash crop.
11:38What is cotton?
11:41Yes.
11:42Correct.
11:43$16,500.
11:44Your total now.
11:45Select again, David.
11:48Liquids for $400, please.
11:50Answer.
11:51Term for the substance expelled by a fleeing octopus.
11:54Some of it appears to paralyze predators.
11:57David.
11:58What is ink?
11:59Correct.
12:00Bands for $1,600, please.
12:03To desert or a wild lack of restraint.
12:08David.
12:09What is abandon?
12:10Yes.
12:11Bands for $2,000, please.
12:12Goods prohibited by law from being imported.
12:16David.
12:17What is contraband?
12:18Yes.
12:19Band for $1,200.
12:20When AT&T merged with cable company TCI, it formed AT&T this.
12:27Jamie.
12:28What is broadband?
12:29Correct.
12:30Bands for $800, please.
12:31Proverbially, to jump on this is to join something that's quickly gaining popularity.
12:37David.
12:38What's the bandwagon?
12:39Right.
12:40Bands for $400.
12:4110-4, good buddy.
12:42It's what the CB and CB radio stands for.
12:45David.
12:46What is citizen's band?
12:47Yes.
12:48Liquids for $1,600, please.
12:51The name of Hungary's Egeri Bicarver wine is translated as this male animal's blood from Eger.
13:02It's a hearty red and it's called bull's blood.
13:05David, back to you.
13:06Liquids for $1,200, please.
13:08Female gnats have mandibles for blood sucking.
13:12Males don't and feed on this liquid like gods.
13:17Jamie.
13:18What is nectar?
13:19Nectar, correct.
13:20Liquids for $800.
13:21Answer.
13:22Nearly double.
13:23There's still plenty of time, but David has a big lead, as you can see.
13:30Let's try $2,000, please.
13:32All right.
13:33Here's the clue in liquids.
13:34A quick dose of candy can help if you take too much of this prescribed twice a day for many people.
13:40What is aspirin?
13:41Oh, no.
13:42Sorry.
13:43What is insulin?
13:44Insulin.
13:45You'll need that candy to offset the insulin.
13:48Select again, Jamie.
13:49Okay.
13:50Liquids for $2,000, please.
13:51It's commonly made by pouring apple cider over wood shavings while blowing air through the mixture.
13:58Jamie.
13:59What is cider?
14:01Hard cider?
14:02No.
14:04David or Jim?
14:06It's usually cider vinegar.
14:08Vinegar is the important word in the response.
14:10Jamie, you go again now.
14:11Okay.
14:12Let's dance for $1,600, please.
14:14The French call this dance associated with the Middle East la danse du ventre.
14:20Jim.
14:21What is the dance of the veils?
14:22No.
14:24Jamie.
14:25What is belly dancing?
14:26Belly dancing, right.
14:27Let's dance for $2,000, please.
14:29The Castle Walk was named for Vernon and Irene Castle, played by this pair in a 1939 movie.
14:37Jim.
14:38Who were Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers?
14:41That's it.
14:43Let's dance for $1,200.
14:45The name of this wild dance is derived from the town of Taranto, Italy, as was the name of a certain spider.
14:52David.
14:53What is a tarantella?
14:54Correct.
14:55Let's dance for $800.
14:57Britannica calls the milonga, a dance from this South American country, fast, sensual, and disreputable.
15:05Jamie.
15:06What is Brazil?
15:07No.
15:08David or Jim?
15:10What is Argentina?
15:11David, you select.
15:12Andrew Jackson's Hermitage for $800, please.
15:14After a fire, Jackson turned the mansion into an example of the revival of this civilization's architecture.
15:22Jim.
15:23What is Greek?
15:24Greek is right.
15:25$1,200, Hermitage.
15:27The tomb inscription for Rachel Jackson mentions this verbal crime that Andrew thought helped kill her.
15:34Jamie.
15:35What is slander?
15:36Yes.
15:37Rock and roll for $1,200, please.
15:40This 1984 film about a young black rocker struggling for fame starred Prince and Apollonia.
15:47Jamie.
15:48What is Purple Rain?
15:49Good, with a minute to go.
15:50Rock and roll for $1,600, please.
15:52Eric Idle played Dirk McQuickly in this 1978 musical spoof about the Prefab Four.
16:00Jamie.
16:01What is The Ruttles?
16:02Yes.
16:03Rock and roll for $2,000, please.
16:04This 1991 film is about a group of young people forming a soul band in Dublin.
16:10Jim.
16:11What is The Commitments?
16:12Yes.
16:13Andrew Jackson's Hermitage for $2,000.
16:15Jackson retired to the Hermitage in 1821 after being governor of this territory, but at 54, the presidency still lay ahead.
16:28He had been governor of the Florida Territory.
16:30Jim.
16:31Rock and roll for $800, please.
16:33Angela Bassett brought this energetic singer's story to life in 1993's What's Love Got to Do With It?
16:40David.
16:41Who's Tina Turner?
16:42Yes.
16:43And now the last clue.
16:44The 1999 TV movie And the Beat Goes On told the story of this singing pop duo.
16:50Jim.
16:51Who was Sonny and Cher?
16:52Right.
16:53That takes you to $6,600.
16:55Both you and Jamie, however, trailed David by quite a margin.
16:59He can't be caught today.
17:00Let's see what the final Jeopardy! category is.
17:02On the Globe.
17:03We'll be back with the clue in a moment.
17:07...in part by...
17:08First, Benefiber made fiber clear and tasteless.
17:11Now, they've made it even easier to take by putting it in caplets.
17:15New Benefiber caplets.
17:16What will they do next?
17:18We're dealing with something on the globe.
17:21Here's the clue.
17:22Moving west from Canada, the next three countries through which the Arctic Circle passes.
17:3030 seconds, players.
17:31Good luck.
18:02All right, Jamie.
18:03We start with you.
18:04You were in third place.
18:05Which three countries did you come up with?
18:07Moving west.
18:08What are Sweden, Norway, and Finland?
18:11Sorry.
18:12That's going to cost you.
18:13That's wrong.
18:14Cost you everything, as a matter of fact.
18:15Let's go to Jim O'Malley.
18:16$6,600 going in, and he came up with...
18:20What is the USA, Russia...
18:23Well, you're on the right track.
18:24There was a third one, which you didn't get, and it cost you $1,600.
18:28Looks like you're going to finish in second place.
18:30Let's go to David Madden.
18:31Did he come up with the United States, Russia, and that third country?
18:35What are the USA, Russia, and Finland?
18:38You are right, David, and you will add how much today?
18:40$10,500.
18:41Way to go.
18:42Good wager.
18:43$34,200.
18:44Now a three-day total of $69,400.
18:48Do we have another Ken Jennings in the making?
18:51Who knows?
18:52Come and see us next time right here on Jeopardy.
18:53Won't you so long, everybody.
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20:07Coming up on the Channel 13 News at 5.
20:13Everyone, just kind of long story short, thought they were going to die.
20:17People started saying prayers, praying to God, panicking.
20:23Not since World War II has London seen this deadly of an attack
20:26coming up the latest developments in the London terrorist attacks.
20:30Last evening, July 6th, at approximately 7.40 p.m.,
20:35the body of a female child was located in the Cedar River.
20:38It is believed to be that of five-year-old Evelyn Miller.
20:43And reaction to the news from the community members
20:45who searched desperately for days for the five-year-old.
20:48The Channel 13 News at 5 starts right now.