[Warning: The following contains Major spoilers for the Wednesday, October 25, 2023 episode of Jeopardy!] Final Jeopardy triple stumpers are pretty common nowadays, but Jeopardy! fans are “amazed” that the final clue in the October 25 episode bested all three players. And in fact, the confusing category and clue prompted the winner to question host Ken Jennings after the show. Competing in the game were Phillip Howard, a Naval officer from Santa Clarita, California; Emily Sands, a project manager from Chanhassen, Minnesota; and Carlos Chaidez, a civil engineer from Burbank, California. It was a fairly high-scoring game on all of their parts; the scores going into Final Jeopardy were Carlos with $13,400, Emily with $25,200, and Phillip with $9,200. Carlos bet, and lost, it all in the final round, and Emily came out on top with a final score of $23,599. Phillip ended in second with $8,400. The final category was “Historic Letters.” The clue read: “A letter from him begins, ‘On the thirty-third day after I had ...
- 10/26/2023
- TV Insider
Citizens, Glasgow
"Peroxide – that's all it is," says a long-suffering hairdresser working for Marilyn Monroe as she takes up residence in the Beverly Hills Hotel while shooting Let's Make Love. In an adjoining room, her husband, Arthur Miller, is typing out the screenplay for The Misfits; over the corridor, that other big-screen blonde, Simone Signoret, is accompanying her husband, and Monroe's co-star, Yves Montand.
In Sue Glover's new bio-drama, Monroe is all too aware that peroxide is all it is. "I've gotten over acting with my hair," she says before one of her many bouts of self-doubt, as she struggles to feel the equal of her intellectual husband and a match for the European sophistication of Signoret. Yes, she reads Shakespeare for pleasure, but there's a big part of Norma Jeane that loves to play the bubbly good-time girl. Signoret, meanwhile, has the opposite complaint: she resents having to soup up her French accent,...
"Peroxide – that's all it is," says a long-suffering hairdresser working for Marilyn Monroe as she takes up residence in the Beverly Hills Hotel while shooting Let's Make Love. In an adjoining room, her husband, Arthur Miller, is typing out the screenplay for The Misfits; over the corridor, that other big-screen blonde, Simone Signoret, is accompanying her husband, and Monroe's co-star, Yves Montand.
In Sue Glover's new bio-drama, Monroe is all too aware that peroxide is all it is. "I've gotten over acting with my hair," she says before one of her many bouts of self-doubt, as she struggles to feel the equal of her intellectual husband and a match for the European sophistication of Signoret. Yes, she reads Shakespeare for pleasure, but there's a big part of Norma Jeane that loves to play the bubbly good-time girl. Signoret, meanwhile, has the opposite complaint: she resents having to soup up her French accent,...
- 3/2/2011
- by Mark Fisher
- The Guardian - Film News
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