
Originally Posted by
pfrduke
Playing a lot of catch up (and maybe the only one left playing?):
1/26
Working 9 2 5 - 1000
Alliteration Time - 600
Languages - 2000 (DD)
1/27
Differs By A Vowel - 1000 (DD)
A Dash Of Fashion - 400
Place Your Bets - 2000
1/30
Channeling The TV Shows - 1000
Nursery Rhymes - 400, 1000
Worst Case Ontario - 400
Mushroom Stew - 400
Scary Movies - 800
FJ - Word Origins - 13400
1/31
Ad Verbs & Taglines - 800, 1000
Head Gear - 1200
3-Letter Palindromes - 2000
They Wrote The Movie - 1600
FJ - U.S. State Names - 333
2/1
Literary Gems - 800
Inventors & Inventions - 400
You “Break” - 400
Mountains - 1600
TV Character First Names - 1200
2/2
Toucan - 600
Play That Game - 600
2/3
Second Cities - 200
19th Century Names - 400
Water Music - 800
2/6
Months That Start With Feb - 2000 (DD)
Doctor WHO - 1000
You Can Call Me Homer - 1200, 2000
S-SS-ing The Situation - 400
2/7
Holidays Around The Globe - 4000 (DD)
The 20th Century By Country - 800
You are so good at it that you scared everybody else off!
I have had two problems: 1) I have been really busy with other stuff, so haven't been able to watch but maybe one or two episodes a week, and 2) ended up somehow getting logged out of DBR and until today have been wholly unsuccessful at logging back in.
Happy to report, however, two things: 1) that I was obviously finally able to get back onto DBR, and 2) that although I haven't watched many episodes, in each and every one of them there was at least one triple stumper that I was able to get. And in several, I was able to get big payouts in missed Daily Doubles or Final Jeopardy questions.
So, I guess I am still kind of playing along, just not as frequently, and I have been unable to post any results.
I'm glad to be back on DBR. I guess I shouldn't be surprised that nobody noticed I was gone, given that I'm a tiny cog in a very large machine. I had a lot of thoughts about the end of the Virginia game, and, although it took several days, other posters eventually covered all of them.
"We are not provided with wisdom, we must discover it for ourselves, after a journey through the wilderness which no one else can take for us, an effort which no one can spare us, for our wisdom is the point of view from which we come at last to regard the world." --M. Proust