I didn’t get it. I got as far as noticing the summer pilot and thinking it was a probably a daytime show, but that was it. I know there were a lot of 50th anniversary retrospectives a few years ago, so maybe the opening scene showed up in one of those.
When the clue came up, nothing at all came to mind. I said, “it must be something I’ve never watched.” Turns out that was the case. 50 years on and I’ve never seen an episode of Sesame Street.
Nitpick, the moon landing was at 4:17 pm EDT on July 20, the moon walk started at at 10:56 pm, and was over by 1:11 am, July 21. They lifted off from the moon at 1:54 pm on July 21.
I had the same reaction–thought of the moon landing first, then tried to think of 1969-era shows that might begin with a D or had a main character whose name started with D.
Sure, Sesame Street is well-known for the “sponsored by the letter ___” line…but a D being drawn in concrete? Is that typical of what they show on screen when the line is spoken? (I’ve never been a viewer of the show.)
I can’t even come up with any shows that would fit.
Dragnet (much older than 1969, and they never used the word “Dragnet” in the entire series)
Dick Dastardly. (I can see Muttley snickering at the letter)
Davey and Goliath (makes more sense. I can see Goliath “I dooon knooow, Daveee. I don’t think we should write in wet cement.” )
Those are probably the best guesses possible. I was thinking in terms of some sort of Dennis the Menace knockoff–the actual show was on YEARS too early–in which a kid was misbehaving. But: no.
There is usually (or was when I was watching) a bit where they would show some scene or animation that would end on the letter showing up somewhere in the environment, with them saying the letter. I could definitely think that the D in the concrete may have come from an episode that was “sponsored” by the letter D.
It’s similar to those fancy bits that you’d see on network TV, where they’d do some elaborate thing to show their call signs. For example, NBC showing a scene that ends on a peacock which then gets an overlay of their symbol.
And I actually just now realized that’s what they were parodying all this time.
What annoyed me about that FJ was Halley’s wager. She threw away her second win for no reason.
Scores at the end of the Double Jeopardy! Round:
Halley
David
Hoa
$7,200
$15,000
$13,900
She bet $7,199 and it was a triple stumper. She came in third.
When you’re a distant third to two other players whose scores are close, the only sensible bet, IMHO, is zero. If she had done that she would have won with a respectable total.
There may be occasions when it’s not the best bet; if the category is one you’re really good with, for instance. But in most cases, $0 is the best bet in that situation.
“Portland” occurred to me as a guess, but it was only a guess, and had I been on the show, I don’t know if I’d have been confident enough to write it down as my response.
It’s not surprising that that was the answer, but it’s hardly common knowledge that Portland, OR was named after Portland, ME. It was news to me. There are may places named Portland all over the world, and it makes sense that people would name a town founded on a coast Portland, with or without regard to whether they had a different place already named Portland in mind.
Writing down nothing gets you exactly the same as writing down an incorrect response. So you might as well write something, even if it’s a guess. It might turn out to be right!