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#quizmaster jack
Okay so I've seen some art about Binjpipe'd hosts so heres my take on it <3
They're so mentally ill lmao
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I was like, FUCK IT! EVEN BOB AND THE INTERNATIONAL HOSTS since I am feeling the evil mood
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majestydeerakuma · 5 months
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Hello, to anyone who has played You Don't Know Jack Full Stream German version, does Escape The Simulation still happen?
(I need to know for the sake of lore :'D)
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Hallo, an alle, die You Don't Know Jack Full Stream Deutsch version gespielt haben, gibt es Escape The Simulation noch?
(Ich muss es aus Gründen der Überlieferung wissen :'D)
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quiplasherror606 · 1 year
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Okay, Here’s two interpretations of some underrated ydkj hosts
Jack Cake and Quizmaster Jack!
(The Jack Cake ref sheet is pretty old, but i like the design!)
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LGBTQ+ actually stands for
Lesbians
Guy Towers
Buzz Lippman
Troy Stevens
Quizmaster Jack
+Cookie Masterson, Nate Shapiro, Schmitty, Bob, Dr. Sandy Whiteman, and Jack Cake
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Do you have any headcanon's for any heroic character on Earth 3?
The big two--World's Finest, if you will--are Captain Alexander Luthor of the Imperial Amerikan Marines and Jack "Jokester" Dent, Clown Prince of Justice.
Alex, despite this family's immense wealth, grew up in the shadow of his foster brother, Clark, through to their adulthood and the day Colonel Kent left for the stars and returned as Earth's new self-proclaimed ruler, Kil-Vex the Ultraman (no relation, obvs). Alex had risen to Captain under the Wilson Regime and personally requested point on the anti-Ultraman offensive. President Wilson's denial of that request and subsequent deal with Kil-Vex led Alex to defect, quickly burning through his personal wealth to build up an Anti-Ultraman Army. It was a disaster. Luthor's personal tragedies continued from there, as his wife, his sister, and eventually his own child all betrayed him for the Crime Syndicate. As his family collapsed, Luthor fully committed himself to his Legion of Justice, even as they were demoralized by defeat after defeat. In a moment of weakness, he tried to even the playing field by stealing geriatric villain Will Batson's dark lightning of MAZAHS, but the cursed magic erased his consciousness and replaced with a warped personality similar to his multiversal counterparts. He was eventually freed from the Curse of Mazahs, his belief in justice strengthened by the shame of the hunger for power he now knew slept deep within his very being.
Jack came from much less auspicious beginnings, a struggling actor and comedian whose act got him the wrong kind of attention of Owlman and his Talons. Viciously beaten and scarred, Jack took to wearing clown make-up and joined up with his ex-wife Evelyn Gold's Justice Underground. As Jokester and Three-Face, they worked with a loose network of other costumed heroes--Quizmaster, King Croc, Tick-Tockman, Mister Moth, Red Hood, and Jack and Evelyn's daughter Duela--to wage an asymmetrical war with Owlman and the fascist Council of Owls that had ruled Gotham for centuries. After killing one of the Talons in self-defense and attempting to return the body to Owlman, Jack was promptly executed, making the return of the Jokester not long after something of a personal annoyance to the Owl. As for Jack himself, even he couldn't explain why he was alive again...but then he always preferred multi-choice questions.
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Hey, just curious to know how Adel gets along with the other hosts
10:57 pm, 4/26/2024
OOC : Holy crud, its been a long time since i got an ask. (i am adding the other hosts that do the other language versions - like Jack Cake, Quizmaster Jack, Masatoshi Hamada, and Troy Stevens) Guy : I have a like and hate relationship : its one of those times where I find him funny but sometimes absolutely so stupid that I have to take a second and go like: ... this dude eats pringles for breakfast.. wtf? Nate : we are siblings, we hardly speak to each other nowadays. - I also may or may not have punched several of his bullies back in highschool. Buzz : ... Uh, hes something.. but i rather avoid him if possible. ESPECIALLY on CAR TRIPS... Cookie and Schmitty : ... uh do i really need to explain myself here? ❤️❤️ Bob : I hardly know shit about this dude, all I know is that he hosted Headrush and probably got burned multiple times in gibberish questions. Jack Cake : an absolute menace. keep him 10 feet away from me. I rather be stuck in a room w/ buzz than him. Quizmaster Jack : never really heard of him , only just knew his name Masatoshi Hamada : Heard of him, never really seen what he does.. so i guess i gotta dig more on that. Troy Stevens : .. i have no words.
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funky-dealer · 2 years
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quizmaster jack is annoying in a sort of charming way (BARELY. barely) but jack cake is annoying in an i want him dead way
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idontknowjack · 2 years
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some other design headcanons i have for the hosts: -cookie has a small potbelly and just generally looks like a Dad -schmitty is one of those "wacky t-shirt" guys. he can and will make himself stand out no matter what -guy is actually the bald one -nate, along with the hair i mentioned in a previous post, has a small goatee of the same color -buzz can't ride a good chunk of theme parks rides (aka he's short) -bob looks like a balding old man despite being in like his 20s -jack cake wears the most boring suit possible. as a way to lure the contestants in. -quizmaster jack, when on the job, wears a sparkly purple suit complete with top hat, gloves, and cane
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wrongydkjquotes · 3 years
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Nate: Jack, why are you sad?
Jack Cake: Well, I managed to get Quizmaster Jack out of my room but it cost me my tea.
Nate: Wow… How British are you!?
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gerard5d · 2 years
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you don’t know jack? buddy there’s four of them right here
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hellyeahydkj · 2 years
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headrush used to have a website for it and one of the things you could do was ask baby diva questions there’s only two instances to look through (also it’s not actually in comic sans sorry)
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twelvegrimmyplace · 3 years
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Nick Grimshaw’s last Radio 1 show review – Grimmy bids adieu in big loss for the BBC
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From Hunt the Sausage to Kate Moss’s prank call game, the funnyman and tabloid fixture made Radio 1 essential listening. It will be all the poorer without him
Thu 12 Aug 2021 - The Guardian
When Nick Grimshaw was given the Radio 1 breakfast show presenting job in 2012, it wasn’t merely a personnel change – his appointment marked a meaningful generational shift. The previous host, Chris Moyles, was known for his blokey banter and litany of politically incorrect jokes. Grimmy was his decidedly un-laddy replacement, a radio funnyman for a more inclusive age – one where casual bigotry, or even just hurting people’s feelings, was no longer a laugh.
Now, as Grimshaw hangs up his headphones – hot on the heels of fellow Radio 1 stalwart Annie Mac – it’s time to take stock of the youth-oriented entertainment epoch he has helmed for over a decade. While Grimshaw never courted controversy, he certainly wasn’t bland. In fact, his vaguely camp, intensely pally style didn’t sit well with everyone, and his breakfast tenure was plagued by reports of low listening figures. But for those on his wavelength, Grimshaw made Radio 1 seem an unbeatable start to the day for the first time in a lifetime – and the phrase ‘Radio 1 comedy’ no longer a contradiction in terms.
Grimshaw bids adieu from his drivetime show, but over the past 14 years he’s presented practically every slot in the schedules. Radio 1 always formed the bedrock of his career – he got his first gig at 23, presenting the radio version of the BBC’s youth strand Switch with Mac – even when his TV gigs (The X Factor judging panel, the Celebrity Gogglebox sofa) were more high-profile, and his celebrity mates (most notably, Harry Styles) made him a tabloid fixture.
Those celebrity mates remain a significant part of Grimshaw’s shtick. In his final broadcast, he remembers how Kate Moss came up with the breakfast show’s prank call game Call or Delete after insisting on sitting in on a two-hour production meeting. He thanks Pixie Geldof for her Instagram tribute post, and receives heartfelt voicemails from Alan Carr, Jack Whitehall and Styles himself. Yet rather than seeming like a shameless namedropper, Grimshaw’s great skill is to put everyone on the same social stratum; one of his most appealing qualities is that he seems exactly the same no matter who he is speaking to. Whether he’s messing about with a superstar he doesn’t know, chatting to a listener or simply relating anecdotes about his non-famous friends, he makes his show feel like a natural extension of his actual social life. This means he can transport big-name interviews into the sphere of friendly chat without it seeming fake or try-hard, but can also charm glamorous guests into doing daft things: in this last show, he relives a time he made Rosie Huntington-Whiteley advertise cat food.
Nowadays, out-and-out silliness is crucial to Radio 1’s identity, and Grimshaw is no stranger to such games. Being accessible but not patronising, goofy and perky but not childish is a hard balance to strike: it involves buying into features such as Hunt the Sausage (in which guests must guess which caller is eating said meat product) and The Ball Bag Quiz, but with a microdose of irony, so the whole thing doesn’t seem ridiculously infantile. Sometimes, things are more straightforwardly funny – for this final show Grimshaw resurrects savage quizmaster robot Showbot, a joke which is perfectly pitched and genuinely clever – but often his role involves laughing with and at a game at the same time.
That sense of arch detachment does seem to prevent this final outing from getting too sentimental. Instead of sobbing uncontrollably, Grimshaw worries that he isn’t sobbing uncontrollably, and struggles to deal with his colleagues doing so, before embarking on a highly relatable overthinking spiral about exactly when he might start crying (he never does). Instead, in true DJ style, he lets the music do the heavy lifting, ending with Talking Heads’ This Must Be The Place, an incredibly beautiful song about love feeling like home. It’s fitting in many ways: Grimmy suffused the airwaves with a warm, welcoming atmosphere; it was also a place that as a young radio fan, he felt he belonged. Ultimately, though, Grimmy brought his own world to Radio 1 – and it will be much poorer without it. 
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majestydeerakuma · 5 months
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GUYS!!! IMPORTANT
Quizmaster Jack is the host of Full Stream in Germany????
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Guys????
Is it really Quizmaster Jack????
Someone please tell me??? Is it Jack or Cookie????
EDIT: Found a video where he said his name is Jack and I listened to the voice in Fibbage 4, Quizmaster Jack is indeed the host of YDKJ Full Stream
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Hello I come to tell you that Jack Cake's Birthday is June 6th. Now I'm off to spread the word as best as I can.
Oh...you saw the post that said that Jack's birthday was June 6th. But fun fact: THERE'S 3 PEOPLE NAMED JACK IN THE YDKJ SERIES! Jack, Jack Cake and Quizmaster Jack. So unless it's for all 3 people named Jack: we have no damn clue who's birthday it really is.
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I find it funny that people have designs for Jack Cake, but then Jack and Quizmaster Jack get no love! Sure one's French and one's German, but they both have such fun voices! Jack sounds so kind and Quizmaster Jack just has so much energy! I wish people gave them more love...
Can definitely agree with that. I feel like it's even more than just the inability to understand them, but the inability to play them. Regional discs and all that. Then again idk fully how the ports work. It's really too bad they get snubbed. Never heard their voices but I bet I like them better than Jack C. His voice frightens me.
Also we all agree the lack of a Jellyvision Spanish dubbed YDKJ is weird right? They literally have the joke within several games about the concept of a Spanish YDKJ.
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papermoonloveslucy · 4 years
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TRYING TO CASH THE PRIZE CHECK
December 9, 1950
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“Trying To Cash The Prize Check” (aka “The ‘Everybody Wins’ Prize Check”) is episode #109 of the radio series MY FAVORITE HUSBAND broadcast on December 9, 1950. 
Synopsis ~ Liz goes on the radio quiz show and wins a check for $500, but she only gets to keep it if she can cash it within 25 minutes, and the banks are all closed!
This was the 15th episode of the third season of MY FAVORITE HUSBAND. There were 43 new episodes, with the season ending on June 25, 1950.
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“My Favorite Husband” was based on the novels Mr. and Mrs. Cugat, the Record of a Happy Marriage (1940) and Outside Eden (1945) by Isabel Scott Rorick, which had previously been adapted into the film Are Husbands Necessary? (1942). “My Favorite Husband” was first broadcast as a one-time special on July 5, 1948. Lucille Ball and Lee Bowman played the characters of Liz and George Cugat, and a positive response to this broadcast convinced CBS to launch “My Favorite Husband” as a series. Bowman was not available Richard Denning was cast as George. On January 7, 1949, confusion with bandleader Xavier Cugat prompted a name change to Cooper. On this same episode Jell-O became its sponsor. A total of 124 episodes of the program aired from July 23, 1948 through March 31, 1951. After about ten episodes had been written, writers Fox and Davenport departed and three new writers took over – Bob Carroll, Jr., Madelyn Pugh, and head writer/producer Jess Oppenheimer. In March 1949 Gale Gordon took over the existing role of George’s boss, Rudolph Atterbury, and Bea Benaderet was added as his wife, Iris. CBS brought “My Favorite Husband” to television in 1953, starring Joan Caulfield and Barry Nelson as Liz and George Cooper. The television version ran two-and-a-half seasons, from September 1953 through December 1955, running concurrently with “I Love Lucy.” It was produced live at CBS Television City for most of its run, until switching to film for a truncated third season filmed (ironically) at Desilu and recasting Liz Cooper with Vanessa Brown.
MAIN CAST
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Lucille Ball (Liz Cooper) was born on August 6, 1911 in Jamestown, New York. She began her screen career in 1933 and was known in Hollywood as ‘Queen of the B’s’ due to her many appearances in ‘B’ movies. With Richard Denning, she starred in a radio program titled “My Favorite Husband” which eventually led to the creation of “I Love Lucy,” a television situation comedy in which she co-starred with her real-life husband, Latin bandleader Desi Arnaz. The program was phenomenally successful, allowing the couple to purchase what was once RKO Studios, re-naming it Desilu. When the show ended in 1960 (in an hour-long format known as “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour”) so did Lucy and Desi’s marriage. In 1962, hoping to keep Desilu financially solvent, Lucy returned to the sitcom format with “The Lucy Show,” which lasted six seasons. She followed that with a similar sitcom “Here’s Lucy” co-starring with her real-life children, Lucie and Desi Jr., as well as Gale Gordon, who had joined the cast of “The Lucy Show” during season two. Before her death in 1989, Lucy made one more attempt at a sitcom with “Life With Lucy,” also with Gordon.
Richard Denning (George Cooper) was born Louis Albert Heindrich Denninger Jr., in Poughkeepsie, New York. When he was 18 months old, his family moved to Los Angeles. Plans called for him to take over his father’s garment manufacturing business, but he developed an interest in acting. Denning enlisted in the US Navy during World War II. He is best known for his  roles in various science fiction and horror films of the 1950s. Although he teamed with Lucille Ball on radio in “My Favorite Husband,” the two never acted together on screen. While “I Love Lucy” was on the air, he was seen on another CBS TV series, “Mr. & Mrs. North.” From 1968 to 1980 he played the Governor on “Hawaii 5-0″, his final role. He died in 1998 at age 84.
Gale Gordon (Rudolph Atterbury) had worked with Lucille Ball on “The Wonder Show” on radio in 1938. One of the front-runners to play Fred Mertz on “I Love Lucy,” he eventually played Alvin Littlefield, owner of the Tropicana, during two episodes in 1952. After playing a Judge in an episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” in 1958, he would re-team with Lucy for all of her subsequent series’: as Theodore J. Mooney in ”The Lucy Show”; as Harrison Otis Carter in “Here’s Lucy”; and as Curtis McGibbon on “Life with Lucy.” Gordon died in 1995 at the age of 89.
Bea Benadaret (Iris Atterbury) was considered the front-runner to be cast as Ethel Mertz but when “I Love Lucy” was ready to start production she was already playing a similar role on TV’s “The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show” so Vivian Vance was cast instead. On “I Love Lucy” she was cast as Lucy Ricardo’s spinster neighbor, Miss Lewis, in “Lucy Plays Cupid” (ILL S1;E15) in early 1952. Later, she was a success in her own show, “Petticoat Junction” as Shady Rest Hotel proprietress Kate Bradley. She starred in the series until her death in 1968. 
Bob LeMond (Announcer) also served as the announcer for the pilot episode of “I Love Lucy”. When the long-lost pilot was finally discovered in 1990, a few moments of the opening narration were damaged and lost, so LeMond – fifty years later – recreated the narration for the CBS special and subsequent DVD release.
Ruth Perrott (Katie, the Maid) does not appear in this episode. 
GUEST CAST
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Frank Nelson (’Happy’ Hal Brubaker) was born on May 6, 1911 (three months before Lucille Ball) in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He started working as a radio announcer at the age of 15. He later appeared on such popular radio shows as “The Great Gildersleeve,” “Burns and Allen,” and “Fibber McGee & Molly”.  Aside from Lucille Ball, Nelson is perhaps most associated with Jack Benny and was a fifteen-year regular on his radio and television programs. His trademark was playing clerks and other working stiffs, suddenly turning to Benny with a drawn out “Yeeeeeeeeees?” Nelson appeared in 11 episodes of “I Love Lucy”, including three as quiz master Freddy Fillmore, and two as Ralph Ramsey, plus appearance on “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” - making him the only actor to play two different recurring roles on “I Love Lucy.” Nelson returned to the role of the frazzled Train Conductor for an episode of “The Lucy Show” in 1963. This marked his final appearance on a Lucille Ball sitcom.
Nelson adds one more quizmaster to his list of credits with ‘Happy’ Hal Brubaker. He joins Smiley Stembottom and Freddy Fillmore. 
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Bobby Jellison (Mr. Uh-Uh-Uh) will play the recurring character of Bobby the bellboy throughout the Hollywood episodes of “I Love Lucy”.  Viewers may also remember him as the milkman in “The Gossip” (S1;E24). He makes one more appearance as another luggage jockey in “Lucy Hunts Uranium,” a 1958 episode of “The Lucy–Desi Comedy Hour”.
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Jerry Hausner (Loan Store Clerk) was best known as Ricky Ricardo’s agent in “I Love Lucy” and as the voice of Waldo in “Mr. Magoo” and several characters such as Hemlock Holmes, The Mole, Broodles and Itchy in “The Dick Tracy Show.”  On Broadway, Hausner had the role of Sammy Schmaltz in Queer People (1934). On radio, he was a regular on such shows as “Blondie”, “The Jim Backus Show”, “The Judy Canova Show”, “Too Many Cooks”, and “Young Love”. Hausner died of heart failure on April 1, 1993. He was 83 years old. 
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Wally Maher (Mr. Trimble, the Grocer) was born on August 4, 1908 in Cincinnati, Ohio. He was known for Mystery Street (1950), The Reformer and the Redhead (1950) and Hollywood Hotel (1937). He was heard with Lucille Ball in the Lux Radio Theatre version of “The Dark Corner” (1947), taking the role originated on film by William Bendix. He died on December 27, 1951.
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Sandra Gould (Woman in Audience) is probably best remembered as the second actor to play Gladys Kravitz on “Bewitched” (1966-71). On “I Love Lucy,” she played Nancy Johnson in “Oil Wells” (ILL S3;E18) and makes a brief appearance as an alarmed strap-hanger in “Lucy and the Loving Cup” (ILL S6;E12). In 1962 she appeared in the fourth episode of “The Lucy Show” as a bank secretary.
EPISODE
ANNOUNCER: “As we look in on the Coopers this morning, they’re at breakfast, and from the way Liz is looking at George, she’s either madly in love or has some ulterior motive in mind.” 
Liz wants to buy a new dress to wear to the club dance on Saturday, which costs $89.50. George won’t allow it but Liz is determined to get it by hook or by crook. 
Later the doorbell rings and it is Iris Atterbury. A downbeat Liz tells Iris about the dress she wants. Iris is going to a radio broadcast and wants Liz to go along to cheer herself up - and possibly win enough money to buy the new dress. 
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The show is called “Everybody Wins” hosted by ‘Happy’ Hal Brubaker (Frank Nelson), a local radio game show. It is sponsored by Grandma Grimes Cold Cream.  The first contestant is the woman with the reddest hair - Liz Cooper! Another woman in the audience (Sandra Gould) objects!
WOMAN: “Are you kiddin’ sister? At home, I’m a redhead. Next to you, I’m a brunette!”
Liz wins a $500 check just for stating her name. The catch is, Liz must cash the check in 25 minutes without telling anyone it is a stunt for a radio show.  She’s assigned a man (Bobby Jellison) to watch her to be sure. Liz confesses that her husband is a banker. Brubaker reminds her that the show went on the air at 3pm when the banks close.
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Liz and Iris tear out of the studio toward the bank. They bang on the door to get the guard’s attention. Liz sees George but can’t tell him why she needs to get in. Their watchdog chaperone intervenes with a warning “Uh uh uh!” every time Liz starts to explain. Mr. Atterbury comes by and Iris asks him to cash the check, but Mr. Atterbury says to come back in the morning.  Liz pleads with him, but Mr. Atterbury cites state law. Liz stages a fake stick-up to get the cash. Mr. Atterbury points out that she hasn’t got a gun.  
With twelve minutes left, Liz and Iris start out to look for somewhere else to cash the check. 
End of Part One
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Bob LeMond does a Jell-O commercial that gives a recipe for a quick dessert during the holidays.  
ANNOUNCER: “As we look in on the Coopers again, Liz and Iris have just left the bank to try to find another place to cash the $500 check from ‘Everybody Wins’ which Liz can keep if she can cash it in the next 15 minutes. George and Mr. Atterbury have prepared to return to their work.”
At the bank, Mr. Atterbury and George are alone. He turns on the radio. 
MR. ATTERBURY: “I wouldn’t want anyone to know that we go over the books with ‘Arthur Godfrey’”! 
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Arthur Godfrey (1903-83) was a tremendously popular host and entertainer. His CBS morning radio show “Arthur Godfrey Time” aired five times a week. He also had an evening program titled “Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts” which soon transitioned to television. It was the lead-in to “I Love Lucy” in 1951 and promoted Godfrey did on-air promotion for “Lucy.”  Many years later Godfrey guest-starred as himself on “The Lucy Show.”  Although tremendously popular whenever he aired, Godfrey was noticeably absent from afternoons, so it is unlikely that George and Mr. Atterbury tune in to his program at 3pm. 
When the radio comes on, however, it is tuned to “Everybody Wins”, not Arthur Godfrey.  
HAPPY HAL BRUBAKER (over radio): “Thank you, Mrs. Malone for being such a good sport and jumping off the high ladder with an umbrella. You missed the mattress so you don’t get a prize. Thanks anyway, and we hope that little old leg of yours mends soon!” 
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This verbal gag is brought vividly to life on television with the appearance of a heavily bandaged former winner Mrs. Peterson (Hazel Pierce) who went over Niagara Falls in a barrel!  
George and Mr. Atterbury tune in just in time to hear Hal Brubaker report that Liz Cooper has not yet returned from cashing her check!  They realize what all her secrecy was about and, after a brief disagreement, they fill their pockets with cash and race off to find her!  
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Liz and Iris see a loan shop sign “Do You Need Money? Hmmm?” in neon. The clerk (Jerry Hausner) tells them he will deduct the interest and the carrying charges giving her $14.32 with $50 weekly re-payments for 36 weeks! To get $500 they need to borrow $13,000! 
They run out of the shop with only six minutes left. George and Mr. Atterbury spot them, but rather than explain and waste time, the girls duck into a taxi to go to Trimble’s Grocery, where Liz is sure Mr. Trimble will give her the cash. 
Elderly grocer Mr. Trimble (Wally Maher) is in a chatty mood, wanting to talk about a mushy eggplant he sold her. He agrees to cash the check but is slow counting out the money from the cash drawer, making Liz a nervous wreck. He finally finishes, only to misread the check and count out $5.00 instead of five hundred! 
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Liz and Iris give up and go back to the radio station. Meanwhile, George and Mr. Atterbury give up chasing Liz and Iris and decide to go to the radio station.  Liz arrives with a minute and a half to go. Defeated, she tears up the check just as the boys come racing in with the $500 cash.  With 45 seconds to go they scramble to reassemble the check!  Liz finds the final piece just as time expires. 
Brubaker reveals that he tricked her. The “Uh Uh Uh” man had the money all the time and would have cashed the check had Liz just asked. George is outraged and punches Brubaker in his ‘Happy’ face!  As a consolation, George agrees to give Liz the money anyway - plus $89.50 for the new dress.
LIZ: “Oh, George!  You really are my favorite husband!” 
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In the final live Jell-O commercial, Lucille Ball takes on the character of a famous lady novelist and Bob LeMond is her interviewer. Lucy adopts a nasal voice as Elizabeth Dopplefinger Hopenshmice. The voice is similar to the one she will do as Isabella Clump in “The Million Dollar Idea” (ILL S3;E13). Elizabeth says she first imagines a book cover and then writes a story around it.  Bob LeMond says he would like to see a bowl of Jell-O on the cover of a book, but Elizabeth prefers a more romantic cover and kisses him. LeMond still wants Jell-O on the cover.  
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Bob LeMond reads the credits. There is a recorded message from Instant Sanka.  
END EPISODE
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