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NWT/Nunavut family victorious on game show Family Feud

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From left, Cheryl Melanson, Irniq Lecompte, Nicole Etitiq, Paani Zizman and Heather Tucker pose for a photo together on the set of Family Feud Canada. The group, who competed as the Keogak-Etitiq family, defeated a family from Newfoundland to set up a second appearance on the show, and another shot at $10,000. Photo courtesy of CBC

The Keogak-Etitiq family represented the NWT and Nunavut well on Family Feud Canada, defeating a family from Newfoundland on the popular game show.

鈥淚t was very exciting,鈥 said Yellowknife resident Cheryl Melanson, one of five extended family members on the Keogak-Etitiq team. 鈥淲e had a lot of fun. We really enjoyed our time together.鈥

Team Keogak-Etitiq was comprised Melanson, Irniq Lecompte, Heather Tucker, Paani Zizman, and Nicole Etitiq. Lecompte, Tucker, Zizman and Melanson are all originally from Sachs Harbour while Etitiq is from Iqaluit. Because Etitiq took the lead in applying for the show, the family agreed to represent her home city against the opposing Walsh family, from Newfoundland.

The Keogak-Etitiq鈥檚 episode of Family Feud was filmed last year, but just aired on the evening of Jan. 10 on CBC television and the streaming service CBC Gem.

On each episode of the show, family members take turns answering questions from host Gerry Dee 鈥 but they are not conventional trivia questions. Instead, the same questions are posed to a 100-person survey panel, and contestants must guess the most popular answers.

Team Keogak-Etitiq got off to a very strong start during their appearance on the show. They were ahead by a 203-0 margin by the beginning of the third and final round, but the Walsh family mounted a late comeback, forcing a one-question 鈥渟udden death鈥 round to decide the winner.

The Keogak-Etitiq family selected Melanson as their representative for that high-stakes moment, and she came through.

The question was, 鈥淣ame something you need when it rains.鈥 Melanson, who was faster hitting the buzzer than her opponent from Newfoundland, guessed the most popular answer: an umbrella.

鈥淚t was intense,鈥 she said of the sudden death round. 鈥淚 was just hoping I鈥檇 be very fast. I was looking over at the fellow who was up against me, and I was thinking, 鈥極h my goodness, I hope he鈥檚 not quick.鈥欌

Melanson鈥檚 successful answer positioned the Keogak-Etitiq team to participate in the final and most important segment of the show: Fast Money.

During Fast Money, two family members from the winning team are asked five identical questions, and must come up with separate answers to each one. The answers provided are scored based on their popularity with the 100-person survey panel, and if the family members can score 200 points, they win $10,000 for their team.

Etitiq and Lecompte stepped up to represent the team during Fast Money, and while they came close to their target with 146 points, they unfortunately came up short, and missed out on the big prize.

鈥淚 wish maybe we鈥檇 done a bit more preparing and practising, but it was a good time,鈥 Melanson said.

The good news is that the The Keogak-Etitiq family鈥檚 victory over the Walsh family set them up for a second appearance on Family Feud.

鈥淭he pressure was still on [after the first episode] 鈥 we were all wondering how we鈥檇 do, and if the questions would be hard,鈥 Melanson said. 鈥淚t was such a whirlwind.鈥

The team鈥檚 second appearance on the show aired on Jan. 11 at 7:30 p.m. Things didn鈥檛 go their way. They put up a valiant effort against the McKenney family from Saskatchewan, but were ultimately defeated in the sudden death round, as Melanson wasn鈥檛 quite quick enough on the buzzer, and her opponent guessed the top answer.

鈥淚 should have practised harder,鈥 she said, laughing.





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