Friday, 29 August 2014

Quick Update

Just to let everybody know, unfortunately circumstance means that I will not be updating this blog again for about a week. So don't fret, I will be back soon. In the meantime, I have finally finished my guide to Best Picture Academy Award Winners of the 2000s, so why not have a look at the final result and let me know what you think?

Hope to see you all again soon.

John Russ

Wednesday, 27 August 2014

Clawing Our Way Back Up the Scoreboard

Despite being a player down this time, I think we proved that we weren't out of the running. We notched up a fairly decent score, which is pretty satisfying as this will probably be my last quiz round up for over a week.  I know, I'm sobbing as we speak, but I'll try and make it up to you at some point if I can. Not many for you to have a go at this time, but secretly I prefer it that way as I don't have to spend so long writing the blog! I see it as an extra incentive to do well. 1st place was only one question ahead, so answering 2 or more of these would make you the hero of the hour. Are you ready then?

26/08/2014
Venue: The Victory                                                          Team: Me + 3 others      
Position: 2nd - 86 points (1st - 88)                                   Snowball: Not chosen

Let's cut right to the chase...

Questions

1) Name all five people who have presented Match Of the Day (we managed 4).

2) Which (cricket) team won the T20 Blast final this week?

3) If you are being 'lapidated', what is happening to you? (Clue given: This tends to happen more in Muslim countries.)

4) Which cricketer captained England in the 1986/87 Ashes Test?

5) What does the second A stand for in NASA?

6) Which famous American said 'I don't know who my grandfather was; I am much more concerned to know what his grandson will be.'

7) These lyrics are from which song - 'What a wicked thing to do, to make me dream of you'?


Answers

1) Kenneth Wolstenholme, David Coleman, Jimmy Hill, Des Lynam, Gary Lineker
2) Birmingham Bears
3) You are being stoned to death
4) Mike Gatting
5) Administration
6) Abraham Lincoln
7) Wicked Game by Chris Isaak


The Excuses

1) This one was quite the team effort, although I was basically excluded. We only missed Wolstenholme, opting for ex-Arsenal goalkeeper Bob Wilson, who actually presented Football Focus from 1974-94. I had meant to watch the 50th anniversary programme this week, but as usual, didn't manage to find the time. I might end up putting it on in the background one day.
Knowledge Is Power: Match of the Day first appeared on BBC2 on 22nd August 1964 and the first game featured was a Liverpool home game against Arsenal. Liverpool won 3-2 and Roger Hunt was the first person to score a goal on the programme. The presenters in order are Wolstenholme (1964-69), Coleman (1968-73), Hill (1973-88), Lynam (1988-99) and Lineker (1999 - present). Lineker first appeared on the programme as a player for Leicester in 1980.

2) More sport. Irritatingly, I had seen the news article, and allowed myself to be talked out of the correct answer. Knowing that the final was played at Edgbaston Cricket Ground (in Birmingham, for those non-cricketaholics), we went with Warwickshire, who historically play there.
Knowledge Is Power: It looks like the two teams are actually more or less the same thing, with Warwickshire Bears being the name used for one-day matches and Birmingham Bears the name used for Twenty20 games. The T20 Blast is a new competition, a replacement for the Friends Life T20. Twenty20 cricket is a shorter version of the game, where each side is restricted to 20 overs. The Birmingham Bears is also the name of the city's Aussie Rules Football club.

3) Not one of those things that one just happens to know. On the back of the clue, we went for having a body part cut off. I know someone who managed to work this out, but all I could think of was if it was related to 'dilapidated'. It doesn't look like it is.
Knowledge Is Power: The word is derived from Latin, and lapidary is the art of refining precious or non-precious stones for decoration. A lapidarium is a place where stone features are stored or exhibited. According to Wikipedia, stoning as a legal form of capital punishment is still used in  Mauritania, northern Nigeria, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Pakistan, Aceh (the westernmost province of Indonesia) and Brunei.

4) Cricket returns. I think there's less chance of me getting into cricket than football. All we could assume was that this was one of the years that England won. We went with Ian Botham, who did at least play in that series.
Knowledge Is Power: The concept of the Ashes comes from a Test match contested between England and Australia in 1882 at the Oval. England lost and the Ashes are supposed to represent the death of English cricket. The two sides usually compete for the Ashes every two years and Australia have won 32 series to England's 31, with 5 draws. The 'real' Ashes are always kept at the Marylebone Cricket Club Museum, with a replica awarded to the winning side. Gatting played from 1975-1998 for Middlesex County Cricket Club.

5) This question is one of the most serial offenders for our getting it incorrect. It just seems to fox us all the time over the years. This is the sort of question that this blog is all about. We always, whatever our logic, always end up thinking the answer is 'Agency' rather than 'Administration'. It looks like old habits die hard.
Knowledge Is Power: NASA was established in 1958 by President Dwight D. Eisenhower and is based in Washington D.C. Its full name is the 'National Aeronautics and Space Administration'. It succeeded the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics.

6) I should have known this, but I thought it might be another Mark Twain quote. In the end we went with Barack Obama.
Knowledge Is Power: Lincoln was the 16th President of the United States from 1861 - 1865, and was the first to represent the Republican Party. His election in 1860 precipitated the American Civil War, but Lincoln's victory in the war and his efforts to abolish slavery have made him highly regarded amongst many Americans. Lincoln's grandfather (also called Abraham) was a captain in the U.S. army, who was killed fighting against native Indians in 1786 in present day Kentucky.

7) I had never heard this song before, though I had heard of it. We worked out that it was by Chris Isaak, but we were pressed for time and not going to come up with the goods before our papers were collected in.
Knowledge Is Power: Wicked Game was initially released in 1989, but did not become a hit until it was featured in the 1990 David Lynch crime thriller Wild At Heart. It then went onto reach the top 10 in the USA. The B side was an instrumental version of the song.



Time for the Snowballs. See if you could have won the cash. Two teams managed it this week.

Snowballs

S1) Which cartoon duo live in Frostbite Falls?

S2) Eric Spear composed the music for which long running TV series?

Answers

S1) Rocky and Bullwinkle. The Rocky and Bullwinkle show originally ran from 1959 to 1964. Bullwinkle is the moose and Rocky is a flying squirrel, and their nemeses are the Russian spies Boris Badenov and Natasha Fatale. A live action movie, The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle was released in 2000 and was co-produced by Robert De Niro and Jane Rosenthal.

S2) Coronation Street. Spear was born in Croydon in 1908 and died in 1966. He primarily composed music for films, but was commissioned to write the music in 1960 for a project then known as 'Florizel Street'. The proper name of the piece is 'Lancashire Blues' and Spear was paid £6 for his efforts.

So there you have it. My last quiz outing for a little while. Hope you've enjoyed it, and don't hesitate to let me know how you did, especially if you could have helped us win it. See you soon, and remember, you're fabulous.



Monday, 25 August 2014

A Moral Victory, A Real Terms Defeat

It was a controversial Bar Wars this time around. A couple of mishaps led to our team being docked a colossal 13 points, placing our hopes of a win firmly in ruins. To make matters worse, had it not been for this, it would have been one of our largest runaway wins of all time. But that's how these things can pan out unfortunately. How did we lose 13 points, you ask? Why not read on and find out...

24/08/2014                                                                
Venue: First Bowl Hereford Arena                     Team: Me + 5 others
Place: Joint 5th - 57/82 (1st - 65 points!)            Money Round - Joint 1st - 9/15 (contested)

Yes, it was a pretty sorry night for the team. I think it's just one of those nights you have to chalk down to experience. The missing 13 points were for not handing in our Picture Round on time. Quite how this happened, I'm not sure, but it seems that one of our team was sitting on it (literally) for some time. So let that be a lesson to all you competitive quizzers out there. Anyway, let's get on with this. I'm not going to go over the all the pictures, just the 2 we got wrong. A * denotes the Wipeout round as always...

Questions

1&2) Identify these two familiar faces taking the Ice Bucket Challenge (one point for each).

3) In the nursery rhyme, what did Tom the Piper's son steal?

4) What does WOMAD stand for?

5) Which sports star blames a hacker for posting an indecent image on his Twitter account this week?

6) 'Dorado' is Spanish for which colour?*

7) Who starred as Jack Regan in the 2012 film version of The Sweeney?*

8) What is the second most traded commodity in the world?* (Clue: It isn't gold.)

9) How many hangovers does the average Briton have in a lifetime - 485 or 726?*

10) Cliff Richard refuses to use a mobile phone - true or false?

11) Identify this song and the artist for one point each - (You're allowed about 20 seconds, and close your eyes while listening or it doesn't count...)

Answers

1) Susanna Reid
2) Ben Shephard
3) A pig
4) World of Music, Arts and Dance
5) Ian Botham
6) Gold
7) Ray Winstone
8) Coffee
9) 726
10) False
11) Mr Blobby by Mr Blobby

The Excuses

1&2) In our defence, our photo was in black and white and I think a little more water was obscuring Ms Reid's face. Having no idea, our (redundant) answer was Ant and Dec...
In the Know: The Ice Bucket Challenge has been taking place recently to raise awareness for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a form of motor neurone disease. In the US, where the challenge began, ALS is also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, after the celebrated baseball player who contracted it in 1939. Reid and Shephard took the challenge on Good Morning Britain, the ITV show that they present alongside Charlotte Hawkins and Sean Fletcher.

3) Despite singing the rhyme over and over in my head, the best I could remember was 'Stole a __ and away did run'. I don't think I could have remembered 'pig' anyway, it was never a household favourite.
In the Know: Tom, Tom, the Piper's Son was first published in 1795 and has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 19621. After stealing the pig, the rhyme continues 'The pig was eat, And Tom was beat, And Tom went crying, Down the street.' Different times back then...

4) We were only one word out on this. We went for World of Music and Dance.
In the Know: WOMAD was founded in 1980 by Peter Gabriel and Thomas Brooman, among others, with the first festival taking place in Shepton Mallet, Somerset in 1982. Former Genesis frontman Gabriel was one of the original performers. Now an international festival, WOMAD in the UK has taken place at Charlton Park in Wiltshire since 2007.

5) We were thinking along the wrong lines (I thought it might have been Oscar Pistorius), but unusually, this was our only news round black hole. I'm not going to put a picture up of the offending image, but Botham has apparently experienced a sharp spike in the number of his followers, so perhaps there wasn't too much harm done.
In the Know: Born in Heswall (then in Cheshire) in 1955, Botham is regarded as one of the best all round players in English team history. In the County Championship, Botham played for Somerset (1974-86), Worcestershire (1987-91) and Durham (1992-93), as well as briefly playing for Queensland in Australia. Botham won the BBC Sports Personality of the Year in 1981 and Pipe Smoker of the Year in 1988.


6) So began our Wipeout round. We would have been right, but extra caution was urged by one of the team, still bruised by our wipeout last week.
In the Know: The Legend of El Dorado or 'The Gold One' was originally held to be a South American tribal chief, but over time 'El Dorado' began to be attributed to a fabled city of gold, with some thinking of it as an empire. Many South American towns are consequently named after this mythical place.

7) Again, too much caution prompted us to cross out the correct answer.
In the Know: The film is based on the TV series which ran from 1975 - 1978, originally starring John Thaw as Regan and Dennis Waterman as George Carter. The name 'The Sweeney' is cockney rhyming slang for the 'Flying Squad' (Sweeney Todd).

8) We weren't going to get this one, but it doesn't surprise me in the least.
In the Know: Coffee appears to have first been cultivated in Yemen in the 15th century and originally had religious connotations. The Ottoman Empire under Sultan Murad IV actually banned it for a while. Venice became the home of the first coffee houses in Western Europe.

9) As usual, not worth a punt. This is worth a quick look. The Daily Mail somehow manages to equate this into 4 years worth of hangovers, by counting non alcohol related headaches...

10) At least there is no evidence to support this statement. I think I might leave this one here...



11) Goodness gracious me. If we were happy to get one wrong it was this one.
In the Know: Mr Blobby first appeared on Noel's House Party and got the 1993 Christmas UK No 1 single with this song. It has been voted the most annoying Christmas No 1 of all time. Even more amusingly, Jeremy Clarkson appears in the music video.


I hope you're up for this next batch of humdingers. It is my contention that we got 10 of these rather than 9, but chances are, we wouldn't have won the end game required to get our paws on the cash. If you don't get the required 13 then you have to do a variety of end games for the cash, and currently you have to shoot rubber bands at empty fizzy drinks cans in order to dislodge paperclips from the tops. We aren't crack shots, but even the crack shots find it pretty tough at the best of times, as the paperclips are pretty hard to dislodge. Could you have helped us over the winning line?

Final Fling Questions

1) Mageirocophobia is the fear of which household activity?

2) Bosworth cheese comes from which English county?

3) Elite, Score and Select are all types of which agency?

4) Used by pilots, what does ADF stand for?

5) Who held the 100m world record before Usain Bolt?

Tiebreak) What percentage of married women say that they wish that their husband would hold their hand more often?

Answers

1) Cooking
2) Staffordshire
3) Modelling Agencies
4) Automatic Direction Finder
5) Asafa Powell
TB) 75%

The Excuses

1) There's nothing like a tough phobia question to make me remember that I still haven't completed my phobia list yet. We went with cleaning, something which would probably be more applicable to me.
In the Know: Humans are first believed to have started cooking around 250,000 years ago after the discovery of fire. Fortunately for modern mageirocophobes, the microwave was first made available in 1946. Or I suppose, you could just eat chocolate forever more.  

2) I've just confirmed this with our old friend cheese.com. I fell into the obvious trap, and went for Leicestershire. One to log for the future I think.
In the Know: Bosworth cheese, also known as Bosworth Leaf or Bosworth Ash Log is made from goat's milk and is suitable for vegetarians.

3) Well, it was either one or the other, and we went the wrong way. Dating agencies seemed so obviously right at the time...
In the Know: Elite Model Management was founded in Paris in 1972,  and Select Model Management in London in 1977. I can't find much on Score Models, but I think they might be female only.

4) We didn't really have a chance on this. We got 'automatic' and didn't get any further.

5) We were broadly thinking along the right lines. We went with Tyson Gay.
In the Know: Powell was born in Spanish Town, Jamaica in 1982 and held the world record for 100m from 2005 to 2008. Originally 9.77 seconds, he cut his own record down to 9.74, but it was broken by Bolt in 2008 with 9.69 seconds. Bolt still holds the world record, now a phenomenal 9.58 seconds, since 2009.

TB) As always, it was a wild stab in the dark, but the usual method of going low failed us this time. We would have had to have been bang on the money anyway, because the winning team went with 74%

So there we go again. Hope you enjoyed it, and if you could have helped us with that lot then we might need to enter discussions about recruiting you for the future. With any luck, we should have another update again tomorrow. When did such luck ever come your way before? Until next time then...





Sunday, 24 August 2014

A Game of Two Halves

Have you missed me? Never fear, I have returned bearing gifts. An awful lot of gifts as it happens, because in the main round of the quiz we attended on Friday, we were absolutely terrible, but a final round blinder secured a much appreciated cash prize, so swings and roundabouts. This quiz was to celebrate the third birthday of Hereford Roller Girls and was hosted at the bowling alley, so the format should be familiar to regular readers. On we go...

22/08/2014
Venue: TGS Events Room                      Team: Me + 1 other
Score: 46/80 (10th)                                 Prize Round: Win! (£50)

Despite managing to post a record low ranking, we had a pretty good go of it. Unfortunately, we were substantially out of our depth. I have no doubt that your assistance would have been of great value, and I have a bumper array of questions for you to salivate over. I am keeping the additional quizzing fact files to a minimum this time, in the interest of space. As usual a * signifies the Wipeout round. Let's get cracking...

Questions

1 & 2) Identify these familiar faces...

3) In feet, how high is a basketball hoop from the ground?

4) What is the name of the supermarket in Coronation Street?

5) What are the westernmost and easternmost capital cities in the European Union? One point for each.

6) In which book of the Bible is Moses born?*

7) In 2008, what was Adele's debut single?*

8) In 1994, what was Oasis' debut single?*

9) In an interview on Women's Hour in 2005, when asked, what type of underwear did then Leader of the Opposition David Cameron say he wore - briefs or boxer shorts?*

You now have to identify these films from the quote.

10) 'The cold never bothered me anyway.'

11) 'When we die, our bodies become the grass and the antelope eat the grass. And so we are all connected...'

12) 'Waiting for me to... commence a conversation, one can wait rather a long wait.'

13) 'I'm gonna give you to the count of 10, to get your ugly, yella, no-good keister off my property before I pump your guts full of lead!'

14) 'It's not right for a woman to read. Soon she starts getting - ideas - and - thinking...'

Answers
1) Zoe Salmon
2) Zoe Saldana
3) 10 feet
4) Freshco
5) Lisbon (Portugal) and Nicosia (Cyprus)
6) Exodus
7) Chasing Pavements (CONTROVERSIAL - see below)
8) Supersonic
9) Boxer shorts
10) Frozen (sung by Elsa)
11) The Lion King (Mufasa)
12) The King's Speech (Albert, Duke of York (future King George VI))
13) Home Alone (Gangster Johnny)
14) Beauty and the Beast (Gaston)

Post-Match Analysis

Not Zoe Salmon...
1) We actually managed a pretty creditable picture round, with these two exceptions. I'm sure that poor Zoe wouldn't be too happy about being mistaken for Amanda Bynes. (It was the pressure Zoe, honest!)
Quiz Snippet: Salmon was a presenter of long running children's TV show Blue Peter from 2004 to 2008. Hailing from Bangor, County Down, she had previously won Miss Northern Ireland in 1999.

2) I have recently seen Guardians of the Galaxy, but in my defence, she was painted green in that film. I think this Zoe might be a bit more accepting about being mistaken for Thandie Newton...
Quiz Snippet: Saldana was born in Passiac, New Jersey in 1978 and also co-starred in Avatar and the Pirates of the Caribbean and recent Star Trek series.

3) It's been a long time since I played basketball, but I used to love it. We ended up going for 8 feet.
Quiz Snippet: Basketball was invented in 1891 by Canadian Dr James Naismith at Springfield College, Massachusetts.

4) It looks like soaps are the new football for me. Kryptonite. Fresh Co happens to be a real life Canadian supermarket chain.
Quiz snippet: Dreamt up by Tony Warren, Coronation Street was first broadcast in 1960. The eponymous street was supposedly named for the coronation of Edward VII.

5) I was irritated at getting both of these wrong. I would have drawn a map, but I didn't have enough space on my paper. But then again, my maps have been known to be more of a hindrance than a help.
Quiz Snippet: Lisbon is apparently the oldest current capital city in Western Europe, though it has never been officially confirmed as the capital of Portugal. It lies on the Tagus river and is served by Portela Airport. Nicosia is on the diving line between Cyprus and the largely unrecognised Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. It is on the river Pedieos.

6) Not being experts on the Bible, we decided not to put Exodus down, just in case his birth was snuck in at the end of Genesis.
Quiz Snippet: Judaism generally ascribes Moses lifespan from 1391 - 1271 BCE, making him about 120 when he died. Which, by the standard of some Biblical lives, practically makes Moses a member of the 27 Club .

7) Again, we didn't want to risk it just in case. I was 90% sure, but we needed to be 100% certain of as many points as possible at this stage in the contest. As it happens, both my instinct and the answer given to this question are incorrect, as Adele first charted with 'Hometown Glory' in 2007.
Quiz Snippet: Both singles are from the album 19, which was nominated for the Mercury Prize.


8) I could only think of the album name, Definitely Maybe, so didn't put anything.
Quiz Snippet: Supersonic reached #31 on the UK chart. Noel Gallagher claims that it is his favourite Oasis song.

9) I remembered this being on the news or something, all those years ago. It's probably for the best that I didn't remember the actual answer.
Quiz Snippet: When he became Prime Minister in 2010, at 43, Cameron was the youngest person to hold the office since Lord Liverpool in 1812. As far as I'm aware, nobody has done any research as to whether his wearing of boxer shorts denied the Conservatives an overall majority at the 2010 General Election...

10) Not seen it, though I had half a mind to put it down. We went for Titanic.
Quiz Snippet: The line is from the Oscar winning song 'Let It Go', performed in the film by Idina Menzel. Frozen also won the Oscar for Best Animated feature in 2013. It is loosely based on 'The Snow Queen' by Hans Christian Andersen.

11) I've only seen the Lion King once, which was probably about 10 times less than most other people in the room. The full quote is 'Yes, Simba, but let me explain. When we die, our bodies become the grass and the antelope eat the grass. And so we are all connected in the great Circle of Life.' I'd like to think we would have got it from that, at least! We thought it might have been a Henry Fonda quote from On Golden Pond.
Quiz Snippet: The Lion King was released in 1994 and is the highest grossing hand drawn film ever. It stars Matthew Broderick as the adult Simba, James Earl Jones as Mufasa and Jeremy Irons as Scar. It won Oscars for Best Original Score (Hans Zimmer) and Best Original Song for Can You Feel the Love Tonight? by Elton John and Tim Rice. It was also nominated for 'Hakuna Matata' and 'Circle of Life'.

12) Amongst the Disney avalanche in this round, this is the only one that I'm a bit embarrassed about getting wrong. I should have known this instantly, my only excuse is that I haven't seen it for ages. I could even visualise Colin Firth saying it when the right answer was revealed. We might even have left this one blank.
Quiz Snippet: If you want some trivia on this film, I actually did a guide to it less than a month ago. (I'm so embarrassed.)

13) Yet another that I've never seen. I have a lot of catching up to do it seems. We went for Back To the Future Part II, thinking it might be the scene where Marty McFly is caught by Mr Strickland reading his newspaper in the alternate 1985.
Quiz Snippet: Home Alone was released in 1990 and stars Macaulay Culkin as 8 year old Kevin McCallister and Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern as Harry and Marv, the burglars. The film is set near Chicago. It has also spawned 4 sequels.

14) We were surprised that we couldn't really think of anything for this one. You would have thought that there were plenty of misogynistic characters in the history of film, but pinning it down proved too difficult for our Disney deprived brains.
Quiz Snippet: Beauty and the Beast was released in 1991 and is based on a fairy tale by Jeanne Marie Le Prince de Beaumont. Disney had attempted to adapt the tale twice before, and decided to try again on the back of the success of The Little Mermaid (1989). The film became the first animated film to be nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars, and the first Disney film to be adapted into a musical.

How did you find those? If you're hungry for more, then get ready for our majestic prize round performance that saw us going home wealthier than we'd come in. Here are the furious 4 that slowed us down, plus the tiebreak for the absolute diehards among you.

Prize Round - Questions

1) In July 2000, which book became the fastest selling book of all time?

2) In Judaism, boys receive their Bar Mitzvah at 13, but at what ages do girls receive their Bat Mitzvah?

3) What was the name of Robbie William's first top 10 single?

4) Which country hosted the opening race of the 2014 Formula 1 season?

Tiebreak) In a survey of American men, what percentage said that they did not know how to turn on a dishwasher?

Answers

1) Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
2) 12
3) Freedom
4) Australia
TB) 23%

Excuses

1) Maybe one that we should have got. I pressed for the Da Vinci Code, but was 3 years out. I had Harry Potter in mind as well, but if pushed I would have gone for the Prisoner of Azkaban on the dates, as I seemed to remember waiting a long time for the Goblet of Fire to hit the shops. Perhaps it just seemed like ages back in the good old days. The sequel, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix took another 3 whole years to be released. I don't know how I coped...
Quiz Snippet: The fourth book in the series, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire went on to sell over 66 million copies and counting. The first Potter film was yet to be released at this point, but the Goblet of Fire film was out in cinemas by 2005. The story centres on Harry's progress in the Triwizard Tournament, in which he is mysteriously entered as the fourth competitor.

2) We had very little idea on this. I had only heard of it because at one point in the sitcom Friends, Monica mentions that she has had one. Having nothing to go on, I think we put 15. 
Quiz Snippet (ouch): B'nai and B'not Mitzvahs are coming of age ceremonies for practising Jews. They are usually scheduled for the first Saturday (or Shabbat - the Jewish Holy day) after the child's appropriate birthday and traditionally the father gives thanks that he is no longer responsible for the child's sins. I'm assuming that most kids don't get up to too much sinning before their Mitzvahs, but I suppose you never know.

3) Knowing it was from 1997, we went for Angels. We weren't going to get this, so we diverted our attention elsewhere.
Quiz Snippet: Released shortly after his departure from Take That, Freedom is a cover of George Michael's Freedom '90. Reaching #2 on the UK chart, it fared quite a bit better that Michael's original peak (#28).

4) Sport. I'm not much cop. We had a stab in the dark at Bahrain.
Quiz Snippet: The race took place on 16th March and was won by German driver Nico Rosberg, after Australia's Daniel Ricciardo was excluded due to 'fuel irregularity'. It takes place in Melbourne and has been part of the Formula 1 World Championship since 1985.

TB) Luck of the draw clinched it for us and we couldn't be more chuffed. We averaged our answers of 37% and 39%, pipping the opposing guess of 43%. We went low(ish), because let's be honest, a quarter of American men not knowing this is still pretty high.


So there we go. Don't hesitate to comment and let me know if you could have saved us our half time blues, or delivered us an unambiguous money round win. As usual, I've spent much longer on writing this entry than intended. Until next time, which hopefully will be tomorrow...



Thursday, 21 August 2014

Only Connect Themed Weekend Quiz

Quiz devotees like your good selves will no doubt be overjoyed to hear that Only Connect is back on TV very soon. Having said that, if you enjoy Only Connect, it might be possible that you are a bit of a masochist. Mastermind usually bills itself as the hardest quiz on the box, but on Mastermind half of your trouble is a round where you have an opportunity to revise your specialist subject. There's none of that nonsense on Only Connect, and you can easily expose the creaking machinery in your brain with hopeless guesses and bold forays into your knowledge void. That said, my questions will not be quite as tough as in the upcoming series. It might be better to think of them as a warm up. Notionally you have 30 seconds for each question, but to be honest, it's more fun to get it correct. Shall we begin?

Round 1

For those of you who are unfamiliar with the show, in Round 1 you have to guess what it is that connects the four clues. You get all the clues in one go on this blog, so each question is only worth one point, for the competitors amongst you.

Question 1

1) Albert Einstein
2) Thor
3) Uranus
4) Ytterby

Question 2

1) This Week (2014)
2) Will and Grace (2005 & 2006)
3) The West Wing (2005)
4) Eastenders (2010)

Question 3

1) Ros Jones - Doncaster
2) Lutfur Rahman - Tower Hamlets
3) George Ferguson - Bristol
4) Joe Anderson - Liverpool

Question 4

1) Eve of Destruction - Barry Maguire
2) Lucy In the Sky With Diamonds - The Beatles
3) Je t'aime... moi non plus - Serge Gainsbourg & Jane Birkin
4) God Save the Queen - The Sex Pistols


Round 2

In this round it's your job to get the fourth answer in the sequence. Sounds easy enough, doesn't it? 2 points for each one you get.

Question 1

1) George VI
2) Douglas Fairbanks and John Gilbert
3) Abraham Lincoln
4) ?

Question 2

1) Geoffrey Howe
2) Michael Heseltine
3) John Prescott
4) ?

Question 3

1) 4 - So long, and thanks for all the fish
2) 3 - Life, the universe and everything
3) 2 - The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
4) 1 - ?

Question 4

1) Eve White
2) Janus
3) A Mobius Strip
4) ?

Rounds 3 & 4

I haven't got the time (or patience) to make a Connecting Wall at the moment, so let's go straight to the Missing Vowels Round. You can only give yourself 1 point for each one you get in roughly 20 seconds. The spaces are also in the wrong places. Here we go...

Italian Artists

1) CRV GG
2) BT TCLL
3) GTT
4) LNR DD VNC

Mark Twain Novels

5) THP RNC NDT HPPR
6) TMS WYR BRD
7) CNN CTC TYN KNK NGR THR'S CRT
8) DVN TRSF HCKL BR RYF NN

Cliches

1) THRLY BRD GTST HWRM
2) STTC HNT MSV SNN
3) CRS TY KIL LD TH CT
4) TMR RW SNT HRDY

European Monarchs and Their Epithets

1) CHR LST HFT
2) HRL DBL T TH
3) LSTH NVR SLS PDR
4) THL RD THN RDY

Answers
Round 1

1) They all have chemical elements named after them.

2) These shows all broadcast live episodes (in the years shown).

3) They are all British elected mayors.

4) These songs were all banned by the BBC for various reasons.


Round 2

1) I will accept either Ron Woodroof or Solomon Northup. They are the real people whose lives are the basis for Best Actor Oscar or BAFTA winning performances from 2010 - 2013.

2) Nick Clegg. They are the politicians who have held the role of Deputy Prime Minister of the UK since 1989.

3) The Hitchhiker's Guide To the Galaxy. They are the books going backwards in the sequence.

4) A sphere is my answer but any answer is acceptable as long as it has no faces (counting down from The Three Faces of Eve). If you have a quibble with sphere, the clarification I received when revising this question is that a sphere's surface does not count as a face, since it has no edges.

Round 4

1) Caravaggio
2) Botticelli
3) Giotto
4) Leonardo da Vinci

5) The Prince and the Pauper
6) Tom Sawyer Abroad
7) A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court
8) Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

9) The early bird gets the worm
10) A stitch in time saves nine
11) Curiosity killed the cat
12) Tomorrow is another day

13) Charles the Fat
14) Harald Bluetooth
15) Louis the Universal Spider
16) Ethelred the Unready


You enjoyed those didn't you? Well, I hope you did anyway. Let me know how you did, as always and I hope this was adequate preparation for the show. Until next time.

Wednesday, 20 August 2014

A Return To Form

Back again, and this this time with much better news. A hearty second place finish this time, by 1 point only. This means (since one question is generally worth 2 points) that by answering any single one of our pitfalls correctly, you would have been the difference between being Kings of the Quiz and our actual outcome as pretenders to the throne. If that isn't an enticement to read on, I don't know what is. So without further ado...

19/08/2014
The Victory Alcohol Serving Establishment               Team: Me + 4 others
Place: 2nd - 89 points (1st place - 90)                         Snowball: Not chosen

Had we been paying a little more attention to the news, I think this would have been ours for the taking. Sadly, however much news we seem to consume, there's always something else that happened in the week. Handily, we got a perfect score for the Starter for Ten, which happened to be (surprise, surprise) to name 10 of the top 10 names for either boys or girls in England and Wales in 2013. But here are the ones where your help may have been invaluable...

Questions

1) What was the name of Robin William's character in Good Morning Vietnam?

2) In which city did the UEFA Super Cup final take place this week?

3) Which brewery won the 'Best British Beer' award this week?

4) On which island would you find Luqa airport?

5) Neil Hamilton played who in the 1960s television series of Batman?

5 1/2) What does a carpophagus animal eat?


Sod's law tells me that you aced those. But why not check, just to be sure...

Answers


1) Adrian Cronauer
2) Cardiff
3) Timothy Taylor's
4) Malta
5) Commissioner Gordon
5 1/2) Fruit

Post Match Analysis


1) Despite having seen the clip of William's character say the line 'What does the 0 stand for? 0 my God, it's early!' several times on the news over the past week, it actually does seem a reckless oversight on my behalf not to have checked what that character was actually called. All we had to go on was that it was a German sounding name, and our answer was indeed something vaguely German.
The Essentials: Good Morning Vietnam was released in 1987 and earned Williams his first Oscar nomination as well as a Golden Globe for his performance. Airman Second Class Adrian Cronauer was a real person on whose story the film is loosely based. The film was set in 1965 in Saigon, but was shot on location in Thailand.

2) Football. Just football. There's always one and I'm trying to get up to speed with this sport as best as I can, but the Super Cup? Zero idea. I think our answer was Madrid.
The Essentials: The Super Cup is played between the winners of the UEFA Champions League and the Europa League (the successor to our old friend, the European Cup Winner's Cup) and was founded in 1972, being recognised by UEFA the following year. Real Madrid beat Sevilla 2-0 at Cardiff City Stadium, with local football superstar Gareth Bale setting up both of Cristiano Ronaldo's goals. A. C. Milan have won the most Super Cups with 5.

3) This was mainly my fault. I had seen the story, but managed to mix several things up in my head. I could only remember that it was brewed in West Yorkshire and that something (it turned out to be the beer) began with the letter 'B'. Timothy Taylor's was suggested as an answer and I vetoed it, so my bad.
The Essentials: Timothy Taylor's brewery was founded in 1858, and Boltmaker, the winning beer, was first brewed in the 1930s and was originally simply called 'Best Bitter'. It was renamed in 2012 after the Boltmaker's Arms pub in Keighley. 'Landlord' is also produced by Timothy Taylor's, which Madonna claims is her favourite beer.

4) Again, I'd never had the pleasure. In my defence, Luqa was spelt out to us as 'Luka', which made me push for a Greek island, although there are plenty of stray letter 'k's in Malta as well. Our guess was Crete.
The Essentials: Located south east of the capital, Valletta, Luqa (officially Malta International) is the only airport on Malta. It is sited on the former RAF Base and opened as a commercial airport in 1992.



5) Another Batman question. I need to get more up to speed. Having no idea, we tried to work it out logically by reasoning that the name 'Neil Hamilton' sounded more British, so was most likely to be Batman's butler, Alfred Pennyworth. And yet again, we were wrong.
The Essentials: The TV series first aired in 1966 and despite only running for 3 seasons managed to rack up 120 episodes. It featured Adam West as Batman and Burt Ward as Robin. Alan Napier played Alfred.

5 1/2) We think this was the question that we were marked down on, costing us the opportunity for the tie-break. Casting my mind back a few weeks, I vaguely remembered the carpology question. The answer we put was 'Fruits and seeds', and our markers probably decided that we were hedging our bets. Anyway, we didn't challenge it and the rest is history.

Could you have dragged us over that magical winning post? Let me know.
More to the point, could you have won £100? Why not read on and find out?

Snowballs

Nobody won the money this week, which is great for us as we weren't picked, but showed us up a little in the knowledge department. In which case, if you get any of these, I'm happy to accredit you with that extra slice of genius.

1) William Simmonite was the real name of which TV character?

2) Margarita Cancino was the real named of which famous actress?

3) Eddie Eagan is notable for being the only Olympian to achieve which feat?

4) What was the original colour of Coca-Cola?


Snowball Answers
1) Compo, from Last of the Summer Wine. Compo was portrayed by Bill Owen from 1973 until 2000, Owen having died in 1999. Compo's vice was that he was incredibly lazy and had something of a crush on his neighbour Nora Batty, played by Kathy Staff. Last of the Summer Wine ran from 1973 - 2010, and according to Wikipedia, is the longest running sitcom in the world. It ran for 295 episodes, and was chiefly filmed in Holmfirth, West Yorkshire.


2) Rita Hayworth. Hayworth was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1918, and she was apparently a brunette in reality, but died her hair red to attract greater attention for film roles. Hayworth is noted for her status as a pin up during the Second World War and for her marriages to Orson Welles and Prince Aly Khan. She married 5 times in total. She died in 1987 after complications due to Alzheimer's Disease.

3) He won gold medals at both the Summer Games and the Winter Games in different events. Eagan was born 1897 in Denver, Colorado. He achieved his first gold in the 1920 Antwerp Games for Boxing in the Light-Heavyweight category. He later won at the 1932 Lake Placid Games in Four man Bobsleigh. He later became a lawyer and a US army colonel. Eagan died in 1967, aged 70.

4) Green. This looks like it is just an internet rumour. Coca-Cola denies that this was ever the case. The drink was invented in 1886 in Atlanta, Georgia by John Pemberton. It is not the first carbonated soft drink, beaten by one year by Dr Pepper. Coca-Cola is also not patented, since once the patent expired the company would have to divulge the secret formula involved in making the drink.

Did you win? Don't worry if not, plenty of teams walked away empty handed. Once again, I've spent far too long on this, so hope you enjoy the fruits of my labour. Until next time ladies and gentlemen.