• QFTCI23 Final, Round 9-10: entertainment, challenge

    From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 7 06:24:59 2024
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2023-11-27,
    and should be interpreted accordingly.

    On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
    both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
    Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
    based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
    the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
    the correct answers in about 3 days.

    All questions were written by members of the Usual Suspects and
    are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may have
    been retyped and/or edited by me. The posting and tabulation of
    current-events questions is independent of the concurrent posting
    of other rounds. For further information please see my 2023-05-24
    companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition
    (QFTCI*)".


    I wrote 9 of the 13 pairs in this set.


    ** Final, Round 9 - Entertainment

    * A. Name that Parody

    A1. Although Hanna-Barbera officially denied it, which of their
    cartoon animal characters was obviously named after a New
    York Yankees player who was famous for his malapropisms?

    A2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/paro-A2.jpg

    Charlie Chaplin's movie "The Great Dictator" featured
    characters 8ho were parodies of, and named in reference to,
    Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini. Give *either* the first
    name or the surname of *either* character.


    * B. Theatrical Superstitions

    B1. On the stage it's considered bad luck to wish someone
    good luck. What do they say instead?

    B2. It is also considered bad luck to mention the name of
    a certain play by Shakespeare, so we won't mention it here.
    What do they say instead?


    * C. Short-Lived TV Titles

    C1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/tv-C1.jpg

    The long-running series whose title is now just "NCIS"
    previously included an expansion of the abbreviation in the
    title. But before that, in its first season, the show used
    an even longer and more redundant title: 6 words altogether,
    counting the abbreviation as one. What was it, exactly?

    C2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/tv-C2.jpg

    A current quiz show on the Game Show Network is hosted by
    the lovely Brooke Burns and titled "Master Minds". In its
    first season, the rules were somewhat different, the host
    was Sherri Shepherd, and the title was different as well.
    What was that 4-word, rather conceited original title?


    * D. Canadiana: GTA Bands

    In each case, name the GTA band in the picture.

    D1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/gta-D1.jpg

    D2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/gta-D2.jpg


    * E. Supermarionation

    E1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/supe-E1.jpg

    Supermarionation was the trademarked name of a system
    by which TV shows and movies, mostly science fiction for
    children, were made using miniature models for sets and
    marionettes instead of actors. Who developed it?

    E2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/supe-E2.jpg

    In the Supermarionation TV show "Thunderbirds", either name
    the organization that the main characters worked for, or give
    the first name of the woman who was their agent in London.


    * F. The World (Taylor's Version)

    Increasingly this is Taylor Swift's world -- we just live here.

    F1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/swif-F1.jpg

    How many studio albums has she released, including the
    re-recorded "Taylor's Version"s?

    F2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/swif-F2.jpg

    She spent her first few years living on a specialized
    farm that her father, a stockbroker, bought from a client.
    What kind of farm was it?


    ** Final, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    * A. Entertainment History

    A1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr10/hist-A1.jpg

    The invention of movies was inspired by an accomplishment
    of Eadweard Muybridge in 1878. He set up a row of cameras
    and took 24 successive photos of a galloping horse, thus
    proving the claim that at times none of its feet were on
    the ground. Why did he want to settle that claim?

    A2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr10/hist-A2.jpg

    After a failed experiment with an incompatible system,
    the US introduced color TV broadcasts on the NTSC system,
    which could be viewed properly on a color TV set, or
    in black-and-white on the ordinary TV set of the time.
    Name any year when Canadians with a color TV set could
    receive these compatible color broadcasts, but only from
    the US, as no one in Canada was yet broadcasting in color.


    * B. History Science

    B1. What technique for finding previously undiscovered ruins,
    or previously undiscovered details in ruins, first became
    available about 1920?

    B2. Carbon is made up principally of two isotopes, carbon-12
    and carbon-14. If an object is made of organic matter, such
    as wood or animal remains, historians may use carbon-dating
    to learn how long it's been dead, which means they measure
    the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12. Why is this ratio
    related to how long it's been dead?


    * C. Science Geography

    C1. The first measurement of the size of the Earth involved
    looking straight down a certain well in Egypt on the longest
    day of the year, and seeing the Sun reflecting off the water.
    This was possible because the well was *where*? (Not the
    place name, the relevant characteristic of that place.)

    C2. The Kennedy Space Center is in Florida, and the Guiana
    Space Center is in French Guiana. Given the political
    desire to locate the one in the US and the other in French
    territory, what made these locations more desirable than
    most alternatives?


    * D. Geography Sports

    D1. This sport was developed from military training exercises
    in Sweden in the late 19th century, and it involves
    finding your way across country using a map and compass.
    What's it called?

    D2. A related recreational activity involves using a GPS
    receiver to find objects hidden at announced coordinates.
    What's this called?


    * E. Sports Literature

    E1. Although he was not an athlete, this American writer
    convinced an NFL team to let him try playing with them.
    He never got into an actual game, but his 1966 book about
    the experience was a success. The title "Paper Lion"
    tells you which team it was, so just name the writer.

    E2. Back in Game 7 of this season you heard about tell-all books
    on the subject of restaurants. In 1970 Jim Bouton wrote
    with similar frankness about a season as pitcher with the
    Seattle Pilots. What was the title?


    * F. Canadiana: Literature Canadiana

    F1. The Bootmakers of Toronto are a society of Sherlock Holmes
    fans. They take their name from a scene where Holmes finds
    a boot marked "Meyers, Toronto" -- in what novel or story?

    F2. In the 1993 spy novel "The Night Manager" by John le Carré,
    the lead character, Jonathan Pine, lives for several months
    in a small town in what Canadian province?


    * G. Canadiana: Canadiana Entertainment

    G1. In 1981 Bonnie Sherr Klein made a documentary for the
    National Film Board, criticizing the pornography business.
    But it was banned for a while in Ontario -- as pornography.
    What was it? (Just the main title.)

    G2. One of the bands selected for a public concert at Nathan
    Phillips Square in 1991 found their booking canceled after
    someone on Mayor Rowlands' staff decided the name of the
    band was offensive. What band?

    --
    Mark Brader | "UNIX are quality sectional bookcases, made of solid oak.
    Toronto | Open or glass-fronted, in three sizes and three finishes, msb@vex.net | UNIX gives unapproached flexibility."
    | -- Daily Mail Ideal Home Book, 1951-52

    My text in this article is in the public domain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Erland Sommarskog@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Wed Feb 7 21:12:57 2024
    Mark Brader (msb@vex.net) writes:
    ** Final, Round 9 - Entertainment

    * A. Name that Parody

    A1. Although Hanna-Barbera officially denied it, which of their
    cartoon animal characters was obviously named after a New
    York Yankees player who was famous for his malapropisms?

    Dino

    * F. The World (Taylor's Version)

    Increasingly this is Taylor Swift's world -- we just live here.

    F1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/swif-F1.jpg

    How many studio albums has she released, including the
    re-recorded "Taylor's Version"s?

    13

    ** Final, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    A2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr10/hist-A2.jpg

    After a failed experiment with an incompatible system,
    the US introduced color TV broadcasts on the NTSC system,
    which could be viewed properly on a color TV set, or
    in black-and-white on the ordinary TV set of the time.
    Name any year when Canadians with a color TV set could
    receive these compatible color broadcasts, but only from
    the US, as no one in Canada was yet broadcasting in color.

    1963


    * B. History Science

    B2. Carbon is made up principally of two isotopes, carbon-12
    and carbon-14. If an object is made of organic matter, such
    as wood or animal remains, historians may use carbon-dating
    to learn how long it's been dead, which means they measure
    the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12. Why is this ratio
    related to how long it's been dead?

    As long as the plant/animal is alive the carbon is constantly replace,
    so the proportions between the isotopes stay the same.

    * C. Science Geography

    C1. The first measurement of the size of the Earth involved
    looking straight down a certain well in Egypt on the longest
    day of the year, and seeing the Sun reflecting off the water.
    This was possible because the well was *where*? (Not the
    place name, the relevant characteristic of that place.)

    The place is on the tropic.

    * D. Geography Sports

    D1. This sport was developed from military training exercises
    in Sweden in the late 19th century, and it involves
    finding your way across country using a map and compass.
    What's it called?

    Orientering is how we spell it in Swedish.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dan Blum@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Thu Feb 8 02:10:31 2024
    Mark Brader <msb@vex.net> wrote:

    ** Final, Round 9 - Entertainment

    * A. Name that Parody

    A1. Although Hanna-Barbera officially denied it, which of their
    cartoon animal characters was obviously named after a New
    York Yankees player who was famous for his malapropisms?

    Yogi Bear

    * B. Theatrical Superstitions

    B1. On the stage it's considered bad luck to wish someone
    good luck. What do they say instead?

    break a leg

    B2. It is also considered bad luck to mention the name of
    a certain play by Shakespeare, so we won't mention it here.
    What do they say instead?

    the Scottish play

    * E. Supermarionation

    E1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/supe-E1.jpg

    Supermarionation was the trademarked name of a system
    by which TV shows and movies, mostly science fiction for
    children, were made using miniature models for sets and
    marionettes instead of actors. Who developed it?

    Gerry Anderson

    * F. The World (Taylor's Version)

    F1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/swif-F1.jpg

    How many studio albums has she released, including the
    re-recorded "Taylor's Version"s?

    12; 15

    F2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/swif-F2.jpg

    She spent her first few years living on a specialized
    farm that her father, a stockbroker, bought from a client.
    What kind of farm was it?

    llama farm; emu farm

    ** Final, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    * A. Entertainment History

    A1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr10/hist-A1.jpg

    The invention of movies was inspired by an accomplishment
    of Eadweard Muybridge in 1878. He set up a row of cameras
    and took 24 successive photos of a galloping horse, thus
    proving the claim that at times none of its feet were on
    the ground. Why did he want to settle that claim?

    he had made a large bet on the subject

    A2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr10/hist-A2.jpg

    After a failed experiment with an incompatible system,
    the US introduced color TV broadcasts on the NTSC system,
    which could be viewed properly on a color TV set, or
    in black-and-white on the ordinary TV set of the time.
    Name any year when Canadians with a color TV set could
    receive these compatible color broadcasts, but only from
    the US, as no one in Canada was yet broadcasting in color.

    1962

    * B. History Science

    B1. What technique for finding previously undiscovered ruins,
    or previously undiscovered details in ruins, first became
    available about 1920?

    aerial photography

    B2. Carbon is made up principally of two isotopes, carbon-12
    and carbon-14. If an object is made of organic matter, such
    as wood or animal remains, historians may use carbon-dating
    to learn how long it's been dead, which means they measure
    the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12. Why is this ratio
    related to how long it's been dead?

    because carbon-14 undergoes radioactive decay

    * C. Science Geography

    C1. The first measurement of the size of the Earth involved
    looking straight down a certain well in Egypt on the longest
    day of the year, and seeing the Sun reflecting off the water.
    This was possible because the well was *where*? (Not the
    place name, the relevant characteristic of that place.)

    on the equator

    C2. The Kennedy Space Center is in Florida, and the Guiana
    Space Center is in French Guiana. Given the political
    desire to locate the one in the US and the other in French
    territory, what made these locations more desirable than
    most alternatives?

    they are near the equator

    * D. Geography Sports

    D1. This sport was developed from military training exercises
    in Sweden in the late 19th century, and it involves
    finding your way across country using a map and compass.
    What's it called?

    orienteering

    D2. A related recreational activity involves using a GPS
    receiver to find objects hidden at announced coordinates.
    What's this called?

    geocaching

    * E. Sports Literature

    E1. Although he was not an athlete, this American writer
    convinced an NFL team to let him try playing with them.
    He never got into an actual game, but his 1966 book about
    the experience was a success. The title "Paper Lion"
    tells you which team it was, so just name the writer.

    Plimpton

    * G. Canadiana: Canadiana Entertainment

    G2. One of the bands selected for a public concert at Nathan
    Phillips Square in 1991 found their booking canceled after
    someone on Mayor Rowlands' staff decided the name of the
    band was offensive. What band?

    Barenaked Ladies

    --
    _______________________________________________________________________
    Dan Blum tool@panix.com
    "I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dan Tilque@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Wed Feb 7 23:03:10 2024
    On 2/6/24 22:24, Mark Brader wrote:



    ** Final, Round 9 - Entertainment

    * A. Name that Parody

    A1. Although Hanna-Barbera officially denied it, which of their
    cartoon animal characters was obviously named after a New
    York Yankees player who was famous for his malapropisms?

    Yogi Bear


    A2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/paro-A2.jpg

    Charlie Chaplin's movie "The Great Dictator" featured
    characters 8ho were parodies of, and named in reference to,
    Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini. Give *either* the first
    name or the surname of *either* character.


    * B. Theatrical Superstitions

    B1. On the stage it's considered bad luck to wish someone
    good luck. What do they say instead?

    break a leg


    B2. It is also considered bad luck to mention the name of
    a certain play by Shakespeare, so we won't mention it here.
    What do they say instead?

    the Scottish play



    * C. Short-Lived TV Titles

    C1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/tv-C1.jpg

    The long-running series whose title is now just "NCIS"
    previously included an expansion of the abbreviation in the
    title. But before that, in its first season, the show used
    an even longer and more redundant title: 6 words altogether,
    counting the abbreviation as one. What was it, exactly?

    C2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/tv-C2.jpg

    A current quiz show on the Game Show Network is hosted by
    the lovely Brooke Burns and titled "Master Minds". In its
    first season, the rules were somewhat different, the host
    was Sherri Shepherd, and the title was different as well.
    What was that 4-word, rather conceited original title?


    * D. Canadiana: GTA Bands

    In each case, name the GTA band in the picture.

    D1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/gta-D1.jpg

    D2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/gta-D2.jpg


    * E. Supermarionation

    E1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/supe-E1.jpg

    Supermarionation was the trademarked name of a system
    by which TV shows and movies, mostly science fiction for
    children, were made using miniature models for sets and
    marionettes instead of actors. Who developed it?

    E2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/supe-E2.jpg

    In the Supermarionation TV show "Thunderbirds", either name
    the organization that the main characters worked for, or give
    the first name of the woman who was their agent in London.


    * F. The World (Taylor's Version)

    Increasingly this is Taylor Swift's world -- we just live here.

    F1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/swif-F1.jpg

    How many studio albums has she released, including the
    re-recorded "Taylor's Version"s?

    F2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/swif-F2.jpg

    She spent her first few years living on a specialized
    farm that her father, a stockbroker, bought from a client.
    What kind of farm was it?


    ** Final, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    * A. Entertainment History

    A1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr10/hist-A1.jpg

    The invention of movies was inspired by an accomplishment
    of Eadweard Muybridge in 1878. He set up a row of cameras
    and took 24 successive photos of a galloping horse, thus
    proving the claim that at times none of its feet were on
    the ground. Why did he want to settle that claim?

    He made a bet about it.


    A2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr10/hist-A2.jpg

    After a failed experiment with an incompatible system,
    the US introduced color TV broadcasts on the NTSC system,
    which could be viewed properly on a color TV set, or
    in black-and-white on the ordinary TV set of the time.
    Name any year when Canadians with a color TV set could
    receive these compatible color broadcasts, but only from
    the US, as no one in Canada was yet broadcasting in color.

    1961



    * B. History Science

    B1. What technique for finding previously undiscovered ruins,
    or previously undiscovered details in ruins, first became
    available about 1920?

    aerial surveying


    B2. Carbon is made up principally of two isotopes, carbon-12
    and carbon-14. If an object is made of organic matter, such
    as wood or animal remains, historians may use carbon-dating
    to learn how long it's been dead, which means they measure
    the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12. Why is this ratio
    related to how long it's been dead?

    C-14 is radioactive and is produced in the atmosphere by cosmic rays.
    Plants and animals take it in while living, but that ceases when they
    die. So the amount of C-14 in a living being is fixed upon death and
    goes down in a predictable manner as the C-14 decays over the years.



    * C. Science Geography

    C1. The first measurement of the size of the Earth involved
    looking straight down a certain well in Egypt on the longest
    day of the year, and seeing the Sun reflecting off the water.
    This was possible because the well was *where*? (Not the
    place name, the relevant characteristic of that place.)

    Tropic of Cancer


    C2. The Kennedy Space Center is in Florida, and the Guiana
    Space Center is in French Guiana. Given the political
    desire to locate the one in the US and the other in French
    territory, what made these locations more desirable than
    most alternatives?

    closeness to the equator



    * D. Geography Sports

    D1. This sport was developed from military training exercises
    in Sweden in the late 19th century, and it involves
    finding your way across country using a map and compass.
    What's it called?

    Orienteering



    D2. A related recreational activity involves using a GPS
    receiver to find objects hidden at announced coordinates.
    What's this called?

    Geocaching



    * E. Sports Literature

    E1. Although he was not an athlete, this American writer
    convinced an NFL team to let him try playing with them.
    He never got into an actual game, but his 1966 book about
    the experience was a success. The title "Paper Lion"
    tells you which team it was, so just name the writer.

    George Plimpton


    E2. Back in Game 7 of this season you heard about tell-all books
    on the subject of restaurants. In 1970 Jim Bouton wrote
    with similar frankness about a season as pitcher with the
    Seattle Pilots. What was the title?

    Ball Four



    * F. Canadiana: Literature Canadiana

    F1. The Bootmakers of Toronto are a society of Sherlock Holmes
    fans. They take their name from a scene where Holmes finds
    a boot marked "Meyers, Toronto" -- in what novel or story?

    F2. In the 1993 spy novel "The Night Manager" by John le Carré,
    the lead character, Jonathan Pine, lives for several months
    in a small town in what Canadian province?


    * G. Canadiana: Canadiana Entertainment

    G1. In 1981 Bonnie Sherr Klein made a documentary for the
    National Film Board, criticizing the pornography business.
    But it was banned for a while in Ontario -- as pornography.
    What was it? (Just the main title.)

    G2. One of the bands selected for a public concert at Nathan
    Phillips Square in 1991 found their booking canceled after
    someone on Mayor Rowlands' staff decided the name of the
    band was offensive. What band?


    --
    Dan Tilque

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to All on Sun Feb 11 03:45:24 2024
    Mark Brader:
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2023-11-27,
    and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
    please see my 2023-05-24 companion posting on "Questions from the
    Canadian Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


    The Final game is over and Stephen Perry is the winner in absentia!

    This completes the latest season written by the Usual Suspects
    (and associated people). Next, we begin the current season, by
    the Misplaced Modifiers -- you've already seen a pair of their
    current-events rounds.


    I wrote 9 of the 13 pairs in this set.

    I wrote entertainment pairs A and C, and the whole challenge round.


    ** Final, Round 9 - Entertainment

    In the original game, the audio round was the hardest and this one
    was next-hardest.

    * A. Name that Parody

    A1. Although Hanna-Barbera officially denied it, which of their
    cartoon animal characters was obviously named after a New
    York Yankees player who was famous for his malapropisms?

    Yogi Bear. (Yogi Berra.) 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum, Dan Tilque,
    and Pete.

    A2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/paro-A2.jpg

    Charlie Chaplin's movie "The Great Dictator" featured
    characters 8ho were parodies of, and named in reference to,
    Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini. Give *either* the first
    name or the surname of *either* character.

    Adenoid Hynkel, Benzino Napaloni. 4 for Joshua.


    * B. Theatrical Superstitions

    B1. On the stage it's considered bad luck to wish someone
    good luck. What do they say instead?

    "Break a leg." 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, and Pete.

    B2. It is also considered bad luck to mention the name of
    a certain play by Shakespeare, so we won't mention it here.
    What do they say instead?

    "The Scottish play." ("Macbeth".) 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum,
    Dan Tilque, and Pete.


    * C. Short-Lived TV Titles

    C1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/tv-C1.jpg

    The long-running series whose title is now just "NCIS"
    previously included an expansion of the abbreviation in the
    title. But before that, in its first season, the show used
    an even longer and more redundant title: 6 words altogether,
    counting the abbreviation as one. What was it, exactly?

    "Navy NCIS: Naval Criminal Investigative Service".

    C2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/tv-C2.jpg

    A current quiz show on the Game Show Network is hosted by
    the lovely Brooke Burns and titled "Master Minds". In its
    first season, the rules were somewhat different, the host
    was Sherri Shepherd, and the title was different as well.
    What was that 4-word, rather conceited original title?

    "Best Ever Trivia Show". Joshua had the idea, but was not close
    enough.


    * D. Canadiana: GTA Bands

    In each case, name the GTA band in the picture.

    (GTA = Greater Toronto Area. But you knew that.)

    D1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/gta-D1.jpg

    Moxy Früvous.

    D2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/gta-D2.jpg

    Triumph.


    * E. Supermarionation

    E1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/supe-E1.jpg

    Supermarionation was the trademarked name of a system
    by which TV shows and movies, mostly science fiction for
    children, were made using miniature models for sets and
    marionettes instead of actors. Who developed it?

    Gerry and Sylvia Anderson. (Either one is sufficient, or just
    the surname.) 4 for Dan Blum and Pete.

    E2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/supe-E2.jpg

    In the Supermarionation TV show "Thunderbirds", either name
    the organization that the main characters worked for, or give
    the first name of the woman who was their agent in London.

    International Rescue, Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward. 4 for Pete.


    * F. The World (Taylor's Version)

    Increasingly this is Taylor Swift's world -- we just live here.

    F1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/swif-F1.jpg

    How many studio albums has she released, including the
    re-recorded "Taylor's Version"s?

    14. (10 others + 4 "Taylor's Version"s.)

    F2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr9/swif-F2.jpg

    She spent her first few years living on a specialized
    farm that her father, a stockbroker, bought from a client.
    What kind of farm was it?

    Christmas-tree farm. 4 for Joshua.


    ** Final, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    * A. Entertainment History

    A1. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr10/hist-A1.jpg

    The invention of movies was inspired by an accomplishment
    of Eadweard Muybridge in 1878. He set up a row of cameras
    and took 24 successive photos of a galloping horse, thus
    proving the claim that at times none of its feet were on
    the ground. Why did he want to settle that claim?

    There was a bet on the outcome. 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum,
    and Dan Tilque.

    Note in particular the second photo in the bottom row.

    A2. See: http://www.vex.net/~msb/tmp/gfr10/hist-A2.jpg

    After a failed experiment with an incompatible system,
    the US introduced color TV broadcasts on the NTSC system,
    which could be viewed properly on a color TV set, or
    in black-and-white on the ordinary TV set of the time.
    Name any year when Canadians with a color TV set could
    receive these compatible color broadcasts, but only from
    the US, as no one in Canada was yet broadcasting in color.

    1953-66. 4 for everyone -- Joshua, Erland, Dan Blum, Dan Tilque,
    and Pete.


    * B. History Science

    B1. What technique for finding previously undiscovered ruins,
    or previously undiscovered details in ruins, first became
    available about 1920?

    Aerial photography. 4 for Dan Blum and Dan Tilque.

    B2. Carbon is made up principally of two isotopes, carbon-12
    and carbon-14. If an object is made of organic matter, such
    as wood or animal remains, historians may use carbon-dating
    to learn how long it's been dead, which means they measure
    the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12. Why is this ratio
    related to how long it's been dead?

    Carbon-14 decays radioactively at a known rate (and when the
    thing dies it stops taking in new carbon from the environment).
    4 for Erland. 3 for Dan Blum and Dan Tilque.


    * C. Science Geography

    C1. The first measurement of the size of the Earth involved
    looking straight down a certain well in Egypt on the longest
    day of the year, and seeing the Sun reflecting off the water.
    This was possible because the well was *where*? (Not the
    place name, the relevant characteristic of that place.)

    On the Tropic of Cancer. 4 for Erland and Dan Tilque.

    C2. The Kennedy Space Center is in Florida, and the Guiana
    Space Center is in French Guiana. Given the political
    desire to locate the one in the US and the other in French
    territory, what made these locations more desirable than
    most alternatives?

    The nearer you are to the equator, the more the rotation of the
    Earth contributes some speed to your (eastward) rocket launch.

    "Closeness to the equator" was not sufficient.


    * D. Geography Sports

    D1. This sport was developed from military training exercises
    in Sweden in the late 19th century, and it involves
    finding your way across country using a map and compass.
    What's it called?

    Orienteering. 4 for everyone.

    D2. A related recreational activity involves using a GPS
    receiver to find objects hidden at announced coordinates.
    What's this called?

    Geocaching. 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, and Pete.


    * E. Sports Literature

    E1. Although he was not an athlete, this American writer
    convinced an NFL team to let him try playing with them.
    He never got into an actual game, but his 1966 book about
    the experience was a success. The title "Paper Lion"
    tells you which team it was, so just name the writer.

    George Plimpton. 4 for Joshua, Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, and Pete.

    E2. Back in Game 7 of this season you heard about tell-all books
    on the subject of restaurants. In 1970 Jim Bouton wrote
    with similar frankness about a season as pitcher with the
    Seattle Pilots. What was the title?

    "Ball Four". 4 for Joshua, Dan Tilque, and Pete.


    * F. Canadiana: Literature Canadiana

    F1. The Bootmakers of Toronto are a society of Sherlock Holmes
    fans. They take their name from a scene where Holmes finds
    a boot marked "Meyers, Toronto" -- in what novel or story?

    "The Hound of the Baskervilles".

    See: http://victorianweb.org/art/illustration/pagets/259.jpg

    F2. In the 1993 spy novel "The Night Manager" by John le Carré,
    the lead character, Jonathan Pine, lives for several months
    in a small town in what Canadian province?

    Quebec.


    * G. Canadiana: Canadiana Entertainment

    G1. In 1981 Bonnie Sherr Klein made a documentary for the
    National Film Board, criticizing the pornography business.
    But it was banned for a while in Ontario -- as pornography.
    What was it? (Just the main title.)

    "Not a Love Story". 4 for Joshua.

    See: http://www.pastposters.com/cw3/assets/product_expanded/JamieR-MULL/not-a-love-story-cinema-quad-movie-poster-(1).jpg

    G2. One of the bands selected for a public concert at Nathan
    Phillips Square in 1991 found their booking canceled after
    someone on Mayor Rowlands' staff decided the name of the
    band was offensive. What band?

    Bare Naked Ladies. 4 for Joshua and Dan Blum.

    If you dare, see: https://i.ytimg.com/vi/Z4U1H9MRNgo/maxresdefault.jpg


    Scores, if there are no errors:

    FINAL ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 7 8 9 10 BEST
    TOPICS-> Geo Mis Spo Sci Lit His Ent Cha SIX
    Stephen Perry 44 48 43 36 48 39 -- -- 258
    Joshua Kreitzer 30 32 16 28 30 27 20 32 179
    Dan Blum 36 24 7 24 40 16 16 31 171
    Dan Tilque 24 20 8 28 24 20 12 35 151
    Pete Gayde 28 23 -- -- 12 10 20 20 113
    Erland Sommarskog 24 16 0 23 8 16 0 16 103

    --
    Mark Brader | "Writing that used both upper-case and lower-case
    Toronto | characters became fashionable many centuries ago.
    msb@vex.net | It continued... until FORTRAN was invented." --Peter Moylan

    My text in this article is in the public domain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Erland Sommarskog@21:1/5 to swp on Mon Feb 12 23:50:51 2024
    swp (stephen.w.perry@gmail.com) writes:
    I used to use x-news, but that was abandoned almost a decade ago. eternal-september doesn't seem to like my login, despite having changed
    my password there just last week, which has complicated things as well. throughout this I saw various people's answers on this round using other services, so I couldn't submit a slate in good conscience.


    Chance has it that I use X-news and eternal-september. Yes, Xnews was
    abandoned more than ten years ago, but since the only group I follow
    that has regular traffic is this one, it works for me.

    I can't say why eternal-september does not like your login, though.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From swp@21:1/5 to Erland Sommarskog on Tue Feb 13 03:14:05 2024
    Erland Sommarskog <esquel@sommarskog.se> wrote in news:XnsB116F297237F2Yazorman@127.0.0.1:

    swp (stephen.w.perry@gmail.com) writes:
    I used to use x-news, but that was abandoned almost a decade ago.
    eternal-september doesn't seem to like my login, despite having changed
    my password there just last week, which has complicated things as well.
    throughout this I saw various people's answers on this round using other
    services, so I couldn't submit a slate in good conscience.


    Chance has it that I use X-news and eternal-september. Yes, Xnews was abandoned more than ten years ago, but since the only group I follow
    that has regular traffic is this one, it works for me.

    I can't say why eternal-september does not like your login, though.


    thank you. I got the password issue resolved with eternal-september.

    now to see if posting from here really works.

    swp

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Erland Sommarskog@21:1/5 to swp on Tue Feb 13 21:04:49 2024
    swp (swp@aol.com) writes:
    thank you. I got the password issue resolved with eternal-september.

    now to see if posting from here really works.


    Seems like it did. Well, at least *I* see your post.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)