The Teams
Queen’s University, Belfast
Sarah Carlisle
Jason McKillen
Daniel Rankin (Capt.)
Sam Thompson
Liverpool
Joyce Sajit
Isabel Day
Neil Williams (Capt.)
Harry Ashcroft
Ah, University Challenge! Yes, this may be the time of year
when gathering swallows that twitter in the skies above remind us that the end of
summer looms ahead of us like a giant looming thing, but the return of
University Challenge is one of life’s consolations.
Several clues to the word sample brought Sam Thompson the
first starter for Queen’s. Musicians who were awarded posthumous Pulitzer
Prizes made an interesting set. Apparently the recipients deliver their
acceptance speeches through the services of a medium. Sorry, that was in very
bad taste. Queen’s took a full house. For the second starter Queen’s captain
Daniel Rankin knew that the largest city of North Rhine Westphalia is Cologne. A
relatively straightforward set on Korea in the second half of the 20th
century brought another complete set. The next starter had me screaming “ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA!” at the telly as both teams sat on their buzzers. (Which brings to
mind my favourite ever small ad once seen in the back of the Ealing Gazette –
For Sale – complete set of Encyclopaedia Britannica. No longer needed as wife
knows everything) Finally Sarah Carlisle of Queen’s came in after Edinburgh in
1771 sealed the deal. The Academie Francaise and its continual blasting of the
trumpet against the monstrous horde of Anglicisms trying to creep into French
provided an interesting set. Queen’s took the first bonus, taking their total
of correct answers at the start of the show to the first 7, but were baulked by
cosy, the 8th. They took rookie to make 70 points unanswered. Isabel
Day buzzed early and correctly to identify cartilage as the answer to the fourth
starter, opening Liverpool’s account. An interminable set of questions on
symmetric molecules provided them with a full house of their own. I like
picture starters on flags, and this was a relatively gentle one with the flag
of Greenland. Sam Thompson took that one. More two tone flags followed, but in
black and white. This meant that Amol had to clarify that with the second it
could be two countries but he wanted the east African one rather than the Asian
one. It didn’t phase Queen’s, who’d now taken three full houses out of the
first five sets of the show. For the next starter it was the list of actors who
sang the songs that told me that the first live action film to receive three
nominations for the Oscar for Best Original Song was Dreamgirls. Maybe it told
Neil Williams too for it was the Liverpool skipper who buzzed in with the
answer. Directors who have won the Palme d’Or twice brought two correct answers
and meant that the score stood at 95-45 in favour of Queen’s at ten minutes.
Nobody knew The House of the Dead for the next starter, and
Liverpool lost five of their hardearned for the first incorrect interruption of
the night. Amazingly what sounded like a difficult science question was
rendered gettable by the words ‘happy hormone’. “Serotonin!” I shouted and set
off on my lap of honour around the Clark sofa before Jason McKillen could give
the same correct answer. Types of sandwich associated with the USA was a good
UC special set of bonuses. The Joey special wasn’t one of them, nor was the NY
Cheese Steak which I became acquainted with last week, so I scored nowt. Two
correct answers and Queen’s were already in triple figures. Joyce Sajit
identified Barcelona as the home of The Block of Discord and earned Liverpool
bonuses on Some Living American Women Artists, a parody of The Last Supper.
Liverpool picked up two, while I picked up one by the expedient of answering
Georgia O’Keefe to all of them. So to
the music starter. Daniel Rankin buzzed in super quickly to answer that Eminem’s
The Real Slim Shady was released in 2000. More songs that were NME Track of the
Year and years of their releases were asked and amazingly they were never even
one year out, taking all three. The onslaught continued. Sam Thompson knew that
the term Rangaku in Japanese refers to knowledge gained through contact with
the Dutch. (Someone in the room who should hang her head in shame suggested
that rangaku might consist of the cultivation of tulips and the process for
making edam cheese.) Use of plants of the rubiaceae family provided two correct
answers but I’m surprised that they didn’t know quinine – which just goes to
show that every single one of us has gaps in our knowledge. Nothing daunted,
Neil Williams buzzed in early to identify “The Tempest” as The Shakin’
Shakespeare play beginning with the word boatswain. Church and State only
provided one bonus, which was the first time that either team failed to get at
least two bonuses from a set. Amazingly I got a maths starter right – mind you
it was only on the last part of several definitions which obviously pointed to
the word degree. Joyce Sajit took that one. Three questions on author and
translator Claire Pollard brought a full house and pushed Liverpool ono three
figures themselves. A rush of blood to the head saw Harry Ashcroft buzz in far
too early on the next starter, allowing Sam Thompson in to identify pepper as
the commodity in question. Bonuses on urban design brought, well, yes, another
full house for Queen’s, who now led by 185 to 95 at the 20 minute mark.
That old warhorse logical positivism galloped onto the
battlefield for the next starter and just as quickly galloped off again when
nobody recognised it. Clues to various Grays saw Joyce Sajit get really annoyed
with herself when she buzzed early and incorrectly, and it was Sam Thompson who
snapped up the answer. Scientists whose names contain a month brought me another
potential lap of honour answer – if it’s Kekule it must be benzene, right? Then
I got another one guessing Chaos Theory. And a full house for corona viruses!
And Queen’s only got 2 of them. The picture starter was a self portrait of one
of my favourite artists – Aubrey Beardsley (Oscar Wilde dubbed him Awfully
Weirdly. Well, be fair, they were mates.) Isabel Day took that one. Beardsley
portraits brought me a second consecutive full house, but Liverpool only the
one. Joyce Sajit buzzed far too early for the next starer, and her eyes darted
from side to side as if she didn’t quite believe she had buzzed. And, flippin’
heck, it was a chemistry starter and I knew the answer, being as it was about
the periodic table. I knew that of the four elements named after Ytterby, the
only one that isn’t a lanthanide is Yttrium. The excellent Sam Thompson, having
a very productive evening, snapped up another unconsidered trifle. Bonuses on
the Laffer Curve promised me nowt, but I got one for guessing Gerald Ford and
another for trickle down economics. Queen’s had all three. Daniel Rankin made
Queen’s first incorrect interruption of the evening on Zydeco, allowing Neil
Williams in with Louisiana. Historical taxes saw Liverpool take just the one,
missing out on old chestnuts scutage and Peter the Great’s beard tax. My heart
went out to Neil Williams for his interruption to suggest that it was Port
Talbot that received city status in 2022. Sadly no, Neil – to the best of my
knowledge that is not a status that my adopted home town aspires to yet. No
football fans in Queen’s it seemed, since they might have known that the
Racecourse Ground is in Wrexham. Skipper Williams admirably made up for this by
buzzing early to identify Germany as the first country to win both Men’s and
Women’s FIFA world cups. Three books with the word Winter in their titles brought
nowt to Liverpool, and the only answer I knew was Kate Mosse. Sam Thompson knew
that two chemical symbols give you an emu. One bonus on Edmund Halley was taken
and that was it. The contest was gonged with Queen’s winning by 240 – 125.
I can’t help feeling a little sorry for Liverpool. They’re
a good team – they scored a BCR of over 51 percent. They were just unfortunate
to meet a potentially very good team indeed. For Queen’s scored an exceptional
BCR of 81 percent. Every one of them answered at least 1 starter correctly so
there’s buzzing throughout the team. I don’t think it will come as any surprise
if I say that they are very much a team to watch.
Amol Watch
‘Good job you’ve got a chemist on your team.” pronounced Amol
after the symmetric molecule questions. True, but not exactly original, Amol. I
doubt you’d say ‘Good job you’ve got a complete nerd on your team’ after a set
on manga for the sake of argument. Fair play, he was understandably amused when
Queen’s facetiously suggested that an America sandwich might possibly have been
named after Les Miserables.
At the twenty minute mark Amol told Liverpool “Plenty of
time left”. This is a habit Amol has that I picked up on last series. A) There
wasn’t actually plenty of time left. B) Liverpool were buzzing quite well anyway
– they weren’t doing badly, just Queen’s were doing exceptionally.
Interesting Fact That I Didn’t Already Know Of
The Week
The first live action film to receive three Oscar
nominations for best original song was Dreamgirls. None of the songs won.
Baby Elephant Walk Moment
(Quick reminder. When I hear an unfathomable – and let’s be
honest, it’s usually Science – question the Baby Elephant Walk sometimes plays on
my mind’s internal soundrack. This is where I nominate the question each week
most likely to induce this.)
What two word term describes the shape of a symmetric
molecule where a central atom is covalently bonded to three peripheral atoms?
An example of this type of atom is boron trifluoride and the bond angle is 120
degrees since all three peripheral atoms are in the same plane. Dum de dumdum
dum dum dum dum dumdum.
No comments:
Post a Comment