I must start with an apology to Les Morrell and Andrew Fraser, for
missing the first heat. It’s still on the iplayer I think, so I will try to
catch up if I can. This review though is of the second show. Our contestants
were : -
Ted Barr
Maya
Davis,
Jonathan
Frere,
Vicky
Smith,
Now,
maybe the name Maya Davis rings a bell with you. Maya featured in the grand
final of Mastermind back in Gary’s 2012 series. Prior to that, though, I
actually met Maya back in 2009, when her first round heat of Brain of Britain
was recorded on the same evening as mine. Then she was unfortunate to find
herself in the same heat as Ian Bayley, who went on to win the whole series,
and Brain of Brains, for that matter.
Well, Ted
kicked off the first round. I didn’t know that RRS as in RSS Discovery, stood
for Royal Research Ship. Ted didn’t know. Jonathan Frere offered Royal Research
Society, but it wasn’t quite close enough. Maya didn’t know her first question,
which country owns Robinson Crusoe Island. Now, I have never actually heard of ‘Robinson
Crusoe Island’ , but the man on whom Crusoe was based, Alexander Selkirk, was
wrecked on the Juan Fernandez Islands, and they belong to Chile. That was the
right answer, but nobody had it. Jonathan Frere didn’t know that Beatrice and
Sidney Webb, among others, founded the LSE, for me the easiest starter so far.
Ted had a bonus from that. This left Vicky Smith to complete the round. She
answered that the song John Brown’s Body
refers to events which led to the start of the American Civil War, but nobody
knew that the forest of Andred in Anglo Saxon times covered a large area of
Southern England now known as the Weald. I did, simply because I studied a bit
of Anglo Saxon history to provide background to the Anglo Saxon literature part
of my degree.
Ted didn’t
know that an exclamation mark is used to represent a number’s factorial. Vicky
took a bonus on that and the lead. Maya, asked for the landmark overlooking
Lake Ontario which opened in 1972, offered the CS Tower. Ah, on such small
margins can matches be decided. Ted gave the correct answer of the CN Tower. I’m
sorry for Maya, but at least it was nice to see that this answer wasn’t
accepted on the rather arbitrary ‘close enough’ ruling which has been so
infuriating in recent series. Jonathan Frere knew that Justin Welby was
previously the bishop of Durham. He also knew that Argon was the first noble
gas to be discovered to become the first contestant to answer two in a row. He didn’t
know the original name of the pirate Barbarossa, though, and that gave Maya a
bonus. For the second round running Vicky was given a rather gentle starter,
asking which author created several of the characters from the Barchester
chronicles, but missed out on a question about the Pentagon which gave Ted a
third point, and meant that he and Vicky shared the lead.
Ted was
given a burst of the World in Union, and asked about the name of the Essex
village used in the title for when Holst’s original melody is used as a hymn.
Phew. The answer is Thaxted anyway, but nobody had it. Maya’s next starter wasn’t
easy, but it was gettable. When asked for the name given to the doctrine
followed by the followers of Thomas Aquinas, she couldn’t quite dredge up
Thomism. Neither could anyone else. Jonathan was given two more gentle
questions, and then probably could have done better with the academic who
delivered the lecture “Conditioned Reflexes”. Maya was the first in to supply
the correct answer of Pavlov. This is probably just me, but again it seemed
that for the third round in a row Vicky was given a gentle starter, asking
about the crew of Apollo XIII. She knew that Marconi’s first transatlantic
signal was the letter S, which wasn’t so easy. One of them might have known the
Biblical phrase, from Dan to Beersheba, but none of them did. Nonetheless the
two points were enough to give Vicky a lead of a point with 5.
Ted didn’t
know that Worm’s Head is on the Gower peninsula. That’s not a huge distance
from where I live. Maya took that bonus. Now, in his explanation, I think that
Russell may have made a bit of a booboo. He said – “The Gower, that takes its
name from an Old English word for Dragon.” Cobblers. Gower comes from the welsh
Gŵyr. Worm, though comes from the Old English wyrm, which could mean dragon. I
think he didn’t quite read his card carefully enough there. Maya had her music starter
with Mary Hopkins singing – Those were the days. Now she was asked the old
chestnut – that Paul McCartney had based the song on a folk song written in
which language. If you’re a regular quizzer, chances are you’ve heard the
question before, and you know it’s Russian. Maya didn’t, which gave Ted the
bonus. Jonathan’s starter was tricky – asking who the second member of the
Jewish faith to lead a British political party was – but it was gettable, being
Michael Howard. Nobody had it. I’d argue that Vicky’s 4th starter
was meat and drink to regular quizzer, asking her which Austrian formula 1
driver died in qualifying in the same grand prix as Ayrton Senna. She missed
out for the first time on a starter, and nobody else had the bonus.
This was
turning out to be an odd kind of show. I wouldn’t say that hardly any of the
questions were gimmes, and the easier questions were only really easier if you
really are a regular quizzer. This accounted for the fact that no contestant
had put together more than 2 consecutive correct answers. I expect that all 4
contestants were glad for the Beat the Brains interval. The two questions were
: - a) Which English placename contains a punctuation mark other than an
apostrophe or a hyphen. They made a lot shorter work of this than most of the
questions they’d already been asked, and well they should for it was the old
chestnut Westward Ho!.
b) Which
English place name contains Roman numerals when written correctly? That was a
lot harder, and I didn’t know. I’ve never heard of Ruyton XI Towns, but Maya
had it, although she allowed herself to be persuaded that it was actually IX towns.
Back to
the tortuous business of the quiz. Ted Barr was given no more gentle a starter
than he’d had all contest, asked which French seaside town PG Wodehouse had
written of in especially critical terms. Vicky came in with the correct answer
of Cannes. Good shout. Maya’s starter – asking the order of insects to which
crickets and locusts belong wasn’t at all easy, being orthopteran. Nobody had
that. Jonathan’s music starter played us a wee snatch of the Alan Parsons
Project – good stuff too. Jonathan didn’t know it, and Ted took the bonus.
Vicky was asked about a Paul Robeson song about Joe Hill as her starter. Nobody
had it, and neither did I. Vicky still led by a point with 6.
Back to
Ted, and yet again, no nice cushy starter. I haven’t heard of the biography “Bitter
Fame” and although told it was about an American poet, none of us guessed
Sylvia Plath. Maya, at last, got a gimme as a starter, asked for the better
known sister of Stheno and Euryale, that being Medusa. Asked which Australian
state had the famous rabbit fence, and the emu fence, everybody else had a go
first before Jonathan gave the correct answer of Western Australia. For his own
first question he was asked the name of the Royal Navy’s helicopter display
team. Nobody knew the Black Cats. Neither did I. Vicky Smith’s music starter
asked which royal occasion her piece of music had been composed for. I recognized
it as belonging to the wedding of Prince William and Katherine Middleton.
Jonathan’s bonus on this brought him level with Vicky on 6.
The start
of the last round, then saw the contestants’ scores ranging from 4 to 6. As
Russell said, anyone could win, but the omens going on the previous rounds
weren’t that good that anyone would score more than a couple. Ted at last got
an easy starter. He didn’t know that George Villiers was the Duke of
Buckingham. That looked like his chances over. Maya took the bonus on that, and
was one point behind with her starter to come. She knew ourobouros. She knew
the mentalis wrinkles the chin. She didn’t know that William Jones came up with
the Pi symnbol. I didn’t know that, but Vicky Smith came up with the bonus.
That took her to 7. Jonathan knew that the green drake is a species of mayfly.
That wasn’t easy. The McCarthy Perpetual challenge cup did for him. It’s
hurling and nobody had it. Vicky then could wrap it all up. Needless to say her
starter wasn’t easy, asking for the astronomical term aberration. Ironic that. Nobody
had it. Which mean that Ted finished with 5 but all three of the others
finished with 7.
Sudden
death tie break time. Asked which gland secretes ADH, Jonathan was first in
with pituitary – always a decent shout. It was right, and gave him the win.
If you’re
a regular reader of my BoB reviews you won’t be surprised I have some observations
to make. One good thing about this show was that in my opinion the
adjudications were fair. I’m sorry, but allowing near misses, as had happened
in recent series on some occasions, opens a whole can of worms, and at least on
that score all contestants were playing on a level playing field.
In other
series there have been shows when I’ ve been struck by the unevenness of the
questions asked to different contenders. I think that if you look at this show
as a whole, this tended to balance itself out.
However .
. . taken as a whole the level of difficulty of these questions seemed higher
than I can remember in any edition of BoB in recent years. Now – if this is a
conscious decision, and other shows have the same level of difficulty
throughout, then fair enough. This is meant to be a premier general knowledge
competition. All of the contenders on this show showed some good knowledge, but
all of them missed things which you’d expect someone good enough to challenge
for the title to get. However, if this is just a rogue show, then it’s a bad
thing, since I would say all of the contestants on this show were put in a position
where it was going to be extremely difficult for them to post a score which
might give them a sniff of a semi final repechage slot. Well, that’s an issue
we’ll continue to look at as the series develops.
The Details
Ted Barr – 5
Maya Davis – 7
Jonathan Frere – 7 (8 AET)
Vicky Smith - 7
3 comments:
I can confirm the first heat is still available on iPlayer for the next three weeks, here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04vk72g
David,
Apologies for using this post to contact you, as it is not directly relevant, but I am not on facebook and do not have have a direct e-mail address for you. Please remove or don not post this note.
I am a little disappointed that there is no review of "Brain of Brains 2014" (perhaps I have missed it?) for a couple of reasons.
Firstly, it is nice to read your detailed reviews and comments,and secondly, I was delighted that my submission was chosen for the "Beat the Brains" listeners questions.
However, no worries. You do a marvellous job in maintaining such a comprehensive, informative, and interesting site on a current basis. The archived material in particular provides a superb reference, which I dip into frequently.
With Kind Regards
Nicholas Flindall
Hi Guys
Thanks Adam!
Hi Nicholas
I'm sorry that I missed Brain of brains, and your question. I can only apologise. I was suffering from a really nasty and draining virus at the time, and I've been back at work since, trying desperately to get to grips with everything I need to do this term.
Thank you so much for your kind comments about the blog. I've often said that I would call it a labour of love - but it's not a labour, it's a pleasure. I do my best to keep up to date, but there are times when it's difficult for me, which I know that readers do understand.
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