The lad’s growing up. Bound to happen when you think about it – in fact it would be weird if he didn’t. This is my excuse for sometimes forgetting myself and saying things in front of him that I shouldn’t. The lad in question is my oldest grandson Ollie, and what brought this home to me was when, as we were watching Pointless together, Alexander asked ‘What are you going to do with the money if you win?” and Ollie, putting himself in the place of the contestants replied, “Stick it up me bum and set fire to it.” Which is entirely my fault because it’s what I often say whenever this banal question is asked on this or a number of shows.
I’ve come clean about my misanthropic tendencies before
now, and this is just another example because small talk on a quiz show is just
something I don’t enjoy. In particular, ‘What are you going to spend the money
on?’ is a question that really irritates me. It’s probably because I often feel
like I’m being manipulated. Contestants, so it seems to me, are obliged to sing
for their supper. It’s not enough that you have the chance of winning some
wedge, you have to justify why you should have it. Hence the cliched trotting
out of anniversaries, family holidays etc. etc. Worthy things like treating a
deserving member of the family or achieving a long held dream. You just know
that none of them is ever going to say “I’m going to spend it on three things –
Alcohol, prostitutes and carpet cleaner (in that order).’ Quite right too – one
should never mention carpet cleaner before the watershed. But the misanthropic schoolboy
in me, who is never that far from the surface, still harbours a wish that a
contestant would say, in response to the question, “Stick it up me bum and set
fire to it.” Or something equally facetious. Incidentally, in my Mastermind
semi final I made a fairly decent crack in the inter-round chat. Remember them?
Now that’s one thing I don’t want to see being brought back to Mastermind. My
semi final subject was the Prince Regent, later King George IV, and in response
to one of John Humphrys’ questions I said “Yes, it’s true, George did spend a
huge amount on wine, women and song, but then he did waste an enormous amount
as well.” Huge laugh from the studio audience. Cut out in the edit. Honestly.
Coming back to misanthropy, this coming week in the club there
is the last quiz before Christmas. Which means a themed quiz. Okay, now I am
not a great lover of themed quizzes. Not only that, the setters don’t do more
than a very few quizzes in a year, and . . . oh look, you know what a miserable
sod I am so I might as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb. . . they’re really not very good at it. They make
very avoidable mistakes and wouldn’t know an interesting question if it bit
them on the behind. And while I’m getting a little better at holding my tongue
at some of the obvious howlers that get perpetrated in the quiz from time to
time, it’s still very frustrating. I can give you an example. This week was Dai
Norwich’s turn. . . (so called because a) his name is David and – oh, I’ve told
you that before have I? Fair enough) He asked “How many players are there in a
lacrosse team?” I think you might guess what’s coming next. “Men’s or women’s?”
I asked. He looked at me blankly. ”You see there’s different numbers in both.”
I added helpfully.
“I dunno.” He replied. “It’s the one I’ve got written down here.”
You know how it goes, I’m sure. Now, yes, there’s no reason
why Dai should know that there’s a different number – well, other than the fact
I’ve asked a version of the question myself which mentions the different
numbers several times in my quizzes over the last 20 years or so. But come on.
If you’re asking a question where you
know nothing about the subject yourself, verify the answer that you have,
especially if you’ve got the question out of ‘My First Quizbook’ or the equivalent.
I hope I’m wrong. But I dunno, I can just see us being
confronted by things like “What does Bethlehem actually mean?” Because without
a little bit more to the question, that’s actually unanswerable. I’m guessing
that if they did ask this, then the answer would be ‘House of Bread’ – the Hebrew
meaning. However in Arabic it also means ‘House of Meat’. If they ask, then
there would be absolutely no point in asking for clarification. . . they wouldn’t
know.
It's not just the quiz itself, though. I have a problem
with the forced jollity of their Christmas quizzes. Last year they gave each of
us some chocolate coins, and in one round we could gain an extra point by ‘bribing
the judges with chocolate coins.’ They also left elf hats on each table and you
could get a point by sending them a selfie with an elf hat on. In one way it’s
really sweet that they go to all of that effort. . . only . . . well, that’s
not quizzing. Not to a grumpy old sod like me, anyway. Christmas quizzes? Pah,
humbug!
And the thing is, the last time they did a quiz was when
the quiz was moved to a Tuesday evening. Honestly, I couldn’t do a Tuesday
evening at the moment even if I wanted to. So we gave that one a miss. The
thing is though that having missed that one, if I gave this one a miss it would
be obvious. And I wouldn’t want to give them the metaphorical slap in the face
that deliberately avoiding their quiz would represent. Now that really would be
misanthropic. So, Rudolf noses, Santa hats and forced grins all round, and try
to keep the sarky comments to a minimum, David.
5 comments:
I did think it was rather nice of Dai to say thank you to the quizmasters of the year, and to give Jess, Adam and I a little shootout as new blood. Nevertheless, we shall see what this Thursday brings. If nothing else, there's a buffet.
Yes, fair play to him, that was handsome. (Just wish he'd take a bit more care over his quiz)
Some quizzes do the chat thing because the games aren't always the same length, so they need something to pad it out with if lots of people knock themselves out early. I don't know if it was the same for you, but when I did Fifteen to One Sandi chatted to us a lot more than they actually used on the programme - and in mine, the group was quite good so most of it got cut, including my quite long chat with her. I was actually glad my bit got cut, because I told her about a big project I was working on that ended up falling through... if they'd kept that bit in, I'd always have felt sad watching it back.
The 'What will you spend the money on?' question though, I feel strongly should only be asked at the end after the person has won the money!
In one of Dave Gorman's books ("Too Much Information", I think), he says he saw a snooker player being asked "What will you do with the money?" after winning a tournament... I think he suggested the snooker player should have replied "What will you do with the money you're being paid for asking that question?"
I like that! I mean, come on, what do you do with 'free' money? Spend it of course! Thanks for taking the time to leave a comment.
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