Friday, 12 December 2025

Mastermind First Round Heat 21

We’re nearly up to date with Mastermind now, peeps. Well, heat 21 was certainly memorable.

For one thing, our first contender, Alan Hotchikiss was answering on one of my favourite subjects, Muhammad Ali. I managed 8 of these and was disappointed. That’s not that the questions were easy, either, but that I’d hoped for double figures. Alan took a good 9 on a round where I can vouch for the fact that you needed to know your stuff to do well.

Every now and again a specialist round comes along where you just want to shout at the telly – stop making this contender go through thi!s- Ffion Rowlands was answering on Homer’s Iliad. It was a real display of stoicism as she kept smiling despite the mounting evidence that it really wasn’t going to be her night. I’ll maybe make a post soon about why specialist rounds go wrong. Whatever the case, Ffion scored 3.

I will be honest, I googled to find out how many world heritage sites there are in Britain and Ireland. I believe there’s almost 40. So superficially at least William Tams’ specialist looked quite tough. Maybe not so much after the first couple of questions where William looked pretty secure. However the round slipped away from hm as it went on, restricting him to five points.

Emma Reeves brought the round to a close on the songs of Dory Previn. If I was to tell you that I knew anything about these prior to the round then mmy nose would surely grow. That didn’t matter though because Emma clearly did know a great deal about the songs and she went on to provide us with the best specialist performance of the evening. 11 points gave her a lead of two at half time.

Right, let’s get Ffion’s GK round out of the way. Contrary to what the twitterati think, a low specialist score might have a number of causes. A low GK score, well. I watched Ffion’s round back twice, and I don’t honestly think it was a rogue round. I do think that it was a round of questions the majority of which could have been asked 10 or even 20 years ago which worked against a younger contender like Ffion. Sometimes you watch a round where the contender gives plausible answers which just aren’t right. In Ffion’s case, she just didn’t know them. Sadly, she finished with a total of 7.

You could forgive William for having been disappointed with his specialist round, but he took it in his stride to deliver a good general knowledge round of 11 to set the bar at 16. If he’d managed a couple more in his specialist then it looks likely that he coulda been a contender.

Definitely a contender was Alan Hotchkiss. He was two points in arrears at the turnaround, but could at least put pressure on Emma who was yet to come. And you don’t have to be a seasoned quiz genius to do this. It requires discipline not to panic, but if you have a decent general knowledge then going for the percentage answers on the questions you don’t know can help keep your score ticking over, and that’s what Alan seemed to do. This earned him a double figure round and meant he was able to open the corridor of doubt for Emma as he raised the target to 19.

So to Emma the maths was simple. She needed 9. 8 and no passes would only earn a tie break. Sadly she never looked convincing in her round and by the last few questions she was too far behind. She finished with 7 for a respectable 18. Close but no cigar.

It’s a testament to the care that the production team take over casting that single figure totals are rare on the show, and I do hope that Ffion was able to put it behind her. At the end of the day it is only a game – it doesn’t mean anything other than you had a low score on that set of questions. And well done Alan! Best of luck in the semis.

The Details

Alan Hotchkiss

Muhammad Ali

9

0

10

0

19

0

Ffion Rowlands

Homer’s Iliad

3

2

4

3

7

5

William Tams

British and Irish World Heritage Sites

5

0

11

0

16

0

Emma Reeves

The Songs of Dory Previn

11

0

7

1

18

1

 

Mastermind Catch Up First Round Heat 20

I don’t know if you remember, but it was round about heat 20 last year that the first round fell into a bit of a malaise of pretty unimpressive scoring. Have we reached that stage this year? Well, you must make your own minds up about that.

My friend and fellow champion, Gary Grant, took Tom McAndrew’s subject, the planets of the solar system, as his semi final subject in his first appearance on the show, I think, and if I recall correctly found it a hard subject to live with during preparation. I use this as an excuse for having a sense of foreboding as Tom sat down. He ended up having one of those rounds, and ended up with 4.

Meg Stapledon on the other hand had a fine round on the films of Kirsten Dunst. I knew about the Spiderman films and Jumanji, but not a great deal else. Meg did. She scored a double figure round of 10 and was worth every point of it too.

One of the younger of this year’s contenders , Teddy Fogel, answered on a surprisingly old-school Mastermind subject, the song cycles of Franz Schubert. You know him, the one who needed a pint of Kronenberg to loosen his chords. That’s Schubert, not Teddy Fogel. Well, he may be young (Teddy Fogel, not Schubert) but if you’re good enough you’re old enough and with his double figure round of 10 Teddy was certainly that.

Finally Meena Heath. Now, I’ve never watched Shetland so I have no way of knowing how hard or fair Meena’s questions on the series were, but 9 is a good score in this day and age and that’s what Meena managed.

Spare a thought for Tom McAndrew. He had gone first. Things had not gone his way and he had seen each of the three other contenders whack in good specialist rounds. It can’t be easy returning to the chair under these circumstances. Thankfully there were no disasters in the GK and he scored 7 to finish with 11.

I have to be honest, the GK round proved a bit of an anti climax. We saw Meena score 6 to go to 15 and Meg score 7 to set the bar at 17. Much honest endeavour, yes, but not great rounds. Thankfully Teddy put in a round of 9 to put daylight between himself and Meg.Very well done. Time will tell whether this is a little too early for Teddy to make a realistic tilt at Mastermind this year, but he certainly has potential to work with

The Details

Tom McAndrew

Planets of the Solar System

4

0

7

1

11

1

Meg Stapleton

The Films of Kirsten Dunst

10

0

7

0

17

0

Teddy Fogel

The Song Cycles of Franz Schubert

10

1

9

0

19

0

Meena Heath

The BBC Crime Drama Shetland

9

0

6

2

15

2

 


Mastermind Catcthup first round heat 19

You now I watched all of these heats that I’m catching up on now when they were first shown and some of them stick in the memory loger than others it seems. If we take heat 19, there was much honest endeavour on offer from all of the contenders, yet I had little or no recollection of what happened until I watched it again.

The best part of the contest was the specialist round. First of these subjects was The French Revolution offered by Sam Schoen. We didn’t see perfection in any of the specialists, but we did see quality. Sam managed 10 on what I can vouch for as a complex subject.

I used to enjoy the Granada TV Sherlock Holmes series starring Jeremy Brett, and I added three to the two I had taken on the French Revolution. Like Sam before him Ross Taylor turned in a very good round to achieve double figures as well.

A familiar face graced us with the third round on the poetry of John Betjeman. As long ago as 2012 Julie Aris made it to the semi finals and she has been this way more than once since. I can understand the appeal of coming back – had the 2007 SOBM not occurred I may well have followed that route myself. Julie was just short of joining the leaders as she scored 9.

Finally Ryan Lewendon gave us his round on the Laurel Canyon Music Scene of the 60s and 70s. Compared with the others Ryan fell a wee bit short. 7 is perfectly respectable but it left him 3 points behind as the half time oranges were handed out.

This proved to be something of a shame for Ryan would go on to produce a rather good double figure GK round . But that’s Mastermind. Even if you have a good GK round within you, you can’t afford to be lagging too far behind after the specialists.

I wouldn’t have said that Julie was lagging too far behind after the specialists. She put on 9 points to take the lead, but I somehow had the nagging feeling that she needed at least one probably two more correct answers to make it to another semi final.

By the time that Sam had weighed in with his own GK round Julie was still in the lead though, as he could only manage 7 for joint second place. So it was all down to Ross Taylor. It didn’t look easy going for him by any means, but he kept the answers coming to score the 9 he needed for the win. Well done and best of luck in the semis.

The Details

Sam Schoen

The French Revolution

10

0

7

2

17

2

Ross Taylor

The TV Series “Sherlock Holmes”

10

0

9

0

19

0

Julie Aris

The Poetry of John Betjeman

9

0

9

1

18

1

Ryan Lewendon

The Laurel Canyon Music Scene of the 1960s and 1970s

7

1

10

1

17

2

 

Mastermind Catchup First Round Heat 18

What happened? Well, I’ve been incredibly busy in my life outside quizzing if I’m honest. I do apologise. I’m going to try to fill in the missing reviews as well as I can, which is why I’m starting with MM18.

Finn Maxwell kicked us off with politician Aneurin Bevan. I work now for the NHS, an organisation which probably owes more to Nye than to any other single person. Also, I’ve recently read a biography of Clement Atlee. Nye gave him his fair share of trouble, but Atlee did think of him as a potential successor at one point. Finn gained respectability with 7, but you could tell by the look on his face that he knew it was going to be tough going in the next round.

Bella Burgess never had anything other than a smile on the face when it came to her round on the musicals of Stephen Sondheim, even though I am sure that she would have been hoping for a bit more than the respectable 6 that she did manage. I had a couple to add to the 4 I’d scored on Nye Bevan, but bearing in mind the two subjects still to come I was pretty sure I wouldn’t be adding many to that.

Carolynn Rowe answering on the 70s TV blockbuster Downton Abbey Upstairs Downstairs really showed us how a specialist round should be done. She had 12 questions and answered all of them correctly. Spare a thought for the fact that there were 68 episodes in five series and that’s a really hefty amount of preparation needed. Carolynn’s measured pace never wavered, and this was a first class display.

Having to follow that was Stuart Beard answering on the origins of Judo. Answering very well too.It isn’t easy following someone who has just had a brilliant round, But Stuart kept his head and powered through to his own double figure round of 10. Me? As predicted I didn’t add to my score from the first two specialists.

On to round two. Bearing in mind that Carolynn had a 6 point lead over Bella and a 5 point lead over Finn, with the best will in the world it really looked as if we were in for a two horse race. Bella scored 5 for a total of 11. The main thing was that she kept a smile on her face and still seemed to have enjoyed the experience. I hope so. Finn did well with a double figure round of his own , scoring 10 for a total of 17. I don’t know if he’ll ever decide to come back this way, but with a killer specialist he could certainly give it a lash.

The mission for Stuart Beard then certainly didn’t look totally impossible, but it would need a good GK round to really give him a realistic chance. If he could do double figures again, and post a score in excess of 20 then that would surely give him a shot. That’s what he managed – 11 for a total of 21. Certainly enough to place Carolynn within the corridor of doubt.

If she was dubious, though, she never showed it. Carolynn again delivered a measured and pretty accurate performance, going through the target with enough questions remaining to take her to 13 and 25. That sort of score will put her well into the top half of my unofficial leaderboard when we start to look at the possibilities for the semi finals.

Very well done Carolyn! Best of luck in the semi finals.

The Details

Finn Maxwell

Aneurin Bevan

7

2

10

2

17

4

Bella Burgess

The Musicals of Stephen Sondheim

6

1

5

1

11

2

Carolyn Rowe

Upstairs Downstairs

12

0

13

0

25

0

Stuart Beard

Jigoru Kano and the origins of judo

10

0

11

0

21

0