Showing posts with label LAMMY Awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LAMMY Awards. Show all posts

Friday, 27 December 2024

The LAMMY Awards 2024

Well, Dearly Beloved, 2024 has certainly been a historic and epoch making year in my life in general, but how does it rate as a quizzing year? Or put it another way, who will be taking home the coveted LAMMY Awards?

Well, let us begin with the LAMMY for . . .

Award for the Best New TV Quiz Show of 2024

In 2023 we had 6 new shows to choose from. In 2022 we had 7. In 2024 we had . . . well, we only had 2. These were:-

Jeopardy!

The Answer Run

It is arguable whether Jeopardy! can even be counted as a new show. This venerable warhorse which has stood proudly at the top of the American quiz show pyramid for forty years has been tried on UK TV four times before.

The main USP of the latest revival was Steven Fry as QM. I would pay to watch him reading our selections from the London Yellow Pages. The gameplay is reassuringly simple and old fashioned. But, the show did feel rather padded and there wasn’t a great deal of variation in the gameplay.

The Answer Run, which hit our screens in August also benefitted from a top notch host. Some QMs manage to make the shows they front worse. More of them do manage to avoid making their shows worse without necessarily bringing that much to the party. A small number manage to take what they’re given and make it better by their presence. Such a presenter is Jason Manford. The show has a fairly simple game mechanic behind it – basically swiping a succession of answers into one of two categories to which they belong. It does have a certain amount of play-at-home-a-bility, which is an essential for a LAMMY Winner.

Which means, as I’m sure you’ve guessed, that the winner of the Best New Show for 2024 is

The Answer Run

The Award for Outstanding Performance in a Broadcast Quiz

Nominees

Ruth Hart – Mastermind

Brain of Britain – Tim Hall

Brain of Brains – Karl Whelan

Only Connect – The Thrifters – Will Chadwick, Sam Haywood, Jack Karimi

University Challenge – Imperial University , London - Justin Lee, Adam Jones, Suraiya Haddad, Sourajit Debnath

Every single one of our nominees would be a worthy winner of the big prize. But I think, on reflection, I probably enjoyed the Grand Final of UC slightly more than the other grand finals, and so the award goes to

Imperial University , London - Justin Lee, Adam Jones, Suraiya Haddad, Sourajit Debnath

The Award for Achievement in Question Mastership

There have been three question masters at the club this year whose quizzes have reached the level of consistent excellence to earn nominations. It probably won’t come as a surprise that they are the same three nominees as last year’s. namely

Dan Ayres

Jessica Ayres

Adam Cook.

I have thought long and hard about this, bearing in mind that they are all members of my team, Adam is my friend, Dan my son in law and friend, and Jess my daughter and friend. But in all honesty, I think if you took the average quiz my nominees produced this year, and compared them with the average quizzes that anyone else produced, an unbiased observer would agree that the nominees' quizzes were a cut above the rest. It’s not the time or place to go through the other question masters' shortcomings, but my guys put a level of love and care into producing their quizzes which refresh the parts that other question masters just can’t be bothered to reach.

Without further ado, the winner is

Jessica Ayres

In all honesty I couldn’t not give it to Jess. On top of the excellence of her usual quizzes throughout the year there was the wonderful quiz she produced for my 60th birthday party, which was just a perfect evening. Well deserved.

Congratulations to all nominees and winners - here's wishing everyone a great quizzing year in 2025

Sunday, 24 December 2023

LAMMY Awards 2023: Committee's Special Award

Yes, a special award goes to Clive Myrie, who had the mortifying experience of having 2 celebrities in the same show fail to score any points in their specialist rounds on Celebrity Mastermind last Friday. What made it worse was that I don’t believe that anyone has ever failed to score in their specialist round before. No, I’m no going to name the celebrities. I don’t think that they should be held up to ridicule just for trying to earn a few quid for a worthy cause.

There’s an interesting debate over on the Contestant Hub on Facebook about Celebrity versions of quiz shows. It’s a tricky one. While sleb versions of The Weakest Link, Pointless, Bridge of Lies etc. are perfectly watchable, Sleb Mastermind can be an uneasy watch at times. To compare it with UC at Christmas, he teams are made up of journalists, writers and academics for the most part and I’m still ofen surprised by what they don’t know. Which I really shouldn’t be, because they’re not quizzers. But at least in that show the contestants are part of a team, and it’s easier to laugh off a bad performance as part of a team.

Yes, I know that anyone going on Celebrity Mastermind really should know what they could be letting themselves in for. But when it becomes an uncomfortable experience for the viewer as well as the poor sleb in the chair, then you have to question when this stops being entertainment.

So well, done to Clive Myrie who did his level best to maintain the positive atmosphere and the bonhomie in this particular edition. It can’t have been easy.

LAMMY Awards 2023 : Award for Achievement in Question Mastery

Right, I have searched my soul about the 2023 Award for the Best Achievement in Question Mastery. I know that I am leaving myself open to accusations of nepotism and favouritism in my nominations. I have played in two quizzes regularly in 2023, and two other quizzes. Starting with the others, the second was a quiz in Mumbles. Each round was interspersed with ‘you all have to join in’ Play Your Cards Right. Not a great evening. The first was in Aberdare, and it wasn’t bad. Not as good as the best quizzes in the rugby club. I’ve posted about the monthly film quiz in the Gwyn Hall, and the question masters do put a lot of time ad effort into it. But when you get right down to it, I don’t enjoy them as much as I do the quizzes in the rugby club. And I’m very sorry, but the best quizzes I the club this year have been done by

Dan Ayres

Jessica Ayres

Adam Cook –

who, incidentally, are all members of my team. Dan is my son in law, married to Jessica (my youngest daughter) and Adam is their good friend, who I am proud to say is also now my good friend. Dan won the LAMMY last year for his single handed revival of the music round. Jess has produced some fine quizzes – some which have been at quite short notice. But I think that the single quiz I have enjoyed most this year was Adam’s last one for the club. So the LAMMY award for the achievement in question mastery goes to

Adam Cook

Many congratulations, this is well deserved.

2023 LAMMY Awards: Award for the best performance in a broadcast quiz

Yes, dearly beloved, it’s time to present the award for best performance in a broadcast quiz. What a crop of worthy nominees we have, too. They are:-

Jonathan Taylor, Jonathan Williams, Joshua Mutio – The Strigiformes

Harry Scully, Chloe Margaux, Alex Radcliffe, Bea Bennett – Durham University

Stuart Field

Daniel Adler

To be honest any of our nominees would be worthy recipients of a LAMMY. The Strigiformes won Only Connect, a massive achievement which requires great all round knowledge. The University Challenge Grand Final back in May was a replay of the first heat of the first round, as Durham saw off a superb Bristol team to become the champions. As I say, all of these are worthy champions.

In April Stuart Field beat the Clark prediction that he would be second in the Mastermind Grand Final, where a brilliant specialist round and a fine GK round gave him the won. Now, for fairly obvious reasons I love Mastermind, and in a normal year Stuart would be adding a LAMMY to his trophy cabinet. But it’s not a normal year. For this is the year that this year’s LAMMY winner –

Daniel Adler

Added the Brain of Britain title to his Counterpoint title won a few years ago. Serial finalist Daniel is also a LAM reader and contributor. Who could ask for more?

Tuesday, 19 December 2023

2023 LAMMY Awards: Best New Quiz Show of 2023

Yes, gentle reader, it’s that time of the year again, when we at LAM Towers (me) hand out the gongs popularly known as the LAMMYs. As is traditional we begin with the ever popular award for the best new quiz show of  the year. Here are the shows that I reviewed this year :-

New shows 2023

Puzzling

007: Road to a Million

Alan Carr’s Picture Slam

The Finish Line

Cheat

In With A Shout

Working from the bottom upwards – April saw the debut of In With A Shout. Now we all know that one of the great pleasures of watching a quiz show is shouting out the answers. So why not get the contestants to the show to do just that? Sorry, but it left me cold.

In the same month Netflix gave us Cheat. I like Ellie Taylor and don’t dislike the scion of royalty, Danny Dyer. But the whole cheating and calling out the cheats dynamic just didn’t work for me and I thought Ellie was under used.

In September the humble picture quiz round proved the inspiration or Alan Carr’s Picture Slam. I’m not a fan of picture rounds, and Alan C’s particular form of hysteria did nothing for me either.

Other streaming services than Netlix are available and one of them, Amazon Prime gave us 007: Road to a Million. This was an unusual hybrid between a challenge based show like, say, Survivor, and a straight quiz. It was not without interest, but I found each edition too long for the amount of content it actually provided.

So all of this leaves us with a shortlist of two, and the awards committee (me) had a real dilemma. One of the two shortlisted shows was a pure quiz, with a gimmick, which was a little easier than I would have liked but was relatively undemanding and enjoyable viewing in the afternoon slot. The other was absorbing, very challenging, had great play at home potential, but was not a pure quiz. The former, the Finish Line is a perfectly good afternoon quiz – better than the Tournament, but not as good as last year’s LAMMY winner Bridge of Lies. My opinion, feel free to disagree. But the 2023 Best New Show goes to (drum roll)

Puzzling

It’s difficult to describe the show without mentioning some similarities to Only Connect. Well, if you’re going to take inspiration from an existing show, it makes sense to take it from a good ‘un. Cogratulatios to Lucy Worsley and all involved.

Tuesday, 27 December 2022

LAMMY Awards 2022: 4) Award for the most enjoyable quiz-based social media content

Award for most enjoyable quiz-based social media content

Yes, it was difficult to work out what I wanted to call this one. After all, it encompasses blogs, reviews and Facebook groups. Throughout the year I’ve particularly enjoyed

Jack’s Online Writings

Weaver’s Week (UK Gameshows.com)

The Contestant Hub (Facebook)

All Things Quiz (Facebook)

Without further ado, the winner is

All Things Quiz

Yes, All Things Quiz takes a well earned LAMMY. Not just for the regular quizzes, but also I’ve really enjoyed Gareth’s excellent videos – the after-show interviews with Mastermind contenders have been something a a highlight for me. Thanks, and keep up the good work, please.

LAMMY Awards 2022: 3) Award for the best achievement in Question Mastery

 Award for the best achievement in Question Mastery

Yes, I don’t always give an award in this category. It’s even more difficult for me to do so now than it used to be back in the days when I was playing in many different quizzes throughout the year. But I have to say that this year there’s only 1 nominee, because there’s one thing that I’ve enjoyed more than anything else in any quiz I’ve played in during this year.

So, without further ado, the LAMMY award for best achievement in Question Mastery goes to :-

Dan Ayres

Yes, I know that awarding a LAMMY to my own son-in-law leaves me open to accusations of favouritism. I don’t care. He’s earned it. During 2022 Dan single-handedly resurrected the music round in the rugby club quiz, and his round on String Quartet versions of popular songs is my favourite single round of the year, not just in any quiz I’ve played in, but also in any round of quizzing that I’ve watched this year.

LAMMY Awards 2022: 2) Award for the finest performance in a broadcast quiz

Award for the Finest Performance in a Broadcast Quiz

The nominees are:-

Sarah Trevarthen – Brain of Britain

Alice Walker – Mastermind

Imperial College (Max Zeng, Fatima Sheriff, Michael Mays, Gilbert Jackson)

As is usually the case, any of the nominees would be worthy winners of the award. Stating with Imperial, they looked likely winners of the series from the early rounds of the competition. Many commentators paid particular attention to the almost superhuman Geography knowledge of Max Zeng. Yet it was the buzzing of Reading captain Michael Hutchinson that looked as if it might prevail in the final, until Imperial managed a 10 point win.

Sarah Trevarthen edged out Mastermind champion Marianne Fairthorne in a really exciting and high-quality final of Brain of Britain. This in a year which had also seen her finish runner up in Mastermind, and have a great run in Counterpoint. In fact if the award was for performance across a range of quiz shows in the year, then Sarah would have won it hands down.

I did mention that Sarah was second placed in the Mastermind Grand Final. Defeating her on that occasion was Alice Walker. Alice had looked to be a serious contender in her heat and semi, but only one of a number of very serious contenders. In the final though she carried all before her. She scored a point more than any other contender in the specialist round, then produced the round of her life in the General Knowledge.

Three very worthy nominees. Without further ado the winner is:-

Alice Walker – Mastermind 2022.

I know that me awarding a Mastermind winner for the second year in a row leaves me open to accusations of favouritism. But the award is for the performance of the year, and that’s what Alice’s Mastermind GK round was for me.

LAMMY Awards 2022: 1) The Best New Show of 2022

 Yes, it’s time to begin handing out the LAMMYs for 2022. Let’s begin with what is often the blue riband award, for the best new show of 2022. Let’s have a look at the runers and riders. In no particular order we have :-

Riddiculous

Fastest Finger First

One Question

Unlimited Win

A One and Six Zeroes

The One Percent Club

Bridge of Lies

Possibly the biggest hit of all of these new shows in terms of audience and media buzz was The One Percent Club. Not such a hit with many of the 100 contestants in each show if some of their online comments are anything to go by. I like Lee Mack, but I’m afraid that this show is a lot of things I don’t like in quiz shows. As a quiz, its pace proved to be funereal for me.

In  fact I could say similar things about A One and Six Zeroes, One Question and Unlimited Win. All of them have talented and popular hosts – respectively Dara O’Briain, Claudia Winkleman and Ant and Dec. Yet as a quiz, none of them really floated my boat at all. Guys, as a rough rule of thumb, the more decent questions you pack into your show the better your chances of winning a LAMMY.

I liked Ranvir Singh on Strictly a couple of years ago, but I have to say she didn’t quite convince me on Riddiculous. The show itself proved to be enjoyable enough, but I do think that it needs a couple of tweaks. On a show where riddles are so important, you cannot afford to have any riddles that could possibly permit an alternative answer to one on the card. I also think that the end game needs work.

Well, many years in the past there’s only been one realistic candidate to receive the LAMMY for best new shows, and indeed there have been years when I haven’t seen anything I like enough to make an award at all. Not so this year. In 2022 there have actually been two shows worthy of the award.

The first of these is Bridge of Lies. I thought that Ross Kemp did an excellent job of balancing the dreaded chatting with contestants elements, with the actual gameplay of the show. I thought that this gameplay was well conceived, and allowed great play at home potential for both serious quizzers and casual viewers at home.

The other nominee is Fastest Finger First. The prize on offer to contestants in this Millionaire spin off is a guaranteed go in the hot seat on the parent show. I wrote a glowing review of the show when it first aired, and I stick by what I said. I would far rather watch this show than the revived Millionaire. Pacing – chat/gameplay ratio – question range and level all contributed to a very good quiz.

I’m tempted to break with tradition and split the prize but I have made the decision. The LAMMY for the best new quiz show of 2022 goes to (drum roll )

Bridge of Lies

Yes, it just about pips Fastest Finger because of the originality of format. I hope that both shows will be back, and that they’ll both run and run.

Friday, 31 December 2021

The LAMMY Awards for 2021

Yes, dearly beloved, for the first time since my quizzing lost weekend, on this, the last day of 2021, I’d like to present just a few LAMMY awards. So without further preamble: -

Award for the Best New Quiz Show of 2021

Let’s look at the new shows I have actually watched during the year.

Gordon Ramsey’s Bank Balance – I never reviewed this show at the time, but I found it suffered from a somewhat glacial pace, and just not being a match for Gordon Ramsey’s perceived on-screen persona. It wasn’t quite as much of a mismatch as Jeremy Kyle’s High Stakes of years gone by, but certainly in the same street.

Quizness – I watched the celebrity show a couple of days ago, and you can read my review I the previous post. With slebs it made an entertaining show, with very good play-along-at-homeability.

Moneyball – Ian Wright’s show, delayed due to equipment problems, was one of the shows given the difficult task of holding an audience on an ITV Saturday evening with no big entertainment spectacular, like the X Factor. It’s not a bad game either, but lacking any adversarial ‘head to head’ action is, I think, a weakness.

Sitting On A Fortune – Gary Lineker’s Saturday Evening show made the most inventive use of chairs since “Ejector Seat”. That didn’t last long, and I’m not sure that this early Saturday Evening show will either. It’s a little too big and grand for a weekday teatime show, but I somehow feel it’s too small for Saturday night. It falls between the two, and as I may have mentioned once or twice before, things which fall between two stools often just fall.

The Tournament – Daytime quiz shows come, and daytime quiz shows go. There are things I like about The Tournament – I think that host Alex Scott has potential, and the quickfire nature of the show is very watchable. However I would strongly advise producers to make some tweaks. The ‘battle cries’ each contestant issues at the start of each show are cringe-inducingly embarrassing. Junk them now. Likewise, the show needs a proper endgame, where the winner plays for a guaranteed amount.

Well, ladies and gents, there have been years when none of the new shows have interested me enough to receive the award. I’m glad to say that this isn’t one of them. The LAMMY for the Best New Quiz Show of 2021 goes to –

Quizness. A clear winner in my opinion – and since I’m the only member of the judging panel, it’s the only one which makes a difference.

Award for the Finest Performance in a Broadcast Quiz

As has happened so often in the past we have some very worthy nominees.

Karl Whelan – who had to defeat Mastermind champion Dave McBryan to win Brain of Britain

David Stainer –2019 champion of BOB who became the latest Brain of Brains

Jonathan Gibson – who became the youngest person ever to win a series of Mastermind, beating the record of Gavin Fuller

Puzzle Hunters (Paul Taylor, Katie Steckles, Ali Lloyd) Only Connect Champions, narrowly defeated in a head to head with the previous champions the OO7s in a Christmas special.

The University of Warwick – The team defeated Magdalene, Cambridge to win University Challenge.

As I said, a bumper crop of nominees, all of whom would be worthy winners. However, after due consideration the award goes to

Jonathan Gibson, youngest ever Mastermind Champion. Not only that, but a contender who managed the feat of answering every question in his semi final correctly. Congratulations.

Now that the most serious awards are out of the way, there’s just a couple of more personal ones to dish out.

Award for the Best Contributor to LAM 2021

After the number of false revivals of LAM during my lost weekend over the last 5 years, I was pretty sure that nobody was going to bother reading the blog again. So I would like to recognise the contributions made by those readers who have taken the time and trouble to leave comments on posts, and in particular to pay tribute to the winner –

George Millman

As for my final award, well, in a year in which there has been no Brain of Mensa competition, I would like to make this one

Award for Staging a Quiz Despite the Pandemic

I would give one for every pub, club or venue that has managed to keep a quiz going since the lifting of the second national lockdown. However I hope I will be forgiven for making specific awards to

Aberavon Rugby Club – for keeping the Thursday Quiz going since the late Spring

Neath Gwyn Hall – for the monthly themed film quizzes.

That’s the LAMMY Awards for 2021. May I wish you all a happy and safe New Year.

Sunday, 4 January 2015

The Better Late Than Never 2014 LAMMY Awards


I did promise that I would try to restage the LAMMY awards as soon as I could, and so here are the awards for 2014.

1) Award for the Best New Quiz Show of 2014

Its interesting to look back and see just how well some of the past recipients of this award have done  - they include Only Connect – The Chase – Breakaway – Perfection – and there have even been a couple of years when no new show has been deemed worthy of winning the award.

In 2014 we saw quite a bumper crop of new shows. In February BBC2 brought us Revenge of the Egghead. This brought CJ back into the Egghead fold. In some ways this seemed a little bit of a hybrid of the original Eggheads and The Chase. The reviews weren’t generally kind, and since CJ is back among the Eggheads fold I have my doubts over whether we’ll see this show again.

Strictly speaking Fifteen to One is not really eligible for the award since it’s not a new show. We can argue about whether revivals should be eligible, but the fact is that I took part in the second series before the end of the year, and this takes it out of the running anyway.

April also brought us Challenge TV’s own original quiz, Timeline. This was all about putting things into a sequence. Now, go back 15 or 20 years, and host Brian Conley was a very big TV name. Somehow though this show contrived to be rather less than the sum of its parts. Meanwhile on Saturday nights in April Rob Brydon brought us a new celebrity panel quiz game called The Guess List. I wasn’t the only one to draw attention to its great similarity to Blankety Blank.

In May ITV unveiled Ejector Seat, presented by Andi Peters. You have to hand it to ITV, they will keep trying out new formats which they can use when The Chase and/or Tipping Point are off the air. This wasn’t the hardest quiz in the world, and the Ejector seat gimmick wore fairly thin fairly quickly. However it wasn’t the worst new quiz show that ITV came up with all year, not by some distance.

Now, in a way, I suppose that you could say I also have a connection with The Link. This was created by the creators of the game Linkee, and I was sub contracted to provide some of the questions for the second edition of the game which is now available. The Link does pretty much what it says on the tin – basically asks you questions, and you have to find the links between the answers. It certainly wasn’t everyone’s cup of tea, but I did think that it had several things going for it. Unlike many, if not most daytime quizzes, this one at least offered a game which had play along at home value for both non quizzers and quizzers alike. Alright, it’s not Pointless, and it’s not Only Connect, but it had something. And what’s not to like about Mark Williams as question master for that matter?

In August, several quizzes came along at once. Poor old Gethin Jones, who presented the awful Sell Me The Answer a few years ago, was given another grade A oven ready turkey in the shape of the 21st question. No better than this was Eamonn Holmes and Ruth Langsford’s rather self indulgent Gift Wrapped. This show suffered from the Holmes-Langsford love in which was rather nauseating, from having some embarrassingly poor contestants, and from being extremely ‘bitty’.

Over on BBC2, though, we had a show which has to be considered for this year’s award. I speak of Richard Osman’s Two Tribes. The gimmick behind this show was that it was a contest between two teams, yet the teams’ membership would change according to answers the contestants had given before the start of the quiz. So for example in the first round cat lovers might play dog lovers, while in the second round those who could read music would play those who couldn’t – and so on. A player was out in each round, until just two remained to play a head to head. I would say that for many viewers the biggest selling point was probably Richard Osman as host.

So basically, it’s a two horse race for me – The Link v. Two Tribes. Now, I will admit that I’m torn here. I can’t help remembering that I plumped for The Chase over Pointless back in 2009, while Pointless would have romped home in any other year since. And when you get right down to it, although I still rate The Chase, I would always opt to watch Pointless now myself. So if I do it again to another Richard Osman show this time, then it’s going to start to look personal. But it isn’t personal. The fact is that while Two Tribes is a perfectly decent little show, the level of the questions means that it doesn’t have the same play at home potential for anyone above a certain level of ability at GK quizzes. At the end of the day it’s purely a matter of personal preference, and while it’s been fair to say that the Link never enjoyed better than strictly lukewarm reviews, I liked it, and therefore the LAMMY Award for the best new quiz show of 2014 goes to

The Link

2) The Award for Best Performance in a Broadcast Quiz of 2014

Nominees: -
Mastermind 2014 – Clive Dunning
University Challenge 2014 – Trinity, Cambridge
Brain of Britain 2014, Brain of Brains – Mark Grant
Only Connect – Europhiles

This one is tricky. My friend Clive won a nailbiting Mastermind final, beating Brian Chesney by 3 passes, having looked like one of the favourites ever since his first round performance. In University Challenge Trinity, Cambridge had to defeat double champions Manchester in their semi final. To be fair to them they were pretty much carrying the mantle of favourites after comprehensively beating a very good Christ Church team in the first round. In the final BBC4 series of Only Connect, the Europhiles demonstrated that if you have a terrific missing vowels player on your team, then you’ll always have a chance of winning.

This year’s overall winner, though, is a name that will be familiar to regular LAM readers. Mark Grant is a member of the Crossworders, the finest Only Connect team ever. As a coincidence, Crossworders skipper David Stainer also took part in the Brain of Brains competition that Mark won, and the third member of the trio, Ian Bayley, is a past recipient of this very award. It was a highly competitive series of BOB this year, and Mark was a very worthy winner of the Grand Final. So the winner of the best performance in a broadcast quiz of 2014 goes to : -

Mark Grant

3) The Award for Best Performance in a Non Broadcast Quiz

As has become customary, I must pay tribute to my teammates in the Bridgend Quiz League. UP to the end of the 2014  season in April we played out of the Llangewydd Arms. During the season we completed our fourth consecutive League Championship and Cup Double, and in fact it was triple winning season considering that we had already won the traditional Muriel Williams Cup curtain raiser back in September 2013. All of which would have made the guys eligible for the award, were it not for the fact that I was playing with them. Such is life.

Despite this, though, we did lose one match during the season. Altogether we lost 4 times in my first 4 seasons playing in the League. On only one of those occasions would I have said that we weren’t a little unlucky in the way that the questions fell out. That happened to be last season. Back in January 2014 we played the Lemurs, the strongest team in the league back when I started. We’ve had some close matches in the past, and some not so close matches, but they’d never beaten us while I’d been playing until this match. The simple fact of the matter is that on that night, they were just much better than we were. It wouldn’t have mattered in what combination the questions had come out, they would still have won – they were that much better than we were. For that reason, they are worthy recipients of the first nomination for this award.

How can you ignore the claims of Ashford Road A from Swindon, who added the 2014 title to their 2012 CIU National title? I certainly can’t ignore them, and they are duly nominated for the award.

Last year’s award winners, the Lemurs from the Aberavon Rugby Club, are again a decent nomination. This year we were managing to duke it out with them on pretty much even terms until June, but since then it’s been pretty much one way traffic, barring the odd win for ourselves here and there.

All of the above are worthy nominees, and all would be front runners in another year. However 2014 was the first time that I’ve played in the Brain of Mensa competition. Now, I know when you mention you’re a member of Mensa you open up a whole can of worms either with people who never have been members, or people who have been members but left after becoming disillusioned with the organization. It really isn’t my purpose here to open a debate on the rightness or wrongness of the organization. What I will say, though, is I got to play in the semi final and final against Les Hurst, and in the final against Stephen Cooke. I don’t play in many individual as opposed to team quiz competitions, but I have to say that this was the toughest I can remember playing in, and the performances of both these gentlemen were outstanding. Stephen won the competition, and therefore I have no hesitation in awarding him this year’s LAMMY.  So the winner is : -

Stephen Cooke.

4) The Award for the Most Enjoyable Event in Quizzing

Well, sadly I wasn’t invited to a GetConnected Charity quiz event this year. It’s a shame, but let’s be fair, it’s a great charity, and it’s been a hell of a lot of fun while it lasted.

Seeing that we arrived early this year, the CIU finals in Derby in September were a lot of fun again, although rather bittersweet considering the uncertainty of the event, and the fact that Dave Cornish, who sadly passed away soon after, was too ill to attend.

If you’ve read my post about the Birmingham Mega Quiz in November, then you’ll know that we were well beaten into third this year. Nonetheless, even despite the fact that there was a round specifically on Birmingham it was an extremely well run event again, and if you can’t enjoy a big quiz event like that even when you don’t win, then you’re probably going off quizzes full stop.

There’s nothing quite like finding a new pub quiz you haven’t been to before, where the quiz is home made – the locals are friendly – there’s no prize so nobody gets too upset if you win. Step forward the Ogmore Junction/ Fox and Hounds Sunday evening quiz – an utter joy.

As I mentioned in the preamble to the previous award, 2014 saw me taking part in three rounds of Brain of Mensa for the first time. I certainly clocked up the mileage, as each round involved several hours driving to get to the venue and back. Each of them was great fun though, and involved meeting some delightful people, and some very good quizzers. Coming third overall was the icing on the cake.

Yet for all that, well, for all that my most enjoyable quizzing event of 2014 has to be my appearance on Fifteen to One. It’s a good 4 years since my previous TV appearance in the final of series 4 of Only Connect, and I have to say that the whole experience was a lot of fun from start to finish, and I only hope this came across in my blog account of it. Therefore the winner of the award is: -

Appearing on Fifteen to One

5) The Host With the Most Award

Former winners of this are – 2013: Russell Davies – 2012: Nick Hancock – 2011: Alexander Armstrong. You could go for any of the biggies here, but instead, and I’m sorry if this is seen as a sop, or a consolation prize for not giving the main award to Two Tribes, but the award this year goes to someone who is one half of the best presenting double whammy on TV, and who on his own raises a rather ordinary quiz into something a lot more watchable. Step forward: -

Richard Osman


That was 2014 then. I’m sorry if you don’t agree with any or all of the awards, but hey, it’s my blog. Apologies for the fact that we couldn’t hold this in December – thankfully I’m starting to feel just a little more perky now.