Rivers, 81, has been in a medically induced coma at Mount Sinai Hospital since going into cardiac respiratory arrest during outpatient vocal cord surgery Thursday in New York.
http://entertainthis.usatoday.com/2014/ ... e-support/
Rivers, 81, has been in a medically induced coma at Mount Sinai Hospital since going into cardiac respiratory arrest during outpatient vocal cord surgery Thursday in New York.
ne1410s wrote:I'd pull the plug like I was starting a lawn mower.
The fact that many many many more people liked Robin Williams than like Joan Rivers may have something to do with that.Bob78164 wrote:The only reason this is newsworthy is her celebrity status, right? Of course, one could say the same thing about Robin Williams, yet for some reason I cared about that story much more than I care about this one. --Bob
Aldous Huxley died on November 22, 1963. I don't think many people paid it much attention.zachhoran1 wrote:Celebrity illnesses and deaths do get reported, the bigger the celebrity, the more it gets reported. Lauren Bacall's death got overshadowed by Robin Williams' the day before, as singer went on a rant about recently.
So did C. S. Lewis. He apparently got less attention.silverscreenselect wrote:Aldous Huxley died on November 22, 1963. I don't think many people paid it much attention.zachhoran1 wrote:Celebrity illnesses and deaths do get reported, the bigger the celebrity, the more it gets reported. Lauren Bacall's death got overshadowed by Robin Williams' the day before, as singer went on a rant about recently.
ne1410s wrote:I'd pull the plug like I was starting a lawn mower.
Bob Juch wrote:So did C. S. Lewis. He apparently got less attention.silverscreenselect wrote:Aldous Huxley died on November 22, 1963. I don't think many people paid it much attention.zachhoran1 wrote:Celebrity illnesses and deaths do get reported, the bigger the celebrity, the more it gets reported. Lauren Bacall's death got overshadowed by Robin Williams' the day before, as singer went on a rant about recently.
Ha! You were good on pianos but you sucked on organs.Liberace wrote:Bob Juch wrote:So did C. S. Lewis. He apparently got less attention.silverscreenselect wrote:
Aldous Huxley died on November 22, 1963. I don't think many people paid it much attention.
I almost died that day as well! And I'd have been kicking and screaming if I didn't get any attention....
Thank you Beebs, I was trying to decide how to respond to this thread because it bothered me.Beebs52 wrote:I like Joan Rivers. I wish her well.
Beebs52 wrote:I like Joan Rivers. I wish her well.
T_Bone0806 wrote:Beebs52 wrote:I like Joan Rivers. I wish her well.
I do not like Joan Rivers.
But I still wish her well.
SSS and Bob would have no trouble with this Season 13 question:Bob Juch wrote:So did C. S. Lewis. He apparently got less attention.silverscreenselect wrote:Aldous Huxley died on November 22, 1963. I don't think many people paid it much attention.

It could also be B. Both Plath and DuBois died earlier in 1963, so I imagine their deaths were overshadowed on November 22, 1963.jarnon wrote:SSS and Bob would have no trouble with this Season 13 question:Bob Juch wrote:So did C. S. Lewis. He apparently got less attention.silverscreenselect wrote:Aldous Huxley died on November 22, 1963. I don't think many people paid it much attention.
The question says "ON November 22..."TheConfessor wrote:It could also be B. Both Plath and DuBois died earlier in 1963, so I imagine their deaths were overshadowed on November 22, 1963.jarnon wrote:SSS and Bob would have no trouble with this Season 13 question:Bob Juch wrote: So did C. S. Lewis. He apparently got less attention.
BookWorms - Chapter 3
May 5, 2010
13- Which two famous writers died the same day as John F. Kennedy (11/22/1963):
a) Thornton Wilder and Syvia Plath
b) John Steinbeck and William Faulkner
c) Ernest Hemingway and H. L. Menken
d) Aldous Huxley and C.S. Lewis
The question doesn't explicitly state that the two authors died on November 22. I think for most people, when they first heard of Kennedy's death that day, it overshadowed every other death that had ever happened before. Robert Stroud, "The Birdman of Alcatraz," died on November 21, and it's safe to say that his death was overshadowed on November 22. I was noting that of the other three choices, only Plath and DuBois were technically arguably correct, since both had in fact died prior to November 22, 1963. The other authors were still alive, except for Hemingway, who had died in 1961.Jeemie wrote: The question says "ON November 22..."
Yes...you could nitpick it...but Plath died in February and DuBois in August.
You would be pushing it to say Kennedy's death "overshadowed" theirs.
You're just the right guy for this job, since your protest of a poorly worded $16K question gave you the chance to win $1.86M. In fact, I'd say your $16K question has overshadowed your final question. (Any BBs remember the $1.86M question? I looked it up. It was aboutTheConfessor wrote:The question doesn't explicitly state that the two authors died on November 22. I think for most people, when they first heard of Kennedy's death that day, it overshadowed every other death that had ever happened before. Robert Stroud, "The Birdman of Alcatraz," died on November 21, and it's safe to say that his death was overshadowed on November 22. I was noting that of the other three choices, only Plath and DuBois were technically arguably correct, since both had in fact died prior to November 22, 1963. The other authors were still alive, except for Hemingway, who had died in 1961.Jeemie wrote: The question says "ON November 22..."
Yes...you could nitpick it...but Plath died in February and DuBois in August.
You would be pushing it to say Kennedy's death "overshadowed" theirs.
Yes, it's nitpicking, in the pursuit of promoting more precise question writing. I was asked to do it as a volunteer several years ago for a big annual children's charity event in Ottawa, where the stakes were high enough that they needed to tighten up their questions to prevent the kind of angry arguments they had experienced in the past. I've been doing it for about ten years, and the organizers love me for it. So when I do the same thing here, looking for loopholes or far-fetched alternate answers, I'm just staying in practice. The stakes are actually a lot higher on a national TV show with a top prize of a million dollars.
http://www.cafott.ca/en/events/world-trivia-night/
Has anyone read my blog today?jarnon wrote:You're just the right guy for this job, since your protest of a poorly worded $16K question gave you the chance to win $1.86M. In fact, I'd say your $16K question has overshadowed your final question. (Any BBs remember the $1.86M question? I looked it up. It was aboutTheConfessor wrote:The question doesn't explicitly state that the two authors died on November 22. I think for most people, when they first heard of Kennedy's death that day, it overshadowed every other death that had ever happened before. Robert Stroud, "The Birdman of Alcatraz," died on November 21, and it's safe to say that his death was overshadowed on November 22. I was noting that of the other three choices, only Plath and DuBois were technically arguably correct, since both had in fact died prior to November 22, 1963. The other authors were still alive, except for Hemingway, who had died in 1961.Jeemie wrote: The question says "ON November 22..."
Yes...you could nitpick it...but Plath died in February and DuBois in August.
You would be pushing it to say Kennedy's death "overshadowed" theirs.
Yes, it's nitpicking, in the pursuit of promoting more precise question writing. I was asked to do it as a volunteer several years ago for a big annual children's charity event in Ottawa, where the stakes were high enough that they needed to tighten up their questions to prevent the kind of angry arguments they had experienced in the past. I've been doing it for about ten years, and the organizers love me for it. So when I do the same thing here, looking for loopholes or far-fetched alternate answers, I'm just staying in practice. The stakes are actually a lot higher on a national TV show with a top prize of a million dollars.
http://www.cafott.ca/en/events/world-trivia-night/. See, I'm right.)Spoiler
aerosol cans
I have now. Something about that story sounds vaguely familiar . . . . --Boblittlebeast13 wrote:Has anyone read my blog today?jarnon wrote:You're just the right guy for this job, since your protest of a poorly worded $16K question gave you the chance to win $1.86M. In fact, I'd say your $16K question has overshadowed your final question. (Any BBs remember the $1.86M question? I looked it up. It was aboutTheConfessor wrote: The question doesn't explicitly state that the two authors died on November 22. I think for most people, when they first heard of Kennedy's death that day, it overshadowed every other death that had ever happened before. Robert Stroud, "The Birdman of Alcatraz," died on November 21, and it's safe to say that his death was overshadowed on November 22. I was noting that of the other three choices, only Plath and DuBois were technically arguably correct, since both had in fact died prior to November 22, 1963. The other authors were still alive, except for Hemingway, who had died in 1961.
Yes, it's nitpicking, in the pursuit of promoting more precise question writing. I was asked to do it as a volunteer several years ago for a big annual children's charity event in Ottawa, where the stakes were high enough that they needed to tighten up their questions to prevent the kind of angry arguments they had experienced in the past. I've been doing it for about ten years, and the organizers love me for it. So when I do the same thing here, looking for loopholes or far-fetched alternate answers, I'm just staying in practice. The stakes are actually a lot higher on a national TV show with a top prize of a million dollars.
http://www.cafott.ca/en/events/world-trivia-night/. See, I'm right.)Spoiler
aerosol cans
lb13