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Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Tue Nov 16, 2010 7:20 pm
by BBTranscriptTeam
Ross Hewitt
New York, NY
Doctor

carryover bank $36000 has only ATA left

Topic Tree unrandomized from yesterday:

Movie Ratings
Grave Manners
World of Wine
International Disputes
What Brass
Rallying Cries
Medical Terms
For the Birds
Fishy Behavior
American Legends

Topic Tree: (randomized)

Movie Ratings
Grave Manners
American Legends
Rallying Cries
Medical Terms
(What Brass)
(Fishy Behavior)
(World of Wine)
(For the Birds)
(International Disputes)


Question 6 - Medical Terms
"Hypertension" is the technical term for what common medical condition?
A. Weight gain B. Difficulty breathing
C. Headache D. High blood pressure

Mere says if Ross gets this wrong, they will take his license away.
Ross is a doctor who has patients who take daily medication for this.
Answer and value
D. High blood pressure
Value: $3000
Bank: $39000
Question 7 - Rallying Cries
The French phrase "Tous pour un, un pour tous" is the motto of what legendary fictional group?
A. Seven Dwarfs B. Robin Hood's Merry Men
C. Knights of the Round Table D. The Three Musketeers
Answer and value
D. The Three Musketeers
Value: 15K
Bank: 54K
Question 8 - American Legends
According to folklore, what legendary character's giant footprints created Minnesota's 10,000 lakes?
A. Davy Crockett B. Paul Bunyan
C. Johnny Appleseed D. Daniel Boone

Answer and value
B. Paul Bunyan
Value: $500
Bank: $54500

Question 9 - Grave Manners
Arlington National Cemetery sits on land outside Washington, D.C. that once belonged to what famous American's wife?
A. Abraham Lincoln B. Ulysses S. Grant
C. Cornelius Vanderbilt D. Robert E. Lee
ATA
A- 7% B-22% C-31% D-40%
Answer and value
D. Robert E. Lee
Value: not shown
Bank: walk with $27250

Edited in the last answer

Re: Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Tue Nov 16, 2010 7:37 pm
by Bob78164
And the correct answer to Question 9? --Bob

Re: Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Tue Nov 16, 2010 8:22 pm
by SpacemanSpiff
Bob78164 wrote:And the correct answer to Question 9? --Bob
I can assure you it's
Spoiler
D. Robert E. Lee. The mansion on the high point on the grounds is the Lee-Custis Mansion, now called Arlington House.

Re: Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Wed Nov 17, 2010 12:35 pm
by earendel
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Ross Hewitt
New York, NY
Doctor
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 6 - Medical Terms
"Hypertension" is the technical term for what common medical condition?
A. Weight gain B. Difficulty breathing
C. Headache D. High blood pressure

Mere says if Ross gets this wrong, they will take his license away.
Ross is a doctor who has patients who take daily medication for this.
Answer and value
D. High blood pressure
Value: $3000
Bank: $39000
He also put in a plug for taking one's medications daily.
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 7 - Rallying Cries
The French phrase "Tous pour un, un pour tous" is the motto of what legendary fictional group?
A. Seven Dwarfs B. Robin Hood's Merry Men
C. Knights of the Round Table D. The Three Musketeers
Answer and value
D. The Three Musketeers
Value: 15K
Bank: 54K
His reasoning was mostly sound - he didn't think that the merry men or the knights were French, nor the dwarves, for that matter.
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 8 - American Legends
According to folklore, what legendary character's giant footprints created Minnesota's 10,000 lakes?
A. Davy Crockett B. Paul Bunyan
C. Johnny Appleseed D. Daniel Boone
Answer and value
B. Paul Bunyan
Value: $500
Bank: $54500
Except that Crockett, Appleseed and Boone aren't "legen...wait for it...dary."

Nihil obstatĀ® - I'd still have all lifelines available.

Re: Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Wed Nov 17, 2010 12:41 pm
by MarleysGh0st
earendel wrote:
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 7 - Rallying Cries
The French phrase "Tous pour un, un pour tous" is the motto of what legendary fictional group?
A. Seven Dwarfs B. Robin Hood's Merry Men
C. Knights of the Round Table D. The Three Musketeers
Answer and value
D. The Three Musketeers
Value: 15K
Bank: 54K
His reasoning was mostly sound - he didn't think that the merry men or the knights were French, nor the dwarves, for that matter.
If SyndieBAM weren't a family show, and if it weren't for that whole Disney thing, that would have been an interesting motto for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. :twisted:

Re: Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Wed Nov 17, 2010 2:20 pm
by andrewjackson
earendel wrote:
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Ross Hewitt
New York, NY
Doctor
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 6 - Medical Terms
"Hypertension" is the technical term for what common medical condition?
A. Weight gain B. Difficulty breathing
C. Headache D. High blood pressure

Mere says if Ross gets this wrong, they will take his license away.
Ross is a doctor who has patients who take daily medication for this.
Answer and value
D. High blood pressure
Value: $3000
Bank: $39000
He also put in a plug for taking one's medications daily.
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 7 - Rallying Cries
The French phrase "Tous pour un, un pour tous" is the motto of what legendary fictional group?
A. Seven Dwarfs B. Robin Hood's Merry Men
C. Knights of the Round Table D. The Three Musketeers
Answer and value
D. The Three Musketeers
Value: 15K
Bank: 54K
His reasoning was mostly sound - he didn't think that the merry men or the knights were French, nor the dwarves, for that matter.
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 8 - American Legends
According to folklore, what legendary character's giant footprints created Minnesota's 10,000 lakes?
A. Davy Crockett B. Paul Bunyan
C. Johnny Appleseed D. Daniel Boone
Answer and value
B. Paul Bunyan
Value: $500
Bank: $54500
Except that Crockett, Appleseed and Boone aren't "legen...wait for it...dary."

Nihil obstatĀ® - I'd still have all lifelines available.
Does legendary imply that the person is fictional? I don't think so. A real person can be legendary.

Re: Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Wed Nov 17, 2010 2:26 pm
by earendel
andrewjackson wrote: Does legendary imply that the person is fictional? I don't think so. A real person can be legendary.
I suppose it's a matter of semantics. I associate "legendary" with figures like Pecos Bill and Paul Bunyan, not historical figures like Boone and Crockett.

Re: Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Wed Nov 17, 2010 2:34 pm
by andrewjackson
earendel wrote:
andrewjackson wrote: Does legendary imply that the person is fictional? I don't think so. A real person can be legendary.
I suppose it's a matter of semantics. I associate "legendary" with figures like Pecos Bill and Paul Bunyan, not historical figures like Boone and Crockett.
I think that real people can be considered legendary if stories are told about them in a similar way to fictional historical characters. I would say that Johnny Appleseed, Daniel Boone, and Davy Crockett would fall into that category. There are lots of stories about those three that are unverifiable even though we know that they really existed.

Re: Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Wed Nov 17, 2010 4:07 pm
by ulysses5019
andrewjackson wrote:
earendel wrote:
andrewjackson wrote: Does legendary imply that the person is fictional? I don't think so. A real person can be legendary.
I suppose it's a matter of semantics. I associate "legendary" with figures like Pecos Bill and Paul Bunyan, not historical figures like Boone and Crockett.
I think that real people can be considered legendary if stories are told about them in a similar way to fictional historical characters. I would say that Johnny Appleseed, Daniel Boone, and Davy Crockett would fall into that category. There are lots of stories about those three that are unverifiable even though we know that they really existed.

You mean Davy Crockett never "Kilt him a b'ar when he was only three"?

Re: Transcript 11/16/2010 Ross Hewitt (carryover)

Posted: Wed Nov 17, 2010 6:34 pm
by Estonut
andrewjackson wrote:
earendel wrote:
andrewjackson wrote: Does legendary imply that the person is fictional? I don't think so. A real person can be legendary.
I suppose it's a matter of semantics. I associate "legendary" with figures like Pecos Bill and Paul Bunyan, not historical figures like Boone and Crockett.
I think that real people can be considered legendary if stories are told about them in a similar way to fictional historical characters. I would say that Johnny Appleseed, Daniel Boone, and Davy Crockett would fall into that category. There are lots of stories about those three that are unverifiable even though we know that they really existed.
Merriam-Webster agrees with aj on this one...