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Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2011 4:13 pm
by BBTranscriptTeam
Chris Zehnder
Shamong, NJ

Chris starts on question 5 with $40,000 in his bank. He has 1 jump the question and his ask the audience lifelines remaining. Unrandomized Topic Tree remains unrevealed.

Topic Tree: (Randomized)

?: Lead Through Adversity
?: Literary Dads
?: Medical Procedures
?: Party Pooper
?: Local Attractions
?: Self Portraits
?: $25,000 (Sensational Shirt)
?: $10,000 (Solve the Puzzle)
?: Jumped ($15,000, Eat Your Words)
?: $5,000 (Hive Mind)

Question 5 - Level ?: Self Portraits


What musician painted his self portrait for the cover of his 1970 album "Self Portrait"?

A: Ringo Starr B: Rod Stewart
C: James Taylor D: Bob Dylan

Chris asks the audience
Spoiler
A: 17%
B: 9%
C: 14%
D: 60%
Chris goes with the audience.
Answer and value
D: Bob Dylan
Value: $3,000
Bank: $$43,000
Question 6 - Level ?: Local Attractions


Action junkies should check out the Spud Town Knockdown, a roller derby competition held in what U.S. state capital?

A: Boise B: Little Rock
C: Des Moines D: Nashville
Spoiler
Chris sees a potato reference there...
Answer and value
A: Boise
Value: $7,000
Bank: $$50,000
Question 7 - Level ?: Party Pooper


Though you wouldn't want to mention it at a holiday party, what plant name is thought to derive from the term "dung-on-a-twig"?

A: Poinsettia B: Conifer
C: Holly D: Mistletoe

His instinct says
Spoiler
D
. But he changes his mind and jumps the question.
Answer and value
D: Mistletoe
Value: $1,000
Bank: $50,000
Question 8 - Level ?: Medical Procedures


Patients who are claustrophobic are most likely to avoid which of these medical procedures?

A: Ultrasound B: MRI
C: X-ray D: Biopsy
Answer and value
B: MRI
Value: $100
Bank: $50,100
Commercial break.

Question 9- Level ?: Literary Dads


What is the occupation of Atticus Finch, patriarch of the family featured in the classic novel "To Kill a Mockingbird?

A: Shopkeeper B: Doctor
C: Lawyer D: Farmer

He's read the book and seen the movie a couple of times. He loves questions like this.
Answer and value
C: Lawyer (He also knows Gregory Peck played him in the movie.)
Value: $500
Bank: $50,600
Question 10 - Level ?: Lead Through Adversity


Which of these world leaders suffered from depression, and famously refered to it as his "black dog"?

A: Charles de Gaulle B: Vladimir Lenin
C: Winston Churchill D: Mahatma Gandhi

He had
Spoiler
Winston Churchill
in mind before the answers came up. He wants to get his entire bank, so he's gonna gamble.
Spoiler
C
, final answer.
Answer and value
C: Winston Churchill
Value: $2,000
Bank: $52,600
CLASSIC MILLIONAIRE

Question 11 - $100K

So hot it's surrounded by cooling pipes, one of the world's most power supercomputers is being built with what serene name?

A: Blue Waters B: Calm Night
C: Bright Sky D: Evening Primrose
Spoiler
He's leaning toward Calm Night.
It pains him to walk but he's going to have to.
Answer
A: Blue Waters
Chris wins $52,600.

Commercial Break

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2011 6:42 pm
by MarleysGh0st
If Chris had more courage to go with his hunches, he'd have won some serious money!

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 1:45 am
by Estonut
MarleysGh0st wrote:If Chris had more courage to go with his hunches, he'd have won some serious money!
But if he'd gone with his last one, he would have left with $25K.

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 4:54 am
by peacock2121
Estonut wrote:
MarleysGh0st wrote:If Chris had more courage to go with his hunches, he'd have won some serious money!
But if he'd gone with his last one, he would have left with $25K.
You gotta love nit pickers.

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 5:17 am
by earendel
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Chris Zehnder
Shamong, NJ
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 7 - Level ?: Party Pooper

Though you wouldn't want to mention it at a holiday party, what plant name is thought to derive from the term "dung-on-a-twig"?

A: Poinsettia B: Conifer
C: Holly D: Mistletoe

His instinct says
Spoiler
D
. But he changes his mind and jumps the question.
Answer and value
D: Mistletoe
Value: $1,000
Bank: $50,000
It's not A because they're named for a U.S. diplomat. It's not C because "conifer" isn't a plant, it's a category. From the comfort of my recliner I guessed correctly; at the Hot Podium I'd have gone with D but with a certain amount of trepidation.
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 11 - $100K

So hot it's surrounded by cooling pipes, one of the world's most power supercomputers is being built with what serene name?

A: Blue Waters B: Calm Night
C: Bright Sky D: Evening Primrose
Spoiler
He's leaning toward Calm Night.
It pains him to walk but he's going to have to.
Answer
A: Blue Waters
The association with "Deep Blue" was a good one but I was leaning toward "Bright Sky" thinking that it might have something to do with astronomy. At the Hot Podium I'd have used a JTQ.

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 6:57 am
by MarleysGh0st
earendel wrote:
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Chris Zehnder
Shamong, NJ
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 7 - Level ?: Party Pooper

Though you wouldn't want to mention it at a holiday party, what plant name is thought to derive from the term "dung-on-a-twig"?

A: Poinsettia B: Conifer
C: Holly D: Mistletoe

His instinct says
Spoiler
D
. But he changes his mind and jumps the question.
Answer and value
D: Mistletoe
Value: $1,000
Bank: $50,000
It's not A because they're named for a U.S. diplomat. It's not C because "conifer" isn't a plant, it's a category. From the comfort of my recliner I guessed correctly; at the Hot Podium I'd have gone with D but with a certain amount of trepidation.
If you remember that mistletoe is a parasite that grows on tree branches, it's logical. And in trying to guess what the Old English or Anglo-Saxon origin for the word was, I remembered that in German, "mist" means "manure."

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 7:25 am
by ulysses5019
MarleysGh0st wrote:
earendel wrote:
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Chris Zehnder
Shamong, NJ
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 7 - Level ?: Party Pooper

Though you wouldn't want to mention it at a holiday party, what plant name is thought to derive from the term "dung-on-a-twig"?

A: Poinsettia B: Conifer
C: Holly D: Mistletoe

His instinct says
Spoiler
D
. But he changes his mind and jumps the question.
Answer and value
D: Mistletoe
Value: $1,000
Bank: $50,000
It's not A because they're named for a U.S. diplomat. It's not C because "conifer" isn't a plant, it's a category. From the comfort of my recliner I guessed correctly; at the Hot Podium I'd have gone with D but with a certain amount of trepidation.
If you remember that mistletoe is a parasite that grows on tree branches, it's logical. And in trying to guess what the Old English or Anglo-Saxon origin for the word was, I remembered that in German, "mist" means "manure."

Smile when you say that mister.

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 9:05 am
by earendel
MarleysGh0st wrote:
earendel wrote:
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Chris Zehnder
Shamong, NJ
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 7 - Level ?: Party Pooper

Though you wouldn't want to mention it at a holiday party, what plant name is thought to derive from the term "dung-on-a-twig"?

A: Poinsettia B: Conifer
C: Holly D: Mistletoe

His instinct says
Spoiler
D
. But he changes his mind and jumps the question.
Answer and value
D: Mistletoe
Value: $1,000
Bank: $50,000
It's not A because they're named for a U.S. diplomat. It's not C because "conifer" isn't a plant, it's a category. From the comfort of my recliner I guessed correctly; at the Hot Podium I'd have gone with D but with a certain amount of trepidation.
If you remember that mistletoe is a parasite that grows on tree branches, it's logical. And in trying to guess what the Old English or Anglo-Saxon origin for the word was, I remembered that in German, "mist" means "manure."
I grew up in Oklahoma and back then the state "flower" was mistletoe, so I learned a lot about it. Plus in the 1st and 2nd editions of Dungeons and Dragons druid characters had to harvest mistletoe for spell components. I should have remembered the German connection.

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 9:56 am
by elwoodblues
earendel wrote:I grew up in Oklahoma and back then the state "flower" was mistletoe, so I learned a lot about it. Plus in the 1st and 2nd editions of Dungeons and Dragons druid characters had to harvest mistletoe for spell components. I should have remembered the German connection.
That is probably the only time Dungeons and Dragons players ever get to use mistletoe.

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 10:09 am
by earendel
elwoodblues wrote:
earendel wrote:I grew up in Oklahoma and back then the state "flower" was mistletoe, so I learned a lot about it. Plus in the 1st and 2nd editions of Dungeons and Dragons druid characters had to harvest mistletoe for spell components. I should have remembered the German connection.
That is probably the only time Dungeons and Dragons players ever get to use mistletoe.
Hey! I'll have you know that in my group there are four married couples.

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover contestant)

Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 3:07 pm
by Estonut
peacock2121 wrote:
Estonut wrote:
MarleysGh0st wrote:If Chris had more courage to go with his hunches, he'd have won some serious money!
But if he'd gone with his last one, he would have left with $25K.
You gotta love nit pickers.
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
~Inigo Montoya

My pointing out to you that it's one word, not two, is nitpicking. :)

My pointing out the error in Marley's assertion is not nitpicking.

nit·pick
verb (used without object)
1.to be excessively concerned with or critical of inconsequential details.

verb (used with object)
2.to criticize by focusing on inconsequential details.

Re: Transcript 10/26/2011 Chris Zehnder (carryover

Posted: Fri Oct 28, 2011 1:41 am
by Bob78164
MarleysGh0st wrote:
earendel wrote:
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Chris Zehnder
Shamong, NJ
BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Question 7 - Level ?: Party Pooper

Though you wouldn't want to mention it at a holiday party, what plant name is thought to derive from the term "dung-on-a-twig"?

A: Poinsettia B: Conifer
C: Holly D: Mistletoe

His instinct says
Spoiler
D
. But he changes his mind and jumps the question.
Answer and value
D: Mistletoe
Value: $1,000
Bank: $50,000
It's not A because they're named for a U.S. diplomat. It's not C because "conifer" isn't a plant, it's a category. From the comfort of my recliner I guessed correctly; at the Hot Podium I'd have gone with D but with a certain amount of trepidation.
If you remember that mistletoe is a parasite that grows on tree branches, it's logical. And in trying to guess what the Old English or Anglo-Saxon origin for the word was, I remembered that in German, "mist" means "manure."
To remember that, you have to have known it in the first place.

I got it by eliminating the other three choices as ear did, but that's always less comfortable than positive knowledge. --Bob