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Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Fri Jul 26, 2013 12:26 pm
by etaoin22
here's the game on CHOM-FM in Mtl, and they say ask your friends for help......
The name of a defunct man is sought. Each day a listener can ask a question and make a guess. They've been asking and guessing for 31 days.
the dead guy is an American inventor born in the US in the 1800's
but not:
entertainer, baseball player,entrepreneur vowel for first letter of first name or m for first letter of lastname, producer of firearms, same last name as a tire company, US President, C for first letter of first name, african-american, chemist, or father-in-law of a Beatle, and did not die in the 1800's
Did not invent telephone, superglue, something computer-related,multi-track recording, anything food-related, rotary printing press, barcode, beverage, hubble telescope, zipper, slinky, musicl instruments, coca-cola or blue jeans.
Not JFK, Malcolm X, Bill Davidson, Abraham Lincoln, THomas Edison, Benjamin Franklin, Wilbur Wright, Henry Ford, Granville T. Woods, Willis Carrier, Albert Einstein, Jonas Salk, Robert Fulton, Larry Hagman, Herb Peterson, Richard Drew, David Kearns, Edward Goodrich Acheson, Thomas Midgley, Jr, Joh Deere, Frank Zamboni, Raymond Dewalt, Jacob Davis, Seth Wheeler, Percy Spencer, James Wright, John DeLorean, Charles Goodyear, Levi Strauss, John S. Thurman, or Lewis Waterman.
I think the entire listenership of the radio station has been through the wiki of American inventors and ain't found it yet.
For two tickets to see Kiss FWIW, I will try to be the ninth caller in an hour and report back.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Fri Jul 26, 2013 1:01 pm
by ksbirchtree
SWAG - George Washington Carver?
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope 13-07-26
Posted: Fri Jul 26, 2013 2:05 pm
by etaoin22
today's game report: Friday July 26, 2012
I do not get through: (not even to hear "try again"")
Caller from Ville-St-Laurent asks;
Did the dead guy invent the escalator?
Answer:
No.
Caller sounds discombubulated.
His dead guy guess:
Les Paul:
No.
Day 33 of game on Monday July 29.
(1) Contestant was probably going to guess Charles Seeberger, who was one of various inventors with similar patents, coined "escalator" as a trademark, and sold out to the Otis company, so he was not an entrepreneur.
http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inven ... alator.htm
(2) Some weeks ago I had Les Paul or Fender from the Fender Bass as my best guesses, but musical instrument inventors have between then and now been ruled out.
(NB my current best guess is Robert Goddard of liquid fuel rocket fame and my backup would be Birdsill Holly the inventor of the fire hydrant.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Fri Jul 26, 2013 2:11 pm
by elwoodblues
On a hunch I tried to look up the inventor of the adding machine and found this obscure name that seems to fit the criteria:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorr_Felt
(Unless he is considered an entrepreneur.)
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Sat Jul 27, 2013 7:36 am
by Bob Juch
ksbirchtree wrote:SWAG - George Washington Carver?
Not "food related" throws that out.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Sat Jul 27, 2013 7:38 am
by Bob Juch
Bob Juch wrote:ksbirchtree wrote:SWAG - George Washington Carver?
Not "food related" throws that out.
As does "not C for first letter of last name."
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 3:32 pm
by tanstaafl2
Is it always a man? Or did a question clarify that already?
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 10:49 pm
by etaoin22
tanstaafl2 wrote:Is it always a man? Or did a question clarify that already?
yeah, the DJ who runs the contest refers to the dead guy not only as a guy, but as he, and all previous rounds have been real 'he"'s.
the station FWIW trends towards a male listenership not that TAWWT. the estrogeny station from the same company is down the hall and a little bit down the FM-band
the game is locally generated, AFAIK, and is not dependent on syndicated question material (unlike the execrable "Morning Impossible Question" promos heard across North America)
The dead guys are likely to be people one might have heard of in Montreal, and not only from Googling, and he DJ who runs the contest is good but not perfect in his knowledge.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 6:00 am
by mrkelley23
Think my next guess would be Richard Drew, who invented masking tape and Scotch tape.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 7:25 am
by littlebeast13
The title of this thread is just a little creepy...
lb13
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 8:32 am
by christie1111
Found it!
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 9:51 pm
by etaoin22
littlebeast13 wrote:The title of this thread is just a little creepy...
lb13
which made me research...
and come up with this....
the title has been used for somewhat different guessing or trivia games on different radio stations, sp evidently it is not a copyrighted or syndicated game. It has been done on WCBS-FM as a kind of 20 questions game with multiple callers on a single day. As opposed to a 1 question per day game....
When I searched, omeone''s blog came up on Google, who mucked up the "DGIAE" game on WCBS by forgetting he intended to say "Ronnie Van Zandt", but then got through on a completely different "caller 11 wins" game to get Rick Springfield tickets. The blogger said he "should have been prepared" because he was "the brother of one of the two persons to miss the first question on Millionaire."
http://delkytlar.livejournal.com/117347.html
Sound familiar??
NB I didn;t call today cause I couldn;t use tickets for tonight had I won. The caller failed. I will post in AM.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 11:20 pm
by silvercamaro
etaoin22 wrote:
The blogger said he "should have been prepared" because he was "the brother of one of the two persons to miss the first question on Millionaire."
Sound familiar??
His brother is Brian Fodera, who couldn't remember what Little Jack Horner pulled out of a pie.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Tue Jul 30, 2013 12:52 am
by TheConfessor
silvercamaro wrote:etaoin22 wrote:
The blogger said he "should have been prepared" because he was "the brother of one of the two persons to miss the first question on Millionaire."
Sound familiar??
His brother is Brian Fodera, who couldn't remember what Little Jack Horner pulled out of a pie.
I expect to see Brian next week at TCONA in Las Vegas. He's actually a smart guy who can hold his own against pretty strong competition. I think almost all of the top winners in U.S. game show history will be there this year, plus a few top foreigners.
http://www.tcona.com/
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Wed Aug 07, 2013 11:24 am
by SportsFan68
etaoin22 wrote:littlebeast13 wrote:The title of this thread is just a little creepy...
lb13
which made me research...
and come up with this....
the title has been used for somewhat different guessing or trivia games on different radio stations, sp evidently it is not a copyrighted or syndicated game. It has been done on WCBS-FM as a kind of 20 questions game with multiple callers on a single day. As opposed to a 1 question per day game....
When I searched, omeone''s blog came up on Google, who mucked up the "DGIAE" game on WCBS by forgetting he intended to say "Ronnie Van Zandt", but then got through on a completely different "caller 11 wins" game to get Rick Springfield tickets. The blogger said he "should have been prepared" because he was "the brother of one of the two persons to miss the first question on Millionaire."
http://delkytlar.livejournal.com/117347.html
Sound familiar??
NB I didn;t call today cause I couldn;t use tickets for tonight had I won. The caller failed. I will post in AM.
So who was the dead guy?
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Fri Aug 16, 2013 10:37 am
by etaoin22
lets update.
the answer is still uncertain.
However, contestant after contestant has chosen progressively lesser-known Americans and lesser known inventions -- one-hit intellectual wonders -- without success. I sorta lost interest. However...
The major host, Bilal Butt, who set the game is off x 2 weeks, with this being the last day for substitute afternoon jock Sharon Hyland. She has been warning us to "look between the lines' and not just at invention. And facts now known in addition to what I previously posted are that the dead guy had something to do with electricity, invented more than one thing, died after 1950, and is not in the Inventors' Hall of Fame (but probably should be, said Ms. Hyland).
I am wondering if Bilal looked out of the window in the (relatively new) CHOM studios in the east end to the islands to see the ruins of the old American Pavilion from Expo 67 aka Biosphere. i dunno if it IS visible from there, but it might be.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Fri Aug 16, 2013 12:24 pm
by Bob Juch
How about Gano Dunn?
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Fri Aug 16, 2013 3:07 pm
by etaoin22
Bob Juch wrote:How about Gano Dunn?
That is a great guess, but I am 99.9% convinced it is Bucky Fuller, remembered in Montreal due to Expo 67, and the American Pavilion.
I heard Fuller speak in Ottawa at the opening of one of the major buildings on the Carleton U. campus, probably the Student Union, although it might have been Architecture. Din't understand a durn thing he was getting at.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Fri Aug 16, 2013 3:15 pm
by Bob Juch
etaoin22 wrote:Bob Juch wrote:How about Gano Dunn?
That is a great guess, but I am 99.9% convinced it is Bucky Fuller, remembered in Montreal due to Expo 67, and the American Pavilion.
I heard Fuller speak in Ottawa at the opening of one of the major buildings on the Carleton U. campus, probably the Student Union, although it might have been Architecture. Din't understand a durn thing he was getting at.
But what did he do with electricity?
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Sat Aug 17, 2013 1:25 am
by etaoin22
Bob Juch wrote:etaoin22 wrote:Bob Juch wrote:How about Gano Dunn?
That is a great guess, but I am 99.9% convinced it is Bucky Fuller, remembered in Montreal due to Expo 67, and the American Pavilion.
I heard Fuller speak in Ottawa at the opening of one of the major buildings on the Carleton U. campus, probably the Student Union, although it might have been Architecture. Din't understand a durn thing he was getting at.
But what did he do with electricity?
advised strongly against the use of fossil fuel derived transportation and electricity generation, and developed maps of potential renewable sources. estimated the true cost of a gallon of gas to be a million dollars.
Re: Dead Guy In An Envelope
Posted: Sat Aug 17, 2013 7:08 am
by littlebeast13
etaoin22 wrote:estimated the true cost of a gallon of gas to be a million dollars.
Before long, that's going to sound like a bargain....
lb13