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Transcript 4/20/16 Adam Neill (audience contestant)

Posted: Fri Apr 22, 2016 4:07 pm
by BBTranscriptTeam
Adam Neill
Originally from Rockland County, N.Y.

$1,000
With over a million living there, many in the Liberdade district of Sao Paulo, what country is home to the most Japanese people outside of Japan?
A: Mexico B: Brazil
C: Chile D: Venezuela
Answer
B: Brazil
Chris pays Adam 50 Harriets (no, 10 Benjamins).

Re: Transcript 4/20/16 Adam Neill (audience contestant)

Posted: Fri Apr 22, 2016 4:34 pm
by jarnon
There was no tilde over the "a" in Sao. I think that was intentional, to make the question a bit harder.

Re: Transcript 4/20/16 Adam Neill (audience contestant)

Posted: Fri Apr 22, 2016 10:51 pm
by TheConfessor
jarnon wrote:There was no tilde over the "a" in Sao. I think that was intentional, to make the question a bit harder.
Either that, or because the U.S. version of WWTBAM is in English, not Portuguese. (I'm not a fan of occasional foreign alphabet letters and diacritics appearing in English language text. I know it happens increasingly often these days, but where do you draw the line?)

Re: Transcript 4/20/16 Adam Neill (audience contestant)

Posted: Sun Apr 24, 2016 3:28 am
by Estonut
TheConfessor wrote:
jarnon wrote:There was no tilde over the "a" in Sao. I think that was intentional, to make the question a bit harder.
Either that, or because the U.S. version of WWTBAM is in English, not Portuguese. (I'm not a fan of occasional foreign alphabet letters and diacritics appearing in English language text. I know it happens increasingly often these days, but where do you draw the line?)
Draw it above the "a," like jarnon said. :)

Re: Transcript 4/20/16 Adam Neill (audience contestant)

Posted: Sun Apr 24, 2016 7:28 am
by MarleysGh0st
Estonut wrote:Draw it above the "a," like jarnon said. :)
Where's the rec button? :lol:



And getting back to the audience question, Adam seemed lucky to stumble onto the correct answer. He said he thought that the Brazilians spelled their city names differently, but he never recognized--out loud, at least--that Sao (or São) Paulo is spelled differently than the Spanish "San Pablo".