Transcript 10/24/2007 - Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
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- Keeper of the Transcripts
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Transcript 10/24/2007 - Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
Claremore, OK
Carole is a former federal law clerk. Her two sons are named Truman and Carter and her husband is a state senator from Oklahoma. She did a whole lot of door-knocking during the blistering heat to help her husband get elected.
$300 – If three blind mice each commit seven deadly sins, how many total sins have the mice committed?
A - 9
B - 21
C - 27
D – 49
$500 – What U.S. landmark bears a plaque that reads, “I lift my lamp beside the golden door”?
A – Niagara Falls
B – Statue of Liberty
C – Hoover Dam
D – Washington Monument
$1K – If it included the main character’s real-life surname, what would be the title of the sitcom “According to Jim”?
A – According to Jim Carrey
B – According to Jim Gandolfini
C – According to Jim Belushi
D – According to Jim Broadbent
$2K – According to cooking pros, which of these foods is “done” when a toothpick stuck into its center comes out clean?
A – roast turkey
B – sponge cake
C – Porterhouse steak
D – poached egg
Carole isn’t much of a cook although she tries.
$4K – The Great St. Bernard Pass, where St. Bernard dogs once gave aid to travelers, is found in what mountain range?
A – Himalayas
B – Andes
C – Alps
D – Urals
$8K – Which of these precious materials is a form of resin?
A – amber
B – pearl
C – jade
D – turquoise
Carole has an inkling but nothing made her heart beat fast like her husband does so she decides to ask the audience.
ATA results
A – 79%
B – 6%
C – 10%
D – 5%
Carole says she was thinking “amber” but there are those little dots on turquoise.
$16K – ILM, the special effects company founded by George Lucas, is an abbreviation that stands for “Industrial Light and” what?
A – Movies
B – Media
C – Motion
D – Magic
Carole doesn’t hesitate on this one.
Commercial break
Carole is a stay-at-home mom and a smart lady.
$25K – In 1865, the U.S. Secret Service was created specifically to combat what?
A – counterfeiting of money
B – foreign spying
C – government corruption
D – illegal immigration
Carole isn’t positive about this but has a good feeling that her phone-a-friend lifeline will know it. She asks to call Brad.
Brad asks to have the choices repeated, leaving 8 seconds. He finally says, “counterfeit currency, I’m sure of it.” Carole goes with his answer because he’s a “supergenius”.
Carole does a little disco dance in the Hot Seat – hand gestures only.
$50K – Edouard de Stoeckl is best known for doing what?
A – discovering silicon
B – assassinating James Garfield
C – selling Alaska to the U.S.
D – inventing cotton candy
Carole knows that Russia sold Alaska and Edouard sounds French. She decides to switch the question.
$50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
Carole asks for the 50/50, leaving A and D. She decides to pick the answer based on how she chooses football and baseball teams – on the uniforms they wear. For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
Commercial break
Her phone a friend was a Rhodes Scholar and former congressman, then Carole uses some sort of logic to get the answer to the question based on how to pick sports teams.
$100K – The ‘90s hit “Macarena” tells the story of a feisty woman who cheats on her boyfriend, a man named what?
A – Baldomero
B – Vitorino
C – Casimiro
D – Marcelino
Carole is leaning toward one. Meredith asks if it’s based on the same rationale as before. Carole says it’s not the one she likes more and thinks she has a “body memory” of one of the names. She starts to give an answer and then decides to take the money. Meredith asks her which one she was leaning toward. Carole says, “Vitorino”.
ANSWERS:
$300 – B (21)
$500 – B (Statue of Liberty)
$1K – C (According to Jim Belushi)
$2K – B (sponge cake)
$4K – C (Alps)
$8K – A (amber)
$16K – D (Magic)
$25K – A (counterfeiting of money)
$50K – C (selling Alaska to the U.S.)
$50K (STQ) – A (Fred Holye)
$100K – B (Vitorino)
Claremore, OK
Carole is a former federal law clerk. Her two sons are named Truman and Carter and her husband is a state senator from Oklahoma. She did a whole lot of door-knocking during the blistering heat to help her husband get elected.
$300 – If three blind mice each commit seven deadly sins, how many total sins have the mice committed?
A - 9
B - 21
C - 27
D – 49
$500 – What U.S. landmark bears a plaque that reads, “I lift my lamp beside the golden door”?
A – Niagara Falls
B – Statue of Liberty
C – Hoover Dam
D – Washington Monument
$1K – If it included the main character’s real-life surname, what would be the title of the sitcom “According to Jim”?
A – According to Jim Carrey
B – According to Jim Gandolfini
C – According to Jim Belushi
D – According to Jim Broadbent
$2K – According to cooking pros, which of these foods is “done” when a toothpick stuck into its center comes out clean?
A – roast turkey
B – sponge cake
C – Porterhouse steak
D – poached egg
Carole isn’t much of a cook although she tries.
$4K – The Great St. Bernard Pass, where St. Bernard dogs once gave aid to travelers, is found in what mountain range?
A – Himalayas
B – Andes
C – Alps
D – Urals
$8K – Which of these precious materials is a form of resin?
A – amber
B – pearl
C – jade
D – turquoise
Carole has an inkling but nothing made her heart beat fast like her husband does so she decides to ask the audience.
ATA results
A – 79%
B – 6%
C – 10%
D – 5%
Carole says she was thinking “amber” but there are those little dots on turquoise.
$16K – ILM, the special effects company founded by George Lucas, is an abbreviation that stands for “Industrial Light and” what?
A – Movies
B – Media
C – Motion
D – Magic
Carole doesn’t hesitate on this one.
Commercial break
Carole is a stay-at-home mom and a smart lady.
$25K – In 1865, the U.S. Secret Service was created specifically to combat what?
A – counterfeiting of money
B – foreign spying
C – government corruption
D – illegal immigration
Carole isn’t positive about this but has a good feeling that her phone-a-friend lifeline will know it. She asks to call Brad.
Brad asks to have the choices repeated, leaving 8 seconds. He finally says, “counterfeit currency, I’m sure of it.” Carole goes with his answer because he’s a “supergenius”.
Carole does a little disco dance in the Hot Seat – hand gestures only.
$50K – Edouard de Stoeckl is best known for doing what?
A – discovering silicon
B – assassinating James Garfield
C – selling Alaska to the U.S.
D – inventing cotton candy
Carole knows that Russia sold Alaska and Edouard sounds French. She decides to switch the question.
$50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
Carole asks for the 50/50, leaving A and D. She decides to pick the answer based on how she chooses football and baseball teams – on the uniforms they wear. For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
Commercial break
Her phone a friend was a Rhodes Scholar and former congressman, then Carole uses some sort of logic to get the answer to the question based on how to pick sports teams.
$100K – The ‘90s hit “Macarena” tells the story of a feisty woman who cheats on her boyfriend, a man named what?
A – Baldomero
B – Vitorino
C – Casimiro
D – Marcelino
Carole is leaning toward one. Meredith asks if it’s based on the same rationale as before. Carole says it’s not the one she likes more and thinks she has a “body memory” of one of the names. She starts to give an answer and then decides to take the money. Meredith asks her which one she was leaning toward. Carole says, “Vitorino”.
ANSWERS:
$300 – B (21)
$500 – B (Statue of Liberty)
$1K – C (According to Jim Belushi)
$2K – B (sponge cake)
$4K – C (Alps)
$8K – A (amber)
$16K – D (Magic)
$25K – A (counterfeiting of money)
$50K – C (selling Alaska to the U.S.)
$50K (STQ) – A (Fred Holye)
$100K – B (Vitorino)
- earendel
- Posts: 13715
- Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2007 5:25 am
- Location: mired in the bureaucracy
Re: Transcript 10/24/2007 - Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
I watched Carole's performance with much interest after the "conversation" with the Neanderthal yesterday (no offense to any cave men out there )BBTranscriptTeam wrote: Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
Claremore, OK
When this question appeared I started laughing and had to explain to elwing about the discussion regarding intelligence. In one of my messages I posted that there were very few pure math questions on BAM, and here one turns up.BBTranscriptTeam wrote:$300 – If three blind mice each commit seven deadly sins, how many total sins have the mice committed?
A - 9
B - 21
C - 27
D – 49
It's a shame she didn't go with her inkling. She mentions the little specks on turquoise as the reason why she wasn't completely sure.BBTranscriptTeam wrote: $8K – Which of these precious materials is a form of resin?
A – amber
B – pearl
C – jade
D – turquoise
Carole has an inkling but nothing made her heart beat fast like her husband does so she decides to ask the audience.
I'm not sure why I knew this, except that I recall that the Secret Service is part of the Department of the Treasury.BBTranscriptTeam wrote: $25K – In 1865, the U.S. Secret Service was created specifically to combat what?
A – counterfeiting of money
B – foreign spying
C – government corruption
D – illegal immigration
Am I the only one who heard Wile E. Coyote's voice here?BBTranscriptTeam wrote: Brad asks to have the choices repeated, leaving 8 seconds. He finally says, “counterfeit currency, I’m sure of it.” Carole goes with his answer because he’s a “supergenius”.
I knew that Berzelius discovered silicon and Guiteau shot Garfield, so that leaves only two answers. Figuring that the 50/50 would leave the two that I don't know, I'd skip that and go to a Google PAF. I agree that Edouard sounds French.BBTranscriptTeam wrote: $50K – Edouard de Stoeckl is best known for doing what?
A – discovering silicon
B – assassinating James Garfield
C – selling Alaska to the U.S.
D – inventing cotton candy
Carole knows that Russia sold Alaska and Edouard sounds French. She decides to switch the question.
Anyone who says that women aren't risk-takers should be required to watch Carole. She went for it, a gutsy move based on a hunch. I knew the answer before the choices were revealed.BBTranscriptTeam wrote:$50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
Carole asks for the 50/50, leaving A and D. She decides to pick the answer based on how she chooses football and baseball teams – on the uniforms they wear. For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
I had no idea, and this just might be the time that holding the ATA would pay off. That's what I would have used, hoping for the best.BBTranscriptTeam wrote:$100K – The ‘90s hit “Macarena” tells the story of a feisty woman who cheats on her boyfriend, a man named what?
A – Baldomero
B – Vitorino
C – Casimiro
D – Marcelino
Carole is leaning toward one. Meredith asks if it’s based on the same rationale as before. Carole says it’s not the one she likes more and thinks she has a “body memory” of one of the names. She starts to give an answer and then decides to take the money. Meredith asks her which one she was leaning toward. Carole says, “Vitorino”.
TruCarMa, you had a great run - I hope you'll come by and tell us about it.
"Elen sila lumenn omentielvo...A star shines on the hour of our meeting."
- MarleysGh0st
- Posts: 27950
- Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 10:55 am
- Location: Elsewhere
Re: Transcript 10/24/2007 - Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
Congratulations, Truman and Carter's Ma!BBTranscriptTeam wrote: Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
Claremore, OK
Did she say that or say that her heart was beating fast from the last question? If the latter, too bad you couldn't take a deep breath and dismiss the Hotseatitis.BBTranscriptTeam wrote: $8K – Which of these precious materials is a form of resin?
A – amber
B – pearl
C – jade
D – turquoise
Carole has an inkling but nothing made her heart beat fast like her husband does so she decides to ask the audience.
Uh oh. More data for SOX.BBTranscriptTeam wrote: $25K – In 1865, the U.S. Secret Service was created specifically to combat what?
A – counterfeiting of money
B – foreign spying
C – government corruption
D – illegal immigration
Carole isn’t positive about this but has a good feeling that her phone-a-friend lifeline will know it. She asks to call Brad.
I knew the Secret Service investigated conterfeiting. The 1865 timing had a little of me questioning choice B, in relation to the Civil War. They mostly outsourced that job to the Pinkertons, IIRC, who spectacularly overestimated the Confederate forces at key points, like during th Peninsular Campaign.
Is de Stoeckl's name ever mentioned in U.S. history lessons about this? An undervalued question, IMHO.BBTranscriptTeam wrote: $50K – Edouard de Stoeckl is best known for doing what?
A – discovering silicon
B – assassinating James Garfield
C – selling Alaska to the U.S.
D – inventing cotton candy
Carole knows that Russia sold Alaska and Edouard sounds French. She decides to switch the question.
Fred Hoyle has also written some science fiction. I think I might have heard of his connection with the Big Bang, but it was too vague a hunch to go with, except if it was a 50/50 situation, like here.BBTranscriptTeam wrote: $50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
Carole asks for the 50/50, leaving A and D. She decides to pick the answer based on how she chooses football and baseball teams – on the uniforms they wear. For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
All the lyrics in this song are unintelligible mumbles in my memory, except for the "Hey, Macarena!" part.BBTranscriptTeam wrote:$100K – The ‘90s hit “Macarena” tells the story of a feisty woman who cheats on her boyfriend, a man named what?
A – Baldomero
B – Vitorino
C – Casimiro
D – Marcelino
- earendel
- Posts: 13715
- Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2007 5:25 am
- Location: mired in the bureaucracy
Re: Transcript 10/24/2007 - Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
I don't think so, or at least I don't recall it being mentioned.MarleysGh0st wrote:Is de Stoeckl's name ever mentioned in U.S. history lessons about this? An undervalued question, IMHO.
He wrote the classic October the First is too Late and A for Andromeda but those are the only ones I know of.[/i]MarleysGh0st wrote:Fred Hoyle has also written some science fiction. I think I might have heard of his connection with the Big Bang, but it was too vague a hunch to go with, except if it was a 50/50 situation, like here.
"Elen sila lumenn omentielvo...A star shines on the hour of our meeting."
- MyBigFatFabulousBrain
- Merry Man
- Posts: 38
- Joined: Wed Oct 10, 2007 5:40 am
- Location: Surrounded by dumbasses
Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
Claremore, OK
Carole is a former federal law clerk. Her two sons are named Truman and Carter and her husband is a state senator from Oklahoma.
Why not Nixon? Or Coolidge? Or Taft?
She did a whole lot of door-knocking during the blistering heat to help her husband get elected.
Yeah, but you probably got a nice breeze from all those doors slamming in your face. I'm not as kind and considerate to visitors as I am to the contestants on this show...
$300 – If three blind mice each commit seven deadly sins, how many total sins have the mice committed?
A - 9
B - 21
C - 27
D – 49
Since when did this show become "Are you Smarter Than a Retard?" Questions about visually impaired sinning mice may very well mark another low in this show's Marianas Trench history...
$500 – What U.S. landmark bears a plaque that reads, “I lift my lamp beside the golden door”?
A – Niagara Falls
B – Statue of Liberty
C – Hoover Dam
D – Washington Monument
$1K – If it included the main character’s real-life surname, what would be the title of the sitcom “According to Jim”?
A – According to Jim Carrey
B – According to Jim Gandolfini
C – According to Jim Belushi
D – According to Jim Broadbent
$2K – According to cooking pros, which of these foods is “done” when a toothpick stuck into its center comes out clean?
A – roast turkey
B – sponge cake
C – Porterhouse steak
D – poached egg
Carole isn’t much of a cook although she tries.
At least you're not like the other contestants who'd be saying they're not much of a trivia whiz. And exactly whose toothpick are we sticking in this food? That's the kind of stuff that gets truck stop restaurants shut down...
$4K – The Great St. Bernard Pass, where St. Bernard dogs once gave aid to travelers, is found in what mountain range?
A – Himalayas
B – Andes
C – Alps
D – Urals
Be on the lookout for llamas...
$8K – Which of these precious materials is a form of resin?
A – amber
B – pearl
C – jade
D – turquoise
Carole has an inkling but nothing made her heart beat fast like her husband does so she decides to ask the audience.
Um.... what? What makes your heart beat fast is not a topic for discussion on a game show, unless it's The Newlywed Game... and I don't see Bob Eubank sitting across from you.
ATA results
A – 79%
B – 6%
C – 10%
D – 5%
Carole says she was thinking “amber” but there are those little dots on turquoise.
There are little numbered dots in my Spokesman's activity book, but that doesn't mean it's made out of resin....
$16K – ILM, the special effects company founded by George Lucas, is an abbreviation that stands for “Industrial Light and” what?
A – Movies
B – Media
C – Motion
D – Magic
Carole doesn’t hesitate on this one.
You mean it doesn't stand for Merchandising?
Carole is a stay-at-home mom and a smart lady.
Oh, who are you trying to kid? My buddy the Sox Guru says that all women are idiots, and he presented a lot of reliable data he found written above the urinals at Hooters to prove his case. If he ever scrape up enough money to write his book, he can quit slaving his life away at McDonalds for that brutal female shift manager who keeps making him clean out the french fryer...
$25K – In 1865, the U.S. Secret Service was created specifically to combat what?
A – counterfeiting of money
B – foreign spying
C – government corruption
D – illegal immigration
Yeah, but where were they for Lincoln?
Carole isn’t positive about this but has a good feeling that her phone-a-friend lifeline will know it. She asks to call Brad.
Brad asks to have the choices repeated, leaving 8 seconds. He finally says, “counterfeit currency, I’m sure of it.” Carole goes with his answer because he’s a “supergenius”.
Whoa, whoa, Carole! Don't just go throwing those terms around lightly! I believe I am still the only person on earth who fits into the academically accepted definition of supergenius.... although I'm sure I'll get some competition from the antigenius who predicted that you'd call a man to answer a question for you...
Carole does a little disco dance in the Hot Seat – hand gestures only.
I do a little hand gesture dance for contestants who start doing insane stuff like that in the Hot Seat.... and you can learn it in just one simple move...
$50K – Edouard de Stoeckl is best known for doing what?
A – discovering silicon
B – assassinating James Garfield
C – selling Alaska to the U.S.
D – inventing cotton candy
Holy friggin' crap! The boys in the dungeon finally learned how to put together a set of distractors without making the answer too obvious or too stupid!
Carole knows that Russia sold Alaska and Edouard sounds French. She decides to switch the question.
Yeah, but the French were in well with wintergreen's favorite tsars...
$50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
Carole asks for the 50/50, leaving A and D. She decides to pick the answer based on how she chooses football and baseball teams – on the uniforms they wear.
Oooooooh crap! I almost made it through a BB stack without seeing something that caused a chunk of my cerebrum to explode in a fiery supernova. Not only is that a good way to show you know nothing about sports, but it really doesn't have anything to do with your selection of a guess here since for all you know these guys could have been nudists...
For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
What about my good friend Happy Fred? Huh, WHAT ABOUT HIM, MEREDITH!?!?!?!!?
Her phone a friend was a Rhodes Scholar and former congressman,
Smart AND weaselly! Together, me and Brad could have taken over the world...
then Carole uses some sort of logic to get the answer to the question based on how to pick sports teams.
Whatever it was, I doubt it made any sense at all. Flipping an imaginary coin in your head would have been a sufficient explanation...
$100K – The ‘90s hit “Macarena” tells the story of a feisty woman who cheats on her boyfriend, a man named what?
A – Baldomero
B – Vitorino
C – Casimiro
D – Marcelino
You've either got to be really into trivia or really out of your mind to try to figure out what the hell they were saying in that song. Considering that song was written by Satan himself, it was probably about Hitler or Stalin...
Carole is leaning toward one. Meredith asks if it’s based on the same rationale as before.
I have no doubt Meredith's intrigued by that outside of the box type of guessing. Few of the normal WE/WE's can come up with something as ridiculous as that...
Carole says it’s not the one she likes more and thinks she has a “body memory” of one of the names.
The "body memory" I have of the Macarena sends chills down my spine and causes very important parts of my big, fat, fabulous brain to shut down due to shock. Please don't tell me you saw some meaning in those dance movements you were doing while rooting for your favorite sports uniform back in 1996...
She starts to give an answer and then decides to take the money. Meredith asks her which one she was leaning toward. Carole says, “Vitorino”.
Veni, Vidi, Vitorino....
Nihil Obstat®
Claremore, OK
Carole is a former federal law clerk. Her two sons are named Truman and Carter and her husband is a state senator from Oklahoma.
Why not Nixon? Or Coolidge? Or Taft?
She did a whole lot of door-knocking during the blistering heat to help her husband get elected.
Yeah, but you probably got a nice breeze from all those doors slamming in your face. I'm not as kind and considerate to visitors as I am to the contestants on this show...
$300 – If three blind mice each commit seven deadly sins, how many total sins have the mice committed?
A - 9
B - 21
C - 27
D – 49
Since when did this show become "Are you Smarter Than a Retard?" Questions about visually impaired sinning mice may very well mark another low in this show's Marianas Trench history...
$500 – What U.S. landmark bears a plaque that reads, “I lift my lamp beside the golden door”?
A – Niagara Falls
B – Statue of Liberty
C – Hoover Dam
D – Washington Monument
$1K – If it included the main character’s real-life surname, what would be the title of the sitcom “According to Jim”?
A – According to Jim Carrey
B – According to Jim Gandolfini
C – According to Jim Belushi
D – According to Jim Broadbent
$2K – According to cooking pros, which of these foods is “done” when a toothpick stuck into its center comes out clean?
A – roast turkey
B – sponge cake
C – Porterhouse steak
D – poached egg
Carole isn’t much of a cook although she tries.
At least you're not like the other contestants who'd be saying they're not much of a trivia whiz. And exactly whose toothpick are we sticking in this food? That's the kind of stuff that gets truck stop restaurants shut down...
$4K – The Great St. Bernard Pass, where St. Bernard dogs once gave aid to travelers, is found in what mountain range?
A – Himalayas
B – Andes
C – Alps
D – Urals
Be on the lookout for llamas...
$8K – Which of these precious materials is a form of resin?
A – amber
B – pearl
C – jade
D – turquoise
Carole has an inkling but nothing made her heart beat fast like her husband does so she decides to ask the audience.
Um.... what? What makes your heart beat fast is not a topic for discussion on a game show, unless it's The Newlywed Game... and I don't see Bob Eubank sitting across from you.
ATA results
A – 79%
B – 6%
C – 10%
D – 5%
Carole says she was thinking “amber” but there are those little dots on turquoise.
There are little numbered dots in my Spokesman's activity book, but that doesn't mean it's made out of resin....
$16K – ILM, the special effects company founded by George Lucas, is an abbreviation that stands for “Industrial Light and” what?
A – Movies
B – Media
C – Motion
D – Magic
Carole doesn’t hesitate on this one.
You mean it doesn't stand for Merchandising?
Carole is a stay-at-home mom and a smart lady.
Oh, who are you trying to kid? My buddy the Sox Guru says that all women are idiots, and he presented a lot of reliable data he found written above the urinals at Hooters to prove his case. If he ever scrape up enough money to write his book, he can quit slaving his life away at McDonalds for that brutal female shift manager who keeps making him clean out the french fryer...
$25K – In 1865, the U.S. Secret Service was created specifically to combat what?
A – counterfeiting of money
B – foreign spying
C – government corruption
D – illegal immigration
Yeah, but where were they for Lincoln?
Carole isn’t positive about this but has a good feeling that her phone-a-friend lifeline will know it. She asks to call Brad.
Brad asks to have the choices repeated, leaving 8 seconds. He finally says, “counterfeit currency, I’m sure of it.” Carole goes with his answer because he’s a “supergenius”.
Whoa, whoa, Carole! Don't just go throwing those terms around lightly! I believe I am still the only person on earth who fits into the academically accepted definition of supergenius.... although I'm sure I'll get some competition from the antigenius who predicted that you'd call a man to answer a question for you...
Carole does a little disco dance in the Hot Seat – hand gestures only.
I do a little hand gesture dance for contestants who start doing insane stuff like that in the Hot Seat.... and you can learn it in just one simple move...
$50K – Edouard de Stoeckl is best known for doing what?
A – discovering silicon
B – assassinating James Garfield
C – selling Alaska to the U.S.
D – inventing cotton candy
Holy friggin' crap! The boys in the dungeon finally learned how to put together a set of distractors without making the answer too obvious or too stupid!
Carole knows that Russia sold Alaska and Edouard sounds French. She decides to switch the question.
Yeah, but the French were in well with wintergreen's favorite tsars...
$50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
Carole asks for the 50/50, leaving A and D. She decides to pick the answer based on how she chooses football and baseball teams – on the uniforms they wear.
Oooooooh crap! I almost made it through a BB stack without seeing something that caused a chunk of my cerebrum to explode in a fiery supernova. Not only is that a good way to show you know nothing about sports, but it really doesn't have anything to do with your selection of a guess here since for all you know these guys could have been nudists...
For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
What about my good friend Happy Fred? Huh, WHAT ABOUT HIM, MEREDITH!?!?!?!!?
Her phone a friend was a Rhodes Scholar and former congressman,
Smart AND weaselly! Together, me and Brad could have taken over the world...
then Carole uses some sort of logic to get the answer to the question based on how to pick sports teams.
Whatever it was, I doubt it made any sense at all. Flipping an imaginary coin in your head would have been a sufficient explanation...
$100K – The ‘90s hit “Macarena” tells the story of a feisty woman who cheats on her boyfriend, a man named what?
A – Baldomero
B – Vitorino
C – Casimiro
D – Marcelino
You've either got to be really into trivia or really out of your mind to try to figure out what the hell they were saying in that song. Considering that song was written by Satan himself, it was probably about Hitler or Stalin...
Carole is leaning toward one. Meredith asks if it’s based on the same rationale as before.
I have no doubt Meredith's intrigued by that outside of the box type of guessing. Few of the normal WE/WE's can come up with something as ridiculous as that...
Carole says it’s not the one she likes more and thinks she has a “body memory” of one of the names.
The "body memory" I have of the Macarena sends chills down my spine and causes very important parts of my big, fat, fabulous brain to shut down due to shock. Please don't tell me you saw some meaning in those dance movements you were doing while rooting for your favorite sports uniform back in 1996...
She starts to give an answer and then decides to take the money. Meredith asks her which one she was leaning toward. Carole says, “Vitorino”.
Veni, Vidi, Vitorino....
Nihil Obstat®
It's sarcasm, get over it already!
- Appa23
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Certainly, MBFFB knows that Stoeckl was the offspring of Andreas von Stoeckl, Austrian diplomat in Istanbul, and Maria Pisani, daughter of Nicolas Pisani, Russian dragoman in Istanbul.Carole knows that Russia sold Alaska and Edouard sounds French. She decides to switch the question.
Yeah, but the French were in well with wintergreen's favorite tsars...
While he was not French, he did move to Paris with his American heiress wife after the sale of Alaska.
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Re: Transcript 10/24/2007 - Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
That explains the username.BBTranscriptTeam wrote:Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
Claremore, OK
Carole is a former federal law clerk. Her two sons are named Truman and Carter
Sean Burrage has an entry in Wikipedia.and her husband is a state senator from Oklahoma.
I'm nihil obstat® for the first 10 questions.
$50K: Charles Guiteau killed Garfield, so he's out. PAF with Google needed here.
$50K #2: Never would've seen this question, but I would've guessed Gold.
I assume that would be Brad Carson, who narrowly lost in 2004 to Tom Coburn for the U.S. Senate.Her phone a friend was a Rhodes Scholar and former congressman
$100K: Show of hands, please. Who here actually bothered to learn the lyrics to that song? I sure as hell didn't. Obvious decision to ATA here. Unless they give a definitive answer, I'll switch.
- MarleysGh0st
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As Meredith says about Regis, "We never mention that name."MyBigFatFabulousBrain wrote:For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
What about my good friend Happy Fred? Huh, WHAT ABOUT HIM, MEREDITH!?!?!?!!?
And how can this subject go by without observing that Fred, not George, is the leader of the Weasley twins!
Last edited by MarleysGh0st on Thu Oct 25, 2007 9:14 am, edited 1 time in total.
- silvercamaro
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Re: Transcript 10/24/2007 - Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
Well, actually, it doesn't prove that women are risk-takers. She used that hunch on a $50K question, so she was risking nothing.earendel wrote:Anyone who says that women aren't risk-takers should be required to watch Carole. She went for it, a gutsy move based on a hunch. I knew the answer before the choices were revealed.BBTranscriptTeam wrote:
$50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
Carole asks for the 50/50, leaving A and D. She decides to pick the answer based on how she chooses football and baseball teams – on the uniforms they wear. For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
- cindy.wellman
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MyBigFatFabulousBrain wrote:
$50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
Carole asks for the 50/50, leaving A and D. She decides to pick the answer based on how she chooses football and baseball teams – on the uniforms they wear.
Oooooooh crap! I almost made it through a BB stack without seeing something that caused a chunk of my cerebrum to explode in a fiery supernova. Not only is that a good way to show you know nothing about sports, but it really doesn't have anything to do with your selection of a guess here since for all you know these guys could have been nudists...
For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
Oh, I wish I knew the exact thing that Carole said about this! When Meredith mentioned George Washington, etc, Carole said something like, "Yes, but there are <b>other</b> Georges" and then sort of looks up. One could interpret the looking up as "rolling of the eyes", or "good grief". Either way, I laughed out loud when she said and did that! LOL
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Hi, Gang --
Just checking in to see what the experts thought. Not surprised to see a little raking over the coals, but in my defense:
** I never said anything about my heart beating fast and my husband. Edited out/not caught on tape was a big gasp by the audience when I immediately answered "Alps" regarding the St. Bernards. There was an exchange with Meredith about my reasoning (no, I don't like the name "Alps" better...) before I said "final answer," and she had a look on her face that made me go "Hmmm..." Still, I stuck with my answer.
So, when the resin question came up, and I was only about 75% sure it was amber, I went ahead and ATA'd, and I said something to the effect that "That last question made my heart beat kinda fast," referring to the audience gasp and Meredith's facial expression. I didn't want to be in the position of several folks who had gone ahead of me, who went down on an answer they thought they were fairly sure of.
** Brad Carson is the former Congressman who was defeated for US Senate by Tom Coburn. Trust me, he's a super-genius. (And I do like Wile E. Coyote : ) )
** The dance moves were just a little something for the crowd at home; sorry they offended. When you appear on the show, you can do what you want, too. Should you choose to do something animated, the producers will love you for it.
** As for my method for choosing b/tw Fred and George, there was more to it than meets the eye. For one thing, I really didn't know the answer to that question, so it was going to be a guess. I had read something about the Big Bang theory somewhere in my preparations, and though nothing rang a bell, when I got down to 50/50, I didn't think it was George Gamow (sp?) because the alliteration didn't seem familiar at all. But, that's kind of boring. Talking it through the way I did bought me a little time, pleased the audience, and let me get in a little eyerolling at the current administration.
**Same with the "body memory" comment -- I said it to elicit a chuckle from the audience. There was actually about 3 full minutes of deliberating before I decided to walk away with the money. Of course, that was edited down. Had I even the least little bit of an educated reason behind my hunch, I would have gone for it. As I told Meredith at the time, "I am the person I would want to call about this question, and I don't know the answer." Truly -- pop music is one of my few areas of expertise. But I couldn't see gambling $25 K based on nothing more than a vague feeling. I couldn't even remember the dance, let alone the lyrics to a song sung in a language I don't speak!
** Some of my comments or my gestures may seem silly to you, but you know, that's just who I am. Additionally, I felt and still feel that my end of the bargain was to be someone the audience at large could identify with. WWTBAM an opportunity to win a lot of money, of course, but it's also a TV show. In exchange for the producers giving me the chance to make a substantial sum of money in a few short minutes, I felt obligated to entertain, get the crowd and the viewers at home rooting for me.
So that's my story. Feel free to ask any questions you want, and I'll keep checking this thread for the next few days and answer what I can.
Thanks to those of you who were cheering me on. And a very special thanks to my PAFs, Bob Juchs and Bob Shore. Knowing they were on my bench gave me a lot of confidence, and I am forever grateful.
Best to all, Carole
Just checking in to see what the experts thought. Not surprised to see a little raking over the coals, but in my defense:
** I never said anything about my heart beating fast and my husband. Edited out/not caught on tape was a big gasp by the audience when I immediately answered "Alps" regarding the St. Bernards. There was an exchange with Meredith about my reasoning (no, I don't like the name "Alps" better...) before I said "final answer," and she had a look on her face that made me go "Hmmm..." Still, I stuck with my answer.
So, when the resin question came up, and I was only about 75% sure it was amber, I went ahead and ATA'd, and I said something to the effect that "That last question made my heart beat kinda fast," referring to the audience gasp and Meredith's facial expression. I didn't want to be in the position of several folks who had gone ahead of me, who went down on an answer they thought they were fairly sure of.
** Brad Carson is the former Congressman who was defeated for US Senate by Tom Coburn. Trust me, he's a super-genius. (And I do like Wile E. Coyote : ) )
** The dance moves were just a little something for the crowd at home; sorry they offended. When you appear on the show, you can do what you want, too. Should you choose to do something animated, the producers will love you for it.
** As for my method for choosing b/tw Fred and George, there was more to it than meets the eye. For one thing, I really didn't know the answer to that question, so it was going to be a guess. I had read something about the Big Bang theory somewhere in my preparations, and though nothing rang a bell, when I got down to 50/50, I didn't think it was George Gamow (sp?) because the alliteration didn't seem familiar at all. But, that's kind of boring. Talking it through the way I did bought me a little time, pleased the audience, and let me get in a little eyerolling at the current administration.
**Same with the "body memory" comment -- I said it to elicit a chuckle from the audience. There was actually about 3 full minutes of deliberating before I decided to walk away with the money. Of course, that was edited down. Had I even the least little bit of an educated reason behind my hunch, I would have gone for it. As I told Meredith at the time, "I am the person I would want to call about this question, and I don't know the answer." Truly -- pop music is one of my few areas of expertise. But I couldn't see gambling $25 K based on nothing more than a vague feeling. I couldn't even remember the dance, let alone the lyrics to a song sung in a language I don't speak!
** Some of my comments or my gestures may seem silly to you, but you know, that's just who I am. Additionally, I felt and still feel that my end of the bargain was to be someone the audience at large could identify with. WWTBAM an opportunity to win a lot of money, of course, but it's also a TV show. In exchange for the producers giving me the chance to make a substantial sum of money in a few short minutes, I felt obligated to entertain, get the crowd and the viewers at home rooting for me.
So that's my story. Feel free to ask any questions you want, and I'll keep checking this thread for the next few days and answer what I can.
Thanks to those of you who were cheering me on. And a very special thanks to my PAFs, Bob Juchs and Bob Shore. Knowing they were on my bench gave me a lot of confidence, and I am forever grateful.
Best to all, Carole
Carole
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cindy.wellman wrote:MyBigFatFabulousBrain wrote:
$50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
Carole asks for the 50/50, leaving A and D. She decides to pick the answer based on how she chooses football and baseball teams – on the uniforms they wear.
Oooooooh crap! I almost made it through a BB stack without seeing something that caused a chunk of my cerebrum to explode in a fiery supernova. Not only is that a good way to show you know nothing about sports, but it really doesn't have anything to do with your selection of a guess here since for all you know these guys could have been nudists...
For some reason “Fred” seems solid (not that “George” isn’t). Meredith mentions Fred and Barney but also George Washington.
Oh, I wish I knew the exact thing that Carole said about this! When Meredith mentioned George Washington, etc, Carole said something like, "Yes, but there are <b>other</b> Georges" and then sort of looks up. One could interpret the looking up as "rolling of the eyes", or "good grief". Either way, I laughed out loud when she said and did that! LOL
Glad you caught that as it was intended! Meredith made the comment about GW, and I said, "Yeah, but there are a lot of other Georges, too..."
Carole
- earendel
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Welcome, Carole! I noticed that you were from Claremore - I spent two years there back in the 60s at what was then known as Oklahoma Military Academy (now it's some junior college).trucarma wrote:Hi, Gang --
Just checking in to see what the experts thought. Not surprised to see a little raking over the coals, but in my defense:
Don't take anything that MBFFB® says seriously.
I did the transcript and that exchange puzzled me so I went back and listened again. I'm still not sure I understood the conversation correctly. Thanks for the correction.trucarma wrote:** I never said anything about my heart beating fast and my husband.
I wonder why the audience gasped.trucarma wrote:Edited out/not caught on tape was a big gasp by the audience when I immediately answered "Alps" regarding the St. Bernards. There was an exchange with Meredith about my reasoning (no, I don't like the name "Alps" better...) before I said "final answer," and she had a look on her face that made me go "Hmmm..." Still, I stuck with my answer.
Has Brad considered trying out for the show?trucarma wrote:** Brad Carson is the former Congressman who was defeated for US Senate by Tom Coburn. Trust me, he's a super-genius. (And I do like Wile E. Coyote : ) )
Good job. I admit I was confused by the mention of uniforms since, to my knowledge, neither Fred nor George ever wore one.trucarma wrote:** As for my method for choosing b/tw Fred and George, there was more to it than meets the eye. For one thing, I really didn't know the answer to that question, so it was going to be a guess. I had read something about the Big Bang theory somewhere in my preparations, and though nothing rang a bell, when I got down to 50/50, I didn't think it was George Gamow (sp?) because the alliteration didn't seem familiar at all. But, that's kind of boring. Talking it through the way I did bought me a little time, pleased the audience, and let me get in a little eyerolling at the current administration.
You did exactly the right thing.trucarma wrote:**Same with the "body memory" comment -- I said it to elicit a chuckle from the audience. There was actually about 3 full minutes of deliberating before I decided to walk away with the money. Of course, that was edited down. Had I even the least little bit of an educated reason behind my hunch, I would have gone for it. As I told Meredith at the time, "I am the person I would want to call about this question, and I don't know the answer." Truly -- pop music is one of my few areas of expertise. But I couldn't see gambling $25 K based on nothing more than a vague feeling. I couldn't even remember the dance, let alone the lyrics to a song sung in a language I don't speak!
I think that anything someone does in the Hot Seat is fine if it helps him or her relax. I'm not sure I agree with you that your "end of the bargain" is to be entertaining, but that's probably why I haven't been called for J!trucarma wrote:** Some of my comments or my gestures may seem silly to you, but you know, that's just who I am. Additionally, I felt and still feel that my end of the bargain was to be someone the audience at large could identify with. WWTBAM an opportunity to win a lot of money, of course, but it's also a TV show. In exchange for the producers giving me the chance to make a substantial sum of money in a few short minutes, I felt obligated to entertain, get the crowd and the viewers at home rooting for me.
"Elen sila lumenn omentielvo...A star shines on the hour of our meeting."
- MarleysGh0st
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Argh! Misled by a completely mistaken audience reaction. The warm-up guy needs to step up his audience instructions about that!trucarma wrote:** I never said anything about my heart beating fast and my husband. Edited out/not caught on tape was a big gasp by the audience when I immediately answered "Alps" regarding the St. Bernards. There was an exchange with Meredith about my reasoning (no, I don't like the name "Alps" better...) before I said "final answer," and she had a look on her face that made me go "Hmmm..." Still, I stuck with my answer.
So, when the resin question came up, and I was only about 75% sure it was amber, I went ahead and ATA'd, and I said something to the effect that "That last question made my heart beat kinda fast," referring to the audience gasp and Meredith's facial expression. I didn't want to be in the position of several folks who had gone ahead of me, who went down on an answer they thought they were fairly sure of.
Yikes! You haven't been here long enough to know about MyBigFatFabulousBrain. As his disclaimer indicates, he's a Merry Man whose whole purpose is writing these satire replies to the transcript threads.trucarma wrote:** The dance moves were just a little something for the crowd at home; sorry they offended.
Please don't take any of what he wrote seriously. The person behind that MM doesn't mean them!
Some BB actually look forward to a celebrity roast from MBFFB, as part of their rite of passage.
- Appa23
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TruCarMa said
In the American version, it is Macarena herself who talks (in English)about her adventures (in English) on the town.
Now don't you worry about my boyfriend
The boy who's name is Vitorino
I don't want him, couldn't stand him
He was no good so I
Now come on, what was I suppose to do
He was out of town and his two friends were so fine
Still, I would have been lifeline hunting there, as well. I wished that I would have remembered that you were on the show yesterday, as I would have tuned into the radio simulcast while at work.
Just to clarify, the hit version of Macarena was the Bayside Boys remix (American version), of the Los Del Rio song, so only the chorus is not in English.I couldn't even remember the dance, let alone the lyrics to a song sung in a language I don't speak!
In the American version, it is Macarena herself who talks (in English)about her adventures (in English) on the town.
Now don't you worry about my boyfriend
The boy who's name is Vitorino
I don't want him, couldn't stand him
He was no good so I
Now come on, what was I suppose to do
He was out of town and his two friends were so fine
Still, I would have been lifeline hunting there, as well. I wished that I would have remembered that you were on the show yesterday, as I would have tuned into the radio simulcast while at work.
- Bob78164
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My pleasure. I'm looking forward to Saturday, when your show is scheduled to air in Los Angeles (the local station pre-empts it a lot for baseball and basketball).trucarma wrote:And a very special thanks to my PAFs, Bob Juchs and Bob Shore. Knowing they were on my bench gave me a lot of confidence, and I am forever grateful.
And the nice thing about your PAF question is that you couldn't have missed. I knew that one cold (I don't think the Secret Service picked up presidential protection until after Garfield's assassination), and I'll bet Bob Juch knew it just as cold.
Let me echo the comments about MBFFB, by the way. He is intended to satire some Bored members whose commentary on other people's stacks evidence a fairly high opinion of themselves. The phrase itself was coined by Bix, who called some people (whom she declined to name) for commenting on stacks for no purpose other than to display their "big fat fabulous brains." --Bob
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear." Thomas Jefferson
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Re: Transcript 10/24/2007 - Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
I didn't remember that Hoyle coined the phrase "big bang," but I did remember he was one of the few astronomers of the era to champion the steady state theory, so I'd have gone with him without a lifeline. But this is a very nasty question for $50,000 -- it would not have been out of place for $500,000. --BobBBTranscriptTeam wrote:$50K (STQ) – What astronomer coined the term “big bang” even though he opposed the well-known theory to which the term now refers?
A – Fred Hoyle
B – Thomas Gold
C – Harmann Bondi
D – George Gamow
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear." Thomas Jefferson
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The decision was made to post them in the Transcript thread, but then a moderator would move them to the main forum so that more people might comment on them. At least I think that's the reason.Shade wrote:Why are transcripts being posted in the main board?
"Elen sila lumenn omentielvo...A star shines on the hour of our meeting."
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Don't be subtle, beast!
We had a big discussion about this a couple days ago, Shade, including these two poll/discussion threads:
viewtopic.php?t=438
Which was amended to:
viewtopic.php?t=447
The general idea of what we came up with is that the transcripts are "shadowed" over on the Transcript forum, for folks who are only looking for a way to find that, but they're primarily on the general Bored Posts forum, because that's where most of us engage in most of our conversation.
People weren't even noticing stuff in the Transcript forum.
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Re: Transcript 10/24/2007 - Carole Burrage (TruCarMa)
$4K - would have need to use my PAF
16k - ATA, I didn't know, I thought it was either Magic or Media
50K - Would not of used switch the question, I had an idea. I would of used 50:50 and may have gotten it right
100k -would have switched here.
16k - ATA, I didn't know, I thought it was either Magic or Media
50K - Would not of used switch the question, I had an idea. I would of used 50:50 and may have gotten it right
100k -would have switched here.
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If he certainly did know, why say it?Appa23 wrote:Certainly, MBFFB knows that Stoeckl was the offspring of Andreas von Stoeckl, Austrian diplomat in Istanbul, and Maria Pisani, daughter of Nicolas Pisani, Russian dragoman in Istanbul.Carole knows that Russia sold Alaska and Edouard sounds French. She decides to switch the question.
Yeah, but the French were in well with wintergreen's favorite tsars...
While he was not French, he did move to Paris with his American heiress wife after the sale of Alaska.