The Tofurkey Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

 

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            Happy almost Thanksgiving! I hope you have some family time planned. My immediate family will gather for some tofurkey and vegetarian giblets on Thursday, and then go out for a long bike ride. One of our family traditions is to visit the Fairfield School in far west Davis on holidays – it’s one of the most peaceful places in town, and the kids love the endless fields and the play apparatuses. I’ll be riding out there on the bicycle I bought today at B & L Bike Shop. I could have saved a few hundred dollars, probably, by buying a cheaper bike at a big department store (do we still call those everything stores “department stores?), or online with free delivery. But I couldn’t see myself doing that to our fair city. We all know what happens when we depend upon a dot com for our major purchases. The money flows out of Davis, benefiting neither our neighbors who work downtown, nor our tax coffers to pay for the Stephens branch of the library that opens two weeks from tomorrow, or the salaries of the teachers who work at the Fairfield School. And, like the attentive servers at Bistro 33, the people who work at B & L Bike Shop and the dozens of other unique downtown businesses will provide us more engaged and more effective customer service than just about any other shop or outlet.

And if you want to enjoy especially precious engagement, instead of going shopping on Friday, you could go see the opening of The Nutcracker at the Veterans Memorial Center at 2:30 and 7:30 pm. For details, visit http://cityofdavis.org/cs/nutcracker/ .

            Tonight’s Pub Quiz will be a bit more full than we have grown used to over the past few weeks, but we will still have room for you if you make your reservations how. Participants this evening will be asked about Saturday Night Live, newspaper headlines, the month of April, boomer television, Mark Twain, cities you learned about in history books, the release of the entire Beatles collection on iTunes, running on empty, delicacies for carnivores, New York landmarks, unusual words referring to colors, current pop music, Reagan-era television, the British Royal Family, California superstar poets, American cities, 19th century journeys, cities that they named twice, Harry Potter, Juno, turkeys, Iowa, desperate housewives, Illinois, Shakespeare, and college football.

            I look forward to seeing you tonight at 9!

 

Your Quizmaster

 

 

 

P.S. Here are five questions from last week’s Pub Quiz:

 

1.            Mottos and Slogans.    What British-owned Miami-based company has not recently been living up to its commercial slogan of  “Fun For All. All For Fun”? 

 

2.            Internet Culture. Jimmy Wales has recently been seen staring at users of what website, demanding donations? 

 

3.            Newspaper Headlines.   It was announced today that the market value of the company Facebook has shot past that of EBay, thus making Facebook the third most valuable internet company. The most valuable, of course, is Google. What is the second? 

 

4.            Four for Four.      Which of the following British citizens have been knighted? John Cleese, Anthony Hopkins, Mick Jagger, Ringo Starr 

 

5.            Gunpowder Plots. Who was the most famous member of the 1605 Gunpowder Plot? 

 

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

 

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The Peace Prize Equanimity Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

 

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            Always researching questions for the Pub Quiz, I visited one of Ireland’s most popular websites this weekend, http://rte.ie, to find out what the website of Raidió Teilifís Éireann has to say about Myanmar’s release of the activist Aung San Suu Kyi after seven years of unwarranted house arrest. Not surprisingly, the paper featured an interview on the musician and human rights activist Bono. Here’s what Bono said about the good news: “I’m very excited, very thrilled at the possibility that this might be the beginning of some sort of rational discussion with the people of Burma by the military junta.” Most musicians don’t spend much time pondering Burmese juntas. He then said, “She is kind of the Mandela of our moment. She’s a character of great grace. Maybe that’s what she has in common with Nelson Mandela.” I was thinking the same thing when I heard the words of Aung San Suu Kyi, not because of her grace, but because of her lack of resentment. Both Nobel Peace Prize winners publicly proclaimed that they did not resent their jailers, something that distinguishes them from most of the rest of us if any of us were to be imprisoned for years for our political beliefs. Of course, the similarities between Suu Kyi and Mandela may stop there because of political differences between their home countries. As Maung Zarni, a Myanmar research fellow at the London School of Economics put it last week, “This is not exactly a Mandela moment, because the regime is not prepared for reconciliation.” Still, it’s encouraging to encounter some good news once in a while.

            In other news, there will be a Pub Quiz this evening, and you are invited to join us. Tonight you can expect questions on “fun” commercial slogans, favorite websites (x2), famous living Brits, conspiracies, the Roman Coliseum, a famous saxophonist, Lawrence Olivier, basketball (x2), body parts, the words “altitudinally,” six-letter monosyllabic words, rock and roll music (x2.5), sanctioned collaboration, The Simpsons, best-sellers, the Commonwealth of Virginia, The Beatles, three-word titles, odes, film quotations, race relations in America, loners, allotropes, the US Congress, football, and Shakespeare.

            I hope you can join us this evening. Remember that any team of first-time players will enjoy a complimentary bottle of wine or order of sweet potato fries. Furthermore, if you recruit such a team, you will enjoy the same treat. Therefore, feel free to forward this message to any interested parties. See you tonight!

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

 

 

P.S. This coming Thursday night at 8 the John Natsoulas Gallery the Poetry Night Reading Series will feature the release party of the new print edition of the UC Davis undergraduate literary journal, Nameless Magazine. Join us Thursday if you would like to experience some of the best in undergraduate prose and poetry. An open mic will follow the featured readers, so you could come practice your karaoke skills (if you dare). To find out more about this event, or register your intent to join us, see http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=107194789350027 .

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

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The Sudden Teenager Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

 

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            It’s strange being the father of a teenager. My daughter Geneva turned 13 yesterday, and now she and I can more responsibly watch PG-13 films. I suppose mostly that means old superhero films, such as Iron Man and the X-Men films. As she is a black belt in Tae Kwon Do, I’m eager for the day that she is old enough to watch Enter the Dragon and other classic kung-fu films. Maybe she’ll be inspired to scream even louder when she kicks the bag in the dojo, and to take up the nunchaku. She’s also a poet, so I bet she’ll especially like Bruce Lee quotation: “All fixed set patterns are incapable of adaptability or pliability. The truth is outside of all fixed patterns.” He systematized this concept with his fighting system which he named Jeet Kune Do, which he sometimes referred to as “The art of expressing the human body.” Do you have a system? What might your system be called?

            Tonight’s Quiz will include questions about insecticides, Twitter, the United Nations, a long-serving British Poet Laureate, expensive election campaigns, Romaine, early Rock and Roll, the Grateful Dead, rocks, Presidents of the US, news shows, Tennessee, European capitals, a Governor of California, famous children’s books, Amy Sedaris films, wine, Africa, musical television, goats, acres in Russia, Forbes, basketball, Shakespeare, and the US mail.

            We will have room for you and your team tonight. Furthermore, if you recruit a team of newbies, both your team and the newbies will enjoy a complimentary bottle of wine. Tell your friends, and I look forward to seeing you tonight.

            Best,

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

 

 

 

P.S. Here are five questions from last week’s Pub Quiz.

 

 

9.            Science.   In the United States and Canada, extensive underground beds of halite extend from the Appalachian basin of western New York through parts of Ontario and under much of the Michigan Basin. By what common name do we know this mineral? 

 

10.            Great Americans.  The Seward of “Seward’s Folly” was William Henry Seward, Sr., the 12th Governor of New York, a United States Senator, and the United States Secretary of State under Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson. “Seward’s Folly” refers to Seward’s orchestrating the purchase of what? 

 

11.            Unusual Words.  What two-syllable word beginning with the letter “A” and containing a double letter (two of the same letter next to each other) means “to cause fear in” or “to frighten”? 

 

12.            Another Music Question.   What is the three-letter name of the British singer-songwriter and rapper of Sri Lankan descent who had 2008 hits with the songs “Boyz” and “Paper Planes”? 

 

13.            Pop Culture – Television.     The name of what Grammy award winning New Zealand-based comedy duo composed of Bret McKenzie and Jemaine Clement is also a TV show?  

 

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

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The Midterm Election Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

 

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            I enjoyed an interesting Halloween conversation yesterday about the integrity of the Pub Quiz. Regular attendees know that when my lovely wife attends the Quiz, I remove from the quiz any questions to which I know she knows the answer. Because she is so smart and well read, and because we have consumed much of the same media together, this makes writing the Pub Quiz particularly challenging when she joins us, and perhaps even more challenging to complete. As a result, when she plays, Kate feels a bit flummoxed on her team, as she is forced to reach back further and deeper into her personal databases of knowledge than most players have to. I bring this up because one of my favorite local politicians and Pub Quiz irregulars offered to have the number of lawn signs she distributed this election cycle be a topic for the tiebreaker question tonight, the night before she’ll be elected to another term on the Davis School Board (I expect). It was a great idea, and the question would be highly topical, but I didn’t want to seem to be giving endorsements to one of the hardest-working and most responsive public servants in Davis, and I didn’t want one of the Quiz participants to have unearned foreknowledge about the answer to even a single Pub Quiz question. As Chinua Achebe once said, “One of the truest tests of integrity is its blunt refusal to be compromised.”

            I tend not to be blunt except when I bluntly request that my students vote in elections, as I was in class today. Of course, I don’t indicate my own voting intentions, or record. Meg Whitman neglected to vote for many an election cycle, and I imagine that she’ll regret that (expensive) missed opportunity for many moons. On the Democratic side, satirists have compared incumbent California Senator Barbara Boxer to Colonel Jessup for insisting that she “has earned” her title of Senator, though I wasn’t sure why that was such a faux pas. Regrets, Boxer has not had a few. And I’m sure Jerry Brown has no regrets over not speaking from prepared remarks as he barnstorms up and down California. He keeps the California press corps on their toes with juicy quotations. Republicans are due to make great gains, the pollsters say, in Congress, governorships and state legislatures, but here in California, it looks like the Democrats will hold their ground, and perhaps take over the Governor’s office. If you have spent time outside of California, then you probably know if your former Senator is as endangered as Democrats will be during tomorrow’s midterm elections.

            Tonight’s Pub Quiz will feature questions on cell phone safety, mice and men, salt, New Jersey, horror film quotations, Canadian musicians, ‘foolish” politicians, leftover Halloween concerns, paper airplanes, the city of Davis, the alphabet, ravishing arks, the last states to join the Union, California museums, South America, Pat Sajak, Kentucky, genes, flying without a license, cowardice and death, Shakespeare, and Gina Daleiden’s lawn signs (a joke).

            As I mentioned recently on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster), We do have room for more teams at tonight’s Pub Quiz. If you recruit a new team (that is, a team of newbies), or if you are a team of newbies, you get either a bottle of wine or an order of sweet potato fries on the house! This is a standing offer. Details at (530) 756-4556

            See you tonight. Should I wear my cape?

 

Your Quizmaster

 

 

Five questions from last week:

 

 

6.            The Monterey Bay Aquarium. The Monterey Bay Aquarium is the same age as which of the following people? Mark Zuckerberg, Derek Jeter, Keanu Reeves, or Denzel Washington? Hint: these people are listed in chronological order by decade.  

 

7.            Pop Culture – Music (Karaoke Question).      What multi-Grammy winning Delta blues guitarist wrote the songs “Boogie Chillen” and “Boom Boom”? 

 

Now for the Karaoke Bonus Round, I would like you to perform a Blues song.

 

8.            Sports.   I remember the 1989 World Series because of the Loma Prieta Earthquake. What is the only year between 1989 and 2010 that the San Francisco Giants appeared in the World Series? 

 

9.            Science – Meteorology. What three-syllable word do we use to name an intense columnar vortex (usually appearing as a funnel-shaped cloud) that occurs over a body of water and is connected to a cumuliform cloud? 

 

10.            Great Brits. What is the last name of the man whose statue lords over London’s Trafalgar Square?  

 

 

P.S. A.D. Winans reads from some of his 51 books on Wednesday night at 8. See http://www.poetryindavis.com for details.

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The Earthquake Weather Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

 

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            When I lived on the east coast as a child, I would attend the local Waldorf school’s Harvest Festival every year, so it was bizarrely familiar to return to the Sacramento Waldorf School Saturday to attend another such festival, or “vegetable” as my five-year-old calls them. Many of the harvest themes and the classroom art projects were just I remembered them at the Washington Waldorf School, but here in California we hardly have a defined “fall” as our eastern autumn promised us every year. The restaurants and shops in downtown Davis must adorn their window displays with artificial red and yellow leaves, for none can be found locally in the wild. Now that the rain has stopped, and the late afternoon sunlight fills the day so diffusely, it almost feels like earthquake weather, as if some sort of meteorological suspense hangs in the air.

            The last earthquake that I remember experiencing intensely was the Loma Prieta Earthquake, the one that interrupted the Bay Area World Series back in 1989, just a few months after I moved to the East Bay. That Halloween one boy came to my Berkeley doorstep dressed as a tremor, a concept that was still frightening to us who tried to sleep through those evening’s aftershocks. Many people are thinking anew about Giants baseball, and about earthquakes, in part because of the new challenges facing the earthquake-stricken people of Haiti, this time in the form of cholera. If you are wondering how you might find out more about, and renew your support for, the most destitute people on our continent, consider visiting the website for Partners in Health: http://www.pih.org/haiti/news-entry/cholera-in-haiti-in-the-media/.

            Tonight’s Pub Quiz will ask an unexpected series of Halloween questions, as well as questions about the creators of popular and essential websites, celebrity criminals, Pierce Brosnan’s past side-gigs, two people with recognizable last names (Zuckerberg and Jeeter) as well as two with more recognizable first names (Keanu and Denzel), aquaria, early hominids, the Blues (can you sing the blues?), the Giants, meteorology, London tourist traps (such as Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum), Glee, David Cronenberg,  Pulitzer Prize-winning books published in your lifetime, money, spices, vampires, spookiness, Louisiana, fairies, architecture, travel overseas, some of my favorite poets, celebrities, Shakespeare “in” Love, and Hawaii.

            I hope you can join us tonight! We expect a few new faces, but we will still have plenty of room for you at tonight’s Pub Quiz!

 

Your Quizmaster

 

 

Five Questions from Last Week’s Quiz:

 

9.            Science.   The largest living rodent in the world has a scientific name of Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris. By what four-syllable name do we know this South American animal? 

 

10.            Great Americans.  What was the highest government office achieved by Abraham Lincoln before becoming President of the United States? 

 

12.            Another Music Question.   What musician is the only girl in the world to appear on two of the top 10 hits at the top of Billboard’s pop music charts this week? 

 

13.            Pop Culture – Television.     What seeming remake of The Brady Bunch was a part of ABC’s TGIF lineup from 1991 until 1997? 

 

14.            The Language of Love. According to scholars, what language did Antony and Cleopatra use to talk to one another? 

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

 

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The Georgia Engel Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

I hope you can join us this evening, for we have a number of tables unclaimed for the Quiz.

Often as a Quizmaster I’ve reflected on ways to make the Pub Quiz fair, that is, equally challenging for all the different segments of our Pub Quiz audience, without regard to age, geographic region, and socio-cultural background. This is difficult, of course, because although I read widely, I am still somewhat limited by my own background. Luckily I know and appreciate friends and mentors who are older than me, and surround myself as part of my profession with students who are half my age. As a result, I often find myself engaged with inquisitive conversations with people who are equally curious about the world and with knowledge that is relevant to their lives, their classes, the books they read and the news that they follow.

Some of my Facebook friends and I have been discussing the phenomenon of The Brady Bunch, of all things, lines of which were quoted in conversations I enjoyed from my childhood, but which I had assumed were largely irrelevant today. It turns out that my family invested in cable TV only about five years ago, so I also wasn’t aware of the great wasteland of television repeats that young viewers have been exposed to for many years. Although I regret the hours and potential lost to television, I have on occasion enjoyed encountering there actors I knew as a child, such as John Hillerman and John Putch on One Day at a Time, and Georgia Engel and Jean Stapleton on CBS hits from the 1970s, repeating witty lines with their young 1970s voices. I know and remember all these actors and these shows well, but is it fair for me to ask questions about programs that had ceased production a decade or more before the births of your typical UC Davis sophomore? After all, the Pub Quiz is an all-ages show (which means that we have alternate prizes ready for young teams who win wine), and I always wish to be fair to everyone.

Speaking of fair (?), here are some hints. Tonight’s Pub Quiz will feature questions about drummers, potentials and passions, Australians, divisions, Wyoming, television mothers, baseballs, recent music, baseball teams that made it to the post-season, rodents (we liberated another mouse last week, releasing him into a field teeming with jackrabbits!), Yeats quotations, beloved Presidents, cynicism, Eminem, Friday television, famous lovers of antiquity, late-night television, Muppets (because they are so popular with the tables that have requested easier questions), time travel, the inimitable Dom DeLuise, the US Navy, poets who were born before your great-great-great grandparents, Las Vegas, Latino culture, UC Davis sports, unsympathetic characters in Shakespeare and really big sharks.

Thanks for reading this far, and of your support of the Pub Quiz. Have you been telling your friends about what you do, or wish you could do, on Monday nights? You should invite them along. What sort of referral bonus do you think would be appropriate for regulars who inspire new teams?

See you soon,

Your Quizmaster

Find out about following Your Quizmaster on Facebook and Twitter at https://www.yourquizmaster.com.

Five Questions from last week’s Pub Quiz:

25.Actresses and Pop Singers. What American actress and pop singer began her foray into film by providing the voice of “Penny” in the animated film Bolt, and earned a nomination for the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song for her performance of Bolt’s theme song, “I Thought I Lost You”?

26.Science – Apples.The country that produced the largest percentage of the 55 million tonnes of apples that were grown worldwide in 2005 is found on the continent where apple trees first originated. Name the continent.

27.Books and Authors.The 19th best-selling book in English, Angels and Demons, sold 39 million copies. Name its author.

28.Current Events – Names in the News.Who is Nicky Diaz’s lawyer?

29.Sports.During most of his playing career, what was Michael Jordan’s jersey number?

P.S. The Second Annual Confluence College Poetry Tour is coming to the John Natsoulas Gallery in Davis Thursday night at 8pm. See http://www.poetryindavis.com for details.

P.P.S. Have you seen the one-woman show Tilly No-Body at the Mondavi Center? Tickets are still available, but the run lasts only until October 24.

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

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Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

One of my favorite Native American friends (outside the family) was born on Columbus Day, she once pointed out sardonically. When she was my student, she affirmed to me that she would never leave her California roots, and now she is a happily married academic and accomplished musician living not far from Little Italy on the Near West Side of Chicago, home of The World Columbian Exposition of 1893. She has escaped familial restrictions (and, she tells me, limitations), but will she ever be able to shake Columbus and his admirers? Really, will any of us be able to shake the legacy of Columbus, and would we want to? It’s hard to imagine a modern Columbus. As Justice Arthur Goldberg once said, “If Columbus had an advisory committee, he would probably still be at the dock.”

Two great cultural resources came to my attention this last week, and I bet one of them would interest you. The first is the movie Howl, showing until Thursday at the Varsity Theatre on 2nd Street in Davis. You know from past newsletters that I am a fan of Allen Ginsberg. I also respect James Franco (playing Ginsberg in this film) as an artist, mostly because of how much time he spends in MFA in writing classes with my heroes, poets such as Alan Williamson and Frank Bidart. And the reviews are pretty good for this film, too. A. O. Scott of The New York Times said “Not quite a biopic, not really a documentary and only loosely an adaptation, Howl does something that sounds simple until you consider how rarely it occurs in films of any kind. It takes a familiar, celebrated piece of writing and makes it come alive.” Now that the downtown Davis Jazz and Beat Festival has concluded, I am going to try to see this film before it leaves town.

The other resource is The Davis Dirt, a new monthly culture calendar that has appeared in bookstores and cafes all over town. It’s bright orange for October – have you seen a copy? I interviewed two of the editors on my radio show Wednesday, and they seem like they are deeply committed to the spirit of our city and to informing us all about the rich array of cultural opportunities available to all of us, from artsy movies to poetry readings to musical performances all over town. Find The Davis Dirt at http://www.thedavisdirt.com/, http://www.dirtyindavis.blogspot.com/, and, on the Davis Wiki at http://daviswiki.org/The_Davis_Dirt .

Tonight on the Pub Quiz you’ll hear questions about frog capitals, websites, ancient kings, African countries, single ladies, David Letterman and his guests, show tunes (you should prepare yours), post-season baseball, elements, short vocabulary words that begin with the letter T, pendula, Prokoviev, diaries, Japan, American universities, zany earmarks, roses, holy cows, Captain John Miller’s only defeat, ninjas, ball bearings, children’s picture books, Star Wars, phobias, the Alps, people named Penny, demons, apples, lawyers, basketball and Shakespeare the familiar.

We will have a full house tonight. I hope you are planning to join us for the Pub Quiz!

Your Quizmaster

 

Here are five questions from last week’s quiz:

2.Internet Culture. Pew Research recently unveiled a study concluding that two tech companies most written about by the press are what?

3.Newspaper Headlines.Connections to the office of US Solicitor General has forced one US Supreme Court Justice into a recusal for 25 upcoming cases. Name the Justice.

4.Four for Four.Which of the following musicians or bands have had top-40 hits on Billboard’s US charts? Bob Marley, Metallica, The Ramones, Tenacious D.

5.Capital Cities that are Fun to Say. Montevideo and its metropolitan area, home to 1.4 million of its country’s total of 3.5 million people, is the capital of what South American country?

6.Film Quotations. Name the 1997 Paul Verhoven film in which the central character of Johnny Rico says “These are the rules. Everybody fights, nobody quits. If you don’t do your job I’ll kill you myself. Welcome to the Roughnecks.”

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Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

Do we have unclaimed tables left for tonight? Yes we do!

 

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

Did you see the Bike Parade yesterday? From what I saw, hundreds of Davisites pedaled Downtown to show off for the photographers and officials from the Guinness Book of World Records. The last time I wanted to participate in such a record-breaking event, it was March of 1986 and Hands Across America, a chain of seven million Americans that crisscrossed much of the country with the exception of the Pacific Northwest and of New England, where I was attending college. Celebrities that participated included Emmanuel Lewis, Tip O’Neill, Tony Danza and R2D2 (all my favorites), and millions of dollars was raised for charities addressing hunger and poverty in the US and in Africa. Soon after the event, The Ramones parodied the event with their music video for the song “Something to Believe in” with an event titled “Hands Across Your Face.” Needless to say, it wasn’t a number one hit. Of course, Phish and Harry Connick Jr. never had number one hits, either.

           

ABBA struck rock gold with “Dancing Queen,” and you can still the played in my house. Repeatedly. Other topics that you might hear discussed in my house (and which will appear in some form on tonight’s Pub Quiz) include Shakespeare plays, our favorite tech companies, Bob Marley, the Supreme Court, South American cities and culture, action movies, the Olympics, onetime starlets whom you can’t believe are still alive, Billy Joel, muppets, world religions, young adult fiction, Abraham Lincoln, songbirds, US states, Athens, and Arlington Cemetery. We actually don’t discuss fuel additives, the SF Giants, or Christine O’Donnell (for we are kind). Sometimes we discuss deep-sea fish, such as the ones you can find in this Dorine Jennette poem:

 

To The Rescue Crew

 

Open me up

with the jaws of life,

you’ll find I’m full

of fish: the deep-

sea kind, whose

dewlaps dredge a trench.

Minding their veils 

of milk silt and slime,

my bulge-eyed denizens

sound their scales.

It’s the pressure

does it, and the dark. 

           

Dorine will be performing her work at Wednesday night at 8. Details at http://www.poetryindavis.com.

 

I hope you can join us tonight at the Pub Quiz. We start at 8!

 

Your Quizmaster

 

 

 

 

P.S. Here are five questions from last week’s quiz:

 

21.             Books and Authors.   What was the name of the Woodland realm elf played by Orlando Bloom in Peter Jackson’s live-action version of the book The Lord of the Rings? 

 

22.            Film.   What 1970s film that won three Oscars includes this line of dialogue? “I think we make a real sharp couple of coconuts – I’m dumb, you’re shy, whaddaya think, huh?” 

 

23.            Musical Theatre. What is the most successful Broadway musical to take place in a shtetl?  

 

24.            Countries of the World. The country with the largest number of troops per capita (418.9 per 1,000) has more total troops (about 9.5 million) than every other country in the world but Russia’s 21 million. Name the country.   

 

26.            Science – Astronomy.  Triton and Nereid are the names of two of the 13 moons orbiting what planet? 

 

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

Posted via email from yourquizmaster’s posterous

The Abbie Hoffman Memorial Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

The last time I checked, we had about five tables left for you and your teams. Have you made a reservation yet to join us at tonight’s Pub Quiz?

As someone who has taught college classes for 20 years (starting 20 years ago this month), I always find the first day of class to be so exciting. In those early years, I remember being filled with trepidation, while today I recognize that the opportunity to make a first impression appeals to the theatrical proclivities of any teacher. As I looked upon the flushed faces of my bicycle-commuter students on this day of record-breaking heat, I remembered what Abbie Hoffman said about the First Amendment: “Free speech means the right to shout ‘theatre’ in a crowded fire.” I met Abbie Hoffman in Boston when I was an undergraduate at Boston University. He was about to give a (free) speech before a crowd protesting Boston University’s refusal (at that time) to divest from apartheid-era South Africa. The air was electric before Hoffman came out, almost what in the 19th century we would have called diamagnetic! Although he looked a lot different from the radical leader we knew from 1968 pictures and newsreels – some say that he had had plastic surgery in order to hide from tax collectors – it was clear from his demeanor and rhetoric that he still considered himself the patron saint of the free speech movement, and that he had only just begun to fight, and we were all grateful to History professor Howard Zinn for bringing such a zany and principled character to BU. Sadly, Hoffman died by his own hand just a month or so before I graduated from college and moved to California.

I hope you will join us at the Pub Quiz this evening. We’ll have questions about kids TV, inventors, healthy diets, Star Wars, the people of Africa, Indiana, favorite old songs, basketball, famous physicists, people named George, the Revolutionary War, making excuses, long-ish words that start with the letter E, films starring four (eventually) Academy-award winning actors, Shakespeare’s histories, Ronald Reagan projects, unlikely cinematic couples, Broadway musicals, World Series baseball, seasoned athletes, and more Shakespeare. No Milton this week.

And below find five questions from last week’s quiz. See you soon!

Your Quizmaster

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

9.         Science – Name the Species.   The males of what species are called bucks, boomers, jacks, or old men; while the females are called does, flyers, or jills? Hint: The collective noun for these creatures is a mob, troop, or court.

10.       Great Americans.  Four men were President of the US in the 1920s. Name three of them.

11.       Unusual Words.  What five-letter one-syllable adjective that begins with the letter “A” means “cunning, crafty, and/or sly”? Hint: This word has a much more recognizable meaning as a noun.

12.       Another Music Question.   The #1 hit single on this week’s Billboard Top 100 Chart, “Teenage Dream,” is sung by the 25 year old who will play the voice of Smurfette in the 2011 film The Smurfs. Name the performer.

13.       Pop Culture – Television.    What American teen drama television that premiered on The CW on September 19, 2007, features an omniscient yet unseen blogger voiced by Kristen Bell, and revolves around the lives of privileged young adults on Manhattan’s Upper East Side in New York City? In its run so far, it has won 14 Teen Choice Awards.

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.

The Indian Summer Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

If you dropped by the Farmers’ Market Saturday, or tried to drive anywhere in Davis since the weekend, you know how our city has changed: They’re back. The students have returned to Davis, flocked with their parents to our favorite restaurants, and descended upon our bicycle stores and supermarkets (Safeway was almost cleaned out of cereal and pasta sauce last night). The energy that students bring with them is frenetic, and prompts questionable driving and biking choices, but it also distinguishes our city from others nearby. We have so much intellectual energy in this town that is creative – UC Davis garnered more than $600 million in research funding last year – but downtown the strolling faculty who represent this mature studiousness can seem a bit sedate to our newcomers. Fortunately for all of us, the hurried students, brimming with eager energy and potential, represent a welcome complement to our slower “townies.” But this influx of people also means that the competition on Monday evening – for prizes, as well as for tables – will intensify. Since September 1st, we’ve usually had reservations available on Pub Quiz Day, but now that summer is ending, you may soon have to show up earlier to participate in the show.

Summer is a relative term in our warmer world. I remember East Coast Septembers where we had to bundle up in the morning only to stuff our jackets into our backpacks on the way home from school. Some of us had to wear raincoats, or even winter jackets, over our Halloween costumes to protect ourselves from the torrents of autumn. But in 2010, with our globe significantly “warmed,” Davis summer temperatures extend on and on almost to November, and today the mercury in St Louis, Topeka, and Denver will hit 92 degrees. In another generation, perhaps what we once called “Indian Summer” will simply be known as “fall.” This term that might be offensive to Native Americans was in use when Emily Dickinson observed a brief respite from fall chills in New England, as presented in this excerpt sometimes titled “Indian Summer”:

These are the days when birds come back,

A very few, a bird or two,

To take a backward look.

These are the days when skies put on

The old, old sophistries of June, —

A blue and gold mistake.

My quick review reveals a Pub Quiz tonight that may be easier than some, so there will be less room for that single “blue and gold mistake.” In my experience, teams wearing blue and gold rarely make careless mistakes. Expect questions tonight on beer, classified ads, Michael Bloomberg, the color yellow, ascending in Paris, the end of the dark ages, 1980s movies where Tom Cruise played a cocky protagonist, gateways, football, bucks and jacks, US Presidents whose significance you might have trouble characterizing, Thomas Jefferson, crafty words, little blue creatures, bloggers, Protestants, Kevin Costner, the polka, the midwest, freedom, Spaniards, Africa, New York City entertainments, assigned poems, late night comedians, basketball, and Shakespeare plays you should have read in high school.

I’m planning on some new bonus competitions surrounding the website (https://www.yourquizmaster.com), so stay tuned for those. Visit the website to see how you can follow me on Facebook and Twitter.

See you tonight!

Your Quizmaster

P.S. Here are five questions from last week’s quiz:

8.         Sports – Major League Baseball.   What Ohio-born former Rookie-of-the-Year holds the record for at-bats and the most outs?

9.         Science – Multiple-Choice.   Amber is fossilized WHAT? Heartwood, resin, paraben, sap.

10.       Great American Dams.  The Hoover Dam, so named in 1947, had a different name when President Franklin Delano Roosevelt dedicated it in 1936. What was its original name?

11.       Unusual Words.  What two-syllable word beginning with the letter M means both 1. An area of muddy or boggy ground, and 2. A complicated or confused situation?

12.       A Music Question.   What hit Lady Gaga song includes these unforgettable lyrics? “K-kinda busy / K-kinda busy / Sorry, I cannot hear you, I’m kinda busy.”

P.P.S. Seen any good plays recently?

Friends of the Pub Quiz, and those curious about all the fun and fuss associated with the Pub Quiz, should come to de Vere’s Irish Pub in Davis (217 E Street), the highly esteemed pub and restaurant that fills up every night because of the superb quality of food, drink and company that can be found there. The de Vere’s Irish Pub Pub Quiz takes place every Monday at 7pm, though players are encouraged to arrive early to claim a table. As always, find out more about the Pub Quiz by visiting https://www.yourquizmaster.com. For more on de Vere’s Irish Pub, visit http://deverespub.com/.