Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

We enjoyed watching the Academy Awards with a few friends last night, though my wife mentioned that she didn’t hear as many belly laughs from our guests as she had in years past. The young actors who hosted this year’s Oscarcast are young and charismatic, and maybe they did attract some of those valuable younger viewers, but they didn’t please everyone. Here’s what Roger Ebert had to say:

 

Despite the many worthy nominated films, the Oscarcast was painfully dull, slow, witless, and hosted by the ill-matched James Franco and Anne Hathaway. She might have made a delightful foil for another partner, but Franco had a deer-in-the-headlights manner and read his lines robotically.

Incredibly, when former host Billy Crystal came onstage about two hours into the show, he got the first laughs all evening. This was the worst Oscarcast I’ve ever endured. It’s time for the Board of Governors to have a long, sad talk with itself.

 

I guess I was enjoying my guests too much to concern myself that the rest of America and Roger Ebert were not having as much fun. I’ve been a fan of Billy Crystal since watching him on the TV show Soap back in the day, and agree that he was funny again last night. I wonder if the Oscar folks will bring him back to host or co-host. It’s not fair to the others for him to get the only laughs. And even though James Franco looked tired, I chalked that up to his studies. A curious polymath, he has been known to take an incredible number of units at Columbia and NYU while keeping up with all his acting duties; the day that he heard that he was nominated for the Best Leading Actor Award he still showed up to his creative writing class at Yale immediately after appearing on the Today Show. He has also taken classes at the Warren Wilson graduate creative writing program with my dissertation director, Alan Williamson, and Alan is a big fan of Franco (though I don’t know that he has seen any of his movies). Franco should have a PhD by the time my 13 year old daughter starts college. Imagine how much more substantive a place Hollywood would be if more of our celebrities had MFAs in creative writing! Imagine all the extra reading assignments that would await the staff at People Magazine!

 

You won’t need graduate degrees to win tonight’s Pub Quiz (depending on who else is on your team). Tonight’s Pub Quiz will feature questions about cars, Madonna, capital punishment, Kim Basinger, DNA, Lake Superior, Courtney Love, Prince, football, metals, US Presidents, martial arts, the Country Music Awards, blood, animation, fashion, rats, Paris Hilton (is she in rehab?), doves and other birds, the Indian Ocean, the Academy Awards, famous beauties, retired actors, admirers of Henry David Thoreau, the City of Davis, imports and exports, J.R.R. Tolkein, chemistry, biology, unquotable novels, professional basketball, shoes, current events, and Shakespeare.

 

Speaking of creativity and poetry, a Sammie Award-Winning poet and MC will be headlining Poetry night at 8 this coming Wednesday night. Random Abiladeze will be supporting his latest CD release with a well-attended performance of incredible hip-hop poetry. The last time he appeared, a large and impressed crowd, as well as the musician Butterscotch, were there to applaud him. Come see why Random Abiladeze is such a big deal. Details can be found at http://www.poetryindavis.com.

 

We have room for you and your team tonight. Drop on by around 8:30 to grab yourself a table. I’m looking forward to sharing a drink with you (or at least drinking a drink while you happen also to be drinking in the same restaurant). See you then!

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster

yourquizmaster@gmail.com

 

Here are five questions from last week’s quiz:

 

 

22.            Film.   What is the title of the 2005 film in which Keanu Reeves plays a chain-smoking cynical exorcist with the ability to discern half-angels and half-demons in their true form? 

 

23.            The British Royal Family. William III of England, also known as William of Orange, married a member of the British royal family in 1677. What was the first name of the wife of William III? 

 

24.            Countries of the World.  What island nation in South Asia was known as Ceylon until 1972?   

 

25.            Greek Terms. “Skolios” is the Greek word for which of the following adjectives? Cheery, Crooked, Fragrant, or Smoky.     

 

26.            Science.  According to the website PestGuide.Org, what is “the largest order of marsupials in the Western Hemisphere”?  

 

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

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

Every year as I drive back to Davis from the San Francisco Writers Conference, I am brimming with ideas for books and projects, as well as thoughts about the best ways that I can make use of all the new publishing and media technologies that I have learned from all the authors that I have met in The City. I also made a number of friends this year, including an athletic Haiku poet and corporate trainer whose move to Italy has shaved 10 years off his biological age, a retired lieutenant colonel and essayist who supports emerging writers with scholarships (and who freely shares stories about her infant daughter), and the CEO of a digital media company that represents over 300,000 musicians. Val Kilmer also stayed in my hotel (the International Mark Hopkins Hotel), though he seemed more interested in my friend Brad’s djembe drum than in the book faire. If I don’t manage to get Kilmer to appear on my radio show, I should at least write you a Pub Quiz question about him. Expect that in 2011, but not tonight.

           

Tonight you can expect questions about Presidents and First Ladies, books and authors, Apple. Inc., Snoopy, rocks, hard rock, seagulls and duckies, California, mystical hoaxes, the jungle, the NBA, human anatomy, winners of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, enthusiastic words, opera, smart Germans, short poems, southern California cities, jasmine, people whose names are also common nouns, scientists, statism and its detractors, exorcism, Shakespeare, the British royal family, Asia, football stars, the 17th-century equivalent of a knock-knock joke, and musicians with a penchant for melodrama.

 

Speaking of musicians, one of my favorite local musicians, Random Abiladeze, is also a roof-raising poet, and he’s coming to Davis. He’ll be performing at Bistro 33 for Poetry Night on March 2nd, the birthday of a number of my heroes, including Dr. Seuss, Desi Arnaz, and Tito Lord. To find out more about Random, please visit http://randomab.com/blog/. I’ll let you know next week how you can register your intent to join us.

 

When last I checked, we still had a number of tables available for this evening’s performance of the Pub Quiz. I hope you will be one of the diners enjoying the performance. Perhaps you will be performing yourself. One needn’t attend a writers conference in order to be inspired, as you folks teach me every week. Happy Presidents’ Day!

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster

yourquizmaster@gmail.com

 

Here are five questions from a Pub Quiz fundraiser I hosted recently for my friends at Davis Sunrise Rotary (see davisrotary.org):

 

1.            Mottos and Slogans.  Found 68 miles south of the state capital of Sacramento, what county seat of Stanislaus County has as its city motto this phrase? Water Wealth Contentment Health. 

 

2.            Internet Culture. What website with the slogan “Relationships Matter” promises that it will “strengthen[] and extend[] your existing network of trusted contacts”? 

 

3.            Frivolous Celebrities. “Lindsay Lohan Charged With Felony Grand Theft, Could Face Years In Prison,” proclaimed a recent headline. What did Lohan allegedly steal?    

 

4.            Four for Four.  Which of the following people, if any, were born in the 19th Century? Jimmy Durante, Cary Grant, A.A. Milne, Daniel Webster. 

 

5.            Art and Art History. What French artist and Post-Impressionist painter has been called the bridge between Impressionism and Cubism, and “the father of us all” by both Matisse and Picasso?  

 

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

Thinking about our Valentines — A Day Off from the Pub Quiz

 

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            Happy Valentine’s Day! We won’t be holding a Pub Quiz tonight, but I bet that you’ll have almost as much fun without us. Please save February 21st for us, as I will have been preparing some clever questions for you. As always, I welcome your feedback, especially in the form of proposed Pub Quiz questions and question topics.

            To improve your prospects, I include here a link to some Pablo Neruda love poems: http://bit.ly/nerudalovepoems. Enjoy your evening!

 

Your Quizmaster

 

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster

yourquizmaster@gmail.com

 

 

P.S. Did you know that your Quizmaster is also a campus expert on textese? See http://bit.ly/andyontvagain.

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 Surfeit of Holidays Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            I hope by now that you have recovered from the Super Bowl, America’s second Thanksgiving. I followed the game peripherally from the tweets I was receiving, commentary on the half-time show and the commercials, but spent most of our warmest day of the year so far bicycling with my son, enjoying having the deserted city streets and downtown shops to ourselves. I stopped by a favorite South Davis restaurant where typically we are greeted by name only to find that all our favorite employees had the day off. The second-stringers were left to watch over the empty eatery, and to get our food order wrong. Other special occasions, like Reagan’s 100th birthday celebrations, or the televised funeral of Ted Kennedy, distract us for a while, and invite us to think about national trends, values, and heroes. Perhaps informal national holidays such as Superbowl Sunday and Black Friday are meant to help us compensate for missed shopping opportunities on “bank holidays.” As Dave Barry says, “Once again, we come to the Holiday Season, a deeply religious time that each of us observes, in his own way, by going to the mall of his choice.” Even more cynical is George Bernhard Shaw; he opined that “A perpetual holiday is a good working definition of hell.” Perhaps Shaw didn’t care to spend time with his family. Another important Superbowl attraction for many Americans, I suppose, is that we spend Superbowl Sunday with the friends whom we seek out, and Thanksgiving with family with whom we are stuck.

            I will be spending the entirety of Valentine’s Day evening dining with my beloved, and I encourage you to do the same. It’s one of the most important days on the calendar, and I’m sure the hardworking staff would be happy to welcome you and your date. Because Valentine’s Day happens on a Monday this year, we will have to take a one-week break from the Pub Quiz so that the Valentine’s Day crowds can be accommodated. If you are desperate for trivial fun, I will be hosting a Pub Quiz-themed fundraiser for Sunrise Rotary Club at International House on Thursday the 17th. Last year at this event the participating teams raised over $1,000 for Haiti Disaster Relief. Visit www.davisrotary.org/ to find out more about this fine civic organization and the February 17th event (which by now may be sold out).

            Even though I have not yet watched this year’s Superbowl (I have it Tivo-ed), you can be sure that I’ll be asking Superbowl-related questions tonight, so feel free to bring at least one person who watched the game. Other questions will concern the letter K, Shakespearean geography, internet culture, supermodels, animated comedies, grouchy former Senators from Wyoming, superheroes (x2), spectacles, football, insects, hellcats, underwear, the automotive industry, the vocabulary of flame wars, Nobel laureates, prayers, telegraphy, Afghanistan, trendy books from last decade, unrest in the Middle East, organic compounds, blockbuster movie stars, gay marriage, and classical composers.

            If you have friends who would benefit from receiving this newsletter, please refer them to the yourquizmaster.com website so they can sign up. I hope you can join us tonight for your last Pub Quiz fix until February 21!

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster

yourquizmaster@gmail.com

 

Here are five questions from last week’s quiz:

 

1.            Mottos and Slogans.  According to the company’s commercials, what kind of beer “Tastes great” and is “less filling”? 

 

2.            Internet Culture. Last week’s Viral Video. In a 1994 episode of what morning show did a host ask this now-famous question: “Alison, could you explain what internet is?” 

 

3.            Newspaper Headlines.   What is the name of the current President of Egypt? 

 

4.            Four for Four.    Which of the following American cities, if any, are south of Los Angeles? Memphis, Tennessee; Mobile, Alabama; Santa Fe, New Mexico; Tulsa, Oklahoma

 

5.            Mine Disasters. In what US state did the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster take place? 

 

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 Poetry for Autism Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

 Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

            As many of you know, while I get to play Quizmaster every Monday night, I wear a great number of other hats. This week I’ve been wearing my poet hat, and have had an opportunity to give readings in support of the causes support. Friday, for instance, the PTA at the Two Rivers Elementary School invited me to perform before 600 of its students at a morning assembly. I was charged with helping to inspire the collected students and their parents read for one million minutes during the month of February. Poems are more fun to read than most other choices students had, I argued, as well as being short, and usually free. I recited and rapped some examples, and then read them my famous rubber duck poem before reminding them to start drafting poems for the Two Rivers Elementary poetry contest, and to keep up with their minutes. You can track their progress, and discover reasons to consider supporting the Two Rivers Elementary PTA by visiting http://www.natomas.k12.ca.us/15172011702238840/blank/browse.asp?A=383&BMDRN=2000&BCOB=0&C=60356.

            And tonight before rushing over to the Pub Quiz, I get to participate in an evening of poetry in support of Autism research and treatment. At the Sacramento Poetry Center tonight I’ll be reading with three terrific poets: Rebecca Foust, Connie Post, Michelle Bitting. All of their lives have been touched by loved ones with autism. The UC Davis Mind Institute and the Odyssey Learning Center will benefit from this evening of food and poetry. Although I don’t expect you to join us in Sacramento tonight at 7, I invite you to find out more about the work of the UC Davis Mind Institute at http://www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/mindinstitute/. We are lucky to have such a local resource to support research into autism, the fastest growing developmental disability in the U.S. today.

            Tonight at the Pub Quiz we will hear questions about film and more film, beer, Katie Couric, Tulsa and Memphis, film sequels you may have seen, coal, southern states, baseball, insects, Thomas Jefferson, one of Shakespeare’s more famous sonnets, debt, being blunt, the Academy Awards, muskrats, superheroes, Canadian performers, Batman, the rickshaw, colors that are also foods, favorite actresses, languages and letters (x3), literary villains, chemistry, Republican statesmen, football and Shakespeare.

            If all this talk of poetry has left you craving an event for you to enjoy, I invite you to return this coming Wednesday night at 8 to see Chana Bloch read. The subject of an entire panel at the most recent meeting of the Modern Language Association, Chana Bloch is the author of four books of poems: The Secrets of the Tribe, The Past Keeps Changing, Mrs. Dumpty, and Blood Honey. She is co-translator of the biblical Song of Songs and six books of contemporary Israeli poetry, including The Selected Poetry of Yehuda Amichai and his magnum opus, Open Closed Open, and Hovering at a Low Altitude: The Collected Poetry of Dahlia Ravikovitch. Find out more at http://www.poetryindavis.com.

            When last I talked to Bistro 33, 14 tables had been reserved for tonight’s Pub Quiz, which means that we still have room for your team if you call now. I hope you will join us tonight for the Pub Quiz!

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster

yourquizmaster@gmail.com

 

Here are five questions from last week’s quiz:

 

22.            Film.   What actress who played a leading role in the HBO television series Big Love, for which she received a Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress in 2010, also appeared in the films Boys Don’t Cry, American Psycho, and Zodiac? 

 

23.            Zookeepers. What is the name of the American zookeeper who is the Director Emeritus of the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium? 

 

24.            Mountains of the World.   The highest mountain in the Alps, covered with snow at almost 16 thousand feet, is found on the Italian–French border. What is its name? 

 

25.            Actors and Actresses. Anne Hathaway has been cast to play Selina Kyle in one of the most anticipated films of 2012. By what name do fans of this film franchise better know Selina Kyle?  

 

26.            Science.  Pangaea was the name of the supercontinent that existed during the Paleozoic and Mesozoic eras, before the component continents were separated into their current configuration. Which of the following numbers of years is closest to the dating of that era? 2,500 years, 250,000 years, 250 million years, or 250 billion years?

 

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 Inspiring Quotations Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

 

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            In class today we discussed the quotation “Be afraid to die until you have won some small victory for humanity.” Horace Mann, founder of Antioch College, spoke these words sometime in the late 19th century, and every day as a college student my father walked past a statue of Mann with the words at its base. It inspired my father to heed Mann’s words as an educator himself, as well as a theatre and film director, journalist, playwright and magician. Have you located the quotation or quotations that sustain and inspire you? Feel free to email them to me, or post them on the blog, and I will feature one or more of them in a Pub Quiz this year. Someone today has already reminded me of these wise words by Eleanor Roosevelt: “No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.” This weekend I saw the Davis Shakespeare Ensemble’s production of Twelfth Night and was reminded that “some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them.” Do you have a sense of what that quotation means to you?

            Tonight greatness awaits those who can answer questions about the following topics: internet fads, Florida, other southern states, world wars, the French language, film music (what’s your favorite film song to sing in the shower?), basketball, Mormons, Minneapolis, wildebeest stampedes, autographed documents, a tunnel anagram, Native American terminology, broken flowers, Glee, taxis, British movies, music and more music, John F. Kennedy, American poets, zoos, storied mountains, geology, illustrations, tigers, football, Shakespeare, and jazz.

            Although we won’t be holding Pub Quiz on Valentine’s Day, we will hold it tonight, and the last time I checked, we’ll have room for you and your team. I hope you can join us.

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster

yourquizmaster@gmail.com

 

Here are five questions from last week’s quiz:

 

 

2.            Internet Culture.  The almost 48 year-old founder, president, chief executive officer and chairman of the board of Amazon.com has a Z somewhere in his five-letter last name. What is that name?

 

3.            Newspaper Headlines.   World Leaders. Run out of town by an angry crowd, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali left the country he formerly ruled with 1.6 metric tons of gold, or about 1.6% his country’s gross domestic product. Name the African country. 

 

4.            Four for Four.   Which of the following recognitions were awarded to Martin Luther King Jr., either during his life or in the two decades after his assassination? The Congressional Gold Medal, The Nobel Peace Prize, The Presidential Medal of Freedom, A Pulitzer Prize. 

 

5.            Art and Art History. What is the one-syllable last name of the man who painted the 1930 painting American Gothic? 

 

6.            Actors and Actresses. What actress starred in the 2004 American remake of Japanese horror film The Grudge?   

 

 

 

P.S. The recent Modern Language Association conference devoted an entire panel to the poetry of Chana Bloch. She’ll be appearing atPoetry night on February 2nd. Mark your calendars now!

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

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

Longtime participants in the Pub Quiz have come to expect questions this holiday Monday that address the legacy of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. King was a hero in my Washington DC home, his picture found in our dining room amid the family portraits. As a child I often visited my mother at her workplace, the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, where I beheld a huge mural that presented Dr. King’s life and accomplishments. I remember a Reverend King quotation (From his final book, Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community) that I read many times in that library, one that is especially relevant today:

 

“Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars…. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.”

 

What would Pub Quiz regulars not expect? Essay questions. Questions that would allow for and welcome a wide variety of answers, such as those I ask in my writing and literature classes. Here’s a topical sports and Hollywood question that I won’t ask tonight: Explain the allusions and humor behind the following Tweet from my favorite People Magazine writer:

 

“If Ricky Gervais finds himself short on job offers after this, I am sure the New York Jets can give him a job on their sidelines.”

 

If you are reading this at https://www.yourquizmaster.com, feel free to leave your answers to this Gervais/Jets question in the comments section of this blog entry!

 

As for tonight’s quiz, we had only one or two tables still available this afternoon. I hope you will grab one of them. Here are the topics to expect, so choose your team’s members accordingly: Government agencies, the CEOs of big tech companies, a metric ton of gold, Martin Luther King, Jr., American art, horror movies, Berlin, golf, Chinese leaders, medical breakthroughs, the Grand Canyon, five-letter verbs with just one vowel, musical colors (again), New Jersey, war poems, American presidents, Harvard academics, novels you have actually read, George Bernard Shaw, Pakistan, Chicago, world heroes, troubled leaders, piano movies, and Shakespeare. You’ve been warned.

 

Speaking of entertainments, Christian Kiefer and Michael Spurgeon are going to be performing at the John Natsoulas Gallery Thursday night, and I get to introduce them. I have known Christian for many years, and you may have heard him interviewed on NPR’sAll Things Considered. As a musician, Christian Kiefer has performed, collaborated, and recorded with some of the leading lights of the American independent rock and avant-garde sound communities and has been featured twice on NPR’s All Things Considered. As a poet, Kiefer has seen his work appear in Santa Monica Review, The Antioch Review, andBlackbird. He holds a Ph.D. in American Literature from University of California Davis and teaches English at American River College. The result of Kiefer’s collaboration on a triple CD, Of Great and Mortal Men: 43 Songs for 43 U.S. Presidencies, has been used as a teaching aid in many American history classes, and I have grabbed a few Pub Quiz topics from it, too. His new novel, The Infinite Tides, is making the rounds. Find out more about Christian Kiefer at http://xiankiefer.wordpress.com/. A tenured professor at American River College, Michael Spurgeon is the faculty adviser to the American River Review, the nation’s most highly acclaimed undergraduate literary and art magazine. Like Kiefer, Spurgeon is also an established poet. You are heartily invited to join us to that event, too. Seehttp://www.poetryindavis.com for details.

See you tonight for the Pub Quiz!

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster

yourquizmaster@gmail.com

 

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

8.            Sports. The current third baseman for the New York Yankees is the youngest player ever to hit both 500 and 600 home runs. What is his name?  

9.            Science. New Subcategory – Science Vocabulary Anagrams. What two-syllable adjective meaning “Resembling, branching like, or shaped like a tree” is an anagram for the common phrase DROID DEN?  

10.            Food and Drink. What are the three primary ingredients found in a Caffe Mocha?

11.            Unusual Words. What three-syllable verb starting with the letter T means to be “born anew in another body after death”? (Only a couple teams answered this question correctly)

12.            Another Music Question. The music video of what new one-word Katy Perry hit shows insecure people in Budapest finding the courage to confront their fears amid multicolored pyrotechnics?  

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

 

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            It’s with a sad heart that I’ve been preparing for tonight’s Pub Quiz, thinking as all of us have about the tragic events in Tucson. A friend of mine and former Davisite who goes by the name Fang Bastardson wrote yesterday that as a society we should be careful not to let notoriety reward the mentally ill people who commit acts of mass violence. Here’s how he put it:

 

I think all responsible broadcasters should get together—of their own accord—and conspire to never to let the name, or any personal information, of assassins or attempted assassins pass their lips or appear in their publications ever again. Take away the spotlight and you take away a lot of the motivation. Most of these idiots leave notes behind, elucidating how much they’re looking forward to their names becoming household words after their atrocities.

 

For this reason and in the name of good taste I am not going pose questions about Representative Gabrielle Giffords or the other events of January 8th. If you would like to read more about the thoughts and photographs of my friend Fang, visit http://fangsforum.blogspot.com. If you would like to support the California Chapter of NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, visit http://www.namicalifornia.org/.

            On tonight’s Quiz we will feature questions on Japanese consumer products, Star Wars, Tom Cruise, an actual country music star (as I try to do at least once a year), Chile, the Royal Family, British singer-songwriters, the color red, baseball, Art and Art History, Cats, Androids that live in dens, cocoa powder, reincarnation, bottle rockets and other pyrotechnics, ABC shows, NBC shows, really long snakes, songs about colors (such as the blues), censorship (x2), Presidents of the United States (more than one), prolific authors, cars with names, foreign leaders, Frenchmen, wireless telegraphy, famous Republicans, mathematics, and Shakespeare.

            We do have tables available for tonight’s Pub Quiz. If you haven’t yet made a reservation, call now at 530 756-4556. And just so you are warned, management wanted to make sure that I had some time with my wife Kate on Monday, February 14th, so we won’t be holding Pub Quiz that night. I bet you will find some other diversions to distract you that night.

            And remember that if you are a new team, or if you recruit a new team, additional bonus rewards await you. All you have to do is let me know on the evening of a Pub Quiz! I will be the guy with the microphone, wearing black.

            See you tonight.

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

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Here are five questions from last week’s quiz:

 

1.            Mottos and Slogans. What company with about 5,000 locations has as its commercial slogan the phrase “We try harder?” 

 

2.            Newspaper Headlines.    United States Secretary of Education Arne Duncan wrote an op-ed that appeared in today’s Washington Post that NCLB provides “A chance for bipartisan governing.” What does NCLB stand for? 

 

3.            Four for Four.      In which of the following films nominated for a Best Picture Oscar did Martin Sheen appear? Apocalypse Now, Avatar, The Departed, Gandhi. 

 

4.            Actors and Actresses. What somewhat overweight American actor, producer and screenwriter has appeared in the films Superbad, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Funny People and Megamind? 

 

5.            Know Your American Cities. In alphabetical order, what are the first letters of the names of the five boroughs of New York City?  

 

 

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

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            Happy New Year! I hope 2011 will be a prosperous year for you. In my family we would always see films on New Year’s Eve, and often on Christmas Day. We did this not only because the best films are released at the end of the year, when the short attention spans of members of the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences were not yet too taxed, but because you can sit around reading your Christmas presents and staring at the people who gave them to you for only so long. As Antoine de Saint-Exupery once said, “Life has taught us that love does not consist in gazing at each other, but in looking outward together in the same direction,” and we often chose to gaze at the big screen.

And these were not just a metaphorical big screen, but actual big screens. The Tenley Circle Theatre, where I worked as a teenager, had three auditoria, the largest of which held almost 500 people. And larger theatres like the Circle Theatre or the Avalon held even more. All of these places are gone now, but the Uptown Theatre still stands. This theatre where I saw Star Wars has been called “the best place to see event movies for several decades” by the website Cinema Treasures (see http://cinematreasures.org/theater/70/). According to this same site, “The theater opened with a seating capacity of 1,364 (914 seats in the orchestra and 450 in the stadium seated balcony). The Uptown Theater was designed by theater architect John Zink, a top designer of Art Deco and Art Moderne style movie houses.” In 1968 2001-A Space Odyssey showed at the Uptown for 51 weeks. Can you imagine?

            So in recognition of such traditions, and such grand theatres of the past, tonight’s Pub Quiz will focus at least partly on film, most of them released in the last 20 years, films that could be seen at our own domestic movie palace, The Varsity, or one of the smaller auditoria in town. We will also feature questions on automobile companies, internet time-wasters, Arne Duncan’s thoughts on education policies, great films (Apocalypse Now, Avatar, The Departed, Gandhi, and other award-winning usual suspects), less-great films, New York City, the music of New Jersey, Canadian athletes, POTUS, favorite primates, forgeries, starlets, New Year’s Eve, oaf topics, fudge, onetime superpowers, Obama’s cabinet, Western Asia, shaking your money maker, physics, mythology, epics, young actresses that I have not heard of, the Sacramento Kings, Shakespeare, and Chinese boys.

            If you call right now, you might grab our last table for tonight’s Quiz. I expect us to sell out again this evening, though you are still welcome to drop by. As I will discuss more fully in a later newsletter, Daniel Goleman’s new book, Social Intelligence: The New Science of Human Relationships, suggests that we need collaborative social events like the Pub Quiz to stay healthy and intellectually active, no matter how old we are. So if connecting with friends, keeping healthy, and challenging yourself intellectually were among your New Year’s resolutions, you owe it to yourself to join us tonight for the Pub Quiz. See you at 9!

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

http://www.twitter.com/yourquizmaster

http://www.facebook.com/yourquizmaster

yourquizmaster@gmail.com

 

Here are five questions from last week’s quiz:

 

1.            Mottos and Slogans.    The company that used to be known for its slogan “All Day I Dream About Sports” is now using “Impossible is Nothing.” Name the Company. 

 

2.            Internet Culture – Viral Videos. What 54 year-old American stand-up comedian, television host, social critic, political commentator, author, and actor published a Christmas video to Oprah called “Enough With the Materialism”? 

 

3.            Newspaper Headlines.   What is the only US state to have lost population between 2000 and 2010? Note that a number of states will have lost representatives in the US House of Representatives. I’m looking for the only state that actually lost citizens over the last decade. 

 

4.            Four for Four.  According to a recent survey, Americans of which of the following ages are 50% or more likely to live in households with cell phones but no traditional landline telephones? 20-24, 25-29, 30-34, 35-39.  

 

5.            Ron Howard Movies. What year 2000 movie was the highest grossing film for that year, as well as the career box office records for both director Ron Howard and actor Jim Carrey? 

 

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 Ersatz Journalism Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

 

            Welcome to the final Pub Quiz Newsletter of 2010! Over the course of the past several months, I have enjoyed sharing with you my sidebar thoughts about a variety of topics as they occur to me on Monday afternoons. Despite some of your wry comments about their inscrutability, I will continue to offer you hints about upcoming Pub Quiz comments on a weekly basis, as well as invite your questions and comments about the Quiz. I’ve been trying to think like a journalist in the last couple weeks, for I will be teaching the UC Davis University Writing Program’s journalism class for the first time next quarter. I’ve been debating with my friends whether my decade of work as a radio talk show host on KDVS counts as journalism, or just an opportunity for me to talk to new and favorite poets and other creative professionals on a weekly basis. The Pub Quiz has forced me to be a researcher of journalism, for I’ve tried my best to review with you (Socratically, one might say) some of the most important and compelling news stories from the previous week. I also include some fluff, the sort of news stories that my brother scoops as a reporter at People Magazine, for not everyone spends time reading The New Yorker and The Economist.

            The year’s last Pub Quiz will include questions about sports dreams, materialism, the US Census, young people and their cell phones, holiday films, Kentucky, Christmas tourism, Lisa Marie Presley, baseball, sound energy, African American actors, chivalry, ABC, famous Russians, the Grammys, Spain, football (x2), Martin Luther King, Great Britain, Rolling Stone, famous novelists, big budget flops, Africa, American wars, migration, ballet, American Samurais, famous aviators, and Shakespeare.

            I appreciate your subscribing to this newsletter, and your participation in the Pub Quiz in 2010. I look forward to bringing you another year of thought-provoking entertainment and opportunities for camaraderie in 2011. Happy New Year to you and your friends!

            Best,

 

Your Quizmaster

https://www.yourquizmaster.com

 

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

 

21.            Books and Authors of the Year. The title of Jonathan Franzen’s latest novel is a one-word abstract noun beginning with the letter F. What’s the title? 

 

22.            Film.   Who plays the title role in the 2011 film The Green Hornet? 

 

23.            Name the State. What US state is known as the “Volunteer State,” a nickname earned during the War of 1812 because of the prominent role played by volunteer soldiers from this state, especially during the Battle of New Orleans?  

 

24.            Countries of the World. According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, there were 13,421,000 Jews worldwide in 2010. What country is home to the largest percentage of them? 

 

25.            Obituaries. What director of Breakfast at Tiffany’s and the original Pink Panther movies died this past Thursday at the age of 88? 

 

 

 

P.P.S. To see the web site that I am building for my weekly radio show on KDVS, visit http://www.poetrytechnology.com.

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