These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2023-11-13,
and should be interpreted accordingly.
On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
the correct answers in about 3 days.
All questions were written by members of the Usual Suspects and
are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may have
been retyped and/or edited by me. The posting and tabulation of
current-events questions is independent of the concurrent posting
of other rounds. For further information please see my 2023-05-24
companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition
(QFTCI*)".
I wrote one of these rounds.
* Game 8, Round 2 - Entertainment - Playing Julius Caesar
Over the years, many actors have portrayed Julius Caesar in movies
and on television. Here are some of them. In each case, name
the actor.
1. In a 1945 movie adaptation of George Bernard ["BER-nerd"]
Shaw's "Caesar and Cleopatra", this British actor as Caesar
was a mouthpiece for Shaw's own witticisms and droll humor.
The actor is better known for his numerous character roles,
often as a villain, in such films as Frank Capra's "Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington" (1939) and Alfred Hitchcock's "Notorious"
(1946).
2. One of the greatest interpreters of William Shakespeare's plays
in theater, this British actor only played Caesar in only one
movie, a 1970 version of Shakespeare's play. His many other
movies, usually in character roles, include "Murder on the
Orient Express" (1975) and "Arthur" (1981).
3. Before he played James Bond in two of Eon Productions' 25 Bond
movies, this British actor distinguished himself in various
Shakespearean roles on stage. After his days as Bond, he took
up the role of Caesar in a 1999 Hallmark TV mini-series called
"Cleopatra". Low career point indeed!
4. This American actor, familiar to fans of Dick Wolf's "Law &
Order" and that producer's current series "FBI", played Caesar
in a 2003 two-part television bio-pic that also starred Richard
Harris, Christopher Walken, and Chris Noth [rhymes with "both"],
another alumnus of "Law & Order".
5. In a big-budget movie extravaganza in 1963, this British actor
took a stab at Caesar. (Groan.) A long-time stage-and-screen
thespian, he had a career that stretched back to the 1930s,
including films such as "Unfaithfully Yours" (1948), as a
homicidal conductor, and "The Agony and the Ecstasy" (1965),
playing a pope.
6. This American actor may have surprised movie fans with his
excellent portrayal of Shakespeare's Caesar in Joseph
Mankiewicz's 1953 film, a production jam-packed with famous
actors such as Marlon Brando, James Mason, <answer 2>, and
Deborah Kerr ["Car"]. He also played a profoundly sleazy lawyer
in John Huston's "The Asphalt Jungle" (1950).
7. This British comedian is famous for the two dozen or more
"Carry On" films he did for decades. One of those, the
atrociously hilarious wink-wink movie "Carry On Cleo" (1964),
saw him take on the role of Caesar opposite Amanda Barrie
as Cleopatra.
8. On a more serious note, occasionally a younger actor takes
on a more youthful Caesar, which was the case for this US
wannabe-Rock-Hudson, better known as the lover of Janet Leigh's
ill-fated character in Hitchcock's "Psycho" (1960). He took
up the challenge of Caesar in Stanley Kubrick's "Spartacus",
also released in 1960.
9. This Irish actor played Caesar in the sprawling, saucy epic
HBO/BBC series "Rome" (2005-07), detailing the transition of
ancient Rome from republic to empire. His movie roles include
villains in "Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life" (2003)
and "Justice League" (2017). More recently, he played Buddy's
grandfather in Kenneth Branagh's "Belfast" (2021).
10. In 2005, ABC took its own even more lurid whack at ancient
Rome with "Empire". Although he was born in the US and has
lived in Ireland, the actor who played Julius Caesar in this
mini-series identifies as Canadian, and has done a lot of plays
and movies here. Movie and TV roles include Pierre Trudeau in
the CBC mini-series "Trudeau" (2002), Glenn Gould in "Thirty-Two
Short Films about Glenn Gould" (1993), and a police detective in
"Bon Cop, Bad Cop" (2006) and its sequel.
* Game 8, Round 3 - Sports - American Football
1. The National Football League now has 32 teams based in more
than 20 US states, but when it started in 1920 there were 14
teams in 5 states. Just like with the NHL, only two of those
original teams still exist, but unlike the NHL, both teams have
moved from their original home cities. Give the *present-day
name* of either of those surviving teams -- give either the
team name or the place name.
2. The most recent case of an NFL team changing its name happened
last year. What is that team now called? Place name and team
name required.
3. The next two questions are about NFL records according to
the NFL's official Record and Fact Book issued at the start of
this season. Which retired player, who started with New England,
holds the all-time career record for the most points scored?
4. Please decode the rot13 only after you have finished with the
previous question. Ivangvrev fpberq zbfg bs uvf cbvagf ol
xvpxvat. Juvpu ergverq cynlre, jub fgnegrq jvgu Fna Senapvfpb,
ubyqf gur nyy-gvzr pnerre erpbeq sbe gur zbfg gbhpuqbjaf?
5. Another professional league of American football currently has
8 teams; its North Division consists of the Michigan Panthers,
New Jersey Generals, Philadelphia Stars, and Pittsburgh Maulers.
Name that league -- the short form will do.
6. Still another professional league of American football has
announced its intention to merge with the <answer 5>. It,
too, currently has 8 teams, and its North Division consists of
the DC Defenders, Seattle Sea Dragons, St. Louis BattleHawks,
and Vegas Vipers. This league only has a short-form name --
what is it?
7. College football in the US, like other collegiate sports,
is governed by the NCAA. What does that stand for, exactly?
8. The highest level of NCAA football is called the Football Bowl
Subdivision of Division I, or FBS for short. It's divided
into 10 conferences, but how many teams are there altogether,
within, oh, 10?
9. Name *any* college or university whose team won the championship
of its FBS conference last year. This does not refer to
bowl games.
10. The top individual award for NCAA football is the Heisman
Trophy. Name *any one* of the last 10 winners (i.e. the winner
for any year 2013-22).
--
Mark Brader | "A colorful quilt reflecting the dispersed development
m...@vex.net | of the nation. A sentence fragment."
Toronto | --Eric Walker
My text in this article is in the public domain.