Minnesota Open Discussion
Minnesota Open Discussion
Unless there is a secret mirror I am confused about, all three sites playing this tournament have finished. I'll let someone else wax more effusively about the project as a whole, but discuss away.
I personally edited or wrote all of the history except a few questions here and there, mostly in the world history sections (don't blame the Wolof Empire on me!). This was the first time I have edited history for a high difficulty level tournament, and I think it ended up being a mixed bag. There were certainly some questions I liked very much, some that didn't play well at all in retrospect (the Hundred Flowers tossup), and some that I liked but just needed clearer wording at times (Sevastopol, Titus). I heard some complaints about the uselessness of the history lead-ins, and this could certainly be true--the lead-in generally was something that amused me or something historiographical. At the very least, I found them more interesting than firing off names, laws, or battles.
I also wrote a handful of questions in other categories, mainly American Lit, Religion, Social Science, and Trash.
It doesn't seem like we succeeded in making it easier than last year, but I'm too tired to determine what happened.
I noticed the tournament seemed to have a very modern flavor at times, which I think reflects some of my interests, perhaps too much so. I will admit that it was certainly easier in the last days of writing to dip into the 20th Century well for topics that I knew well.
I personally edited or wrote all of the history except a few questions here and there, mostly in the world history sections (don't blame the Wolof Empire on me!). This was the first time I have edited history for a high difficulty level tournament, and I think it ended up being a mixed bag. There were certainly some questions I liked very much, some that didn't play well at all in retrospect (the Hundred Flowers tossup), and some that I liked but just needed clearer wording at times (Sevastopol, Titus). I heard some complaints about the uselessness of the history lead-ins, and this could certainly be true--the lead-in generally was something that amused me or something historiographical. At the very least, I found them more interesting than firing off names, laws, or battles.
I also wrote a handful of questions in other categories, mainly American Lit, Religion, Social Science, and Trash.
It doesn't seem like we succeeded in making it easier than last year, but I'm too tired to determine what happened.
I noticed the tournament seemed to have a very modern flavor at times, which I think reflects some of my interests, perhaps too much so. I will admit that it was certainly easier in the last days of writing to dip into the 20th Century well for topics that I knew well.
Mike Cheyne
Formerly U of Minnesota
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I thought this was a very enjoyable tournament. It had lots of really good questions and a few questions that I thought were a little weak but which aren't really worth discussing too much. I want to note two things that jumped out at me about this set. First, it seems like there was a disproportionately large number of questions, primarily in chemistry, which were about specific scientists. Maybe I'm wrong about this, but I'm not sure that there are a lot of people out there who have a great deal of knowledge regarding Staudinger's work; in our room, it basically came down to me putting together "German scientist + namesake ligation," but then again, no one on either team playing at the time was really a chemistry expert. Another thing I noticed about the history questions was the preponderance of not-very-useful anecdotes. They seemed to show up more or less randomly in various parts of the question. I'm not particularly opposed to the judicious use of a neat anecdote as a leadin clue, but too often those clues ended up being unhelpful or were placed in the middle of the question where you'd otherwise be expecting a more substantive clue. I don't think it particularly impacted the overall quality of the questions themselves, but it was just something I thought worth noting. Other than that, it was a fun time; thanks to Bernadette and Rob for their hospitality and the whole Minnesota team for a solid tournament.
Jerry Vinokurov
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I'll freely admit that the anecdote thing dominated lead-ins quite a bit for the history questions, but I was wondering if you had specific examples of tossups in which middle clues also were unhelpful anecdotes. I will say that one of the way I personally learn history is through more anecdote driven memories, as I have a hard time keeping track of specific names (thus the Lisbon tossup mentioning the EuroVision entry being played before the Carnation Revolution, the Cambyses tossup talking about his Lost Army and him fighting his imposter brother, etc.). I understand that these sorts of clues are not always helpful and will perhaps try to be more varied if (and that's a big if) I edit history related things again.
There were a number of clunker questions that just didn't work out. I labored a long time on the Hundred Flowers tossup and it still turned out to be crappy. The Sevastopol one was worded improperly. The Titus one should have said "his father" before "assault on Jerusalem." The Robert Moses tossup (which I liked as an idea) was written on the fly to fill a last minute gap.
I did not powermark the history questions very well.
There were a number of clunker questions that just didn't work out. I labored a long time on the Hundred Flowers tossup and it still turned out to be crappy. The Sevastopol one was worded improperly. The Titus one should have said "his father" before "assault on Jerusalem." The Robert Moses tossup (which I liked as an idea) was written on the fly to fill a last minute gap.
I did not powermark the history questions very well.
Mike Cheyne
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
If you can send me the set I can tell you.Cheynem wrote:I'll freely admit that the anecdote thing dominated lead-ins quite a bit for the history questions, but I was wondering if you had specific examples of tossups in which middle clues also were unhelpful anecdotes.
As the author of the original "Sevastopol" tossup, I was kind of confused by the way it changed during editing. Here's my version:There were a number of clunker questions that just didn't work out. I labored a long time on the Hundred Flowers tossup and it still turned out to be crappy. The Sevastopol one was worded improperly. The Titus one should have said "his father" before "assault on Jerusalem." The Robert Moses tossup (which I liked as an idea) was written on the fly to fill a last minute gap.
Here's the edited version:The opening actions of this battle saw the destruction of the battery situated on Mount Rudolph, which prevented the eventual victors from capitalizing on a similarly successful artillery action. A relief action by General Liprandi failed to aid the losing side at this battle after Liprandi was defeated at Fedioukine Hills. During this battle, which followed the success of the eventual victors at Alma River, the defenders relied on fortifications constructed under the direction of Eduard Totleben, and this battle saw an unsuccessful attempt to sieze the Redan redoubt, which was eventually burned by the retreating defenders. Following the death from cholera of Lord Raglan, the French forces at this battle under Canrobert captured the Malakoff fortification, causing Prince Gorchakov, who had taken command from Alexander Menshikov, to abandon the city over which this battle was being fought. For ten points, identify this siege of a Black Sea city which lasted from October 1854 to September 1855, whose end effectively concluded the Crimean War.
ANSWER: Battle or Siege of Sevastopol
I really am not sure what exactly the edited version adds. The clue about Burgoyne's illegitimate son seems utterly useless to me unless it's one of those cute anecdotes; I had no idea of any such connection and it didn't come up anywhere in my research on the battle. Besides, is there some harm in giving the guy's name? I really don't like these oblique references. Furthermore, does it matter that the railway was constructed by "independent contractors?" I fail to see what this adds at this stage of the question. Also, note that the original version (in my view) avoids the ambiguity over Raglan (which I'm sure caused some negs) by specifying in advance of his name that this was the battle where he died. I guess I just don't understand the motivation for changing this question around so drastically and I don't see what was improved from the original to the edited version.This battle began with the destruction of a battery on Mount Rudolph, which prevented the eventual victors from making a general assault. P.P. Liprandi failed to relieve the losing side after his defeat at Fedioukine Hills. John Burgoyne’s illegitimate son was made a baronet for his engineering accomplishments in this battle. The losing side in this battle aided by engineer Eduard Totleben, while the victors received supplies from a railway constructed out of pocket by independent contractors. Lord (*) Raglan was blamed for not taking weather conditions into account during this battle and he ultimately died during it of dysentery. A key moment in this battle saw General Patrice Mac-Mahon seize the Malakoff fortification, forcing the retreat of Prince Gorchakov, who had take control after the Battle of Inkerman. For 10 points, name this siege of a Black Sea city, whose end effectively concluded the Crimean War.
ANSWER: Battle or Siege of Sevastopol
Jerry Vinokurov
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I negged on the Raglan clue, but it didn't end up mattering in the game.
Perhaps there could have been something early on to indicate that this is a long operation rather than a one-off battle.
Perhaps there could have been something early on to indicate that this is a long operation rather than a one-off battle.
Bruce
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Honestly, I think if you know a lot about the Crimean War, you're not really justified in buzzing just because you heard "Raglan." Dude was pretty much involved in every major action of the war up to and including the last (i.e. Sevastopol) so I don't think you can just buzz because you heard that.Morraine Man wrote:I negged on the Raglan clue, but it didn't end up mattering in the game.
Perhaps there could have been something early on to indicate that this is a long operation rather than a one-off battle.
Jerry Vinokurov
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I liked this set a lot. I also didn't mind too much regarding the anecdotal nature of the early clues, as very few buzzes came super early. I was very glad this tournament had power marks, even if I felt the history powermarks were a bit tough sometimes. One thing that I felt was missing was the lack of coverage of the Middle East and India before the modern period (Sepoy Rebellion is kinda in there). Off hand, I can't remember any tossups on that, and just two bonuses.
Libo
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
The lack of Middle East and India were on me--it just happened to fall through the cracks. There was an India bonus that was claimed but never written. I have no idea why the Middle East didn't appear and it would have certainly made writing a lot easier--I guess it was just an inexplicable blind spot for me when thinking of answers. (Also, there were almost no submissions in this vein)
Regarding the Sevastopol tossup, I admit to not knowing a lot about this battle, so I tried to read about it a bit beforehand. The John Burgyone clue (the guy's name is John Burgoyne, it wasn't intended to be an oblique reference, just a way of distinguishing from his dad) was something humorous I found and in retrospect should have just been a lead-in. I thought it was a way of indicating the importance of engineering at this battle, as Burgoyne the Bastard was the British Chief Engineer. It also noted the British were there, I guess. It probably was an unhelpful clue, but it seemed interesting to me.
I don't see the tossup changed that drastically--aside from some wording changes, which sometimes were there to make it shorter. My reading about the battle suggested the railway was really important, as a way of bringing in much needed supplies, so that's why I added it. I thought it was interesting that the railway was not built by the British government funding it, but by some dudes who read about the siege in the paper and thought they could fund a solution. The only things I deleted were the Alma River and the Redan Redoubt, and if these were essential clues, I'm sorry. I admit the wording got changed a bit and perhaps definitely could have been punched up for the Lord Raglan bit.
My philosophy with submitted history tossups was that I basically took the submissions (assuming I liked the answer lines) and wrote a new tossup using the clues in the submission as a foundation. This is because in cases where I did not know the topic well, I wanted to take a "buck stops here" approach so that problems with them could be traced to me and not to a submission. In many cases, this led to dramatically reworded questions. This was not a slam or jab at the original tossup; it more reflects my general conclusions from a brief attempt to learn about the topic at hand.
Regarding the Sevastopol tossup, I admit to not knowing a lot about this battle, so I tried to read about it a bit beforehand. The John Burgyone clue (the guy's name is John Burgoyne, it wasn't intended to be an oblique reference, just a way of distinguishing from his dad) was something humorous I found and in retrospect should have just been a lead-in. I thought it was a way of indicating the importance of engineering at this battle, as Burgoyne the Bastard was the British Chief Engineer. It also noted the British were there, I guess. It probably was an unhelpful clue, but it seemed interesting to me.
I don't see the tossup changed that drastically--aside from some wording changes, which sometimes were there to make it shorter. My reading about the battle suggested the railway was really important, as a way of bringing in much needed supplies, so that's why I added it. I thought it was interesting that the railway was not built by the British government funding it, but by some dudes who read about the siege in the paper and thought they could fund a solution. The only things I deleted were the Alma River and the Redan Redoubt, and if these were essential clues, I'm sorry. I admit the wording got changed a bit and perhaps definitely could have been punched up for the Lord Raglan bit.
My philosophy with submitted history tossups was that I basically took the submissions (assuming I liked the answer lines) and wrote a new tossup using the clues in the submission as a foundation. This is because in cases where I did not know the topic well, I wanted to take a "buck stops here" approach so that problems with them could be traced to me and not to a submission. In many cases, this led to dramatically reworded questions. This was not a slam or jab at the original tossup; it more reflects my general conclusions from a brief attempt to learn about the topic at hand.
Mike Cheyne
Formerly U of Minnesota
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
The battle at the Redan redoubt was the major action of the siege.Cheynem wrote:The only things I deleted were the Alma River and the Redan Redoubt, and if these were essential clues, I'm sorry.
I don't want to harp on this one tossup but I think it's a good example of the way in which the anecdotes, while sort of amusing, aren't terribly helpful. Not that they hurt as such, but I doubt they were particularly beneficial to anyone.
I have to say, this strikes me as odd. I mean, everything comes back to the editor anyway; if you let through a question that has a problem, that's a missed judgment call by you, so I'm not sure the whole "buck stops here" rationale makes any sense. In general, my feeling is that if a question doesn't need work, the editor should leave it alone. That's the model I generally operate on, anyway, and although I certainly do my share of complete rewrites, those tend to be on questions that are just bad to start with. I don't think there's much to be gained from rewriting a question that's already fine. That just sounds like making extra work for yourself.My philosophy with submitted history tossups was that I basically took the submissions (assuming I liked the answer lines) and wrote a new tossup using the clues in the submission as a foundation. This is because in cases where I did not know the topic well, I wanted to take a "buck stops here" approach so that problems with them could be traced to me and not to a submission. In many cases, this led to dramatically reworded questions. This was not a slam or jab at the original tossup; it more reflects my general conclusions from a brief attempt to learn about the topic at hand.
Anyway, I generally enjoyed the history questions about as much as the rest of the set, which is to say quite a bit. I'm just kind of puzzled at your approach.
Jerry Vinokurov
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I guess I felt a little antsy about leaving questions alone, maybe because it was one of my first major editing jobs. In the future, perhaps I will be more confident to leave tossups alone. I have to say though it didn't really produce any extra work--all of the history was finished well before the tournament date.
Mike Cheyne
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
Formerly U of Minnesota
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I really liked the mythology in this tournament -- it absolutely didn't sacrifice Greco-Roman for the sake of expanding the range of askable world myth tossups. Those world myth questions that were there, such as Bogatyrs and Kusanagi, were cool with the singular exception of that unpronouncable second wife of Tlaloc.
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Those seeking to learn how to pronounce Aztec names should invest in some Chalchiuhtlicue cards.every time i refresh i have a new name wrote:I really liked the mythology in this tournament -- it absolutely didn't sacrifice Greco-Roman for the sake of expanding the range of askable world myth tossups. Those world myth questions that were there, such as Bogatyrs and Kusanagi, were cool with the singular exception of that unpronouncable second wife of Tlaloc.
(incidentally, Kusanagi was a bonus part)
That said, I am, as always, interested in hearing what people thought of the tournament. I edited or wrote the majority of the lit, most of the fine arts (other than some of the painting), the myth, and some of the trash, in addition to a few questions scattered here and there including at least one question in almost every subdistributional area in the editors' packets.
With the lit, I know there were a few things that didn't fly as well as I'd hoped, like the tossup on Once Were Warriors, and a few bonuses that were probably unnecessarily hard (I probably shouldn't've left the submitted bonus part on Congreve's Incognita, nor should I have taken Millet's name out of the bonus part on Bret Harte's "The Angelus", among other things), but I think overall it met my goals. What do you think?
I also want to hear what people thought of the music. I edited or wrote all of it and I want to see what both "music people" and non-"music people" have to say.
Rob Carson
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I've actually heard of Once Were Warriors; it has the status of the foremost illustration of the modern plight of the Maori, the way movies like Smoke Signals might be for Native Americans. I don't recall the tossup mentioning this status, or indeed making any sort of big deal of the fact that the people involved are Maori. I'm not sure if this would have helped anybody get the tossup.
Overall, I thought this MO was a lot less remarkable than last year's MO. I mean that in a good way: there are fewer wacky tossup choices or egregious questions to remark on.
Overall, I thought this MO was a lot less remarkable than last year's MO. I mean that in a good way: there are fewer wacky tossup choices or egregious questions to remark on.
Bruce
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Yeah, Mike was done far before the rest of us were and was awesome enough to help the rest of us out quite a bit.Cheynem wrote:I guess I felt a little antsy about leaving questions alone, maybe because it was one of my first major editing jobs. In the future, perhaps I will be more confident to leave tossups alone. I have to say though it didn't really produce any extra work--all of the history was finished well before the tournament date.
I am glad that most of this tournament was well-received. There were a few things that I wish I'd done better in the R/P/SS (giving the On Liberty tossup a second look for transparency, moved a couple tossups into to the editors packets since they were harder, etc...). I didn't get too many comments from our site, so I'd love to hear more feedback on the stuff that I worked on.
I will probably have something to say about the submissions we received for this tournament, but that will wait until I feel a little less shitty
Bernadette Spencer
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Here's the tossup:Morraine Man wrote:I've actually heard of Once Were Warriors; it has the status of the foremost illustration of the modern plight of the Maori, the way movies like Smoke Signals might be for Native Americans. I don't recall the tossup mentioning this status, or indeed making any sort of big deal of the fact that the people involved are Maori. I'm not sure if this would have helped anybody get the tossup.
I wanted to write on it because it is an important portrait of the modern Maori, but I thought shouting MAORI MAORI MAORI would not be the best way to go about it. You'll notice it does mention the fact that its protagonist is a Maori in the giveaway.For the Michigan packet, I wrote:15. This novel’s protagonist’s wife marries a man named Charlie Bennett in its second sequel, which is titled for the “Long Shadow” of its protagonist. One character in this work hangs out with a drug-addicted boy named Toot, while another, nicknamed “Boogie”, is sent to a Borstal. The protagonist’s eldest son Nig, who dies in this novel’s sequel What Becomes of the Broken Hearted?, joins the Brown Fists gang, whose attempts to reclaim ideal masculinity are reflected in this novel’s title. Near the end of this novel, its protagonist’s daughter Grace hangs herself after being raped, causing the protagonist to abandon his wife Beth and his other five children to live in a park. Its protagonist spends most of his time in McClutchy’s Bar, where his constant fighting earns him the nickname (*) “the Muss”. For 10 points, identify this novel by Alan Duff about the abusive Maori Jake Heke, which was adapted into a 1994 movie starring Temuera Morrison.
ANSWER: Once Were Warriors [accept Jake’s Long Shadow until “second sequel”]
This was my primary goal while writing the set and I'm glad (at least some people) are perceiving it this way.Morraine Man wrote:Overall, I thought this MO was a lot less remarkable than last year's MO. I mean that in a good way: there are fewer wacky tossup choices or egregious questions to remark on.
Rob Carson
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Thanks to Minnesota for putting on a fantastic tournament. I had a lot of fun and thought the questions were great. I'll have more comments about distribution / difficulty once I have a look at the set, but I have no specific complaints about the Fine Arts at this time (except that tossup on The Metamorphosis of Narcissus; sure it's a memorable painting and I liked that tossup a lot, but I think it's too hard to toss up, even at this level).
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I enjoyed this set. I do think there were some kind of crazy answer choices, but more were crazy in a good way (the Gatsby's House tossup) than in a bad way (whatever the hell that Maori thing was; the tossup on Tolstoy that used only non-literary writings).
Highlights for me: Tossups on Liaisons Dangereuses and Man and Superman (which are both underasked, considering their real-world notability), and a Barthelme tossup chock full of clues from his best short stories. I really liked the tossup on North by Northwest, and the bonus that went: Third Man / William Wyler / Touch of Evil (I assume I have Mike Cheyne to thank for it); I'm always happy when the film distribution contains Hollywood classics, and isn't all foreign film.
Highlights for me: Tossups on Liaisons Dangereuses and Man and Superman (which are both underasked, considering their real-world notability), and a Barthelme tossup chock full of clues from his best short stories. I really liked the tossup on North by Northwest, and the bonus that went: Third Man / William Wyler / Touch of Evil (I assume I have Mike Cheyne to thank for it); I'm always happy when the film distribution contains Hollywood classics, and isn't all foreign film.
Sketches of Spain was the only music tossup that seemed to have cluing problems (very transparent: after the lead-in, every clue seemed to mention something related to Spain). All of the cluing in the other tossups seemed really good: not useless description of generic attributes, but real clues. The jazz bonuses asked about some very real great jazz guys in need of exposure (Art Blakey and Woody Herman; the latter is my favorite bandleader so I was really pleased). The musicology bonus was a cool idea, and well-executed. The only real difficulty outlier was the tossup on Tchaikovsky's Winter Dreams Symphony. He wrote six symphonies, of which this is probably his least popular/well-known, and most lacking in quizbowl clues that would make it buzzable; so, it strikes me as kind of a strange choice and probably only viable at CO level. (I may be wrong, because I'm not a violinist, but I think the bonus part on Joachim's Violin Concerto No.2 is also a bit insane for a pre-CO hard part).Ukonvasara wrote: I also want to hear what people thought of the music. I edited or wrote all of it and I want to see what both "music people" and non-"music people" have to say.
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Rob wrote the Touch of Evil bonus and I wrote the North by Northwest tossup. I also wrote the bonus that mentioned Woody Herman--I'm glad somebody likes him, he seemed important but hard.
Mike Cheyne
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
That was a religion tossup. Tolstoy's religious works are a pretty important part of his life; this was a submission that I was quite pleased by.ThisIsMyUsername wrote:the tossup on Tolstoy that used only non-literary writings
You assume wrong!ThisIsMyUsername wrote:the bonus that went: Third Man / William Wyler / Touch of Evil (I assume I have Mike Cheyne to thank for it)
Gautam wrote SoS and the Blakey thing was submitted (originally it was a bit harder); Mike wrote the Woody Herman thing. I'm glad you liked the musicology bonus, and I'm glad my uneducated efforts at real-clue finding were successful.ThisIsMyUsername wrote:Sketches of Spain was the only music tossup that seemed to have cluing problems (very transparent: after the lead-in, every clue seemed to mention something related to Spain). All of the cluing in the other tossups seemed really good: not useless description of generic attributes, but real clues. The jazz bonuses asked about some very real great jazz guys in need of exposure (Art Blakey and Woody Herman; the latter is my favorite bandleader so I was really pleased). The musicology bonus was a cool idea, and well-executed.Ukonvasara wrote: I also want to hear what people thought of the music. I edited or wrote all of it and I want to see what both "music people" and non-"music people" have to say.
Yeah, this was a submission; I was a bit conflicted about keeping it but ended up just leaving it due to running out of time to replace it.ThisIsMyUsername wrote: The only real difficulty outlier was the tossup on Tchaikovsky's Winter Dreams Symphony. He wrote six symphonies, of which this is probably his least popular/well-known, and most lacking in quizbowl clues that would make it buzzable; so, it strikes me as kind of a strange choice and probably only viable at CO level.
Could be. My research suggested it was pretty important and/or highly-regarded, but I'm hardly a violinist either.ThisIsMyUsername wrote:(I may be wrong, because I'm not a violinist, but I think the bonus part on Joachim's Violin Concerto No.2 is also a bit insane for a pre-CO hard part).
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I was also quite happy to receive this tossup from VCU. Tolstoy considered his work after his religious conversion/revival/whatever to be very important, and most of his late work, overtly religious or not, was heavily influenced by his belief in God.Ukonvasara wrote:That was a religion tossup. Tolstoy's religious works are a pretty important part of his life; this was a submission that I was quite pleased by.ThisIsMyUsername wrote:the tossup on Tolstoy that used only non-literary writings
EDIT: Formatting
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I'm a violinist and asking about Joachim's concertos is nutty. Winter Dreams being tossed up makes me sad I couldn't go though, that symphony kicks the Pathetique's ass.
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Yeah, I think MO could be summed up as the model of a very competent hard tournament. If there were a "Writing Hard Tournaments for Dummies" book, it would be wise to use this event as the prototype. In this day and age, I feel like you know a tournament is good the same way that you know an umpire is doing a good job in baseball - you don't notice it/him. I assume that's what Bruce means with his "remarkable" comment too - five years ago, it was easier to go "wow!" when someone produce a very good tournament...but now, people going from round to round without much to complain about is really the highest praise.
I can understand Cheyne's hands-on approach to questions - while I'm not sure that the Sevastopol change was for the best, I can't really place fault on any editor who's putting that kind of effort into going through questions. But, yeah...as you do more tournaments, I can guarantee that the urge to alter Jerry-written tossups on Sevastopol will exponentially dissipate. You'll enter an era where you see Magin tossups on the biloquist Carwin and go "I'm sure that's fine, scan it for grammar and I'm done...now we concentrate on this Little Women tossup from North Dakota State...by removing it and writing a second tossup on Carwin."
I can understand Cheyne's hands-on approach to questions - while I'm not sure that the Sevastopol change was for the best, I can't really place fault on any editor who's putting that kind of effort into going through questions. But, yeah...as you do more tournaments, I can guarantee that the urge to alter Jerry-written tossups on Sevastopol will exponentially dissipate. You'll enter an era where you see Magin tossups on the biloquist Carwin and go "I'm sure that's fine, scan it for grammar and I'm done...now we concentrate on this Little Women tossup from North Dakota State...by removing it and writing a second tossup on Carwin."
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I am pure energy...and as ancient as the cosmos. Feeble creatures, GO!
Left here since birth...forgotten in the river of time...I've had an eternity to...ponder the meaning of things...and now I have an answer!
I am pure energy...and as ancient as the cosmos. Feeble creatures, GO!
Left here since birth...forgotten in the river of time...I've had an eternity to...ponder the meaning of things...and now I have an answer!
Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
ThisIsMyUsername wrote: Sketches of Spain was the only music tossup that seemed to have cluing problems (very transparent: after the lead-in, every clue seemed to mention something related to Spain)
Is this really transparent? I don't see anything Spanish mentioned until Song of the will o' the wisp. Perhaps the clue about the muezzin hinted Spain?I wrote: 16. A 1997 re-issue of this album includes a composition called "Song of Our Country"
which had earlier appeared in its artist's album Directions. The third track on this album
has a tune based on a traditional Peruvian whistle song, while its fourth track has a solo
cadenza which emulates the voice of a muezzin calling out the adhan but was inspired by
a song sung in processions during Holy Week. In addition to "The Pan Piper" and "Saeta,"
this album includes a composition based on a theme from the Song of the Will o' the Wisp
from El (*) Amor Brujo. The tracks on this album were composed and arranged by Gil Evans, and its
opening track was adapted from a Joaquin Rodrigo work named for a royal palace built by Phillip II. For
10 points, identify this jazz album which contains the piece "Concierto de Aranjuez" and adapts music
from a certain European country, a work of Miles Davis.
ANSWER: Sketches of Spain
For all the MOs I've tried to write at least one tossup for every category, and this was my "music" tossup for this year (though it filled the other fine arts distribution.) If everybody playing this thought it was transparent, sure, I'll admit it. I'm not going to claim any competence in writing music, and I made some judgment error. If this is indeed a fine tossup and is being labeled transparent, then I'm really bothered by the label.
EDIT: Okay, that came off as a little confrontational, but here's what I want to say: I'm fine with statements like "I didn't like this tossup" but not with claims like "this tossup is transparent" if, in fact, it isn't.
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I think John's referring to the stuff about the Peruvian whistle tune--obviously Peru isn't Spain, but it was enough to make me, for example, want to buzz with Sketches of Spain (although John justly beat me to it.)gkandlikar wrote:ThisIsMyUsername wrote: Sketches of Spain was the only music tossup that seemed to have cluing problems (very transparent: after the lead-in, every clue seemed to mention something related to Spain)Is this really transparent? I don't see anything Spanish mentioned until Song of the will o' the wisp. Perhaps the clue about the muezzin hinted Spain?I wrote: 16. A 1997 re-issue of this album includes a composition called "Song of Our Country"
which had earlier appeared in its artist's album Directions. The third track on this album
has a tune based on a traditional Peruvian whistle song, while its fourth track has a solo
cadenza which emulates the voice of a muezzin calling out the adhan but was inspired by
a song sung in processions during Holy Week. In addition to "The Pan Piper" and "Saeta,"
this album includes a composition based on a theme from the Song of the Will o' the Wisp
from El (*) Amor Brujo. The tracks on this album were composed and arranged by Gil Evans, and its
opening track was adapted from a Joaquin Rodrigo work named for a royal palace built by Phillip II. For
10 points, identify this jazz album which contains the piece "Concierto de Aranjuez" and adapts music
from a certain European country, a work of Miles Davis.
ANSWER: Sketches of Spain
For all the MOs I've tried to write at least one tossup for every category, and this was my "music" tossup for this year (though it filled the other fine arts distribution.) If everybody playing this thought it was transparent, sure, I'll admit it. I'm not going to claim any competence in writing music, and I made some judgment error. If this is indeed a fine tossup and is being labeled transparent, then I'm really bothered by the label.
EDIT: Okay, that came off as a little confrontational, but here's what I want to say: I'm fine with statements like "I didn't like this tossup" but not with claims like "this tossup is transparent" if, in fact, it isn't.
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Oh God, I did not mean to start a music thread derail yet again...Sorry...gkandlikar wrote:ThisIsMyUsername wrote: Sketches of Spain was the only music tossup that seemed to have cluing problems (very transparent: after the lead-in, every clue seemed to mention something related to Spain)Is this really transparent? I don't see anything Spanish mentioned until Song of the will o' the wisp. Perhaps the clue about the muezzin hinted Spain?I wrote: 16. A 1997 re-issue of this album includes a composition called "Song of Our Country"
which had earlier appeared in its artist's album Directions. The third track on this album
has a tune based on a traditional Peruvian whistle song, while its fourth track has a solo
cadenza which emulates the voice of a muezzin calling out the adhan but was inspired by
a song sung in processions during Holy Week. In addition to "The Pan Piper" and "Saeta,"
this album includes a composition based on a theme from the Song of the Will o' the Wisp
from El (*) Amor Brujo. The tracks on this album were composed and arranged by Gil Evans, and its
opening track was adapted from a Joaquin Rodrigo work named for a royal palace built by Phillip II. For
10 points, identify this jazz album which contains the piece "Concierto de Aranjuez" and adapts music
from a certain European country, a work of Miles Davis.
ANSWER: Sketches of Spain
For all the MOs I've tried to write at least one tossup for every category, and this was my "music" tossup for this year (though it filled the other fine arts distribution.) If everybody playing this thought it was transparent, sure, I'll admit it. I'm not going to claim any competence in writing music, and I made some judgment error. If this is indeed a fine tossup and is being labeled transparent, then I'm really bothered by the label.
EDIT: Okay, that came off as a little confrontational, but here's what I want to say: I'm fine with statements like "I didn't like this tossup" but not with claims like "this tossup is transparent" if, in fact, it isn't.
I probably wouldn't have mentioned this tossup if Rob hadn't been soliciting comments on the music questions, but I'll defend my claim. I do think it's transparent, but it's always possible that I'm just being over-nitpicky or using the term too loosely, as usual.
How I played this tossup: I heard "Peruvian" and "muezzin". I thought to myself: "hmm...Latin American and Muslim influences on a jazz album, eh? I wonder if this is Sketches of Spain." If I were courageous, I would have buzzed there. I waited for additional Spanish-sounding things or confirmation that this was a Miles Davis album. When I received both at line 5, I buzzed and received power. I would not have been able to remember which Miles Davis album this was otherwise. Will, who I was playing, commented that he had been sitting on that answer for the same reasons. I talked to Dan Passner afterwards and he mentioned having a similar experience with this question.
I think its transparency is basically a result of two things: 1. The small number of possible answers for a tossup on a jazz album (even at this level, there are only about seven or eight album max you could be tossing up), which therefore exacerbates the consequences of clues that help lateral thinking. Album + Spain = Sketches of Spain is a perfectly reasonable binary. 2. The length of the tossup (9.5 lines). There are a bit over three lines to go after you've said the unmistakably spanish title El Amor Brujo.
From line three forward we have the following Spanish-sounding things: Peruvian whistle song (line 3), muezzin/Holy Week (i.e. Muslim + Catholic, line 4), Saeta (even if one doesn't know that this is a Spanish genre, it is a Spanish word, line 5), El Amor Brujo (line 7), Joaquin Rodrigo (line 8), Philip II (line 8), Concierto de Aranjuez (line 9), the indication that the album is titled after the country (line 10) . That's a whole lot of buzzwords for Spain, one after another, in one fairly long tossup, more clues than you have that are ethnically neutral: "song our country" (line 1), Directions (line 2), Gil Evans (line 7), Miles Davis (line 10). Basically, I think the majority of this tossup rewards the ability to recognize things that sound Spanish and starts doing that within power. This is a unique pitfall for this particular album, because of the binary association of Spanishness that is present on pretty much every track, and probably makes it especially hard to write on this album well.
John Lawrence
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I'm fairly sure I powered that tossup by reverse-engineering "Spanish-type influences + jazz record." And I don't know Sketches of Spain from a hole in the ground.
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
A few scattered things:
Thank you thank you thank you Mike Cheyne for that Robert Moses tossup.
Both the opposing team (I think was UVA?) and I were surprised to hear that Woody Herman was the dedicatee of Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto rather than Benny Goodman- probably since Goodman's recording is much more well known.
I actually own the Sketches of Spain reissue, so that question ended up being my only first-line buzz of the day.
Don't actually have a whole lot of comment on the rest of the music; it was by and large quite good, barring the occasional wackiness like Joachim #2 and whoever that third musicologist was (great idea for a bonus, though).
I was pleasantly shocked to see that Paul Simon/Derek Walcott's The Capeman passed muster as part of an academic question. If high level tournaments keep reducing pop culture (something I am actually not opposed to, despite my reputation as a quixotic Bob Dylan defender), I certainly hope that there can still be room for serious and serious-ish stuff like this and Laurie Anderson's "O Superman" (another thing I was quite pleased to see come up, seeing as it's possibly the single best example of a piece which is unquestionably both popular and art music).
Thank you thank you thank you Mike Cheyne for that Robert Moses tossup.
Both the opposing team (I think was UVA?) and I were surprised to hear that Woody Herman was the dedicatee of Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto rather than Benny Goodman- probably since Goodman's recording is much more well known.
I actually own the Sketches of Spain reissue, so that question ended up being my only first-line buzz of the day.
Don't actually have a whole lot of comment on the rest of the music; it was by and large quite good, barring the occasional wackiness like Joachim #2 and whoever that third musicologist was (great idea for a bonus, though).
I was pleasantly shocked to see that Paul Simon/Derek Walcott's The Capeman passed muster as part of an academic question. If high level tournaments keep reducing pop culture (something I am actually not opposed to, despite my reputation as a quixotic Bob Dylan defender), I certainly hope that there can still be room for serious and serious-ish stuff like this and Laurie Anderson's "O Superman" (another thing I was quite pleased to see come up, seeing as it's possibly the single best example of a piece which is unquestionably both popular and art music).
Chris White
Bloomfield HS (New Jersey) '01, Swarthmore College '05, University of Pennsylvania '10. Still writes questions occasionally.
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Are you possibly referring to noted musicologist Theodor Adorno?Theory Of The Leisure Flask wrote:Don't actually have a whole lot of comment on the rest of the music; it was by and large quite good, barring the occasional wackiness like Joachim #2 and whoever that third musicologist was (great idea for a bonus, though).
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
D'oh! Welp, that was stupid. Yeah, Adorno is super-important, and I've actually read a bit of his writings on music*; for some reason I had never heard of the specific stuff which came up in the question, and that's what I had remembered.Ukonvasara wrote:Are you possibly referring to noted musicologist Theodor Adorno?Theory Of The Leisure Flask wrote:Don't actually have a whole lot of comment on the rest of the music; it was by and large quite good, barring the occasional wackiness like Joachim #2 and whoever that third musicologist was (great idea for a bonus, though).
Clearly I am turning into a doddering fool in my old age.
*specifically, Philosophy of New Music
Chris White
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I am glad that my suspicions about Adorno's music theory being real-world important. I didn't write this specific bonus but had planned on writing something about his musicology work in some form before Rob stole the idea.Theory Of The Leisure Flask wrote:D'oh! Welp, that was stupid. Yeah, Adorno is super-important, and I've actually read a bit of his writings on music*; for some reason I had never heard of the specific stuff which came up in the question, and that's what I had remembered.Ukonvasara wrote:Are you possibly referring to noted musicologist Theodor Adorno?Theory Of The Leisure Flask wrote:Don't actually have a whole lot of comment on the rest of the music; it was by and large quite good, barring the occasional wackiness like Joachim #2 and whoever that third musicologist was (great idea for a bonus, though).
Clearly I am turning into a doddering fool in my old age.
*specifically, Philosophy of New Music
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
IIRC the Adorno part didn't mention his support for the twelve-tone system, which is one of the two big things Adorno is known for, music-wise (the other being his contempt for popular music).tetragrammatology wrote:I am glad that my suspicions about Adorno's music theory being real-world important. I didn't write this specific bonus but had planned on writing something about his musicology work in some form before Rob stole the idea.Theory Of The Leisure Flask wrote:D'oh! Welp, that was stupid. Yeah, Adorno is super-important, and I've actually read a bit of his writings on music*; for some reason I had never heard of the specific stuff which came up in the question, and that's what I had remembered.Ukonvasara wrote:Are you possibly referring to noted musicologist Theodor Adorno?Theory Of The Leisure Flask wrote:Don't actually have a whole lot of comment on the rest of the music; it was by and large quite good, barring the occasional wackiness like Joachim #2 and whoever that third musicologist was (great idea for a bonus, though).
Clearly I am turning into a doddering fool in my old age.
*specifically, Philosophy of New Music
I found Adorno to be a fascinating read, in large part because I disagree with so much of what he says, and enjoyed grappling with it.
Chris White
Bloomfield HS (New Jersey) '01, Swarthmore College '05, University of Pennsylvania '10. Still writes questions occasionally.
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
The bonus, in full:Theory Of The Leisure Flask wrote:IIRC the Adorno part didn't mention his support for the twelve-tone system, which is one of the two big things Adorno is known for, music-wise (the other being his contempt for popular music).
I found Adorno to be a fascinating read, in large part because I disagree with so much of what he says, and enjoyed grappling with it.
In Editors 2, I wrote:5. Identify the following musicologists, for 10 points each.
[10] This promoter of Arthur Manns’s concerts at Sydenham discovered a number of previously-lost Schubert works, including Rosamunde, with the aid of his friend Arthur Sullivan. He may be more famous for editing his namesake Dictionary of Music and Musicians.
ANSWER: George Grove
[10] This German-American is likely most famous for making the first major revision to the Köchel catalog of Mozart’s works. His own best-known work is probably Mozart: His Character, His Work.
ANSWER: Alfred Einstein
[10] This part-time composer lamented the fall of prima donnas and castrioti and the rise of memorable popular music in such works as On the Fetish-Character in Music and On Jazz.
ANSWER: Theodor W. Adorno [or Thedor Ludwig Adorno Weisengrund]
Rob Carson
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I initially read this wrong......I think MO could be summed up as the model of a very competent hard tournament.
It is the very model of a competent hard tournament
Not yet Chicago Open, there's bandleader Woody Herman in't
A tossup done on Tolstoy in a categ'ry not heard before
Sevastopol had Raglan, but so did the whole Crimean War
"Original was better" said the writer, J. Vinokurov
And Spain comes up in other arts: a country that there's Sketches of
Joachim's Concerto Number Two is deemed too hard for Quizbowl play
And unpronounceable was Aztec goddess Chalchiuhtlicue.
Rebecca Maxfield
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Ironically, these lines don't really rhyme.Nicklausse/Muse wrote:Joachim's Concerto Number Two is deemed too hard for Quizbowl play
And unpronounceable was Aztec goddess Chalchiuhtlicue.
Rob Carson
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I'm not that worried.Gilbert, in [i]Patience[/i], wrote:In that case unprecedented
Single I must live and die –
I shall have to be contented
With a tulip or lily.
Rebecca Maxfield
Brown University '13
Brown University '13
Why do you picture John of Gaunt as a rather emaciated grandee?
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Sorry. I read this and I just couldn't resist:Nicklausse/Muse wrote:I initially read this wrong......I think MO could be summed up as the model of a very competent hard tournament.
It is the very model of a competent hard tournament
Not yet Chicago Open, there's bandleader Woody Herman in't
A tossup done on Tolstoy in a categ'ry not heard before
Sevastopol had Raglan, but so did the whole Crimean War
"Original was better" said the writer, J. Vinokurov
And Spain comes up in other arts: a country that there's Sketches of
Joachim's Concerto Number Two is deemed too hard for Quizbowl play
And unpronounceable was Aztec goddess Chalchiuhtlicue.
We are the very model of a quizbowl music mafia,
Staging coups in forum threads, like Colonel Gadaffi. A
Tiny misplaced clue sends a shiver down our vertebrae
So that against our better judgment, we leap right into the fray,
To denigrate a question's use of music terminology
(E.g. to say: "F double-sharp is really not at all a G...").
Our aim is to accustom would-be writers to these niceties
And get a bigger slice of distribution at the ICT's!
And get a bigger slice of distribution at the ICT's!
And get a bigger slice of distribution at the ICT's!
And get a bigger slice of distribution at those yearly ICT's!
Forgive us please, oh forum readers, if our music passion
Leads to pedantry, (this parody), and constant question-bashin'...
That I would keep on writing this, shows that a prudent head I lack.
This is the very model of a music mafia thread hijack.
John Lawrence
Yale University '12
King's College London '13
University of Chicago '20
“I am not absentminded. It is the presence of mind that makes me unaware of everything else.” - G.K. Chesterton
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I've got a little list, and if you don't start discussing the tournament at hand, you're going on that list.
Rob Carson
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
Stop tossing up so many people in the science distribution. It leads to negs on doubly-eponymous things.
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Brown 2009, Penn Med 2018
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“The next generation will always surpass the previous one. It’s one of the never-ending cycles in life.”
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- silverscreentest
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
The teams in the room I was reading grumbled about the Versailles tossup. It seemed to be a list of recent art exhibitions and ended with a buzzer race at the Hall of Mirrors giveaway.
Brick of Silver Screen Test.
Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I wrote that one as a current events question. I'd vaguely heard about all the monocle-dropping that accompanied the Jeff Koons exhibit a couple years back and more recently heard about similar shenanigans in connection with Takeshi Murakami's exhibition, and thought this would make for an interesting, non-impossible "things that are going on in the art world" question. I also tried to mention some non-current stuff (Salon of Mars, Lemoyne's ceiling painting) in the context of the recent exhibition clues that I thought would help clue people in, but perhaps I missed all the stuff people know about Versailles (or maybe the real problem is that people just don't know much at all about Versailles).silverscreentest wrote:The teams in the room I was reading grumbled about the Versailles tossup. It seemed to be a list of recent art exhibitions and ended with a buzzer race at the Hall of Mirrors giveaway.
I'll readily admit that I'm not a current events player. Was I wrong to think that fine arts current events is a reasonable topic for a current events question, or does CE all have to be politics/trash because no one pays attention to other kinds of news? Or is it that there is a decent population of people who pay attention to fine arts current events, but I was wrong in thinking that the exhibitions at Versailles were noteworthy?
-Seth
Seth Teitler
Formerly UC Berkeley and U. Chicago
President of NAQT
Emeritus member of ACF
Formerly UC Berkeley and U. Chicago
President of NAQT
Emeritus member of ACF
Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
You are not wrong in thinking any of these things; perhaps people were just unaware of the contemporary art exhibitions at Versailles. At our site, the mention of Jeff Koons made me neg (stupidly) with "Guggenheim Bilbao," despite the fact that where I buzzed, the Salon of Mars was already mentioned. Berkeley just had a temporary lapse because of the Japanese art exhibitions, I guess, and said something Japanese when the question was over despite the mention of the Hall of Mirrors.setht wrote:Was I wrong to think that fine arts current events is a reasonable topic for a current events question, or does CE all have to be politics/trash because no one pays attention to other kinds of news? Or is it that there is a decent population of people who pay attention to fine arts current events, but I was wrong in thinking that the exhibitions at Versailles were noteworthy?
-Seth
Auroni Gupta (she/her)
Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
This tournament is now posted at http://collegiate.quizbowlpackets.com/archive/2010MO/, with a zip copy available on the main page.
I hope this incites more question specific (or overall) discussion.
The non-history I wrote
Tossups: The Old Curiosity Shop, William Saroyan, Man and Superman, William of Baskerville, This Side of Paradise, Henry James, Jimmy Porter, edited Interpreter of Maladies, edited Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Photographs of Bourke-White, Louis Sullivan, Philippians, Pentecostalism, Gideon, Self-Reliance, Harry Harlow, North by Northwest, Texas Rangers, Grover, UCLA, Kill Bill, Carmen Electra
Bonuses: Vanity Fair bonus, Angels in America bonus, American Indian lit bonus, edited English Patient bonus, Glackens bonus, Courbet bonus, Bingham bonus, Lichtenstein bonus, German film bonus, Khachaturian bonus, Gospel of John bonus, voodoo bonus, Gorgias bonus, Bourdieu bonus, communication theory bonus, John Sayles bonus, Lesley Gore bonus, singing in movies bonus, popular historians bonus, poodles bonus, The Big C bonus, old songs about people dying bonus
I hope this incites more question specific (or overall) discussion.
The non-history I wrote
Tossups: The Old Curiosity Shop, William Saroyan, Man and Superman, William of Baskerville, This Side of Paradise, Henry James, Jimmy Porter, edited Interpreter of Maladies, edited Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Photographs of Bourke-White, Louis Sullivan, Philippians, Pentecostalism, Gideon, Self-Reliance, Harry Harlow, North by Northwest, Texas Rangers, Grover, UCLA, Kill Bill, Carmen Electra
Bonuses: Vanity Fair bonus, Angels in America bonus, American Indian lit bonus, edited English Patient bonus, Glackens bonus, Courbet bonus, Bingham bonus, Lichtenstein bonus, German film bonus, Khachaturian bonus, Gospel of John bonus, voodoo bonus, Gorgias bonus, Bourdieu bonus, communication theory bonus, John Sayles bonus, Lesley Gore bonus, singing in movies bonus, popular historians bonus, poodles bonus, The Big C bonus, old songs about people dying bonus
Mike Cheyne
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
- grapesmoker
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I thought most of these were pretty good; the only question in this collection I had an issue with was the Harlow tossup. Again, I felt like the "he changed his super-Jewish name" anecdote was not terrible helpful, and I thought the rest of the question was kind of figure-outable in the sense that it was "this guy devised various experiments that kinda sorta tortured his animal subjects." So that's my two cents. But I really liked the William of Baskerville question, and I thought "photographs of Bourke-White" was a really great idea. Also Henry James from hard clues was a nice change-up.Cheynem wrote:Tossups: The Old Curiosity Shop, William Saroyan, Man and Superman, William of Baskerville, This Side of Paradise, Henry James, Jimmy Porter, edited Interpreter of Maladies, edited Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Photographs of Bourke-White, Louis Sullivan, Philippians, Pentecostalism, Gideon, Self-Reliance, Harry Harlow, North by Northwest, Texas Rangers, Grover, UCLA, Kill Bill, Carmen Electra
Jerry Vinokurov
ex-LJHS, ex-Berkeley, ex-Brown, sorta-ex-CMU
presently: John Jay College Economics
code ape, loud voice, general nuissance
ex-LJHS, ex-Berkeley, ex-Brown, sorta-ex-CMU
presently: John Jay College Economics
code ape, loud voice, general nuissance
Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
The Harlow one was a bitch to write. My original draft was even crummier, so ultimately I had to add some other stuff to pad it out a bit, as it just kept falling over a cliff. I'll admit it probably didn't go that well--my intent with the name-changing anecdote was to also give a clue about the dude's mentor (Lewis Terman, the Stanford psychology dude), but perhaps that wasn't helpful either.
Mike Cheyne
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
- Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-TN)
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
This prompted me to google it, and according to a Publishers Weekly review of Deborah Blum's Love at Goon Park (she's a prominent critic of Harlow), he apparently was not actually Jewish and just by pure chance was named Harry Israel but still got anti-semitic flack. I agree that's not a terribly useful clue, but I just now found it interesting enough to be worth posting here.grapesmoker wrote:Again, I felt like the "he changed his super-Jewish name" anecdote was not terrible helpful
Charlie Dees, North Kansas City HS '08
"I won't say more because I know some of you parse everything I say." - Jeremy Gibbs
"At one TJ tournament the neg prize was the Hampshire College ultimate frisbee team (nude) calender featuring one Evan Silberman. In retrospect that could have been a disaster." - Harry White
"I won't say more because I know some of you parse everything I say." - Jeremy Gibbs
"At one TJ tournament the neg prize was the Hampshire College ultimate frisbee team (nude) calender featuring one Evan Silberman. In retrospect that could have been a disaster." - Harry White
Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I'm just curious, but why did you need to write a tossup with the answer line ANSWER: _photographs_ of Margaret _Bourke-White_, when it seems to me that she was best known as a photographer? Isn't that like writing a tossup on the _painting_s of _Titian_?
I really liked the rest of your questions though, maybe with the exception of Jimmy Porter since I buzzed in with "that dude from Look Back in Anger and couldn't remember his name. That's not on the question though, that's totally on me, it goes without saying.
I really liked the rest of your questions though, maybe with the exception of Jimmy Porter since I buzzed in with "that dude from Look Back in Anger and couldn't remember his name. That's not on the question though, that's totally on me, it goes without saying.
Auroni Gupta (she/her)
Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I think I did it to avoid two things--giving away that it was a photographer early (I guess I could have said "one of this artist's works") or giving away that it was a woman early (I guess I could have said "this artist" over and over). I'm not sure if it really was necessary or not, but I can't see it tripping up someone who knew what was going on.
Mike Cheyne
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
When I was playing the question, it still became abundantly clear around the middle that you were describing photographs; I think that at the level of MO, there are something like 6-8 tossup-able photographers, so you wouldn't have been giving away too much by either implying that she was a photographer using "this artist," or even outright saying "this photographer."
Auroni Gupta (she/her)
Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I guess that's fair...but I didn't. I mean, was this like confusing to someone? Did someone think this was like a specific series of Bourke White photographs or like some weird-ass tossup on "Twentieth Century Photographs"? Unless this question was drastically confusing (which I maintain, if you know what's going on, I'm not sure why it would be), then this is really coming down to just an aesthetic difference in answer lines, which is understandable if fruitless to discuss. I used "Photos of Bourke-White" as an answer-line, you wouldn't, and that's great.
Mike Cheyne
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
Formerly U of Minnesota
"You killed HSAPQ"--Matt Bollinger
- grapesmoker
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Re: Minnesota Open Discussion
I thought it was perfectly clear what was being asked for.Cheynem wrote:I guess that's fair...but I didn't. I mean, was this like confusing to someone? Did someone think this was like a specific series of Bourke White photographs or like some weird-ass tossup on "Twentieth Century Photographs"? Unless this question was drastically confusing (which I maintain, if you know what's going on, I'm not sure why it would be), then this is really coming down to just an aesthetic difference in answer lines, which is understandable if fruitless to discuss. I used "Photos of Bourke-White" as an answer-line, you wouldn't, and that's great.
Jerry Vinokurov
ex-LJHS, ex-Berkeley, ex-Brown, sorta-ex-CMU
presently: John Jay College Economics
code ape, loud voice, general nuissance
ex-LJHS, ex-Berkeley, ex-Brown, sorta-ex-CMU
presently: John Jay College Economics
code ape, loud voice, general nuissance