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Programme 10, 2021

Tom Sutcliffe chairs the classic quiz of lateral thinking and cryptic connections, with teams from around the UK. Today Northern Ireland take on the North of England.

(10/12)
The North of England, Stuart Maconie and Adele Geras, could find themselves in strong contention for the overall series title if they can hold off the challenge from Northern Ireland (Freya McClements and Paddy Duffy) in today's contest. This is the last appearance by these pairs in the current series so both sides will be going all-out for another win. Tom Sutcliffe asks the questions, provides helpful hints where necessary as the panellists deliberate, and awards the points according to how much he has had to intervene.

As usual there are several questions inspired by Round Britain Quiz listeners' suggestions - and each team gets a question with musical clips to identify and connect.

Producer: Paul Bajoria

28 minutes

Last on

Sat 15 May 2021 23:00

Rankings

Going into today's contest all of the teams have played three times in the current series, and this is how the RBQ league table stands:
1  Midlands   Played 3  Won 3  Drawn 0  Lost 0  Total points 63
2  North of England   P3  W2  D1  L0  Pts 63
3=  Northern Ireland   P3  W1  D0  L2  Pts 53
3=  Scotland  P3  W1  D0  L2  Pts 53
5  Wales   P3  W1  D0  L2  Pts 51
6  South of England   P3  W0  D1  L2  Pts 58   

Last week's teaser question

Last week we asked why Martin Scorsese might approve of a Scottish goalkeeper, the inventor of the hole-in-the-wall cashpoint, and a 'shrewd and knavish sprite' in Athens?
The sprite we were thinking of is Puck, in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, who is also referred to as Robin Goodfellow. The man generally credited with the invention of the ATM cash machine is the scientist James Goodfellow. And Ryan Goodfellow is a goalkeeper currently playing for Edinburgh City.
As Goodfellows, they might attract Scorsese's attention because one of his most successful pictures was Goodfellas.

Questions in this programme

Q1 (from Nigel Choyce)  What meal might you have shared with the following: a generic chauffeur, a founding club of the Football League, a wet participant of the winning Boat Race team and a small amount of salad dressing?
Q2 (from Thomas Halliday)  The owner of a Magic cockatiel consumes a crab soup, and passes through a member of Celtic FC with a Misunderstood manager. What could he be playing at?
Q3 (from Ivan Whetton) Music: Why might this music bring to mind a type of rechargeable battery, a 17th century plotter and Prufrock's life-measurer? 
Q4  Explain how you could turn from: getting the ball over the line in rugby, to attempting  musical piece for the first time; manoeuvring a seagoing vessel, to packaging and dispatching a young bull; leaving your bread under the grill for too long, to raising a glass to a stream in northern Britain?
Q5  If Don Draper, Basil Fawlty's father and a castle frequented by Gibbs are found in the middle of a town in Kent, what time of day is it? 
Q6  Music: Why might these suggest the protocol of buttons?
Q7 (from Sarah Rowland Jones)  Why might a household Baby, with Blake's small innocent, and a Bronte heroine, with Bogart's bird, together lead you West-ward?
Q8  Why might it seem possible to inter insectivorous mammals in Shropshire, a New Year offensive in the Cotswolds, Arsenal football club in Chiswick, and both Leopold and Molly in WC1?

This week's teaser question

This week have a think about the following question:
Why might The Glossy Years, The Dancer Upstairs, Nathaniel's Nutmeg and One Pair of Hands all prove confusing for literary critics?
We'll provide the answer next time.

Broadcasts

  • Mon 10 May 2021 15:00
  • Sat 15 May 2021 23:00

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