silverscreentest wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 9:33 am
A brother of a friend was in Omen 3 and was eaten by beagles.
I actually remember that! One of about 2-3 mildly noteworthy scenes from a terrible movie.
silverscreentest wrote:I haven't seen the original The Omen in a while so I don't know how well it holds up.
Very well. Frankly, almost all the 70's classics hold up well to this day. In my view, film-making hit its apex that decade, and while it has advanced in certain areas since then, in others it has stagnated or even regressed.
About the only things I remember from "The Omen" are that the child, Damian, had 666 marked on his head and there's a scene where a priest is killed by being impaled.
I do not watch scary movies. I noticed the 666 connection and figured that meant "The Exorcist". (Someone possessed, presumably by Satan.) I was quite happy with that answer. Ooops.
silverscreentest wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 9:33 am
I dated a girl born June 7, 1966. Her parents always told her she was born on June 6 until she saw her actual birth certificate. Her family was areligious.
I do have a friend who was born 6/6/66. It doesn't bother her at all.
silverscreentest wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 9:33 am
I dated a girl born June 7, 1966. Her parents always told her she was born on June 6 until she saw her actual birth certificate. Her family was areligious.
I do have a friend who was born 6/6/66. It doesn't bother her at all.
Why should it? Ain't nothing spooky or satanic about 6666.
TenPoundHammer wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 12:19 pm
So did they seriously want you to recognize a politician entirely from their GPA in school? Dafuq?
And where they were from, and what their academic interests were. And all of them were probs in the top 20 most recognizable politicians of this generation. Chill.
TenPoundHammer wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 12:19 pm
So did they seriously want you to recognize a politician entirely from their GPA in school? Dafuq?
And where they were from, and what their academic interests were. And all of them were probs in the top 20 most recognizable politicians of this generation. Chill.
What there academic interests were still seems fishy. That's like those horrible clues on WWTBAM? where they ask "Which famous celebrity's first job was at Hardee's?" as if that were the most commonly thing known about them.
TenPoundHammer wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 12:19 pm
So did they seriously want you to recognize a politician entirely from their GPA in school? Dafuq?
And where they were from, and what their academic interests were. And all of them were probs in the top 20 most recognizable politicians of this generation. Chill.
It was a mix of both knowing photos and knowing their bios. I knew Jindal almost immediately without the bio; Jane got Bernie solely from the description.
silverscreentest wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 9:33 am
Patrick Troughton (Doctor Who #2) was in The Omen and got decapitated by a pane of glass. A brother of a friend was in Omen 3 and was eaten by beagles.
Maybe I misremember, but I seem to associate David Warner with the decapitation scene. As I recall, he was behind a truck carrying sheets of window glass that stopped suddenly, and the top pane of glass slid off and got him in the neck. It's been a LONG time since I've seen the film, though, so I could have my characters switched around.
I'm not the defending Jeopardy! champion. But I have played one on TV.
badgerfellow wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 12:38 am
I think we've discussed before but would that have been legal? Didn't hear anything on it in orientation, and contestant coordinators didn't say anything either.
Volante wrote:
You cannot rest it against the table.
Interesting. I will defer to both of you, but can one cradle it in a hand that is then resting on the table itself?
Amusingly, I had a discussion just yesterday about mashing within the context of speedrunning video games. "Slow" mashers hit the button 9-10 times a second. The really fast ones can hit up to 17 (!!!) reps in a second with one hand, and two-handed mashers can get to 20.
Regardless, Trevor's mashing sounded very familiar to me indeed.
During my time at the lectern, I tended to have my non-buzzer hand flat against top of the lectern. I held the buzzer vertically, thumb on top, with the pinkie side of my palm resting on the top of the lectern. No one ever said anything about my position; it was a lot less fatiguing than holding my fist suspended in mid-air.
The only instructions I remember getting during briefing was a couple of very theatrical demonstrations from Maggie about what not to do. She said "Don't hold the device in one hand and smack the button with your other hand," and demonstrated smacking one palm into her other fist. She also hit her forehead with the thumb side of her fist and said, "Don't hold the device in one hand and smack the button against anything else." I don't remember hand position on the lectern being mentioned at all.
I'm not the defending Jeopardy! champion. But I have played one on TV.
Count me in as one of those who picked up the 6-6-6 reference immediately but could do nothing with it.
For the record, age 61 and definitely *not* a movie buff. I see maybe one new one in-theatre every two or three years on average, and practically never ever download 'em or watch 'em on TV.
I believe the "don't smack the button" rule--more of a guideline than a rule--is purely an accommodation for the audio crew who are trying to get good audio of the game, and not a lot of button-smacking noise. Violators might get a finger wag at a commercial break, but no points off or DQ'ation.
IIRC Mike Day's signature move of inverting the buzzer and thumping it down on the lectern top in Season 1 resulted in a real rule change--the "can't ring in until Alex finishes" rule, complete with lockout enforcement system and false-start penalty.