Programme 5, 2024
Kirsty Lang chairs the cryptic contest of wordplay and obscure connections, today featuring the South of England against the Midlands.
(5/12)
Kirsty Lang chairs another closely-contested battle of wits between Marcus Berkmann and Paul Sinha for the South of England, and Frankie Fanko and Stephen Maddock for the Midlands.
Today's questions are:
Q1 Explain why you might be spellbound by a group of male strippers, the Beatles' parasitic friend and one of the all-time NBA greats?
Q2 What do the Maid of Buttermere, William Bloke and (doubly so) the recipients of the 1915 Nobel Prize for Physics have to boast about?
Q3 Music: Which titular Oscar Wilde character might you add to this collection?
Q4 How might you help a day in Spain to become a baker from Llareggub, a Gilbertian Princess, a German cobbler and an airport in Washington?
Q5 By adding nothing, turn an Arsenal manager into a Long Day's Journeyman, two World Snooker champions into a liberator of South America, the father and murderer of twins in a classic horror film into Lily Savage, and one half of a Trollope novel into the other half.
Q6 Music: Why are we playing you these in this order?
Q7 (from Simon Meara) If an ornithological orb scores 50,000, Highlands headwear 300,000 and a Charleston cropper two million, which social media site out-performs them all?
Q8 A board game in Japan, a device for moving fluids in Wales, a guinea-pig in the Balkans and the capital of Peru in the Pacific: is this the right number of clues?
Producer: Paul Bajoria
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The RBQ League Table
1聽 Northern Ireland聽 聽 聽 Played 2聽 Won 2聽 Drawn 0聽 Lost 0聽 Total points 41
2聽 Wales聽 聽 聽 聽 聽 聽P2聽 W1聽 D0聽 L1聽 聽Pts 35
3聽 The Midlands聽 聽 聽 聽 P1聽 W1聽 D0聽 L0聽 Pts 24
4聽 North of England聽 聽 聽P1聽 W0聽 D0聽 L1聽 Pts 19
5聽 Scotland聽 聽 聽P1聽 W0聽 D0聽 L1聽 Pts 18
6聽 South of England聽 聽 聽P1聽 W0聽 D0聽 L1聽 Pts 15
Last week's teaser question
'The drawing-room of Europe' was a phrase attributed to Napoleon Bonaparte, describing St Mark's Square in Venice - and St Mark is the common link. The hawthorn fly, Bibio marci, is also known as St Mark's fly because it appears in large numbers in and around British hedgerows at roughly the time of the feast of St Mark, in April. And Sheila Escovedo is the percussionist and singer who, billed as Sheila E, had a worldwide hit in 1986 with the Prince song 'The Belle of St Mark'.
This week's teaser question
Don't write to us if you know the answer: just listen to the next edition and Kirsty will reveal whether or not your solution matches ours!
Broadcasts
- Sun 7 Apr 2024 16:30大象传媒 Radio 4
- Sat 13 Apr 2024 23:30大象传媒 Radio 4
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