TD 267: Once Around the Monopoly Board [Final Standings Posted!]

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Blue Lion
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TD 267: Once Around the Monopoly Board [Final Standings Posted!]

Post by Blue Lion »

This Think Different game, which celebrates the 80th anniversary of the board game Monopoly, will take you once around the Monopoly board. It was inspired by my wonderful wife, Mrs. Blue Lion, who loves to play Monopoly and grew up a just a few miles from Atlantic City, on which the game is based.

I hope you enjoy this game! Even if you have never set foot in “AC,” do not be afraid to play. Blue Lion games are of the general-knowledge variety, and I hope all of the questions are at least somewhat accessible. Besides (see below), you have two lifelines to get you through difficult questions.

THE RULES

1. The object of this game is to provide the correct answer you think will be the least popular.

2. Because this game is based on Monopoly, the scoring will be a little different from that in regular TD. Actually, it will be quite different. In Monopoly, players start out with $1,500, so you will begin this game with 1,500 points. And you will lose points, rather than accumulate them, as the game goes on.

The player with the highest point total at the end of the game is the winner.

3. Each question will correspond to a property on the Monopoly board. As you advance around the board, the stakes get higher with each question.

4. If you give a correct answer, you will lose 5 points for each contestant who chose that answer. If you choose the SHEEP answer—the correct answer given by the most contestants—you will, in addition, lose the number of points corresponding to 5 times the lowest rent for that property.

For example, if you SHEEP on Virginia Avenue (lowest rent: $12), you will lose 5 points for each person who chose the answer you chose PLUS another 60 points (5 times 12) for rental value. If there is no rental value for the square in question (Free Parking, Go to Jail, Luxury Tax), you will lose 5 points for each person who chose the answer you chose PLUS another 50 points.

The maximum point loss for a correct answer is 150 points OR the number of dollars needed to buy the deed to that property, whichever is less. If the property cannot be bought (Free Parking, Go to Jail, Luxury Tax), the maximum point loss is 150 points.

5. If you give an incorrect answer, you will lose points equal to the number of dollars needed to buy the deed to that property. For example, if you give an incorrect answer on Pennsylvania Avenue (purchase price $320), you will lose 320 points. On squares that players cannot buy, the penalty for a wrong answer will be 200 points.

6. If your point total drops below zero, you are bankrupt and out of the game. :| Do not let this happen.

7. To help you stave off bankruptcy, there are two bonus questions worth 100 points each.

8. You also have two lifelines. If you wish to pass on a question and take a score of zero, your response should be JUST VISITING (DROP is also acceptable). If you wish to take the SHEEP score for a question, your response should be CHANCE (SHEEP is also acceptable).

9. You may only use the information stored in your brain. If you stumble onto an answer after you read the questions but before you submit your answers, it is perfectly acceptable to use that answer. Intentional outside research is not allowed. If you get caught doing this, you will go directly to jail. :D

10. Unless stated otherwise, Wikipedia.com is the final authority for what responses are correct. Spelling is not important as long as you are close enough, and I want to give you the benefit of the doubt. However, you will help your cause by spelling your answers as close to correctly as you can. 

11. Unless stated otherwise, last names are sufficient.

12. Ties will be broken only for the top three positions. In case of a tie, the entry that comes closest to the correct answer for the TIE-BREAKER is the winner. If there is still a tie after the tie-breaker is applied (and TD is so weird a game that this could actually happen), the earliest submission wins.

13. Please send your answers to me in the following format:

1: Answer
2: Answer
3: Answer
.
.
.
12: Answer.

14. The deadline for entering this game is 11:59 pm (ET) Sunday, November 1. Please send your entries to me via PM.
Last edited by Blue Lion on Sun Nov 08, 2015 5:43 pm, edited 36 times in total.
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Questions

Post by Blue Lion »

Okay, let’s “Go”!

1. MEDITERRANEAN AVENUE (deed $60, rent $2)—Name the capital of a European country* that has a coastline on the Mediterranean Sea. For purposes of this question, “European country” means an independent country, so Gilbraltar isn’t acceptable, and neither is Akrotiri and Dhekelia (and I wouldn’t put it past you guys to come up with this). It also excludes countries with limited recognition, so Northern Cyprus is out. Last but not least, it means a country entirely within Europe, so Turkey is off the menu.

* I'm looking for either an island nation in the Mediterranean OR a country whose capital is on the European mainland. See "Clarifications" below.

Again, I’m looking for the capital, not the country. [12 possible answers]


2. CONNECTICUT AVENUE (deed $120, rent $10)—The answer to each of these 12 clues is a person associated with the state of Connecticut. Provide the answer to one of them, and be sure to include the letter of the clue that corresponds to that answer.

a. No cigar for this Greenwich, Connecticut-born actress, who has been nominated for six Academy Awards but has yet to win.
b. Suckers are born every minute. This showman, who preyed on suckers, was born in Bethel, Connecticut, in 1810.
c. Born in Russia, this aviation pioneer moved to Stratford, Connecticut—not to act on the stage but to build a helicopter.
d. This Italian-born basketball coach imported his winning ways to the University of Connecticut women’s team, winning ten NCAA Division I titles.
e. After joining a Connecticut regiment to fight the Confederates, he moved to New York and turned his attention to fighting obscenity and contraception.
f. Born and raised in Kent, Connecticut, this funny “Family Guy” found success in Hollywood.
g. He was president of Yale University, but is best known for the next job he held: Commissioner of Baseball.
h. His birthplace was New Haven, Connecticut, but his heart was in Dogpatch, the setting of the “L’il Abner” comic strip he created in 1934.
i. Born in Cheshire, Connecticut, he played in 1,971 major league games—the most by any Jewish major-league ballplayer—and now manages the Detroit Tigers.
j. Attention must be paid to this New York native, who died in Roxbury, Connecticut, 56 years after he won the 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
k. In 2006 he lost his party’s Senate primary but won re-election anyway as the candidate of a party he formed for the general election.
l. Let’s cut to the chase. This Hartford-born banker put together a consortium that helped rescue the banking industry during the Panic of 1907.


Bonus Question #1. VERMONT AVENUE—Vermont is the home Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream. One of its best-known flavors is Cherry Garcia, which was the company’s best-seller for over a decade. In 2013, however, another flavor surpassed Cherry Garcia. Name it, and get 100 points added to your score.


3. STATES AVENUE (deed $140, rent $12)—The street plan for Atlantic City was devised in 1851 by a physician named Jonathan Pitney. Dr. Pitney gave north-south streets the names of bodies of water, and east-west streets the names of states. 

Name a state that was admitted to the Union after 1851 but before the end of the 19th century—that is, December 31, 1900. [14 possible answers]


4. VIRGINIA AVENUE (deed $160, rent $12)—Since 1871, all cities in the Commonwealth of Virginia have had the status of “independent cities,” which are administratively independent of any county. Name one of Virginia’s 15 most populous independent cities as of the 2010 census. Petersburg, with a population of 31,973, is in 16th place. [15 possible answers]


5. TENNESSEE AVENUE (deed $180, rent $14)—Tennessee’s capital, Nashville, is the “Music City” and the home of the Country Music Hall of Fame. Each of these 12 clues identifies one of the Hall’s members. Provide the answer to one of them, and be sure to include the letter of the clue that corresponds to that answer.

a. Inducted in 2004, he was a Rhodes Scholar and a U.S. Army captain before starting his career as an songwriter, recording artist, and actor.
b. After his band The First Edition broke up, this 2013 inductee launched a long and successful solo career with his 1977 hit “Lucille.”
c. He never lived to see his 30th birthday, but recorded 35 Top Ten country hits, including “Your Cheatin’ Heart”; in 1961, he became one of the Hall’s three original inductees.
d. In 1969, a quarter century before he entered the Hall, this artist annoyed hippies by singing the praises of "Muskogee, Oklahoma, U.S.A.”
e. She was inducted in 1973–-twelve years before Sweet Dreams, the film based on her life, hit the screens.
f. This singing and acting cowboy is the only person inducted twice: once as a member of the “Sons of Pioneers” in 1980, and again as a soloist in 1988.
g. This duo, inducted in 1985, had only one #1 song in their career, but is was a memorable one--about "a poor mountaineer who barely kept his family fed.”
h. During her husband’s first campaign for president, Hillary Rodham Clinton made a disparaging remark on 60 Minutes about this woman, who entered the Hall in 1998.
i. In 1993, seven years before his induction into the Hall, he was the first African American to become a regular performer on the Grand Old Opry.
j. He wrote 11 number-one songs, including the crossover hit “Harper Valley PTA,” and earned a place in the Hall in 2008. He’s also known to like beer.
k. Inducted in 2008, she has 13 Grammy Awards to her credit, including one for Best Album for the soundtrack to the Coen brothers’ film O Brother Where Art Thou.
l. Best known for the hit songs “I’m Sorry” and “Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree”, this 1997 inductee is also a member of the Rock and Roll and Rockabilly Halls of Fame.


6. NEW YORK AVENUE (deed $200, rent $16)—New York City is the live theater capital of America. Since 1960, a total of 16 plays have won both a Tony Award (either for Best Play or Best Musical) and a Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Name one of them. [16 possible answers]

Note: Musicals are eligible for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and three musicals have won both the Tony and the Pulitzer since 1960.


7. B&O RAILROAD (deed $200, rent $25)—In 1884, Charles Dow created a list that evolved into the Dow Jones averages, which today consist of 65 stocks in three groups: Industrials, Transportation, and Utilities.

Name one of the 20 companies that, as of October 23, 2015, were components of the Transportation Index. [20 possible answers, including 5 airlines, 4 railroads, 4 trucking companies, 3 delivery services, 2 marine transportation companies, and 2 miscellaneous transportation companies]

Note: I will be very generous with responses to this question.


8. FREE PARKING--There’s plenty of free parking at America’s fast-food restaurants. Name a U.S. fast-food chain [“fast food” includes coffee and pizza] which, according to QSR magazine, ranked in the top 15 for the greatest number of franchised locations as of 2013. Quizno’s, with 2,349 locations, ranks 16th. [15 possible answers]


9. GO TO JAIL—Each of these 12 questions involves a famous prisoner, real or fictional. Provide the answer to one of them, and be sure to include the letter of the clue that corresponds to that answer.

a. In the 2003 film Monster, Charlize Theron played this female serial killer who had been executed the year before by the state of Florida.
b. Spandau Prison in Berlin was demolished in 1987 after the death of this man, who was sent there after being convicted of war crimes at Nuremburg.
c. Chateau d’If, an island prison off the southern coast of France, was made famous as one of the settings of this adventure novel by Alexandre Dumas.
d. On March 3, 1934, this man, dubbed “Public Enemy Number 1”, escaped from the supposedly escape-proof jail in Crown Point, Indiana.
e. Denzel Washington played this ex-boxer, who spent nearly 20 years in prison before a federal court overturned his conviction and life sentence for murder.
f. He was one of the most famous inmates in the history of the Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary because of his expertise in ornithology.
g. On May 3, 1916, Patrick Pearse was executed by firing squad at Kilmainham Gaol in this city after leading a failed uprising.
h. He commanded a Confederate POW camp near Andersonville, Georgia; was found guilty of war crimes; and was hanged on November 10, 1865.
i. The central character in Tom Wolfe’s The Electric Kool-Aid Test, he spent five months in a California jail for possession of marijuana.
j. Published in 1962, this novel by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn describes a single day of this man, a prisoner in a Soviet labor camp.
k. This Ohio physician, who was convicted in 1954 of murdering his wife (the conviction was later overturned), inspired the television series The Fugitive.
l. He quarterbacked the prisoners’ football team in the original version of The Longest Yard (1974), and coached the prisoners’ team in the 2005 remake with the same title.


10. PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE (deed $320, rent $28)—Over the years, many visitors to Atlantic City and other South Jersey resorts have come from Pennsylvania.

The Keystone State is the home of 14 universities whose men’s basketball team competes in the NCAA’s Division 1. Name one of them. [14 possible answers]


11. LUXURY TAX--Name one of the countries that, according to GoldInvestingNews.com, was in the top 10 for gold production in 2013 OR was one of the six top gold-producing U.S. states in 2013. [16 possible answers]


Bonus Question #2. LUXURY TAX REDUX—As of September 12, 2014, three families had multiple members on Forbes magazine’s list of the 20 richest Americans. Name two (last name is sufficient) for a 100-point bonus.


12. BOARDWALK (deed $400, rent $50)—Atlantic City is the home of the world’s first boardwalk, which is also the world’s longest. Atlantic City has also been the home of Miss America Pageant for much of its existence.

These 12 questions are associated with Atlantic City, the surrounding area, and Miss America. Provide the answer to one of them, and be sure to include the letter of the clue that corresponds to that answer.

a. No boardwalk is complete without an amusement arcade. In this popular arcade game, a player rolls nine balls down an alley, and the maximum score is 450 points.
b. The 1964 Democratic National Convention, held in Atlantic City, nominated these two men for president and vice president.
c. In 1980, he succeeded Bert Parks as the host of the Miss America Pageant.
d. U.S. 30, which begins at the intersection of Absecon Boulevard and Virginia Avenue, is 3,073 miles long, and ends in this West Coast state.
e. Built in 1898, this pier has been known for diving horses and a wide variety of other entertainment.
f. This 1972 film, shot in pre-legalized-gambling Atlantic City, starred Jack Nicholson, Bruce Dern, and Ellen Burstyn.
g. Invented by accident in 1883, this confection has been associated with the Atlantic City boardwalk ever since.
h. On May 26, 1978, this Atlantic City hotel became the first legal casino to operate outside the state of Nevada.
i. At the 2015 pageant, Miss America CEO Sam Haskell apologized to this woman, who resigned her Miss America crown after nude photos of her appeared in Penthouse magazine.
j. In 1967, this Pulitzer Prize-winning author wrote The Pine Barrens, describing his travels in the heavily forested coastal plain northwest of Atlantic City.
k. Margate City, a town on the same island as Atlantic City, is the home of “Lucy,” a wooden version of this animal. She was built as a tourist attraction in 1881.
l. In January 2015, Don Guardian, the mayor of Atlantic City, said of his city’s economic woes, “At least we’re not (this city)”.


TIE-BREAKER--On October 29, 2012, Hurricane Sandy made landfall just to the northeast of Atlantic City. It was the second most destructive hurricane in U.S. history, surpassed only by Hurricane Katrina. How much destruction (please round to the nearest billion dollars) did Sandy cause in the United States? My authority is the National Climatic Data Center.
Last edited by Blue Lion on Mon Oct 26, 2015 11:42 am, edited 4 times in total.
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List of Participants

Post by Blue Lion »

42 Participants
Spoiler
Elendil Pickle
Peggles
Rackme32
MarkBarrett
patkav

Bamaman
Caboom
chmmr
9021amyers
Lampy

quarterrican
Magna
Ryno
Lumosityfan
Vermonter

immaf
caknuck
MollyQMurphy
mennoknight
molly427

mahatma
clprez
dott888
gamawire
dinghammer

econgator
Armandillo
Category 13
ouachiouat
dhkendall

nightreign
FireAntsDefense
dnbguy
goforthetie
barandall800

sillymonkey
WooWho?
Tabby
tjconn728
kettledrum

BigDaddyMatty
Tigershark
Many thanks to those who entered!
Last edited by Blue Lion on Mon Nov 02, 2015 7:26 pm, edited 19 times in total.
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Announcements and Clarifications

Post by Blue Lion »

Announcements

Important Announcement About the CHANCE Lifeline

There are a couple of questions on this TD--which I won't mention by number--that are giving players fits.

I mention this because very few players have using the CHANCE (aka SHEEP) lifeline.

If you take the CHANCE option, the maximum number of points you can lose is 150. If you don't use CHANCE, the penalty for a wrong answer is likely to be even bigger.

If you've submitted an entry, remember that you have until the Sunday night deadline to make changes. There's no penalty for changing your answer.

General Clarifications

The maximum point-loss limits for correct answers also apply to the CHANCE (aka SHEEP) lifeline.

There is no penalty for incorrect answers on bonus questions.

If, on a given question, there are two or more co-SHEEPS, the added penalty for a SHEEP answer will be 3 times, not 5 times, the lowest rent for the property.

Regarding bankrupt players. The first to go bankrupt finishes last, the second to go bankrupt finishes next to last, and so on. Answers given by bankrupt players will still be counted toward which answer is the SHEEP.

Question-Specific Clarifications

Question #1.

9021amyers pointed out that at least two European countries have territory outside the European continent and thus, technically, don't meet the "entirely within Europe" criterion. In light of that observation, Question 1 is looking for "island nations and nations whose capitals are located on the European mainland", which would still remove Ankara, Turkey, from consideration.

The definition of "Mediterranean" includes seas such as the Adriatic and Aegean.

Question #9

If you choose clue "L", either the name of the character in the two Longest Yard films or the actor who played that character is acceptable.

Bonus Question #2.

I need two different families, each of which has multiple members on the Forbes top 20. One of the three families that qualify is very reclusive and thus little-known.
Last edited by Blue Lion on Wed Oct 28, 2015 11:18 pm, edited 10 times in total.
WooWho?
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by WooWho? »

Isn't the deed for Mediterranean Avenue $60?
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by Blue Lion »

WooWho? wrote:Isn't the deed for Mediterranean Avenue $60?
You are correct, sir. I've corrected the deed amount.
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by BobF »

Blue Lion wrote:7. To help you stave off bankruptcy, there are two bonus questions worth 100 points each.
Personally, I'd make it $200, as if you were passing gas, I mean Go.
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by Vermonter »

BobF wrote:
Blue Lion wrote:7. To help you stave off bankruptcy, there are two bonus questions worth 100 points each.
Personally, I'd make it $200, as if you were passing gas, I mean Go.
I would have made Bonus #2 "BANK ERROR IN YOUR FAVOR" ;)
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by patkav »

<off topic> About 80% of the time when I see your name, I read it as "Vermonster" and it makes me want ice cream. </ot>
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by Armandillo »

For the Bonus Questions. Are they free guesses or will we be penalized for wrong answers?

(I will be submitting an entry, btw)
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by Blue Lion »

Armandillo wrote:For the Bonus Questions. Are they free guesses or will we be penalized for wrong answers?

(I will be submitting an entry, btw)
No penalty for wrong guesses on bonus questions; you're playing with (brightly-colored) house money. If you don't know the answer, humorous guesses are strongly encouraged.

Looking forward to your entry.
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by caknuck »

Dibs.

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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by Blue Lion »

patkav wrote:<off topic> About 80% of the time when I see your name, I read it as "Vermonster" and it makes me want ice cream. </ot>
A couple of years ago, Rock Art Brewery in Vermont came out with an ale named "Vermonster," and promptly got slapped with a cease-and-desist order by the Hansen Beverage Company, the makers of Monster energy drink. Hansen, which was deluged with angry correspondence from beer fans, backed down and agreed to a compromise: Rock Art could keep making Vermonster, provided it stayed out of the energy-drinks business.

I can only imagine the uproar if Hansen tried to make Ben & Jerry's stop selling Vermonster ice cream.
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by MarkBarrett »

caknuck wrote:Dibs.

[Silver Car]
I'll see your silver car and raise you a gold hat that will either be my token or my prize at the end.

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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by patkav »

image.jpeg
image.jpeg (9.49 KiB) Viewed 7511 times
OK FINE, I'll be the iron for 19th straight game.
Blue Lion wrote:
I can only imagine the uproar if Hansen tried to make Ben & Jerry's stop selling Vermonster ice cream.
Indeed.
Last edited by patkav on Mon Oct 26, 2015 9:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by Ryno »

While we're at it, I couldn't resist using this image for my 500th post. :D



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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by patkav »

Excellent milestone post, Ryno.

You have been here 287 days longer than I, and I am only 114 posts behind you. Apparently, I am chatty.
<stops posting>
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by 9021amyers »

patkav wrote:
image.jpeg
OK FINE, I'll be the iron for 19th straight game.
No fair! I wanted the be the old-timey flatiron! I'm tired of being the Scottie!
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Re: TD 267—Once Around the Monopoly Board (Now Accepting Entries)

Post by patkav »

OK. I'll trade.
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Funny Suggestions

Post by Blue Lion »

BobF, regarding bonus questions: "Personally, I'd make it $200, as if you were passing gas, I mean Go."

Vermonter, on the same topic: "I would have made Bonus #2 ;BANK ERROR IN YOUR FAVOR'".

Blue Lion, on these suggestions: "Why didn't I think of that?"
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