Any Questions #263

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WAMC's Ian Pickus and resident quizzer Mike Nothnagel try out a new category.

Last week's challenge
Start with the term BROADWAY PLAY. Rearrange the letters and you can spell a five-letter word for what a Broadway play might win and the seven-letter name of a certain magazine. What are the words?
Answer: The words are AWARD and PLAYBOY.

THIS WEEK'S CATEGORY: ONE, THE OTHER, BOTH, OR NEITHER?
On-air questions: Since we started a new season of Any Questions? last week, we thought it would be fun to introduce a new type of question to our repertoire. We've done Before and After a few times, we've done our Series questions, and this one is called One, The Other, Both, or Neither?. I'll name a person, place, or thing and then give you two descriptions. You decide if one, the other, both, or neither of the descriptions apply to the person, place, or thing.

1. Actress Nicole Kidman: Oscar winner, Australian, both, or neither?
2. The planet Jupiter: the largest planet in our solar system, the planet in our solar system with the most moons, both, or neither?
3. Mount Rushmore: Located in North Dakota, a National Memorial, both, or neither?
4. Baseball great Ted Williams: Hall-of-Famer, part of a World Series-winning team, both, or neither?
5. The year 1900: Leap year, the first year of the 20th century, both, or neither?

Extra credit
1. James Madison: Vice President, Secretary of State, both, or neither?
2. Tomato: classified as a fruit, classified as a vegetable, both, or neither?

This week's challenge
Start with the words BOTH and NEITHER. Change one letter to an M and you can rearrange the result to spell a seven-letter word for something you might prove in math class, and a four-letter word for what your professor might give you to get started. What are the words?
 

ANSWERS
On-air questions

1. Both
2. Both
3. National Monument
4. Hall-of-famer
5. Neither

Extra credit
1. Secretary of State
2. Both (botanically, it's a fruit; it was classified as a vegetable for tariff purposes in an 1883 Supreme Court case)
 

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A lifelong resident of the Capital Region, Ian joined WAMC in late 2008 and became news director in 2013. He began working on Morning Edition and has produced The Capitol Connection, Congressional Corner, and several other WAMC programs. Ian can also be heard as the host of the WAMC News Podcast and on The Roundtable and various newscasts. Ian holds a BA in English and journalism and an MA in English, both from the University at Albany, where he has taught journalism since 2013.