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        Some quiz show responses
       
                  
        The grotesquely wrong answers that some contestants give on quiz programmes would surely make most participants think twice before applying.
 THE ARTS
 PRESENTER: Who painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel?
 CALLER: Leonardo di Caprio.
 (2CR FM)
 
 BIOLOGY
 PRESENTER: Was the Tyrannosaurus Rex a carnivore or a herbivore?
 CONTESTANT: No, it was a dinosaur.
 (Are You Smarter Than A Ten-Year-Old?)
 
 ANNE ROBINSON: What type of bear lives in the Arctic?
 CONTESTANT (after much thought): Penguin.
 (The Weakest Link)
 
 CLASSICS
 ANNE ROBINSON: What was the principal language used by the ancient Romans?
 CONTESTANT: Greek.
 (The Weakest Link)
 
 DOMESTIC SCIENCE
 PRESENTER: Emmental and Double Gloucester are both types of what?
 CALLER: Banks.
 (Breakfast Toaster Quiz, Heart FM)
 
 ENGLISH LITERATURE
 JEREMY PAXMAN: Of all Beatrix Potter’s books, which is the only one to feature a human in the title?
 ANTONY BEEVOR (author and historian): Peter Rabbit (Celebrity edition of University Challenge)
 (BBC Radio 2)
 
 ANNE ROBINSON: What ‘B’ was a pseudonym used by Charles ens?
 CONTESTANT: Bart Simpson.
 
 FILM STUDIES
 STEVE WRIGHT: Johnny Weissmuller died on this day. Which jungle-swinging character clad only in a loincloth did he play?
 CALLER: Jesus.
 
 SPORT
 ANNE ROBINSON: The point on a golf club or a tennis racket that gives the best contact is alliteratively known as the what spot?
 CONTESTANT: The g-spot.
 
 ANNE ROBINSON: In 1975 the first black tennis player to win the Wimbledon Men’s Singles title was Arthur who?
 CONTESTANT: Askey.
 
 ANNE ROBINSON: Who won the U.S. Open Tennis Championship wearing a black dress modelled on Audrey Hepburn’s in Breakfast at Tiffany’s?
 CONTESTANT: Roger Federer.
 
 (All the Weakest Link)
 
 MUSIC
 PRESENTER: Name the festival started in 1895 by Sir Henry Wood.
 CALLER: Glastonbury.
 (TalkSPORT)
 
 GEOGRAPHY
 DARREN DAY: What area of Germany is the cake named after, made with chocolate, cream, kirsch and cherries?
 CONTESTANT: Belgium?
 (Spin Star, ITV1)
 
 PRESENTER: What is the capital of Cuba?
 CALLER: Ermmm…
 PRESENTER: Take your time.
 CALLER: Ermmm…
 PRESENTER: Go on, have a guess.
 CALLER: Is it Belgium?
 PRESENTER: Er, not quite.
 (Sun FM, Sunderland)
 
 DALE WINTON: Alderney and Sark - are they part of the Channel Islands?
 CONTESTANT: Ooooh! Is that the English Channel? I don’t know, are there islands in the English Channel? I’ve never heard of any. France - that’s near the English Channel isn’t it?
 (In It To Win It, BBC1)
 
 ANNE ROBINSON: Pakistan was part of which other state until it achieved independence in 1947?
 CONTESTANT: Bulgaria.
 (The Weakest Link)
 
 DAVE LEE TRAVIS: In which European country are there people called Walloons?
 CALLER: Wales.
 
 QUIZMASTER: Where is the Sea of Tranquility?
 CONTESTANT: Ibiza. (RI:SE, Channel 4)
 
 MATHS
 ANNE ROBINSON: What kind of dozen is 13?
 CONTESTANT: Half a dozen.
 (The Weakest Link)
 
 MEDICINE
 STEVE WRIGHT: On what part of the body is a lobotomy performed?
 CONTESTANT: The bottom.
 (BBC Radio 2)
 
 HISTORY
 PRESENTER: What was the date of the Battle of Hastings?
 CONTESTANT: Ooooh! Er... was it 1974?
 (Galaxy Radio, Leeds)
 
 ANNE ROBINSON: Which English queen rode a chariot with knives on the wheels?
 CONTESTANT (full of confidence): Victoria!
 (The Weakest Link)
 
 PRESENTER: Which ancient army was discovered in China in 1974?
 CONTESTANT: The Territorial Army.
 
 PRESENTER: What was Hitler’s first name?
 CONTESTANT: Heil. (BBC Radio Merseyside)
 (Breeze FM)
 
 ANNE ROBINSON: What ‘T’ did British POWs use to escape from Second World War German prison camps?
 CONTESTANT: I don’t know. Was it herbal?
 (The Weakest Link)
 
 POLITICS
 PRESENTER: Who was the Prime Minister before Tony Blair?
 CALLER: George Bush.
 (Viking FM)
 
 PRESENTER: Name Prince Charles’s younger sister.
 CALLER: Is it Camelia?
 (The Ugly Phil Breakfast Show, Kerrang! Radio)
 
 RELIGIOUS STUDIES
 PRESENTER: What religion was Guy Fawkes?
 CALLER: Jewish.
 PRESENTER: That’s close enough.
 (BRMB)
 
 ANNE ROBINSON: In Roman Catholicism, baptism, confirmation and matrimony are three of the seven what?
 CONTESTANT: Deadly sins.
 (The Weakest Link)
 
 SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
 ANNE ROBINSON: What man made structure built during the 3rd century BC is often said to be visible from space?
 CONTESTANT: The Millennium Dome.
 (The Weakest Link)
 
 Presenter: Which prominent Birmingham family had a toposcope constructed in 1923 for the top of Beacon Hill in Lickey Hills?
 CALLER: The Osbournes.
 (BBC Radio WM)
 
 GENERAL STUDIES
 TERRY WOGAN: Which Duke resides at Woburn Abbey?
 CONTESTANT: Hazzard. (Wogan’s Perfect Recall, Channel 4)
 
 PRESENTER: According to legend, who shot an apple off the top of his son’s head?
 CONTESTANT: Well, straightaway I’m thinking of Isaac Newton.
 (Are You Smarter Than A Ten-Year-Old?)
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