Explorers Trivia I
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🔵 Get right to the trivia at 9:08
Before passports come out, the Question of the Week turns the spotlight inward — and it gets personal fast. We take turns casting each other as the lead in a made-for-TV Hallmark movie, complete with a title and plot. If you’ve listened long enough, you’ll probably start guessing who gets which storyline… and you’ll be dangerously accurate.
Then Scott leads us somewhere unexpected with a trivia topic that inspires very little confidence going in: world explorers. Early nerves, cautious guesses, lowered expectations — and then… surprise. The Crew holds its own, which only makes the competition louder and the confidence shakier.
We close by dreaming forward instead of backward, talking about the unexplored corners of the world that still call our names — the places we’d drop everything to see if given the chance.
Equal parts self-roast, curiosity, and competitive chaos.
Just the way exploration should be.
Five friends. Ten questions. Infinite banter.
Join us for trivia, stay for the laughs, and see who comes out on top!
Tune in and see if you can keep up with Kelly, Brian, Scott, Andy and Nick on The Ultimate Trivia Podcast
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[SPEAKER_00]: You have to make trivia podcasts!
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[SPEAKER_04]: What's up, trivia nerds?
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[SPEAKER_04]: Welcome into the Ultimate Trivia podcast, the show where knowledge is power.
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[SPEAKER_04]: And laughter is our only reward.
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[SPEAKER_04]: I am your host, Andy.
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[SPEAKER_04]: We got the whole crew in the studio tonight.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Big B is sitting to my right.
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[SPEAKER_04]: How are we feeling tonight, kid?
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[SPEAKER_02]: A, amazing.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Awesome.
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[SPEAKER_04]: What a great answer.
00:31.256 --> 00:33.078
[SPEAKER_04]: You only have a couple of beers in front of you.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Brian, we have, let me be been here a while.
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[SPEAKER_04]: What's going on?
00:36.818 --> 00:38.421
[SPEAKER_04]: All right, turn it over a new leaf.
00:39.002 --> 00:40.284
[SPEAKER_04]: Kay Ray, how's your shoulder feel?
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[SPEAKER_04]: Feels good.
00:41.406 --> 00:42.889
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, surgically repaired.
00:43.109 --> 00:45.814
[SPEAKER_03]: It is next, next, next wiffle ball season.
00:45.854 --> 00:47.877
[SPEAKER_03]: I think I'll be a Henry Rowan grader.
00:49.159 --> 00:51.423
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, we got extra elasticity boys.
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[SPEAKER_03]: You had a lot.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I'm throwing some of that in there.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, and I'm going to throw like him just because I can't bend my arm back that far.
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[SPEAKER_03]: All right.
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[SPEAKER_04]: from one man who is getting better at wiffable ball to one who I believe has recently retired Nicholas.
01:05.098 --> 01:05.639
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't believe it.
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[SPEAKER_02]: We don't have enough time for this.
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[SPEAKER_02]: We're going to say where we want to say and get ready for Ridiculous.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Brian is very unhappy about this.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Hi.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Hi.
01:12.996 --> 01:13.597
[SPEAKER_04]: Thanks for having me.
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[SPEAKER_04]: We're really dragging you down.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
01:16.221 --> 01:17.343
[SPEAKER_04]: Just stomping on me.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Just, no.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Out of the gate.
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[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
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[SPEAKER_02]: Come out tonight.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
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[SPEAKER_03]: That was a big eye roll in case you missed that.
01:24.634 --> 01:26.717
[SPEAKER_03]: You're the youngest one of the group and you're going to retire.
01:26.777 --> 01:27.358
[SPEAKER_03]: That's true.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Our host this evening.
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[SPEAKER_02]: No.
01:29.822 --> 01:30.664
[SPEAKER_02]: You're Scott.
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[SPEAKER_02]: Just think you're better yourself.
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[SPEAKER_02]: Like yourself.
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[SPEAKER_01]: Andy, I'm feeling a lot better than you look so overdue.
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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, it's not a hard bar brother That's how bad I feel.
01:41.767 --> 01:42.430
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, okay.
01:42.470 --> 01:44.478
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm sorry that you feel comfortable.
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[SPEAKER_04]: But
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[SPEAKER_04]: Nevertheless, you've been thinking about this topic for a while.
01:48.683 --> 01:49.844
[SPEAKER_04]: We don't know it yet, officially.
01:49.904 --> 01:51.305
[SPEAKER_04]: You've been thinking about it or something.
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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
01:52.246 --> 01:54.669
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, I'll hold off giving you the topic.
01:54.689 --> 01:56.070
[SPEAKER_01]: But I will say it came to me.
01:56.130 --> 01:58.272
[SPEAKER_01]: I was just walking down the hall at work in a popped in my head.
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[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know where it came.
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[SPEAKER_01]: It was with the best one.
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[SPEAKER_03]: So I'm walking down the hall and you felt something full.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Just, yeah, he's very proud of himself.
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[SPEAKER_01]: But we do have a listener question of the week.
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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, four weeks.
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[SPEAKER_01]: Jump into this exciting topic.
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[SPEAKER_01]: This came in from Patrick on Instagram.
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[SPEAKER_01]: Here's what he wants to know.
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[SPEAKER_01]: If a hallmark movie was made about your life, what would the title of that movie be?
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[SPEAKER_01]: And I think we should answer for one another.
02:25.434 --> 02:28.919
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, man, I'm going to get buried on the hallmark movie thing, aren't I?
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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that's going to be crazy.
02:30.802 --> 02:32.044
[SPEAKER_01]: Like you, you're a walking hallmark.
02:32.185 --> 02:36.551
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I'm going to call me Princess Andy, let the hell.
02:36.572 --> 02:37.833
[SPEAKER_01]: Commercials make me cry.
02:38.174 --> 02:40.077
[SPEAKER_01]: It would probably be the name of the movie.
02:41.137 --> 02:42.479
[SPEAKER_01]: All right, we're not here.
02:42.499 --> 02:44.823
[SPEAKER_04]: I can't shoot an animal in the woods joke here.
02:44.923 --> 02:51.554
[SPEAKER_04]: I feel he next can be the firm one I like that the oh But Nick no no no no for me.
02:51.674 --> 02:57.404
[SPEAKER_04]: It's going to be something like the first time I said I love you It would be a whole mark.
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[SPEAKER_03]: No, bunch of no It's the year he took Christmas away
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[SPEAKER_02]: I love that.
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[SPEAKER_02]: I love that.
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[SPEAKER_01]: They started true story because of any good hallmark movie the guys always the bad guy Oh for sure.
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[SPEAKER_04]: That's true.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Wow.
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[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.
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[SPEAKER_04]: I play that role well.
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[SPEAKER_04]: I can't dispute any of those.
03:18.238 --> 03:18.999
[SPEAKER_04]: I can't Is it lost Christmas?
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[SPEAKER_04]: No You're like that.
03:19.740 --> 03:20.081
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:20.101 --> 03:20.522
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:20.542 --> 03:21.023
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:21.043 --> 03:21.383
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:21.403 --> 03:21.744
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:21.764 --> 03:22.104
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:22.124 --> 03:22.485
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:22.505 --> 03:22.846
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:22.866 --> 03:23.206
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:23.226 --> 03:23.607
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:23.627 --> 03:24.128
[SPEAKER_03]: You're like that.
03:24.148 --> 03:24.488
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:24.508 --> 03:24.849
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:24.869 --> 03:25.210
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:25.230 --> 03:25.570
[SPEAKER_03]: You're like that.
03:25.590 --> 03:25.971
[SPEAKER_02]: You're like that.
03:26.031 --> 03:26.592
[SPEAKER_02]: You're like that.
03:26.612 --> 03:26.953
[SPEAKER_02]: You're like that.
03:26.973 --> 03:27.313
[UNKNOWN]: You're like that.
03:27.333 --> 03:27.674
[UNKNOWN]: You're like that.
03:27.694 --> 03:28.034
[UNKNOWN]: You're like that.
03:28.054 --> 03:28.395
[UNKNOWN]: You're like that.
03:28.415 --> 03:28.756
[UNKNOWN]: You're like that.
03:28.776 --> 03:29.116
[UNKNOWN]: You're like that.
03:29.136 --> 03:29.477
[UNKNOWN]: You're like that.
03:29.497 --> 03:29.837
[UNKNOWN]: You're like that.
03:29.858 --> 03:30.198
[UNKNOWN]: You're like that.
03:30.218 --> 03:30.559
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:30.579 --> 03:30.919
[SPEAKER_03]: You're like that.
03:30.999 --> 03:31.360
[SPEAKER_04]: You're like that.
03:33.280 --> 03:36.407
[SPEAKER_04]: Like Kelly and the jealous has been on it like something.
03:37.048 --> 03:42.080
[SPEAKER_03]: It's one of the guy who kills Kelly Okay, it's a dark hallmark movie.
03:42.100 --> 03:42.781
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, I got you guys.
03:42.801 --> 03:47.712
[SPEAKER_03]: I'm swear I need to do it I don't that don't No mess with married people
03:48.130 --> 03:51.457
[SPEAKER_04]: No, Kelly, like you would get injured here and they've been a coma.
03:51.477 --> 03:58.032
[SPEAKER_03]: Somehow there's a miracle where you, you know, I own a tree farm and I constantly injured myself cutting on the trees for the customers.
03:58.072 --> 04:01.560
[SPEAKER_03]: So I'm in a different split or cast every week.
04:01.660 --> 04:04.386
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes, when a new family comes in to get their Christmas tree.
04:04.486 --> 04:05.328
[SPEAKER_04]: Some on those lines.
04:05.709 --> 04:05.949
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes.
04:06.451 --> 04:06.791
[SPEAKER_04]: I like it.
04:06.952 --> 04:07.573
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.
04:08.144 --> 04:10.428
[SPEAKER_04]: All right, Doc, what do we got for Doc over there?
04:10.448 --> 04:10.869
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, no.
04:10.929 --> 04:13.232
[SPEAKER_01]: Sure, there's another short joke that showed Jeff.
04:13.252 --> 04:14.615
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, Christmas.
04:14.655 --> 04:15.957
[SPEAKER_04]: Very hobby Christmas.
04:15.977 --> 04:17.319
[SPEAKER_04]: There's a small tree.
04:17.339 --> 04:18.040
[SPEAKER_04]: It's not at all.
04:18.060 --> 04:19.984
[SPEAKER_03]: He owns a small tree Christmas farm.
04:20.124 --> 04:21.586
[SPEAKER_03]: Many Christmas, shorter people.
04:21.646 --> 04:24.171
[SPEAKER_03]: They all fit inside the car.
04:24.251 --> 04:25.913
[SPEAKER_03]: We've always done tree dogs here.
04:26.314 --> 04:27.696
[SPEAKER_01]: That's a little bit of a tough joke.
04:27.797 --> 04:28.979
[SPEAKER_01]: It's called the Off on the shelf.
04:29.900 --> 04:34.067
[SPEAKER_01]: Because the whole movie, the elf stays in the same spot because I can't reach it.
04:36.815 --> 04:40.063
[SPEAKER_00]: That's perfect.
04:40.084 --> 04:43.733
[SPEAKER_04]: It's just one long hour long shot of an elf in the same spot.
04:43.753 --> 04:50.250
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah I've got jumps up everyone's in one did we do burn big be only thing for bright no
04:50.872 --> 04:51.693
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know.
04:51.713 --> 04:52.434
[SPEAKER_01]: Something about just falling asleep.
04:52.454 --> 04:52.554
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.
04:52.574 --> 05:16.947
[SPEAKER_04]: The female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female with the female
05:16.927 --> 05:19.951
[SPEAKER_04]: Narcaledetic nightmare, that's nice.
05:19.971 --> 05:21.373
[SPEAKER_01]: Uncle Brian smells like whiskey.
05:24.116 --> 05:27.060
[SPEAKER_03]: We all get him a 18 pack kind of the tree.
05:27.100 --> 05:29.002
[SPEAKER_03]: I was like, oh, you shouldn't have.
05:29.242 --> 05:30.063
[SPEAKER_02]: It's like our Christmas is coming.
05:30.084 --> 05:30.844
[SPEAKER_03]: We're going to live together.
05:31.345 --> 05:31.465
[SPEAKER_02]: Wow.
05:31.525 --> 05:32.126
[SPEAKER_02]: The tree's starting.
05:32.507 --> 05:33.848
[SPEAKER_02]: Uncle Brian goes to jail.
05:33.968 --> 05:35.731
[SPEAKER_02]: Then I think Uncle Brian home.
05:35.771 --> 05:37.853
[SPEAKER_03]: National Lampons, Uncle Brian.
05:39.515 --> 05:42.379
[SPEAKER_03]: It's Brian and Uncle Eddie hanging out is the whole movie of the dozen Eddie.
05:42.479 --> 05:43.100
[SPEAKER_03]: There you go.
05:43.140 --> 05:43.801
[SPEAKER_03]: I love it.
05:44.421 --> 05:44.842
[SPEAKER_02]: I like that.
05:44.882 --> 05:46.444
[SPEAKER_02]: That's a great idea.
05:46.728 --> 05:49.412
[SPEAKER_03]: because in the Indian uncle brand.
05:49.432 --> 05:55.702
[SPEAKER_04]: Any years is more like the story of like the notebook but it's you and some kind of wild game to know that.
05:56.863 --> 05:57.865
[SPEAKER_00]: The turkey's lived.
05:58.105 --> 05:59.227
[SPEAKER_03]: Is that the name of the world?
05:59.247 --> 06:04.635
[SPEAKER_03]: The falls in love with every animal that he tries to shoot is a deep emotional connection.
06:05.037 --> 06:10.142
[SPEAKER_04]: Disney animation is so about a deer and turkey's to get together and laugh at them.
06:10.162 --> 06:14.266
[SPEAKER_04]: I nursed them back to health I find wounded animals in the woods and nursed them to health.
06:15.167 --> 06:15.867
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, that's so good.
06:15.887 --> 06:16.228
[SPEAKER_01]: Great.
06:16.428 --> 06:17.969
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, thank you Patrick.
06:18.009 --> 06:23.995
[SPEAKER_01]: We got a T-shirt code coming your way for sending in that question So keep them coming everyone patty.
06:24.355 --> 06:25.416
[SPEAKER_04]: They'll pat patty.
06:26.077 --> 06:26.417
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.
06:26.757 --> 06:28.619
[SPEAKER_01]: Here comes tonight's topic.
06:29.180 --> 06:32.343
[SPEAKER_01]: I got one word for you.
06:34.785 --> 06:34.825
[UNKNOWN]: No
06:34.805 --> 06:35.626
[SPEAKER_04]: I like it.
06:36.468 --> 06:37.550
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I thought you might kill him.
06:38.572 --> 06:41.357
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay, I'm rifling through the names that I have in my head.
06:41.397 --> 06:45.444
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, and I'm done Okay, well, you got a couple of quick.
06:45.464 --> 06:47.127
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know if I got the two, actually.
06:47.147 --> 06:47.668
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
06:47.688 --> 06:52.136
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, I didn't wander too far off the path Hey, you may not appreciate that.
06:52.156 --> 06:55.362
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, you may not want to share any names because there's a good
06:55.342 --> 06:58.047
[SPEAKER_01]: It seems like you did not do a lot of exploring.
06:58.768 --> 07:08.986
[SPEAKER_01]: Driven by curiosity and a desire to uncover the unknown, explores venture into uncharted territories and landscapes and pursuit of discovery.
07:09.487 --> 07:17.822
[SPEAKER_01]: Throughout history, they have pushed the boundaries of human knowledge, encountering cultures and phenomena previously unseen by the wider world.
07:17.802 --> 07:34.393
[SPEAKER_01]: Their journeys have expanded our understanding of the planet and inspired generations to look beyond the horizon, whether they navigated dense jungles, sparse deserts, or icy oceans, explorers and body, the human spirit of adventure and discovery.
07:34.373 --> 07:36.417
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, we haven't even got the question one.
07:36.437 --> 07:51.808
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, bro Long-indra Long-indra Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
07:51.788 --> 07:53.792
[SPEAKER_02]: move on.
07:53.812 --> 07:54.853
[SPEAKER_04]: Not my strong suit.
07:55.074 --> 07:56.036
[SPEAKER_04]: History in general.
07:56.356 --> 07:57.238
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
07:57.258 --> 07:59.542
[SPEAKER_04]: It requires memory unless it's about the pyramids.
07:59.942 --> 08:00.604
[SPEAKER_04]: Any lands.
08:02.267 --> 08:02.487
[SPEAKER_03]: It's not.
08:02.507 --> 08:03.128
[SPEAKER_03]: It's not.
08:03.148 --> 08:04.971
[SPEAKER_04]: It's not about the people even with your reading.
08:06.113 --> 08:08.738
[SPEAKER_04]: I just believe that you tell me that they can't do that.
08:08.758 --> 08:09.900
[SPEAKER_02]: It's okay.
08:10.301 --> 08:10.882
[SPEAKER_02]: Easy.
08:10.902 --> 08:11.824
[SPEAKER_03]: It's not about the memory.
08:11.844 --> 08:15.390
[SPEAKER_03]: Nick, it's about the the interest of the topic that the memory.
08:15.410 --> 08:16.632
[SPEAKER_03]: That doesn't help me.
08:16.612 --> 08:18.195
[SPEAKER_03]: You remember a lot of movies.
08:18.455 --> 08:20.538
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, yeah, and sports facts.
08:20.899 --> 08:21.440
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that's true.
08:21.740 --> 08:23.723
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, we all we'll have her don't Sorry, so short.
08:24.284 --> 08:25.246
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, you're trying to slouch.
08:25.346 --> 08:27.429
[SPEAKER_04]: That's a good call.
08:27.630 --> 08:28.431
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm good at it.
08:29.092 --> 08:29.352
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.
08:29.372 --> 08:30.775
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, we'll see how you do ready.
08:31.035 --> 08:31.275
[SPEAKER_04]: Yep.
08:31.295 --> 08:41.151
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's do it It's time for the main event our 10 question trivia game on explorers
08:41.266 --> 08:44.711
[SPEAKER_04]: and Scotty is our quiz master for tonight.
08:45.072 --> 08:45.853
[SPEAKER_04]: Here's how it works.
08:45.913 --> 08:47.135
[SPEAKER_04]: He's going to read a question.
08:48.017 --> 08:50.961
[SPEAKER_04]: We'll have a chance to write our answers on our whiteboard when he says reveal.
08:50.981 --> 08:52.424
[SPEAKER_04]: We have to reveal our answers.
08:52.884 --> 08:55.368
[SPEAKER_04]: If we get it right, Nick's going to give us a point, right?
08:55.709 --> 08:56.330
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, sir.
08:56.350 --> 08:59.895
[SPEAKER_04]: And if we get it wrong, well, that's when the real fun begins.
08:59.915 --> 09:02.920
[SPEAKER_04]: So, let's see who ends up on top today.
09:02.900 --> 09:04.542
[SPEAKER_04]: Dr. Scott the show is yours.
09:04.802 --> 09:05.143
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.
09:05.263 --> 09:14.274
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you Andrew and you guys will be happy to know last names are accepted as correct answers So all right, that's really my difference.
09:14.514 --> 09:21.723
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, and you do not have to spell them so it's too in my too in your favor All right, let's start us off here.
09:21.763 --> 09:23.305
[SPEAKER_01]: We go question one
09:24.787 --> 09:40.872
[SPEAKER_01]: This Portuguese explorer is best known for achieving the first circumnavigation of the earth, aka sailed around the world, between 1519 and 1522.
09:41.678 --> 09:45.522
[SPEAKER_01]: Nick shaking his head and then this would be the equivalent of a layup.
09:46.303 --> 09:46.684
[SPEAKER_03]: This is?
09:47.244 --> 09:47.484
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes.
09:47.545 --> 09:48.886
[SPEAKER_03]: This is a layup.
09:48.986 --> 09:49.707
[SPEAKER_03]: Dang it.
09:49.727 --> 09:51.609
[SPEAKER_03]: That's a layup.
09:51.949 --> 09:53.491
[SPEAKER_03]: I call this, I call this slam dunk.
09:53.591 --> 09:54.632
[SPEAKER_03]: That calls it a layup.
09:54.652 --> 09:54.893
[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
09:54.953 --> 09:56.775
[SPEAKER_03]: That's right.
09:56.795 --> 09:58.016
[SPEAKER_01]: I call it a two foot jumper.
09:59.718 --> 10:00.799
[SPEAKER_04]: That's not it.
10:00.819 --> 10:02.081
[SPEAKER_04]: That's what I call a view for me.
10:02.101 --> 10:04.243
[SPEAKER_04]: I was never basketball guy.
10:04.679 --> 10:05.381
[SPEAKER_01]: I'll read it again.
10:05.441 --> 10:16.366
[SPEAKER_01]: This Portuguese explorer is best known for achieving the first circumnavigation of the Earth, aka sailed around the world between 1519 and 1522, everybody has an answer.
10:16.486 --> 10:18.992
[SPEAKER_03]: If I'm correct, you get another point for the first name.
10:19.276 --> 10:24.926
[SPEAKER_01]: That is He said he was if he was correct, but you will get props from everyone at the table Yeah, that's true.
10:24.946 --> 10:28.211
[SPEAKER_01]: It's not for nothing from probably not except for Brian all right.
10:28.231 --> 10:35.884
[SPEAKER_01]: Let's reveal We have Magellan from Nick and Andy brand wrote Paul Staley on
10:35.864 --> 10:42.194
[SPEAKER_01]: Kelly wrote Ferdinand Magellan the correct answer is Ferdinand Magellan.
10:42.715 --> 10:44.157
[SPEAKER_04]: Nice work, Nicholas.
10:44.217 --> 10:45.640
[SPEAKER_04]: Where was that from, man?
10:46.742 --> 10:47.483
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know.
10:47.503 --> 10:52.210
[SPEAKER_04]: I had a different name written down, which is helpful to me.
10:52.230 --> 10:54.154
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm actually no more than one thing to say.
10:54.194 --> 10:56.337
[SPEAKER_04]: Are you sure the other one wasn't explorer?
10:56.317 --> 10:59.940
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, that's a great question, I don't know.
10:59.960 --> 11:00.961
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't know at this point.
11:01.041 --> 11:03.463
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, Chamberlain was on the floor.
11:03.483 --> 11:05.305
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, well, he explored the line.
11:05.325 --> 11:06.646
[SPEAKER_04]: He explored the line.
11:06.666 --> 11:07.767
[SPEAKER_04]: He was 20,000.
11:07.787 --> 11:09.268
[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, that's been a lot of fun.
11:09.288 --> 11:11.450
[SPEAKER_02]: He's been the greatest, explore, all thanks.
11:11.470 --> 11:11.730
[SPEAKER_02]: Good fall.
11:11.750 --> 11:17.676
[SPEAKER_04]: According to him, he actually would help me as when it was demonstrated that this was conservatively up.
11:17.696 --> 11:18.897
[SPEAKER_04]: I was like, I have to go with.
11:18.917 --> 11:19.897
[SPEAKER_04]: Gotcha, the name we know.
11:20.118 --> 11:20.818
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, it makes sense.
11:20.838 --> 11:23.861
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, there won't be that many hints, but I'm glad I helped you out on that one.
11:23.901 --> 11:24.742
[SPEAKER_04]: I appreciate it.
11:24.762 --> 11:26.323
[SPEAKER_01]: To help you turn on the board.
11:26.303 --> 11:30.154
[SPEAKER_01]: Brian, you'll be happy to know that these flavor tex are nice and short.
11:30.635 --> 11:30.996
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you.
11:31.096 --> 11:32.400
[SPEAKER_01]: You're welcome.
11:32.460 --> 11:41.646
[SPEAKER_01]: Magellan was killed in battle in the Philippines in 1521, but is crew completed the return trip to Spain in 1522.
11:41.626 --> 11:43.408
[SPEAKER_01]: In other words, he did not make it.
11:43.468 --> 11:44.129
[SPEAKER_01]: He did not make it.
11:44.409 --> 11:45.270
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, you're right.
11:45.550 --> 11:46.331
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, how about that?
11:46.892 --> 11:49.254
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, but we say Magellan Felt around the world.
11:49.635 --> 11:50.095
[SPEAKER_04]: I wasn't mad.
11:50.155 --> 11:53.839
[SPEAKER_04]: Jell in a Portuguese name It you know, I don't know.
11:53.859 --> 11:55.161
[SPEAKER_01]: It doesn't feel very Portuguese me.
11:55.221 --> 11:58.985
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know Portuguese Fine, he means, but for some reason it doesn't feel Portuguese.
11:59.005 --> 12:00.146
[SPEAKER_04]: What is a Portuguese name?
12:00.767 --> 12:06.714
[SPEAKER_03]: Nose You know like all of our This is out there go send us through cinnamon.
12:06.754 --> 12:10.738
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm saying it just didn't comment Portugal names because I know we have a big
12:10.718 --> 12:11.640
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, people.
12:11.921 --> 12:13.224
[SPEAKER_03]: He's pronounced my healing.
12:13.245 --> 12:13.746
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, that's right.
12:13.766 --> 12:14.508
[SPEAKER_04]: Maybe.
12:14.528 --> 12:14.648
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
12:14.668 --> 12:17.455
[SPEAKER_04]: I was thinking, yeah, definitely more of a Spanish influence.
12:17.475 --> 12:17.656
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
12:17.676 --> 12:18.458
[SPEAKER_04]: And then maybe.
12:18.919 --> 12:20.824
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know the actual national language, unfortunately.
12:20.844 --> 12:21.867
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, there's lots.
12:21.887 --> 12:24.694
[SPEAKER_02]: Just keep saying that doesn't make it so bad.
12:25.180 --> 12:27.002
[SPEAKER_04]: I think we should move on the question too, Scott.
12:27.022 --> 12:27.923
[SPEAKER_04]: It's not a question.
12:27.943 --> 12:28.103
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.
12:29.264 --> 12:29.865
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
12:31.226 --> 12:31.427
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.
12:31.447 --> 12:42.899
[SPEAKER_01]: Question number two, after the Louisiana purchase, Lewis and Clark, led the exploration of what would one day become the Western United States, which President commissioned this expedition?
12:45.101 --> 12:45.521
[SPEAKER_04]: Dang it.
12:48.244 --> 12:53.770
[SPEAKER_01]: Which the short version would be which President commissioned Lewis and Clark, exploring the West?
12:54.627 --> 12:56.334
[SPEAKER_03]: Did you say a year or no?
12:56.796 --> 12:57.378
[SPEAKER_01]: Did not.
12:58.041 --> 13:00.109
[SPEAKER_01]: But I did say after the Louisiana purchase.
13:00.309 --> 13:03.743
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I know when that was, okay, great.
13:05.478 --> 13:07.481
[SPEAKER_04]: My answer has merit.
13:07.921 --> 13:08.582
[SPEAKER_04]: I can say that.
13:09.544 --> 13:10.946
[SPEAKER_04]: But I don't know what that means.
13:11.446 --> 13:12.929
[SPEAKER_04]: Like an educated guest.
13:12.949 --> 13:14.411
[SPEAKER_04]: No, like that's exactly what it means.
13:14.431 --> 13:19.538
[SPEAKER_04]: There's a different, there's a different, there's definitely tied to the question.
13:20.419 --> 13:22.202
[SPEAKER_04]: I just don't know what the timing's correct.
13:22.222 --> 13:22.422
[SPEAKER_04]: OK.
13:22.923 --> 13:23.724
[SPEAKER_04]: I think I know what you mean.
13:24.064 --> 13:26.147
[SPEAKER_04]: And I think I use the same logic if I do.
13:26.167 --> 13:27.029
[SPEAKER_04]: OK. Yeah.
13:27.049 --> 13:32.496
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I don't want to give any more detail.
13:32.516 --> 13:33.097
[SPEAKER_00]: It's worth it.
13:33.237 --> 13:35.080
[SPEAKER_04]: I think I'm struggling.
13:35.802 --> 13:38.395
[SPEAKER_01]: We'll give you guys nine and a half seconds.
13:38.415 --> 13:39.319
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, you have a lot.
13:39.339 --> 13:40.726
[SPEAKER_04]: Such weird numbers now.
13:40.746 --> 13:41.027
[SPEAKER_04]: We're gonna.
13:41.068 --> 13:41.228
[SPEAKER_04]: Right.
13:41.249 --> 13:41.771
[SPEAKER_04]: Do you have an answer?
13:42.032 --> 13:42.856
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
13:42.876 --> 13:43.620
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, so good about it.
13:43.640 --> 13:44.243
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah
13:45.100 --> 13:45.641
[SPEAKER_04]: Not at all.
13:46.702 --> 13:47.543
[SPEAKER_02]: No, it's fine.
13:47.643 --> 13:48.304
[SPEAKER_02]: It's fine.
13:48.364 --> 13:49.245
[SPEAKER_02]: It's fine.
13:49.305 --> 13:50.026
[SPEAKER_02]: It's fine.
13:50.046 --> 13:50.526
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:50.706 --> 13:51.147
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:51.207 --> 13:51.808
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:51.828 --> 13:52.308
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:52.929 --> 13:54.190
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:54.271 --> 13:54.691
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:54.711 --> 13:55.212
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:55.232 --> 13:55.752
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:55.772 --> 13:56.013
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:56.033 --> 13:56.773
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:57.354 --> 13:57.875
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
13:58.696 --> 14:01.399
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
14:02.240 --> 14:03.221
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
14:03.241 --> 14:03.721
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
14:03.782 --> 14:04.623
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
14:04.683 --> 14:06.144
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
14:06.264 --> 14:06.805
[SPEAKER_01]: It's fine.
14:07.156 --> 14:08.518
[SPEAKER_01]: Thomas Jackson.
14:08.538 --> 14:10.522
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, he orchestrated the Louisiana differences.
14:10.682 --> 14:12.044
[SPEAKER_04]: So yeah, I do.
14:12.165 --> 14:12.545
[SPEAKER_03]: I do that.
14:12.605 --> 14:15.731
[SPEAKER_03]: I do know of the timing of the expedition.
14:15.811 --> 14:16.592
[SPEAKER_03]: Same thing, Corley.
14:16.652 --> 14:17.614
[SPEAKER_03]: I just didn't know any differently.
14:17.654 --> 14:18.696
[SPEAKER_04]: That's what I was worried about.
14:18.796 --> 14:22.603
[SPEAKER_04]: You know, I did not send the expedition occurred after the actual.
14:22.703 --> 14:25.047
[SPEAKER_02]: I think if you're looking in, it's Donald Trump.
14:25.027 --> 14:29.999
[SPEAKER_04]: He might tell you, yeah, he might take credit for that.
14:30.019 --> 14:30.641
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm not taking credit for that.
14:30.661 --> 14:31.343
[SPEAKER_04]: Very great purchase.
14:32.285 --> 14:33.568
[SPEAKER_04]: That purchase I'll stay in.
14:33.608 --> 14:33.969
[SPEAKER_02]: Huge, huge.
14:34.471 --> 14:35.433
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, we're in Thailand all.
14:35.473 --> 14:35.914
[SPEAKER_04]: What's you?
14:36.395 --> 14:37.378
[SPEAKER_03]: He mettle the whole purchase.
14:37.398 --> 14:38.460
[SPEAKER_03]: 15 million dollars.
14:38.962 --> 14:40.205
[SPEAKER_03]: He's a deal.
14:40.225 --> 14:41.047
[SPEAKER_01]: He's a pretty good deal.
14:41.227 --> 14:42.310
[SPEAKER_01]: That's a pretty good deal.
14:42.442 --> 14:43.584
[SPEAKER_03]: That's a lot of acreage.
14:43.624 --> 14:44.165
[SPEAKER_01]: A bunch.
14:45.407 --> 14:49.334
[SPEAKER_01]: Under the command of Captain Mary Weather Lewis, do you know that case?
14:49.414 --> 14:49.675
[SPEAKER_01]: Yes, I did.
14:49.695 --> 14:50.136
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, good.
14:50.576 --> 14:56.928
[SPEAKER_01]: A group of US Army and civilian volunteers set out from Camp Dubois, where at Illinois.
14:57.609 --> 15:02.437
[SPEAKER_01]: On May 14, 1804, and eventually made it to the Pacific Ocean the following year.
15:02.898 --> 15:07.386
[SPEAKER_03]: Illinois, as I believe, counts it pronounced it Dubois Dubois.
15:08.311 --> 15:12.457
[SPEAKER_04]: across the Mississippi just north of where we are currently.
15:12.617 --> 15:13.398
[SPEAKER_02]: That's well, boy.
15:13.559 --> 15:14.260
[SPEAKER_02]: That's 45 miles.
15:14.340 --> 15:20.529
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, all in this area, land between the Missouri, land between the lakes.
15:20.549 --> 15:23.233
[SPEAKER_04]: What's the river that spot between the rivers they're never mind?
15:23.253 --> 15:23.634
[SPEAKER_03]: Come vote.
15:23.654 --> 15:24.455
[SPEAKER_03]: The conversions.
15:24.915 --> 15:26.237
[SPEAKER_03]: Confluence.
15:26.678 --> 15:27.419
[SPEAKER_01]: There you go.
15:27.439 --> 15:28.060
[SPEAKER_01]: We got there.
15:28.260 --> 15:28.401
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.
15:28.421 --> 15:29.162
[SPEAKER_01]: Team after we should.
15:29.182 --> 15:31.345
[SPEAKER_01]: Everybody gets another point.
15:31.365 --> 15:33.148
[SPEAKER_01]: Everybody gets a point.
15:33.648 --> 15:35.151
[SPEAKER_01]: Because Andy couldn't think of a word.
15:36.012 --> 15:36.833
[SPEAKER_04]: Another point.
15:37.910 --> 15:39.593
[SPEAKER_01]: Alright, let's do Question 3.
15:39.613 --> 15:41.355
[SPEAKER_01]: I know you guys are clamoring for it.
15:41.415 --> 15:42.016
[SPEAKER_01]: So here we go.
15:42.757 --> 15:43.499
[SPEAKER_01]: Born and Venice.
15:44.180 --> 15:51.411
[SPEAKER_01]: This merchant and writer traveled through Asia along the Silk Road between 1271 and 1295.
15:51.531 --> 16:00.124
[SPEAKER_01]: He wrote a book about his travels giving Europeans the first comprehensive look to China, Persia, Japan and many other Asian societies.
16:00.244 --> 16:01.386
[SPEAKER_01]: Did you give a year?
16:01.653 --> 16:05.278
[SPEAKER_01]: 1200s 1271 and 1295 Thank you.
16:05.699 --> 16:06.040
[SPEAKER_04]: Thank you.
16:06.440 --> 16:08.964
[SPEAKER_04]: I was just trying to tie it to something else.
16:10.927 --> 16:11.127
[SPEAKER_04]: Nick.
16:11.768 --> 16:12.469
[SPEAKER_04]: Good.
16:12.670 --> 16:13.391
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm not good.
16:14.793 --> 16:15.274
[SPEAKER_04]: I disagree.
16:15.474 --> 16:15.874
[SPEAKER_00]: You're good.
16:15.955 --> 16:17.237
[SPEAKER_04]: You went to the court pretty fast.
16:17.337 --> 16:17.637
[SPEAKER_04]: I thought.
16:18.438 --> 16:19.560
[SPEAKER_04]: Just an instinct.
16:19.726 --> 16:27.865
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't I don't know why that this name just popped in my head, but I have no idea This been discussed on an episode before really it is.
16:28.406 --> 16:28.967
[SPEAKER_04]: It's still corrode.
16:28.987 --> 16:29.148
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes.
16:29.348 --> 16:29.749
[SPEAKER_04]: Look at that.
16:29.809 --> 16:30.631
[SPEAKER_04]: I know the silk road.
16:30.651 --> 16:32.335
[SPEAKER_04]: I
16:32.568 --> 16:41.696
[SPEAKER_01]: All right, I'll read it one more time while people are thinking born and Venice, this merchant and writer travel to Asia along the Silk Road between 1271 and 1295.
16:42.237 --> 16:50.985
[SPEAKER_01]: He wrote a book about his travels that I can't name because his name is in the book giving Europeans first comprehensive look into many Asian societies.
16:51.445 --> 16:52.626
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know if I felt good about this.
16:53.747 --> 16:59.993
[SPEAKER_04]: The only reason I do is, I guess I'll wait for everybody to finish writing, but
16:59.973 --> 17:03.096
[SPEAKER_04]: I watch something bad at you with this.
17:03.416 --> 17:04.517
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay, so that's why I want with this.
17:04.618 --> 17:07.000
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm so you're not going to wait till everyone's done right here.
17:07.020 --> 17:07.280
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.
17:07.300 --> 17:08.661
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, we'll let Nick start.
17:09.502 --> 17:18.511
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, a female Marco Polo and so did Andy and so did Kelly and of course, Brian wrote Hitler and the correct answer Is of course, Marco.
17:19.152 --> 17:22.895
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I Refrain for making a reference to the shirt.
17:23.055 --> 17:26.138
[SPEAKER_01]: It wasn't a little bit Goodness.
17:27.280 --> 17:27.720
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, man.
17:28.100 --> 17:28.541
[SPEAKER_04]: Marco.
17:28.781 --> 17:29.862
[SPEAKER_04]: He explored in a pool.
17:30.837 --> 17:31.698
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, that was the whole idea.
17:32.760 --> 17:34.182
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I mean, what are we talking about?
17:34.202 --> 17:34.743
[SPEAKER_04]: There's a show.
17:35.144 --> 17:36.466
[SPEAKER_04]: I think it's this Netflix.
17:36.486 --> 17:37.828
[SPEAKER_04]: There's a really nothing.
17:37.908 --> 17:39.831
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I've seen parts of it.
17:40.412 --> 17:41.093
[SPEAKER_03]: I referenced.
17:41.193 --> 17:43.417
[SPEAKER_03]: I gave you guys a, you're asking about shows to watch.
17:43.457 --> 17:44.078
[SPEAKER_03]: And I gave it to you.
17:44.098 --> 17:45.120
[SPEAKER_03]: And I think you started it.
17:45.160 --> 17:46.802
[SPEAKER_03]: And you really didn't have much interest.
17:46.842 --> 17:47.804
[SPEAKER_03]: I've seen it.
17:47.924 --> 17:48.785
[SPEAKER_03]: It's only two seasons.
17:48.805 --> 17:49.306
[SPEAKER_03]: What's the call?
17:49.506 --> 17:50.548
[SPEAKER_03]: Marco Polo.
17:50.668 --> 17:51.730
[SPEAKER_04]: It's called Marco Polo.
17:52.872 --> 17:53.673
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I don't know why.
17:53.973 --> 17:56.237
[SPEAKER_01]: Would you recommend that is the most important question.
17:57.348 --> 18:01.053
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, for what I've seen, but I didn't hold me enough to, that I had to binge it.
18:01.073 --> 18:01.994
[SPEAKER_04]: Gotcha.
18:02.014 --> 18:04.657
[SPEAKER_03]: But thank you so much for having me traveling any runs in the Gangas Khan.
18:04.938 --> 18:05.619
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
18:06.520 --> 18:06.700
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, yeah.
18:06.720 --> 18:08.583
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know how historically accurate it is.
18:08.603 --> 18:09.984
[SPEAKER_04]: I do like period.
18:10.064 --> 18:10.505
[SPEAKER_04]: Spot on.
18:10.525 --> 18:11.086
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.
18:11.346 --> 18:11.747
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
18:12.327 --> 18:16.713
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, so if you watch the show, Nick, you'd be fascinated for no of that.
18:16.933 --> 18:19.917
[SPEAKER_01]: Marco Polo was not the first European to reach China.
18:20.077 --> 18:23.642
[SPEAKER_01]: What was the first to give a detailed chronicle of his experience?
18:23.622 --> 18:27.687
[SPEAKER_01]: His account gave Europeans a clear picture of Asian geography and customs.
18:28.648 --> 18:29.589
[SPEAKER_04]: He brought pizza back.
18:30.170 --> 18:33.554
[SPEAKER_04]: That was the fact that we talked about previously on the show.
18:33.574 --> 18:34.856
[SPEAKER_04]: He brought pizza back from Asian.
18:35.316 --> 18:36.458
[SPEAKER_00]: Kelly dropped.
18:36.478 --> 18:37.159
[SPEAKER_00]: He brought pizza back.
18:38.580 --> 18:39.582
[SPEAKER_04]: Is there a Marcos pizza?
18:40.342 --> 18:41.664
[SPEAKER_04]: Hey, there he goes.
18:41.684 --> 18:43.086
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, this is where he brought it.
18:43.106 --> 18:43.366
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, yes.
18:44.247 --> 18:44.888
[SPEAKER_01]: Bill Swanlow.
18:46.387 --> 18:49.531
[SPEAKER_01]: All right, we're moving ahead the question four.
18:49.571 --> 18:50.593
[SPEAKER_01]: Here we go.
18:50.873 --> 18:51.334
[SPEAKER_01]: Thank God.
18:51.574 --> 19:12.782
[SPEAKER_01]: This Spanish explorer is best known for leading an expedition deep into the modern day south-eastern United States and is the first European documented as having crossed the Mississippi River.
19:13.032 --> 19:14.476
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, I think Nick wants a question again.
19:14.496 --> 19:20.531
[SPEAKER_01]: He does this Spanish explorer is best known for leading an expedition deep into modern day.
19:20.552 --> 19:28.071
[SPEAKER_01]: South Eastern United States and is the first European documented as having crossed the Mississippi River.
19:29.873 --> 19:33.518
[SPEAKER_03]: Hmm, you want your board click and you know this.
19:33.718 --> 19:38.444
[SPEAKER_03]: I have a very good guess But it's just a yeah first name on this one.
19:38.464 --> 19:38.725
[SPEAKER_03]: I do.
19:38.885 --> 19:39.025
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
19:39.045 --> 19:41.328
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, I have the first one last.
19:41.849 --> 19:47.256
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh Yeah, but it's a Daffy duck That is nothing.
19:47.296 --> 19:48.097
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that means nothing.
19:48.177 --> 19:49.940
[SPEAKER_02]: Absolutely, but I want to add it to it to it.
19:50.000 --> 19:58.311
[SPEAKER_04]: I just want to tell you guys Probably run First you're peeing to cross the Mississippi
19:58.358 --> 19:59.581
[SPEAKER_01]: All right, I will give.
20:01.264 --> 20:04.291
[SPEAKER_01]: Contrary to popular belief, I like Andy, so I will give him 11 seconds.
20:05.072 --> 20:05.553
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, a lot.
20:05.814 --> 20:08.841
[SPEAKER_04]: It's a, turn it.
20:08.861 --> 20:15.615
[SPEAKER_04]: Now I'm afraid that I'm giving a future race.
20:15.635 --> 20:17.920
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I don't think it's right.
20:17.900 --> 20:18.702
[SPEAKER_04]: But everyone.
20:19.102 --> 20:23.410
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, gentlemen, let's reveal Pawn Staley on from Kelly.
20:23.951 --> 20:25.995
[SPEAKER_01]: Franz Fernand from Ryan, good band.
20:26.657 --> 20:27.598
[SPEAKER_01]: Andy wrote Cortez.
20:28.220 --> 20:29.522
[SPEAKER_01]: Nick wrote Disoto.
20:30.263 --> 20:33.249
[SPEAKER_01]: The correct answer is Hernando Cortez.
20:33.269 --> 20:36.415
[SPEAKER_00]: Disoto.
20:36.395 --> 20:38.419
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, what is going on?
20:38.900 --> 20:52.227
[SPEAKER_01]: And I'm disappointed in my time-filled fans because they talk about Magellan and the Soto in an episode My goodness, the first question to Soto was like the first in a pop to me
20:52.527 --> 21:01.599
[SPEAKER_01]: And based on where we live, there's a dissette of Illinois and so on and you lived in the sort of I did believe yeah, yeah, yeah, he did he did.
21:01.860 --> 21:03.942
[SPEAKER_03]: Fantastic count.
21:03.962 --> 21:08.508
[SPEAKER_01]: He saw number the prefix was 867 When I lived in dissette of five three.
21:08.549 --> 21:21.606
[SPEAKER_01]: I tried I call the phone company and ask him to give me 867 5309 But that number was not allowed You didn't want that anyway
21:21.586 --> 21:24.010
[SPEAKER_02]: You've been mad at like two days.
21:24.030 --> 21:26.834
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I would have pulled the plug in and I'd worry about it.
21:27.836 --> 21:39.173
[SPEAKER_01]: Decetal landed with nine ships, 620 men, 220 horses and modern day Tampa, Florida, ships carried priests, craftsmen, engineers, farmers, and merchants from all parts of the world.
21:39.541 --> 21:41.925
[SPEAKER_01]: I feel like Nick just wants to retire on that one.
21:42.126 --> 21:42.406
[SPEAKER_04]: I do.
21:42.446 --> 21:44.430
[SPEAKER_04]: That's the block out of me.
21:44.490 --> 21:45.812
[SPEAKER_04]: Because right now you're winning.
21:45.953 --> 21:48.958
[SPEAKER_04]: Like I have very few other names that I think in this brain right now.
21:49.599 --> 21:50.861
[SPEAKER_04]: Not feeling good about the second half.
21:50.881 --> 21:51.983
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, we're not doing a score check.
21:52.003 --> 21:52.805
[SPEAKER_01]: But I'm looking at your board.
21:52.845 --> 21:54.368
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't believe what I'm looking at.
21:54.428 --> 21:55.069
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't believe it either.
21:55.450 --> 21:56.131
[SPEAKER_01]: But just keep it going.
21:56.151 --> 21:56.712
[SPEAKER_04]: Something's wrong.
21:56.872 --> 21:57.874
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's just ride this wave.
21:58.395 --> 21:58.635
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.
21:58.655 --> 21:59.958
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, let's explore it together.
22:01.020 --> 22:02.402
[SPEAKER_01]: There you go.
22:02.422 --> 22:03.144
[SPEAKER_01]: Question five.
22:03.224 --> 22:03.945
[SPEAKER_01]: Here we go.
22:04.415 --> 22:22.727
[SPEAKER_01]: This captain of the British Royal Navy led three voyages of exploration between 1768 its 1790-none, nope sorry 1779, completing the first circumnavigation of New Zealand and leading the first recorded European visit to the Hawaiian Islands.
22:29.997 --> 22:44.075
[SPEAKER_01]: This captain of the British Royal Navy led three voyages of exploration between 1768 and 1779 completing the first circumnavigation of New Zealand and leading the first recorded European visit to the Hawaiian Islands.
22:45.416 --> 22:48.941
[SPEAKER_04]: Dang it, I got, I got two good names in my head man.
22:49.021 --> 22:53.647
[SPEAKER_02]: Easy peasy.
22:53.847 --> 22:54.147
[SPEAKER_04]: Really?
22:56.130 --> 22:56.791
[SPEAKER_04]: Donald Trump.
22:58.413 --> 22:58.553
[SPEAKER_04]: I know.
23:00.524 --> 23:01.429
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, man.
23:01.449 --> 23:02.676
[SPEAKER_01]: Nick wrote something though.
23:02.697 --> 23:03.622
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, but I don't want to.
23:03.743 --> 23:04.869
[SPEAKER_04]: No, I have no idea.
23:05.030 --> 23:06.096
[SPEAKER_04]: You got this one, Kelly?
23:06.194 --> 23:07.236
[SPEAKER_03]: I blew some.
23:07.256 --> 23:08.398
[SPEAKER_04]: Ooh, one and two.
23:08.618 --> 23:10.802
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm just... No one is coming to my head.
23:11.704 --> 23:13.467
[SPEAKER_02]: Are we... Well, I don't really...
23:13.487 --> 23:13.827
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't really...
23:13.848 --> 23:16.753
[SPEAKER_01]: I'm spelling on this, cause... Oh, I'm completely lenient.
23:16.833 --> 23:18.095
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, okay.
23:18.115 --> 23:19.197
[SPEAKER_01]: Completely lenient.
23:19.217 --> 23:20.339
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, there's time to see my answers.
23:20.900 --> 23:21.200
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
23:21.401 --> 23:21.701
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
23:21.721 --> 23:21.902
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
23:22.162 --> 23:23.985
[SPEAKER_01]: Nick, you're going to write something down.
23:24.025 --> 23:24.446
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay, I did.
23:24.546 --> 23:25.368
[SPEAKER_04]: I wrote something down.
23:25.388 --> 23:25.688
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, good.
23:25.708 --> 23:26.390
[SPEAKER_01]: So we can reveal.
23:26.510 --> 23:26.710
[SPEAKER_01]: Sure.
23:26.891 --> 23:27.452
[SPEAKER_01]: Let's reveal.
23:28.113 --> 23:31.138
[SPEAKER_01]: What did you write down?
23:31.625 --> 23:40.498
[SPEAKER_01]: Um, Andy wrote down Earl of Sandwich, Brian Reftier, Mama, and Kelly wrote down Cook, Jimmy T. The correct answer is James Cook.
23:41.019 --> 23:42.381
[SPEAKER_04]: I had no idea.
23:42.401 --> 23:44.364
[SPEAKER_04]: I had down and erased it.
23:44.965 --> 23:46.467
[SPEAKER_04]: That doesn't ring a bell at all.
23:46.588 --> 23:47.589
[SPEAKER_04]: James Cook.
23:47.709 --> 23:49.071
[SPEAKER_04]: James Cook.
23:49.091 --> 23:50.013
[SPEAKER_03]: Who are you?
23:50.033 --> 23:50.694
[SPEAKER_03]: I have been here.
23:50.734 --> 23:52.497
[SPEAKER_03]: Something in Hawaii named after him.
23:52.797 --> 23:54.780
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, he was eaten by locals.
23:55.891 --> 23:57.614
[SPEAKER_04]: He was eaten by the locals.
23:57.854 --> 24:00.118
[SPEAKER_04]: Anyway, is that where they got the term cook?
24:00.138 --> 24:01.280
[SPEAKER_04]: Like the cook guy.
24:01.320 --> 24:02.722
[SPEAKER_04]: They cooked after the cook came.
24:03.063 --> 24:05.066
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't think so.
24:05.547 --> 24:06.448
[SPEAKER_01]: That's right.
24:06.569 --> 24:07.911
[SPEAKER_01]: I did not have that tidbit.
24:08.291 --> 24:08.772
[SPEAKER_01]: Good question.
24:09.033 --> 24:13.901
[SPEAKER_01]: I have in 1779 Cook was killed when a dispute with Native Hawaiians turned violent.
24:13.941 --> 24:16.585
[SPEAKER_04]: They are very confident that he was eaten.
24:16.605 --> 24:18.067
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.
24:18.448 --> 24:21.493
[SPEAKER_01]: That is a show of force to say the least.
24:21.473 --> 24:25.539
[SPEAKER_04]: Um, or sandwich was in that area too, because the sandwich islands are there.
24:25.579 --> 24:27.562
[SPEAKER_04]: And yes, he invented the sandwich.
24:28.183 --> 24:29.986
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, but so there's some more trivia.
24:30.006 --> 24:31.689
[SPEAKER_04]: And if I just gave it a little bit.
24:31.729 --> 24:32.009
[SPEAKER_03]: Absolutely.
24:32.089 --> 24:32.791
[SPEAKER_03]: He was before.
24:33.171 --> 24:33.311
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
24:33.452 --> 24:34.173
[SPEAKER_03]: I'm frame wise.
24:34.313 --> 24:35.074
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, okay.
24:35.094 --> 24:35.314
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
24:35.334 --> 24:35.655
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
24:35.675 --> 24:36.036
[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know.
24:37.137 --> 24:42.165
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, um, let's turn it over to our sponsors and then we'll come back with a score chat.
24:43.310 --> 24:49.496
[SPEAKER_04]: All right here we go from worst to first be you have not actually got on the board just yet So I probably won.
24:49.656 --> 25:02.829
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, you got doughnut going Kelly and Andrew both have three I have four I don't know how I don't know why I don't know why either I'm pulling for you next.
25:05.572 --> 25:06.453
[SPEAKER_01]: I guess at this point.
25:06.513 --> 25:08.535
[SPEAKER_04]: I saw my it's bizarre a world.
25:08.715 --> 25:11.578
[SPEAKER_04]: This is my
25:11.558 --> 25:15.164
[SPEAKER_01]: Let's see what we got going here in the second half here's question number six.
25:16.206 --> 25:25.862
[SPEAKER_01]: Norwegian Explorer, Roald Aimanson, became the first documented person to reach this location on December 14th, 1911.
25:29.689 --> 25:29.929
[SPEAKER_01]: What?
25:34.277 --> 25:34.377
[UNKNOWN]: Yeah.
25:34.643 --> 25:42.500
[SPEAKER_01]: Norwegian explorer, Roald Amenson, became the first documented person to reach this location got you.
25:43.081 --> 25:44.104
[SPEAKER_01]: On December 14, 1911.
25:44.124 --> 25:44.525
[SPEAKER_01]: 1911?
25:44.565 --> 25:44.905
[SPEAKER_01]: Hmm.
25:44.926 --> 25:51.279
[SPEAKER_03]: It's a good pistol.
25:52.723 --> 25:52.923
[SPEAKER_03]: Is it?
25:53.805 --> 25:54.306
[SPEAKER_04]: Who makes it?
25:55.113 --> 25:57.556
[SPEAKER_01]: And he doesn't know how to shoot, so explain it to him.
25:57.576 --> 25:59.998
[SPEAKER_04]: And maybe that's the key, maybe that's what I need.
26:00.018 --> 26:03.142
[SPEAKER_01]: There's a mechanism that snaps and it fires a bullet.
26:03.322 --> 26:04.724
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, they're, you gotta put bullets in it?
26:05.465 --> 26:08.128
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, man, I'm gonna be using water gun.
26:08.148 --> 26:08.808
[SPEAKER_01]: A Nerf gun.
26:09.209 --> 26:09.850
[SPEAKER_01]: I got a third of it.
26:09.870 --> 26:10.690
[SPEAKER_04]: I got a third of it.
26:11.331 --> 26:13.293
[SPEAKER_04]: You two real pretty fast on D&D.
26:13.313 --> 26:15.916
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm not certain, but I am pretty confident.
26:15.956 --> 26:16.998
[SPEAKER_04]: I'd place a bet on it.
26:17.018 --> 26:17.558
[SPEAKER_04]: Do that name?
26:17.618 --> 26:18.820
[SPEAKER_04]: Actually, saw for lawyer team?
26:18.920 --> 26:21.002
[SPEAKER_03]: I have never heard that name before in my life.
26:21.860 --> 26:22.902
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I'm going to go with it.
26:22.982 --> 26:25.405
[SPEAKER_01]: I figured you can guess the location.
26:25.425 --> 26:27.749
[SPEAKER_01]: I have this thinking what would know this.
26:28.350 --> 26:31.655
[SPEAKER_04]: I can't say that I would come up with the name and you've gone the other direction.
26:31.675 --> 26:32.636
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that's what I mean.
26:32.656 --> 26:33.197
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.
26:33.518 --> 26:33.898
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, sure.
26:33.918 --> 26:42.231
[SPEAKER_01]: Now, Regent Explore, Roald, eight minutes in became the first document a person to reach this location on December 14, 1911.
26:42.633 --> 26:55.336
[SPEAKER_01]: I think me and you're gonna say, okay, well, then I'm gonna say reveal and let's start with Kelly who wrote the North Pole at a boy Brian wrote Iceland and he wrote North Pole and Nick wrote Iceland.
26:55.396 --> 27:02.729
[SPEAKER_03]: The crack dancer is the South Pole Oh Would that be I wrote down Antarctica first man.
27:02.749 --> 27:04.933
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, it is such an idiot.
27:05.013 --> 27:07.257
[SPEAKER_03]: North is complete opposite of South
27:07.237 --> 27:09.020
[SPEAKER_01]: What would you?
27:09.260 --> 27:16.290
[SPEAKER_01]: I did write an article first, but that wouldn't have been the... Yeah, I thought about saying, and it's not a continent, you know?
27:16.310 --> 27:18.473
[SPEAKER_04]: And we get to self-fultal 1911.
27:18.533 --> 27:26.104
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, that is why I originally thought the South Pole first because it's so much later than you would otherwise expect it.
27:26.444 --> 27:30.570
[SPEAKER_04]: But given the fact that he's from Scandinavia, it'd be so easy just to jump.
27:30.650 --> 27:32.814
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, you're gonna love the flavor here.
27:32.894 --> 27:33.234
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, boy.
27:33.555 --> 27:36.619
[SPEAKER_01]: On May 12th, 1926.
27:36.599 --> 27:39.967
[SPEAKER_01]: Traveling via the airship Norge.
27:39.987 --> 27:45.720
[SPEAKER_01]: He became the first document explorer to reach the north pole later So I was right shocking except for the year.
27:45.760 --> 27:51.252
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's why I included the year That is very surprising.
27:51.272 --> 27:56.143
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, and he used he failed you know using a ship or whatever So he took a
27:56.123 --> 27:56.904
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know.
27:56.924 --> 27:57.725
[SPEAKER_01]: It says airship.
27:57.765 --> 27:59.787
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know exactly what's and it does.
27:59.807 --> 28:01.730
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, what a big one here.
28:01.770 --> 28:03.111
[SPEAKER_03]: Twenty six.
28:03.431 --> 28:04.092
[SPEAKER_03]: What an airship.
28:04.112 --> 28:07.056
[SPEAKER_03]: Be like a yeah, could have been a lamp or like a hand it.
28:07.076 --> 28:08.077
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, so I don't know.
28:09.438 --> 28:10.660
[SPEAKER_04]: Does it say documented?
28:11.741 --> 28:13.743
[SPEAKER_04]: First talking politics or to reach up there.
28:13.763 --> 28:15.606
[SPEAKER_03]: Clearly they're inhabitants up there.
28:15.626 --> 28:15.826
[SPEAKER_03]: So.
28:15.886 --> 28:17.788
[SPEAKER_01]: I feel like there's always a question now.
28:17.808 --> 28:18.289
[SPEAKER_03]: But South Pole.
28:18.309 --> 28:19.390
[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know that there are any.
28:19.410 --> 28:20.371
[SPEAKER_03]: No, no, the North Pole.
28:20.892 --> 28:21.152
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.
28:22.263 --> 28:24.807
[SPEAKER_01]: Alright, here we go with question number seven.
28:24.867 --> 28:26.750
[SPEAKER_01]: This is a name you all know.
28:27.431 --> 28:28.132
[SPEAKER_01]: Beautiful.
28:28.152 --> 28:28.613
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh great.
28:28.653 --> 28:29.514
[SPEAKER_04]: That could be a stretch.
28:29.614 --> 28:29.935
[SPEAKER_04]: Go ahead.
28:30.235 --> 28:31.637
[SPEAKER_01]: I believe Christopher Columbus.
28:32.599 --> 28:32.679
[SPEAKER_01]: Hey.
28:32.719 --> 28:35.764
[SPEAKER_01]: What's the next floor from the Republic of Genoa?
28:35.924 --> 28:36.304
[SPEAKER_01]: Never.
28:36.745 --> 28:38.928
[SPEAKER_01]: Which is located in this modern day country.
28:41.192 --> 28:41.813
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh yeah.
28:41.833 --> 28:41.993
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh yeah.
28:45.837 --> 28:53.294
[SPEAKER_01]: Christopher Columbus was an explorer from the Republic of Genoa, which is located in this modern day country.
28:54.356 --> 28:54.537
[SPEAKER_04]: Gotcha.
28:54.577 --> 28:55.499
[SPEAKER_04]: How are we doing Nick?
28:56.241 --> 28:56.802
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm like, come in.
28:56.942 --> 28:58.125
[SPEAKER_04]: Am I coming for you here?
28:58.426 --> 29:00.869
[SPEAKER_04]: So there's actually two answers in my head.
29:00.889 --> 29:02.991
[SPEAKER_04]: I know why you chose one of your answers.
29:03.011 --> 29:06.515
[SPEAKER_04]: You know why of course I do is at the right way the good.
29:06.535 --> 29:16.065
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm gonna tell you about chasing you But it is it the right way to go the way you think I'm going do you think I'm correct on that You don't know what each other are talking about No, I know exactly what he's talking about.
29:16.085 --> 29:21.091
[SPEAKER_01]: What I really do is everyone I have a country written down I think so okay.
29:21.151 --> 29:22.132
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, okay.
29:22.192 --> 29:23.353
[SPEAKER_01]: Let's reveal all right
29:24.245 --> 29:30.751
[SPEAKER_01]: We have Italy from everybody in the room, and I'm happy to report you are all correct.
29:30.771 --> 29:32.873
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, all this is so nice.
29:32.893 --> 29:35.636
[SPEAKER_04]: Long, I'd Brian, I thought that might be the one you're saying.
29:35.656 --> 29:39.159
[SPEAKER_04]: Had a boy, but I was like, and there's something to do with Spain in Columbus though.
29:39.219 --> 29:41.561
[SPEAKER_04]: That's like Christopher Columbus Spanish, they funded it.
29:41.621 --> 29:45.225
[SPEAKER_04]: No, he's an easy Italian, but they funded Spanish, funded Spanish.
29:45.385 --> 29:50.670
[SPEAKER_04]: He was Spanish for some kind of Italian time.
29:52.191 --> 29:54.133
[SPEAKER_02]: That's great.
29:55.008 --> 30:00.296
[SPEAKER_04]: So, that's why I was like, wait, I thought Spain has something to do with it, so I was like, okay.
30:00.316 --> 30:06.785
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that's a good start, but keep going.
30:06.805 --> 30:08.488
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, I knew we all knew the name Columbus.
30:08.528 --> 30:20.425
[SPEAKER_01]: He made landfall in many other locations, including modern day Bahamas, Haiti, Cuba, Trinidad, a stopson, the northern coast of America and the eastern edge of Central America.
30:20.405 --> 30:22.188
[SPEAKER_04]: Here is a real stand-up guy, too.
30:23.310 --> 30:23.550
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.
30:24.171 --> 30:31.785
[SPEAKER_01]: But we won't do a score check just yet, but I'm glancing over, things are tightening up.
30:31.805 --> 30:33.748
[SPEAKER_01]: Let's go on to... Oh, man.
30:33.808 --> 30:34.509
[SPEAKER_02]: Come on, there he goes.
30:34.589 --> 30:35.811
[SPEAKER_02]: They're running scared.
30:35.832 --> 30:36.673
[SPEAKER_02]: They're running scared.
30:37.114 --> 30:38.476
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, don't have a chance, but you are.
30:38.716 --> 30:39.418
[SPEAKER_01]: You're a close-knit.
30:41.481 --> 30:44.286
[SPEAKER_01]: On the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria.
30:44.857 --> 30:45.238
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.
30:45.258 --> 30:45.638
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, man.
30:45.658 --> 30:48.682
[SPEAKER_04]: That's started a wrap in my step brothers.
30:49.383 --> 30:49.483
[SPEAKER_01]: Yes.
30:49.503 --> 30:49.703
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.
30:49.723 --> 30:50.144
[SPEAKER_01]: Here we go.
30:50.805 --> 30:52.087
[SPEAKER_01]: According to the Yes.
30:53.388 --> 30:54.710
[SPEAKER_01]: Sogas of Icelanders.
30:55.711 --> 31:00.958
[SPEAKER_01]: This explorer is thought to have been the first European Decept foot on continental America.
31:01.679 --> 31:03.642
[SPEAKER_04]: I've been waiting for this one.
31:04.887 --> 31:09.192
[SPEAKER_01]: According to the sagas of ice landers, that's in caps.
31:09.913 --> 31:14.939
[SPEAKER_01]: This explorer thought to have been the first European the set foot on continental America.
31:15.600 --> 31:17.362
[SPEAKER_04]: Last name in the bank there, Nick.
31:17.382 --> 31:19.185
[SPEAKER_04]: I only went like a big one.
31:19.205 --> 31:19.525
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
31:19.545 --> 31:21.207
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.
31:21.227 --> 31:22.669
[SPEAKER_03]: Kelly should get points for first names.
31:22.689 --> 31:24.371
[SPEAKER_04]: I did write the first name in the name for names.
31:24.651 --> 31:24.852
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
31:25.272 --> 31:26.033
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, is a nickname?
31:26.694 --> 31:27.455
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know if I know.
31:27.475 --> 31:28.216
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, I don't know the name.
31:28.256 --> 31:29.477
[SPEAKER_04]: I think I have the first name.
31:29.497 --> 31:29.898
[SPEAKER_04]: Spelling.
31:30.459 --> 31:33.983
[SPEAKER_04]: Don't have the window, but I think I have this.
31:33.963 --> 31:34.659
[SPEAKER_03]: Kelly.
31:34.700 --> 31:35.805
[SPEAKER_03]: So sad.
31:36.055 --> 31:37.716
[SPEAKER_01]: All right, well, everyone has an answer.
31:37.777 --> 31:39.738
[SPEAKER_01]: We're going to say, reveal.
31:40.439 --> 31:44.683
[SPEAKER_01]: And Kelly has Leaf Ericsson, Brian wrote, Ragnarok, Leaf Ericsson, and Leaf Ericsson.
31:44.703 --> 31:46.805
[SPEAKER_01]: And Leaf Ericsson from the other two gentlemen in the room.
31:46.845 --> 31:49.847
[SPEAKER_01]: The correct answer is, Leaf Ericsson.
31:49.867 --> 31:50.748
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, they're dead.
31:51.048 --> 31:51.949
[SPEAKER_01]: Maybe Eric, they're dead.
31:51.969 --> 31:52.730
[SPEAKER_04]: Eric, they're dead.
31:52.750 --> 31:53.551
[SPEAKER_04]: Haven't heard that.
31:53.571 --> 31:54.432
[SPEAKER_04]: He's the red.
31:54.592 --> 31:55.573
[SPEAKER_04]: I didn't know what he meant.
31:55.993 --> 32:01.318
[SPEAKER_04]: Vikings are known for their, that makes sense if he was red because they are known for their blonde streaks, right?
32:01.338 --> 32:02.018
[SPEAKER_04]: They're blonde locks.
32:02.098 --> 32:03.280
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, but they do a red.
32:03.740 --> 32:06.062
[SPEAKER_04]: He was probably red.
32:06.042 --> 32:07.505
[SPEAKER_04]: They blonde, are they right?
32:09.048 --> 32:09.589
[SPEAKER_04]: The mystery.
32:09.729 --> 32:11.051
[SPEAKER_04]: The blonde is strawberry blonde.
32:11.753 --> 32:14.017
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, I'm just throw for a little bit like they're known for their blonde hair.
32:14.077 --> 32:14.758
[SPEAKER_01]: It's opportunity for a big friend.
32:14.778 --> 32:14.878
[SPEAKER_01]: What?
32:14.898 --> 32:14.998
[SPEAKER_01]: What?
32:15.019 --> 32:26.700
[SPEAKER_01]: You know what, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds up, it all adds
32:26.680 --> 32:36.068
[SPEAKER_01]: Um, the sagas of Icelanders are narrative stories based on historical events that primarily took place in Iceland in the 9th, 10th and 11th centuries.
32:36.108 --> 32:39.852
[SPEAKER_01]: They provide valuable insight about medieval societies and kingdoms.
32:40.472 --> 32:40.693
[SPEAKER_01]: Hmm.
32:41.233 --> 32:41.333
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.
32:41.734 --> 32:50.922
[SPEAKER_01]: So a lot that we know about medieval, um, you know, UK, England, you know, all that is, the slag is of Icelanders.
32:50.982 --> 32:51.723
[SPEAKER_01]: So that's pretty interesting.
32:51.743 --> 32:52.743
[SPEAKER_04]: Watch the show Vikings.
32:53.044 --> 32:54.965
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes.
32:55.206 --> 32:56.687
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
32:56.667 --> 32:58.189
[SPEAKER_04]: We widely attacked.
32:58.210 --> 33:07.485
[SPEAKER_04]: And never mind that clearly we were already inhabited, but why is Columbus get so much credit for discovering the West when clearly He did it.
33:07.645 --> 33:10.349
[SPEAKER_04]: It was crafty a telling and there are people already here.
33:10.470 --> 33:17.421
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, no, if we disregard that I obviously recognize that too No, Lee Ferris and his widely known as the first person in North America.
33:17.681 --> 33:18.903
[SPEAKER_04]: They're in their own day.
33:19.244 --> 33:21.207
[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know why the banks are closed, right?
33:22.165 --> 33:23.147
[SPEAKER_03]: There's a Columbus day.
33:23.327 --> 33:25.110
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, I've had no idea of what this was called.
33:25.271 --> 33:26.513
[SPEAKER_01]: He landed in Canada.
33:26.533 --> 33:27.815
[SPEAKER_02]: There was just now Canada.
33:28.016 --> 33:28.857
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, I like that.
33:28.877 --> 33:29.599
[SPEAKER_02]: What do you do?
33:30.420 --> 33:30.480
[SPEAKER_02]: No.
33:30.500 --> 33:31.883
[SPEAKER_02]: Hey, you got a question about it?
33:32.223 --> 33:32.684
[SPEAKER_02]: Talk about it?
33:33.225 --> 33:36.271
[SPEAKER_02]: No, we were talking about it.
33:36.291 --> 33:36.391
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
33:36.411 --> 33:37.112
[SPEAKER_02]: You're telling that.
33:37.173 --> 33:37.874
[SPEAKER_02]: Forget about it.
33:38.675 --> 33:40.338
[SPEAKER_01]: All right, Nick, give us a score check.
33:40.358 --> 33:41.220
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.
33:41.200 --> 33:42.001
[SPEAKER_04]: Be you're on the board.
33:42.021 --> 33:42.622
[SPEAKER_04]: You got your one.
33:42.642 --> 33:43.704
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, baby.
33:44.265 --> 33:46.408
[SPEAKER_04]: Kelly and Andy both have five cares.
33:46.768 --> 33:48.351
[SPEAKER_04]: I actually I have six.
33:48.571 --> 33:50.454
[SPEAKER_04]: Hey, this is going to my mind, Andy.
33:50.474 --> 33:51.075
[SPEAKER_04]: I am.
33:51.095 --> 33:51.856
[SPEAKER_04]: We're coming for him.
33:51.876 --> 33:52.336
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, he can.
33:52.376 --> 33:53.057
[SPEAKER_03]: He's not going to win.
33:53.158 --> 33:54.880
[SPEAKER_03]: There's no like and hold these last two.
33:55.060 --> 33:57.164
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, there's a brain that they've been a dummy.
33:57.724 --> 33:58.345
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, he's flexing it.
33:58.365 --> 33:58.666
[SPEAKER_02]: He's flexing.
33:58.706 --> 33:59.287
[SPEAKER_02]: He's flexing.
33:59.347 --> 33:59.968
[SPEAKER_02]: He's flexing.
34:00.048 --> 34:00.388
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:00.408 --> 34:00.989
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:01.009 --> 34:01.590
[SPEAKER_02]: He's flexing.
34:01.610 --> 34:01.951
[SPEAKER_02]: He's flexing.
34:01.971 --> 34:02.291
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:02.411 --> 34:02.672
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:02.692 --> 34:03.032
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:03.052 --> 34:03.493
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:03.693 --> 34:04.014
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:04.034 --> 34:04.554
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:04.574 --> 34:04.835
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:04.855 --> 34:05.255
[SPEAKER_02]: He's flexing.
34:05.576 --> 34:05.856
[SPEAKER_02]: He's flexing.
34:05.896 --> 34:06.277
[SPEAKER_02]: He's flexing.
34:06.297 --> 34:06.758
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:06.818 --> 34:07.138
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:07.158 --> 34:07.639
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:07.659 --> 34:08.160
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:08.260 --> 34:08.741
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:08.761 --> 34:09.041
[SPEAKER_01]: He's flexing.
34:09.061 --> 34:09.422
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing.
34:09.442 --> 34:09.722
[SPEAKER_04]: He's flexing
34:09.702 --> 34:12.567
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, think of names in your head and explorers.
34:12.727 --> 34:14.189
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, let's see if you have this one Nick.
34:15.011 --> 34:22.303
[SPEAKER_01]: This Spanish explorer led the first officially European expedition to it is now known as Puerto Rico and Florida.
34:24.206 --> 34:33.381
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, I'm going back to early into those wrong.
34:33.682 --> 34:42.271
[SPEAKER_01]: This Spanish explorer led the first official European expedition to what is now known as Puerto Rico and Florida.
34:46.235 --> 34:47.676
[SPEAKER_04]: I think I think I'm actually out of names.
34:49.117 --> 34:51.500
[SPEAKER_01]: That's it.
34:51.520 --> 34:52.341
[SPEAKER_01]: Taped out of names.
34:52.401 --> 34:53.142
[SPEAKER_01]: I think I am.
34:53.762 --> 34:55.944
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I can't.
34:55.964 --> 34:56.745
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, Nick, that's too bad.
34:56.765 --> 35:00.289
[SPEAKER_01]: I'm going to give you an eight count.
35:00.309 --> 35:01.630
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, enjoy.
35:02.707 --> 35:03.970
[SPEAKER_04]: Man you got a killie.
35:04.972 --> 35:06.095
[SPEAKER_03]: I have a guess.
35:06.456 --> 35:06.797
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, man.
35:06.817 --> 35:07.759
[SPEAKER_03]: I don't feel good about it.
35:09.062 --> 35:12.832
[SPEAKER_03]: I have no idea This one clue in there that kind of got me.
35:13.413 --> 35:14.636
[SPEAKER_03]: So that's why I'm going with my answer.
35:14.656 --> 35:15.518
[SPEAKER_01]: What's the clue?
35:33.115 --> 35:34.438
[SPEAKER_01]: Correct answer is one.
35:34.918 --> 35:35.940
[SPEAKER_01]: Pond Staley on.
35:36.481 --> 35:37.784
[SPEAKER_03]: Good job, Jolly.
35:38.305 --> 35:38.706
[SPEAKER_03]: Florida.
35:39.006 --> 35:39.447
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, yeah.
35:39.527 --> 35:40.189
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, yeah.
35:40.209 --> 35:41.170
[SPEAKER_03]: It's a nice and a few.
35:41.190 --> 35:41.912
[SPEAKER_03]: Pond Staley.
35:41.932 --> 35:43.335
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, right.
35:43.355 --> 35:43.876
[SPEAKER_02]: Put your phone.
35:44.677 --> 35:44.757
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes.
35:44.777 --> 35:45.439
[SPEAKER_03]: That doesn't happen.
35:46.180 --> 35:47.603
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm so glad I'm joking on you.
35:47.623 --> 35:48.404
[SPEAKER_02]: Pond Staley.
35:48.424 --> 35:50.348
[SPEAKER_03]: You mentioned that same explore.
35:50.328 --> 35:51.069
[SPEAKER_03]: A question.
35:51.089 --> 35:52.150
[SPEAKER_02]: Somebody wrote it down.
35:52.170 --> 35:52.530
[SPEAKER_01]: I remember.
35:52.550 --> 35:54.572
[SPEAKER_01]: I thought we were going to win answers.
35:54.672 --> 35:55.814
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, that's interesting.
35:55.834 --> 35:57.255
[SPEAKER_04]: I've used friends for it.
35:57.275 --> 35:58.356
[SPEAKER_04]: But I spelled it different.
35:58.677 --> 36:01.099
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, that's a difference maker for sure.
36:01.620 --> 36:02.380
[SPEAKER_02]: Exactly.
36:02.400 --> 36:03.161
[SPEAKER_02]: Hold the sum out.
36:03.181 --> 36:03.782
[SPEAKER_02]: I got one.
36:04.202 --> 36:06.124
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm not on the, you know, I'm off the bench.
36:06.204 --> 36:07.165
[SPEAKER_02]: That's all I care about.
36:07.185 --> 36:07.986
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, yeah, man.
36:08.146 --> 36:10.709
[SPEAKER_02]: Scott, Scott went over with all of that, remember that?
36:10.729 --> 36:10.909
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
36:10.929 --> 36:13.152
[SPEAKER_02]: We're the times going to get one question right?
36:13.172 --> 36:13.392
[SPEAKER_01]: I remember.
36:13.412 --> 36:14.333
[SPEAKER_01]: What a loser.
36:14.353 --> 36:15.714
[SPEAKER_02]: But yeah, I didn't do that.
36:15.774 --> 36:16.555
[SPEAKER_02]: That's correct.
36:16.535 --> 36:18.419
[SPEAKER_02]: I blocked that out of my memory.
36:18.439 --> 36:18.820
[SPEAKER_01]: You can't prove it.
36:18.840 --> 36:19.762
[SPEAKER_01]: No, you can't prove it.
36:20.243 --> 36:21.025
[SPEAKER_02]: You remember it.
36:21.626 --> 36:25.093
[SPEAKER_02]: You're short, but you remember he's good.
36:25.895 --> 36:30.244
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, though popular culture suggests he was lurking for the fountain of youth.
36:30.485 --> 36:35.235
[SPEAKER_01]: There's no evidence to support the story and is considered to be a myth by most historians.
36:35.823 --> 36:40.750
[SPEAKER_04]: What's he responsible, I believe it's St. Augustines is these oldest settlement in America.
36:40.790 --> 36:42.112
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
36:42.232 --> 36:43.895
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
36:43.935 --> 36:44.876
[SPEAKER_04]: That's still a thing.
36:44.996 --> 36:45.377
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.
36:45.757 --> 36:46.679
[SPEAKER_02]: See you in Florida.
36:46.699 --> 36:46.799
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
36:46.819 --> 36:47.199
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
36:47.220 --> 36:48.561
[SPEAKER_02]: That's the oldest city in America.
36:48.581 --> 36:50.304
[SPEAKER_04]: But is he responsible for that?
36:50.324 --> 36:50.825
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, yeah.
36:50.845 --> 36:51.406
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't know.
36:51.466 --> 36:54.029
[SPEAKER_02]: But that is the oldest city in the city.
36:54.049 --> 36:54.490
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah.
36:55.027 --> 36:58.411
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, I know that has tightened up the scoreboard here.
36:58.932 --> 36:59.132
[SPEAKER_01]: Uh-oh.
36:59.553 --> 37:00.394
[SPEAKER_01]: So here we go.
37:00.694 --> 37:01.155
[SPEAKER_01]: Uh-oh.
37:01.175 --> 37:02.456
[SPEAKER_02]: What all comes down to this?
37:02.877 --> 37:04.199
[SPEAKER_02]: This is a question, 10.
37:04.339 --> 37:05.440
[SPEAKER_01]: Question 10.
37:05.460 --> 37:05.600
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh.
37:06.001 --> 37:06.401
[SPEAKER_04]: Here it is.
37:08.284 --> 37:11.688
[SPEAKER_01]: On May 29, 1953, Oh.
37:13.811 --> 37:24.544
[SPEAKER_01]: Edmund Hillary and Tindzig, Norway, became the first documented people to reach this.
37:25.722 --> 37:38.082
[SPEAKER_01]: he's smirking over there on May 29th, 1953 Edmund Hillary and Tensig Norge, Paul Giza, if I'm butchering that, became the first documented people to reach this.
37:38.262 --> 37:39.705
[SPEAKER_03]: You could have just gave me Norge's name.
37:40.226 --> 37:40.506
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
37:40.907 --> 37:41.267
[SPEAKER_03]: Really?
37:42.109 --> 37:42.389
[SPEAKER_03]: Wow.
37:42.730 --> 37:43.351
[SPEAKER_03]: I got enough.
37:43.451 --> 37:43.811
[SPEAKER_03]: You know this?
37:43.831 --> 37:44.132
[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know.
37:44.733 --> 37:45.614
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know for fat.
37:45.674 --> 37:47.097
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm not 100%.
37:47.317 --> 37:48.559
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm pretty confident.
37:49.000 --> 37:49.280
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
37:49.300 --> 37:49.641
[SPEAKER_04]: Really?
37:49.721 --> 37:50.122
[SPEAKER_04]: 100%.
37:50.362 --> 37:52.185
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
37:52.469 --> 37:55.092
[SPEAKER_04]: Is it was worth two for anyone trailing perhaps?
37:55.513 --> 37:59.158
[SPEAKER_04]: No, unfortunately, that's all right.
37:59.298 --> 38:00.780
[SPEAKER_03]: I will give you like one more time.
38:00.880 --> 38:02.022
[SPEAKER_03]: I almost had a brain fart.
38:02.062 --> 38:04.865
[SPEAKER_03]: I'll tell you afterwards what I wrote down first.
38:04.885 --> 38:21.447
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, and it is not good on May 29, 1953 Edmund Hillary and Ten Zing Ten Zing Norwaye became the first documented people to reach this.
38:21.427 --> 38:22.348
[SPEAKER_01]: I wrote something down.
38:22.928 --> 38:23.649
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
38:24.290 --> 38:25.551
[SPEAKER_01]: Everybody has something written down.
38:25.591 --> 38:27.693
[SPEAKER_01]: We're going to reveal.
38:28.354 --> 38:29.615
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh.
38:29.635 --> 38:30.636
[SPEAKER_01]: Nick wrote Easter Island.
38:31.337 --> 38:33.639
[SPEAKER_01]: Andy wrote Mount Everest.
38:33.659 --> 38:33.980
[SPEAKER_01]: Summ it.
38:34.100 --> 38:34.580
[SPEAKER_01]: Summ it.
38:34.600 --> 38:35.821
[SPEAKER_01]: Brian wrote Miss Goudell and I.
38:37.163 --> 38:38.284
[SPEAKER_01]: And now Everest.
38:38.304 --> 38:38.484
[SPEAKER_01]: Yep.
38:38.684 --> 38:39.986
[SPEAKER_01]: That is the correct answer.
38:40.026 --> 38:41.907
[SPEAKER_01]: They were the first.
38:41.927 --> 38:42.088
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh.
38:42.108 --> 38:43.409
[SPEAKER_01]: He didn't put summit.
38:43.429 --> 38:45.311
[SPEAKER_04]: We'll see if it's a piece of the mountain.
38:45.391 --> 38:46.472
[UNKNOWN]: Yeah.
38:46.722 --> 38:47.423
[SPEAKER_04]: They were just there.
38:47.503 --> 38:54.898
[SPEAKER_04]: They were the first people to do what no, to some of it's not reach the highest point on on and in the world.
38:55.759 --> 38:59.106
[SPEAKER_01]: But yeah, once I probably documented it's still growing.
38:59.426 --> 39:00.388
[SPEAKER_03]: And it's tell you what I wrote.
39:01.109 --> 39:01.310
[SPEAKER_03]: Sure.
39:01.550 --> 39:02.231
[SPEAKER_03]: Mount St. Helens.
39:02.512 --> 39:03.173
[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, beautiful.
39:03.394 --> 39:04.416
[SPEAKER_03]: And I'm like nailed it.
39:04.656 --> 39:05.718
[SPEAKER_03]: And I'm like, hold on a second.
39:05.838 --> 39:06.459
[SPEAKER_03]: Hold on a second.
39:06.480 --> 39:07.802
[SPEAKER_03]: That's just darn minute.
39:07.782 --> 39:31.444
[SPEAKER_01]: they didn't stick around for 25 years yeah they were part of those two gentlemen were part of the ninth British expedition to reach the summit the attempt to reach the ninth of the tenth yeah I find it didn't just surprise you didn't describe his sir Hillary had yeah he is sir Hillary but in 1953 he was I was at a say it was a nighted based on this accomplishment yes
39:31.424 --> 39:34.207
[SPEAKER_01]: So I believe we have a clear winner.
39:34.508 --> 39:42.177
[SPEAKER_04]: We do we do and who might that be from from worse the first Brian you end it with one Yay, Andy myself and who was six.
39:42.217 --> 39:43.318
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm still shocked by my score.
39:43.358 --> 39:53.431
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm impressed with you and disappointed in myself I don't know what that says about Kelly was able to come back and the late innings and he won with seven On the ground behind victory.
39:53.551 --> 39:55.373
[SPEAKER_04]: Well done K-Ray
39:55.353 --> 40:04.204
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, we don't need a tiebreaker, but would anyone like to offer guests in terms of how tall and feet is Mount Everest?
40:04.244 --> 40:05.706
[SPEAKER_03]: 32,196,542.
40:06.427 --> 40:08.429
[SPEAKER_03]: Okay, wow.
40:09.070 --> 40:10.171
[SPEAKER_01]: You guys left to do your own math?
40:10.552 --> 40:13.295
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know what they actually, what's 32,196.
40:13.536 --> 40:15.057
[SPEAKER_04]: I think it's 26.
40:15.218 --> 40:16.499
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm going 27.
40:16.519 --> 40:18.361
[SPEAKER_04]: 26 and 6.
40:18.382 --> 40:21.225
[SPEAKER_02]: 14 feet.
40:21.492 --> 40:23.115
[SPEAKER_02]: It is 29,000.
40:23.135 --> 40:26.321
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, I've got one for you.
40:26.361 --> 40:27.564
[SPEAKER_01]: Split the difference.
40:27.684 --> 40:28.846
[SPEAKER_01]: Eight and a half inches.
40:29.106 --> 40:29.848
[SPEAKER_01]: If we had to get it.
40:30.128 --> 40:33.034
[SPEAKER_04]: It is growing by a couple of centimeters every year.
40:33.074 --> 40:34.096
[SPEAKER_04]: It was at least a worst.
40:34.176 --> 40:35.158
[SPEAKER_01]: Quarter my year.
40:35.218 --> 40:37.382
[SPEAKER_01]: Forces it was last measured in 2020.
40:37.522 --> 40:37.863
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
40:37.883 --> 40:38.264
[SPEAKER_04]: Very good.
40:38.404 --> 40:40.969
[SPEAKER_02]: So that's where it uses going down and up.
40:41.827 --> 40:44.229
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, he's just going down and up.
40:44.249 --> 40:45.270
[SPEAKER_02]: It's going up.
40:45.510 --> 40:46.111
[SPEAKER_04]: It's rising.
40:46.391 --> 40:50.515
[SPEAKER_04]: So say, though, usually like erosion, it's because the plates are still crashing.
40:50.655 --> 40:51.616
[SPEAKER_02]: Oh, it's a little bit.
40:51.636 --> 40:52.637
[SPEAKER_04]: No, that's impressive.
40:52.697 --> 40:53.818
[SPEAKER_01]: I was going for a moment there.
40:53.838 --> 40:54.759
[SPEAKER_04]: That's interesting.
40:54.799 --> 40:56.140
[SPEAKER_04]: Geology lesson for today.
40:56.320 --> 40:56.721
[SPEAKER_04]: Thank you.
40:56.741 --> 40:57.261
[SPEAKER_04]: Appreciate that.
40:57.482 --> 41:00.725
[SPEAKER_04]: We've lost all of our listeners.
41:00.845 --> 41:04.708
[SPEAKER_01]: So this episode recovered quite a bit of the globe.
41:04.908 --> 41:05.549
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.
41:05.569 --> 41:07.211
[SPEAKER_01]: But I wrote that.
41:07.451 --> 41:07.971
[SPEAKER_01]: George, really?
41:08.131 --> 41:08.712
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, why?
41:10.413 --> 41:13.358
[SPEAKER_01]: I was impressed that we knew as much as we did.
41:13.418 --> 41:14.300
[SPEAKER_01]: That's really well.
41:14.320 --> 41:15.702
[SPEAKER_02]: That's pretty clear.
41:15.722 --> 41:16.644
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't know what to do.
41:16.684 --> 41:25.039
[SPEAKER_01]: But in thinking about all these places all over the world, I'm wondering what is at the top of your bucket list for places to visit and explore.
41:25.860 --> 41:26.802
[SPEAKER_04]: And explore.
41:28.267 --> 41:35.315
[SPEAKER_01]: So I'm looking for a tip-top, you, someone's giving you money to go, I'm going to go do this, what, where you're going, what you're doing.
41:35.335 --> 41:35.716
[SPEAKER_01]: Scallon.
41:35.836 --> 41:36.537
[SPEAKER_04]: It's so big.
41:36.657 --> 41:38.959
[SPEAKER_04]: Like there's so many places that are running through my head.
41:38.979 --> 41:39.180
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
41:39.200 --> 41:39.720
[SPEAKER_04]: I can't.
41:40.621 --> 41:41.823
[SPEAKER_04]: Brian, why scallon?
41:41.843 --> 41:43.264
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, castles are like what?
41:43.665 --> 41:46.168
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I mean, well, I'll tell you why.
41:46.208 --> 41:46.889
[SPEAKER_02]: It looks beautiful.
41:47.189 --> 41:47.850
[SPEAKER_03]: I'll tell you why.
41:47.870 --> 41:49.071
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm a castl guy.
41:49.191 --> 41:51.414
[SPEAKER_02]: I love castles, so scallon is on my head.
41:51.434 --> 41:52.435
[SPEAKER_03]: Do you want me to tell you why?
41:52.702 --> 41:53.744
[SPEAKER_02]: It's so cold for it.
41:53.764 --> 41:55.567
[SPEAKER_03]: Because if it's not school, it's crap.
41:56.369 --> 41:57.150
[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.
41:57.170 --> 41:57.832
[SPEAKER_02]: It's not coming.
41:57.852 --> 41:58.092
[SPEAKER_02]: Yes.
41:58.172 --> 42:00.016
[SPEAKER_02]: If I go anywhere, it would be Scotland.
42:00.236 --> 42:00.677
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't know.
42:00.797 --> 42:01.498
[SPEAKER_02]: Straight up.
42:01.518 --> 42:02.340
[SPEAKER_02]: For me, Scotland.
42:02.520 --> 42:02.661
[SPEAKER_02]: Cool.
42:03.021 --> 42:04.243
[SPEAKER_03]: Andy, no, you have a list.
42:04.264 --> 42:05.526
[SPEAKER_03]: You need a time to think about it.
42:05.546 --> 42:07.490
[SPEAKER_04]: I have recently kissed the Blarny Stone.
42:07.730 --> 42:07.950
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
42:08.051 --> 42:11.437
[SPEAKER_04]: And that was that would have been on the list, Ireland in general.
42:11.477 --> 42:12.419
[SPEAKER_04]: But Dr.
42:12.439 --> 42:14.743
[SPEAKER_04]: Check that off now here in the recent months.
42:14.723 --> 42:40.647
[SPEAKER_04]: Iceland comes to mind immediately I'm with it just it's just such it just just having never been there producer Amy's been there it just feels like such an untouched landscape which is similarly how I describe New Zealand which I've also had the good fortune to visit both canos hot springs just the northern lights raw nature happening and and along those
42:40.627 --> 42:45.917
[SPEAKER_04]: to finalize my answer now, and I've talked about this, he's talking about Iceland.
42:46.057 --> 42:47.580
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, I see there's a reason.
42:47.600 --> 42:48.903
[SPEAKER_04]: No, that's what I'm saying.
42:49.504 --> 42:56.798
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, but the Alaska back country, you know, just to, I've talked about this before, get dropped off by a plane.
42:57.319 --> 42:58.822
[SPEAKER_04]: If you get a cold, you did.
43:00.465 --> 43:03.411
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, there's just, it's just complete.
43:03.982 --> 43:07.946
[SPEAKER_04]: completely in tune with what nature and just surroundings and add it to win.
43:08.427 --> 43:09.648
[SPEAKER_04]: So that would be my bucket.
43:09.668 --> 43:28.068
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I think I think mine right now would be like the Swiss Alps, maybe you know, Northern Italy, Austria just seeing those picturesque towns and the valleys in the mountains and you just look up and it's just that landscape and just just all the stuff you can do out there too.
43:28.809 --> 43:29.770
[SPEAKER_03]: I mean just
43:29.750 --> 43:36.658
[SPEAKER_03]: outdoors nature, hiking, skiing, and there have been skiing, I'm pretty sure it'd be a great place to learn on the Swiss House.
43:36.999 --> 43:38.861
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, you would have no jumping like diamonds.
43:39.421 --> 43:42.445
[SPEAKER_04]: Zero joints would look for you after you did all of that.
43:42.465 --> 43:42.665
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
43:43.146 --> 43:49.133
[SPEAKER_02]: I mean, it says easier to learn on a place like that because the mountains, you're going cross, cross, you know what I'm saying?
43:49.373 --> 43:51.015
[SPEAKER_02]: But like in here in America,
43:50.995 --> 43:54.941
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, there's the shorter run really short run run deeper.
43:55.362 --> 44:18.859
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, yeah, no chance you're going to get hurt I mean if if survival was in like an issue, I like I would like to explore the Amazon Okay, you know that's a good but that's like what like when most dangerous places in the world Everything so if somehow you know you go check it out and you won't die
44:19.396 --> 44:20.257
[SPEAKER_04]: I want to check that out.
44:20.718 --> 44:20.858
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
44:20.878 --> 44:22.441
[SPEAKER_04]: It's a really good answer.
44:22.461 --> 44:22.841
[SPEAKER_02]: I do it.
44:22.921 --> 44:23.662
[SPEAKER_02]: Mosquitoes.
44:23.963 --> 44:24.383
[SPEAKER_02]: Snake.
44:24.443 --> 44:25.064
[SPEAKER_02]: Some good.
44:25.966 --> 44:31.213
[SPEAKER_04]: But if I'm not fearing death somehow, to be able to just a lot of people go there and don't die, you'll be okay.
44:31.434 --> 44:31.574
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
44:31.594 --> 44:32.575
[SPEAKER_04]: But don't do something.
44:32.596 --> 44:33.096
[SPEAKER_04]: They're special.
44:33.677 --> 44:34.318
[SPEAKER_04]: And much less.
44:34.338 --> 44:36.481
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm going to sweat much like Mr. Cook.
44:36.501 --> 44:36.722
[SPEAKER_04]: Sweat.
44:36.742 --> 44:37.683
[SPEAKER_04]: I'm going all day.
44:37.963 --> 44:39.025
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
44:39.005 --> 44:53.590
[SPEAKER_03]: I do have a number two that it's like what's part of the Amazon go to go to Machu Picchu Oh, there's like hike at that area And that's close to I think the eastern side of that is the Amazon forest So that would be and it's fun to say Machu Picchu And it's very fun.
44:53.630 --> 44:55.694
[SPEAKER_04]: Bless you The fun name.
44:55.934 --> 44:57.537
[SPEAKER_04]: Doc, what do you have in mind for this one?
44:57.517 --> 45:01.644
[SPEAKER_01]: I mean, uh, New Zealand, um, the walk long walk to more door.
45:01.684 --> 45:02.665
[SPEAKER_01]: Have you not been there?
45:02.685 --> 45:03.066
[SPEAKER_01]: No.
45:03.086 --> 45:03.747
[SPEAKER_01]: No, I have not been there.
45:03.787 --> 45:03.907
[SPEAKER_01]: No.
45:04.749 --> 45:05.109
[SPEAKER_01]: You know her.
45:05.630 --> 45:06.592
[SPEAKER_01]: She's, she live there.
45:06.672 --> 45:06.952
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.
45:07.012 --> 45:07.633
[SPEAKER_01]: Four and a half months.
45:07.654 --> 45:14.344
[SPEAKER_01]: So, and for what I've learned from her living there, I think specifically the South Island is the more mountainous if I'm run.
45:14.364 --> 45:14.625
[SPEAKER_01]: Good.
45:14.645 --> 45:18.551
[SPEAKER_01]: I'm knowing my geography correctly, but I'd like to do both, yeah.
45:18.571 --> 45:19.773
[SPEAKER_04]: Shiders on the North Island.
45:19.933 --> 45:20.875
[SPEAKER_01]: It is, yeah.
45:21.142 --> 45:24.253
[SPEAKER_01]: So, but yeah, I'd like to do a tour of both islands.
45:24.494 --> 45:24.795
[SPEAKER_01]: Heard.
45:24.815 --> 45:28.810
[SPEAKER_01]: And if you're going to drop the coin and go down that far, you might as well more doors.
45:28.830 --> 45:29.994
[SPEAKER_01]: Heiz will do both islands.
45:30.014 --> 45:30.135
[SPEAKER_01]: Sure.
45:30.396 --> 45:30.978
[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.
45:30.998 --> 45:31.540
[SPEAKER_03]: I agree.
45:31.992 --> 45:32.352
[SPEAKER_01]: All right.
45:32.432 --> 45:37.076
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, uh, it wasn't pop culture, but I appreciate you guys playing along.
45:37.096 --> 45:40.159
[SPEAKER_02]: Because there was a couple more extra in the fall.
45:40.219 --> 45:42.301
[SPEAKER_04]: Beautiful, which is a casket.
45:42.421 --> 45:43.301
[SPEAKER_04]: No, this was a good one.
45:43.382 --> 45:47.705
[SPEAKER_04]: It was, you know, geography and history, kind of all combined.
45:47.785 --> 45:49.967
[SPEAKER_04]: I was nervous when I heard the topic.
45:50.107 --> 45:50.708
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
45:51.088 --> 45:52.209
[SPEAKER_04]: It surpassed my expectations.
45:52.229 --> 45:55.432
[SPEAKER_01]: As I've started putting the questions together, I was like, they know these guys.
45:55.552 --> 45:57.634
[SPEAKER_01]: They've, they know some of this stuff.
45:57.654 --> 46:01.797
[SPEAKER_04]: Less nervous on what how I would do and more nervous if we would just have anything to talk about.
46:01.777 --> 46:03.180
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, well, that's true as well.
46:03.320 --> 46:03.420
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.
46:03.641 --> 46:07.508
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, it's hard to banter on Marco Polo.
46:07.528 --> 46:08.550
[SPEAKER_04]: We figured it out.
46:08.570 --> 46:08.811
[SPEAKER_04]: All right.
46:08.971 --> 46:11.897
[SPEAKER_04]: Marco is what we did doing for two decades.
46:11.917 --> 46:13.500
[SPEAKER_04]: We might as well share it with the listeners.
46:13.520 --> 46:13.800
[SPEAKER_04]: Sure.
46:14.181 --> 46:17.788
[SPEAKER_01]: Hey, do we want to in this episode with now we don't toast a toast?
46:17.808 --> 46:18.189
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, yeah.
46:18.369 --> 46:18.890
[SPEAKER_04]: Heck yeah.
46:18.910 --> 46:19.632
[SPEAKER_04]: We forgot about that.
46:19.812 --> 46:20.854
[SPEAKER_04]: We have to toast our listen.
46:20.894 --> 46:22.878
[SPEAKER_04]: We did forget to kick off trivia with a toast.
46:22.898 --> 46:23.118
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.
46:23.319 --> 46:24.561
[SPEAKER_04]: Who do we got producer Amy?
46:25.132 --> 46:27.456
[SPEAKER_03]: tonight we drink with Bailey Fletcher.
46:27.816 --> 46:29.519
[SPEAKER_04]: Hey, Bailey, Bailey.
46:29.800 --> 46:30.301
[SPEAKER_04]: That's awesome.
46:30.321 --> 46:31.142
[SPEAKER_04]: What what did she buy?
46:31.443 --> 46:34.287
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, she buy us a Bailey got a some Samuel Adams.
46:34.307 --> 46:36.371
[SPEAKER_01]: This is the winter white ale.
46:36.551 --> 46:37.152
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.
46:37.172 --> 46:37.633
[SPEAKER_04]: It's a white.
46:38.074 --> 46:38.655
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, it's Bailey.
46:38.675 --> 46:39.456
[SPEAKER_04]: What was that?
46:39.476 --> 46:40.177
[SPEAKER_04]: Cheers, Bailey.
46:40.317 --> 46:40.758
[SPEAKER_04]: Our Doug.
46:41.239 --> 46:42.040
[SPEAKER_02]: Well, let's go.
46:42.060 --> 46:42.501
[SPEAKER_02]: Let's go.
46:42.581 --> 46:43.042
[SPEAKER_02]: Let's go.
46:43.082 --> 46:43.923
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, we're measurements.
46:44.104 --> 46:45.486
[SPEAKER_04]: Let's live.
46:45.803 --> 46:53.776
[SPEAKER_04]: Alright, doc, thank you very much for writing that one, Kelly, congratulations again, and that's going to do it for this episode of the Ultimate Trivia podcast.
46:54.077 --> 46:55.299
[SPEAKER_04]: Thanks for tuning in.
46:55.359 --> 46:58.404
[SPEAKER_04]: Don't forget, hit the subscribe button so you get us every week.
46:58.825 --> 47:02.210
[SPEAKER_04]: Give us a few stars if you feel like it and write us a review.
47:02.551 --> 47:09.162
[SPEAKER_04]: We'll see you next time with more trivia and more fun and until then, keep your brain sharp and those belly flat.