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Aussie WWTBAM faces another controversy

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CherryPizza:
Hi everyone, this is my first post to this board. I think I may have spoken to some of you at various times. Anyway, my Australian Game Shows site is back online and can be found at http://zap.to/ozgames

Anyway, it seems that a new trend in the Aus game show world is heavily scrutinising answers to questions. A couple of weeks ago, a contestant on Catch Phrase was deemed incorrect for answering \"boogieman\" to a question whose answer was \"bogeyman\", and much debate occurred since if he had been deemed correct, he would have won a car.

And this week on WWTBAM, there was a near re-run of an incident from last year when a contestant playing for $64,000 was asked which country's flag contained a large R in the centre. The contestant, unsure of the answer, guessed Reunion, was deemed incorrect and left with $32,000. However, the \"correct\" answer of Rwanda was no longer correct, as the Rwandan flag changed on 1/1/2002. Since no answer was technically correct, the program was obliged to award him the $64,000 and re-instate him.

This week's incident occurred when a contestant, also playing for $64,000 was asked how many justices sit on a full bench of the High Court of Australia. The contestant guessed five, and was deemed incorrect because according to WWTBAM, the correct answer is seven. However, as a newspaper article on the incident states, \"While it is correct that seven judges sit on the High Court, the term Full Court or Bench is defined under the Judiciary Act (1903) as a hearing comprising \"two or more justices\"\".

At this stage the Nine Network, which airs WWTBAM, is standing by its decision to judge the contestant wrong.

Brandon Brooks:

--- Quote ---Hi everyone, this is my first post to this board. I think I may have spoken to some of you at various times. Anyway, my Australian Game Shows site is back online and can be found at http://zap.to/ozgames
--- End quote ---
Not bad.  You have some dead picture links, though.  Random question:  Has Aussie TPIR aired yet?  If it has, how is it?

--- Quote ---Anyway, it seems that a new trend in the Aus game show world is heavily scrutinising answers to questions. A couple of weeks ago, a contestant on Catch Phrase was deemed incorrect for answering \"boogieman\" to a question whose answer was \"bogeyman\", and much debate occurred since if he had been deemed correct, he would have won a car.
--- End quote ---
Yeesh.  That's sticky.  What the hell is a \"bogeyman?\"


--- Quote ---And this week on WWTBAM, there was a near re-run of an incident from last year when a contestant playing for $64,000 was asked which country's flag contained a large R in the centre. The contestant, unsure of the answer, guessed Reunion, was deemed incorrect and left with $32,000. However, the \"correct\" answer of Rwanda was no longer correct, as the Rwandan flag changed on 1/1/2002. Since no answer was technically correct, the program was obliged to award him the $64,000 and re-instate him.
--- End quote ---
Eh, it happens.  WWBTAM did the right thing.  No big deal.

--- Quote ---This week's incident occurred when a contestant, also playing for $64,000 was asked how many justices sit on a full bench of the High Court of Australia. The contestant guessed five, and was deemed incorrect because according to WWTBAM, the correct answer is seven. However, as a newspaper article on the incident states, \"While it is correct that seven judges sit on the High Court, the term Full Court or Bench is defined under the Judiciary Act (1903) as a hearing comprising \"two or more justices\"\".

At this stage the Nine Network, which airs WWTBAM, is standing by its decision to judge the contestant wrong.
--- End quote ---
Now, that's just a horrible question.  If it was about the U.S., then it would cut and dry.  (That question was a mighty easy one for $64,000.  I know right off the top of my head that there are nine justices; how hard could it be to remember how many there are in Australia?)  They should do something about that.  

Brandon Brooks

CherryPizza:

--- Quote ---Not bad. You have some dead picture links, though. Random question:?Has Aussie TPIR aired yet??If it has, how is it?
--- End quote ---

Yes it has... pretty much the same as it was last time around. It was originally to have had a new host, but they recycled the host from the former series... it's not doing anything \"wrong\", but it doesn't seem as new and fresh as it should.

I think I know which pics you mean... I'm trying to solve that. Do you mean the Family Feud pic and the one of Sale champ Vincent Smith?


--- Quote ---Yeesh. That's sticky. What the hell is a \"bogeyman?\"
--- End quote ---

Apparently it's an alternative pronunciation of \"boogieman\", the way it's said in the UK, I take it.

Like the \"flag of Rwanda\" ordeal, I think that it was wrong to have that puzzle the way it was to start with. After all, Australians don't say \"bogeyman\", therefore an Aus game show shouldn't have a puzzle to which that is the correct answer. (the puzzle picture had \"bowgee\" written on it, which therefore could not have been pronounced \"boogie\", so technically the producers may have been right, but were perhaps wrong to depict that pronunciation

Peter Sarrett:

--- Quote ---
--- Quote ---Yeesh. That's sticky. What the hell is a \"bogeyman?\"
--- End quote ---

Apparently it's an alternative pronunciation of \"boogieman\", the way it's said in the UK, I take it.
--- End quote ---

Actually, it's the correct spelling of the word, regardless of where you are.  There's no such thing as a BOOGIEMAN (unless you're at a disco). BOOGEYMAN or BOGYMAN is also correct.

  - Peter

Matt Ottinger:
With the usualy caveat that this isn't scientific, and many factors could skew the results, here's what Google has to say:

BOOGEYMAN - 46,900 Hits
BOGEYMAN - 38,800 Hits
BOOGIEMAN - 18,700 Hits
BOOGYMAN - 3,040 Hits

BOGYMAN, BOGIEMAN, BOGGIEMAN and even BOOGIMAN turn up in smaller numbers.

So on the internet, anyway, there are considerably more references to the \"boo\" sound 'boogeyman' than the long-o sound 'bogeyman'.   If it was the answer to a trivia question, there's no way they'd get away with accepting one pronunciation but not the other.  But since it's the solution to a puzzle where the \"correct\" pronunciation was provided, I can see why there's some debate.

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