Category: Viral
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“Why is it that other people just find their person and be happy, but mine is taken from me so soon?”
In-person voting went ahead earlier this month after Republicans fought a delay and mail-in ballots. Now people are beginning to get sick.
Every weekday afternoon, News O’Clock will have the latest in news and pop culture for your ears. It’s what you want to know, when you need to know it.
“We’re telling you that no one should be out here because it’s dangerous, but we’re sending you out there and we’re not giving out any masks.”
Though we continue to live in a world where the supply of fresh Jeopardy! episodes slowly dwindles, the ones currently airing offer insight into the fickle nature of trivia knowledge. While many of the contestants on the syndicated show possess a wide range of interests and command of large quantities of trivia, sometimes a good old fashioned pop culture question is the difference in a game.
Monday’s edition of Jeopardy! was yet another example of that, as contestants were tripped up by a Final Jeopardy! question deemed easy by a lot of viewers. In fact, some predicted what the answer would be well before the question ever hit their screens. The Final Jeopardy category on Monday was Recent Movie Songs, and given that the show was recorded a few months earlier it certainly limited what “recent” releases are. Given that the biggest recent movie song was Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper singing in A Star Is Born, many people flat out guessed it would be the answer.
Here was the Final Jeopardy clue: “In October 2019 this song, a duet, was still in the top 10 on Billboard’s Adult Contemporary Chart after spending a year on the chart.”
Twitter was flooded with answers about “Shallow” and how many predicted the answer to the question before it was even read after the commercial break.
The Final Jeopardy! category was Recent Movie Songs. I said “Shallow” before the clue was even read. Alas pic.twitter.com/hzDKDJkAAy
— Adam Graham (@grahamorama) April 20, 2020
*Watching Jeopardy!*
Alex: The category for final is… Recent movie songs!
Victoria: I bet the answer is gonna be Shallow
*goes to commercial*
Alex: this song was still on the charts in 2019 after being on the charts for over a year
*answer is Shallow*@tor_cornish pic.twitter.com/xspEFsIy49
— JB (@JB___96) April 20, 2020
Even some former contestants who often play along on Twitter knew it right away.
Final #Jeopardy. Uhh….Shallow? My guess. (Hearing it 72 times a day was what pushed me and my coworker to finally change channels in the tasting room.)
— Author Jennifer Quail (@jenniferquail) April 20, 2020
But it was far from a gimmie for those playing. Only contestant Ben Sonday had the right answer. Andrew Cramer knew it was a Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper song, but didn’t have the name. And champion Felicity Flesher got it wrong, calling it “Into the Deep.” It’s likely a nod to one of the song’s lyrics — I’m off the deep end, watch as I dive in — but it was incorrect.
Fittingly, knowing the answer wasn’t enough for Sonday to win, wagering just $401. Cramer, meanwhile, had enough left to beat out Flesher, who would have easily escaped if she could come up with “Shallow.”
It just goes to show you: one person’s ubiquitous earworm may be another person’s undoing on Jeopardy! Gotta be prepared for everything while on stage.
If your pre-coronavirus life consisted of near-daily hikes, weekend camping trips, and any other excuse to spend an excessive amount of time outside, you’re probably having a tougher time in quarantine than us homebodies. Especially if you don’t have a backyard. But while trailheads, beaches, and national parks remain closed to the public, you can still enjoy the outdoors — so long as you’re keeping socially distant from others. In fact, you can do it tonight.
Pack some snacks, gather your housemates, bundle up, and take a drive out to a dark and secluded place away from the city to catch the Lyrid Meteor shower this very evening. From about 12 AM to 4 AM you can enjoy a meteor show that should produce about 15 meteors per hour, according to Earth Sky. It’s not exactly a jaw-dropping amount, but it’s a great excuse to take a long drive and get some fresh air, and it’s not like you have anything else to do tonight.
Tonight’s near new moon will also improve viewing conditions a great deal, as the shooting stars won’t have to compete with the bright light of the moon, so if you’re feeling lazy it is possible to catch some activity from the city, but the show won’t nearly be as brilliant. To best view the Lyrids, head to a dark area away from light pollution and look towards the southwest early in the night. As the hours approach dawn, turn your gaze directly overhead. The meteors will be emanating from the constellation Lyra, which, if you’re unfamiliar, looks kind of like a juice box. You’ll want to fix your gaze towards that general area to catch the most activity.
If you’re feeling creative, this is a great time to grab that camera and tripod and capture some time-lapses of the night’s sky show.
While The Last Dance is nominally about the 1997-98 Chicago Bulls, the 10-hour documentary goes much deeper into the history of the team’s major players like Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen, and will continue to follow that trajectory as it bounces back and forth from the 97-98 season to the past that shaped that last team.
The next episode will feature the Bulls-Pistons rivalry of the late 80s and early 90s, and also introduce Dennis Rodman to the documentary for the first time, with some fantastic stories surely to come out of his involvement and his teammates’ remembrances of The Worm. After that, we’ll get to the first three-peat and, eventually, Michael Jordan’s first retirement after the 1992-93 season.
Jordan’s retirement to play baseball in the minor leagues for 18 months before returning in 1995 remains a hot topic for many, with speculation about exactly why he chose to step away from basketball. After the murder of his father, Jordan decided to pursue his first sports love of baseball, but there are some that believe there was more to it. The “secret suspension” theory is popular among some corners of the internet, but former teammate Steve Kerr believes Jordan was simply emotionally exhausted from the constant scrutiny and spotlight that followed him as the world’s most famous athlete (and, arguably, person), as he told Rachel Nichols on The Jump.
Always a smart conversation with @SteveKerr on #TheJump – he told us why he thinks MJ really left to play baseball, about Scottie’s battles with Jerry Krause & if the Warriors (who already have the best odds for the No. 1 pick) would rather call this season/start fresh next year pic.twitter.com/8CRtumXBHm
— Rachel Nichols (@Rachel__Nichols) April 21, 2020
“Make no mistake about it, he faced all kinds scrutiny, but it was different,” Kerr said. “I will always maintain that the reason he really went and played baseball was because he was fried emotionally from the scrutiny that really only he felt. Just watching him, by the time I got there, watching the life that he led compared to everyone else, it was insane. And so, I think he had had enough and just stepped away for a little while, then came back and was ready to roll.”
It wouldn’t be surprising if this was the case, with his father’s death only adding to the emotional weight he would’ve had to carry. It’ll be interesting how much The Last Dance dives into that decision and how much Jordan speaks on it, but we’ll just have to wait a few weeks to find out.