(Kannada for "what? where? why?")
My liaison with quizes began when I almost won a scholarship through a quiz. The fascination was upped a notch when Derek O'Brien threw out chocolates to the audience of BQC prelims (I was there, yipppeee!!!)
When you are as good as a common-bred horse at trivia and such, it should make you mad enough to quit attending the quizzes right? WRONG! It gives me some kinda high to just be there (and write "Luca Brasi sleeps with the fishes tonight" for most of the answers).
I compile this list of My Gods annually (new habit I picked up since I started college, since there's no dearth of people to look up to here). And of course the reigning masters always figure in it.
I take this opportunity to salute Vada and his seemingly omniscient kin, especially Vada for having been so kind as to set questions that I have been able to work out (with little help from the loud team behind me). The sheer brilliance of his questions lay in the lucid simplicity of the answers, in the way they make u feel like a complete gavaar halli guggu at the end of the stipulated time. And also thanks to Priya, for taking pity on me and teaming up with me a couple of times.
Maybe we should hold a quiz set only by girls. The prelim questions will be only about brands, gossip and barbies; they will also be printed on perfumed pink paper (pls note the alliteration). And seeing that there are approximately two-and-a-half girls in any quizzing hall (half accounting for the girl who leaves half way through), the guy who wins to wear a push-up bra for the next in-house production.
Up for the challenge Green Goblin?
Today I discovered: http://www.worldsfamousphotos.com/
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
18 Till I Die!
Every person has a wishlist, of things they want for their b'days, of things they would like to buy when they win the Lotto, of the chores their spouse would do (focusing on the WISH part of wishlist), of people they wana bump off, etc etc. Every person also probably has a wishlist comprising of things they want to do in their lives... for most people I know, it is sit on their arses and beat Team Doom at DOTA.
I'll probably get around to doing the things in my list only by the time I'm 40, you know, after I have earned tons of money (that's the plan) and the kids are all grown up...
1. Learn to play the violin
Arrived at this after eliminating the piano, the guitar and that metal triangle they played in the school marching band. Yeah, I'll probably never get around to doing this, so I figured I should go right out and start with the toughest (I think..?), what the heck.
2. Be a tourist guide- one of my childhood dreams
12-year-olds (which is what I was when I wanted to be a tourist guide) wana be doctors, engineers and astronauts. Even most 20-year-old Indians (which is what I am now) usually want to start their own business, get into Bollywood or "a job in the US". But the untrodden path (pun intended- kinda sad one though) has its own charm.
3. Climb Mt. Everest (a Really Men)
But this one's reserved for the fortnight before I die of terminal brain cancer or some such (remember Bucket List?).
4. Learn a coupla languages more
Russian and Sanskrit. We had the bestestestestestest Sanskrit teacher at school (do Poly and Costu agree?). I would like to learn the language of Ancient India just for her. Then I may also be able to read the Kamasutra in original :P. Living in that all Sanskrit speaking village (in Kerala, is it??) might just help. Anyone has spare tickets to that place?
5. Learn to read the Arab/Urdu script (or are they the same?)
(Dont it seem like this blog is successively betraying my lack of knowledge of SOO many things)
This is all thanks to Khaled Housseini. My mum (or is it my cousin?) is literate in Urdu. Just the fact that it is read from right to left is pre-e-e-e-ty interesting. And there seem to be such beautiful literary works in Urdu (I have only read a couple of translations).
6. TOTALLY (my latest new word to be used to punctuate sentences with) disappear one day, not tell anyone and start a new life.
(The Monkess who Sold Her Prada Bag :) )
Poly says Norway is a great place. Ya, go pray for that day to be tomorrow.
But I wont be getting these done too soon. Haven't you noticed how ppl who have led lives to their fullest tend to die early young, especially in Bollywood movies (Kal Ho Na Ho)?
(or is it that they live their lives to the fullest because they are going to die early?)
Today I discovered: Death is hereditary.
I'll probably get around to doing the things in my list only by the time I'm 40, you know, after I have earned tons of money (that's the plan) and the kids are all grown up...
1. Learn to play the violin
Arrived at this after eliminating the piano, the guitar and that metal triangle they played in the school marching band. Yeah, I'll probably never get around to doing this, so I figured I should go right out and start with the toughest (I think..?), what the heck.
2. Be a tourist guide- one of my childhood dreams
12-year-olds (which is what I was when I wanted to be a tourist guide) wana be doctors, engineers and astronauts. Even most 20-year-old Indians (which is what I am now) usually want to start their own business, get into Bollywood or "a job in the US". But the untrodden path (pun intended- kinda sad one though) has its own charm.
3. Climb Mt. Everest (a Really Men)
But this one's reserved for the fortnight before I die of terminal brain cancer or some such (remember Bucket List?).
4. Learn a coupla languages more
Russian and Sanskrit. We had the bestestestestestest Sanskrit teacher at school (do Poly and Costu agree?). I would like to learn the language of Ancient India just for her. Then I may also be able to read the Kamasutra in original :P. Living in that all Sanskrit speaking village (in Kerala, is it??) might just help. Anyone has spare tickets to that place?
5. Learn to read the Arab/Urdu script (or are they the same?)
(Dont it seem like this blog is successively betraying my lack of knowledge of SOO many things)
This is all thanks to Khaled Housseini. My mum (or is it my cousin?) is literate in Urdu. Just the fact that it is read from right to left is pre-e-e-e-ty interesting. And there seem to be such beautiful literary works in Urdu (I have only read a couple of translations).
6. TOTALLY (my latest new word to be used to punctuate sentences with) disappear one day, not tell anyone and start a new life.
(The Monkess who Sold Her Prada Bag :) )
Poly says Norway is a great place. Ya, go pray for that day to be tomorrow.
But I wont be getting these done too soon. Haven't you noticed how ppl who have led lives to their fullest tend to die early young, especially in Bollywood movies (Kal Ho Na Ho)?
(or is it that they live their lives to the fullest because they are going to die early?)
Today I discovered: Death is hereditary.
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