00:00:07
Speaker 1: It’s podcast.
00:00:10
Speaker 2: Welcome to Meat Eater Trivia, the only game show where conservation always wins. I’m your host, Spencer new Arthan. Today we’re joined by Brodie Corey, Marge, Nate, Tresa, and Laura Muscari. Laura, this is your first time on the show. Tell folks what you do here at Meat Eater.
00:00:25
Speaker 3: Hi.
00:00:25
Speaker 4: I’m Laura. I’m our graphics business at parelel manager. So I oversee all the logo wear for Meat Eating first Light, and I get to work with really cool graphic designers and the crew and it’s awesome. I love it.
00:00:38
Speaker 2: Yeah. If you’ve noticed our merch get more badass in the last six months, that is because of Laura. Laura, what are your trivia strengths and weaknesses? Oh?
00:00:49
Speaker 4: I would say my weaknesses are I don’t know my states and countries.
00:00:54
Speaker 2: I heard Tressa giving you some advice before we turned on the mike.
00:00:57
Speaker 4: That was the first piece of advice, and I immediately thought, well, I’m really bad at that. Okay, okay, but I have a secret talent of guessing acronyms.
00:01:06
Speaker 2: Mmm, okay, so thank you. I think this is uh. There is an acronym in today’s show. Good for you, all right, we know that she has a decent chance on question six. Now, this is a ten round quiz show with questions from meat Eater’s four verticals, which are hunting, fishing, conservation, at cooking, and there is a prize. Mediator will donate five hundred dollars to the conservation organization of the winners choosing. We have an I faq this week. If you have an I FAQ, send it to Trivia at the medeater dot com. Chase Faulkner says, this is a question from my five year old son, Hayes. Any plans to make Meat Eater Trivia board game Kids Edition? He loves participating when we play at home. No plans right now, Hayes for the kids edition the board game, But as an alternative, I’d offer up the games section of our website. That’s the medeater dot com Slash Games. We have a new crossword puzzle every month. There’s a new turtle it’s like wordtle bit better every Wednesday, and pretty soon we are going to have a third game that comes out on Fridays. I think we’ll have more details on that soon. He’s five years old, so this will be a little participate. Yeah, he can participate with a parent who are an older sibling who wants to play those games. We have crosswords the meat eater, turtle, and something new.
00:02:26
Speaker 5: Yeah, if he knows his ABC’s, he can just throw outlet.
00:02:28
Speaker 2: That’s right. We have some housekeeping. On episode six twelve in twenty twenty four, I had a question about the word that’s defined as melting hard animal fat for cooking purposes. The answer was rendered, and that was such a good question that I repeated it on episode seven ninety one a few weeks ago, and to no one’s surprised, every player got it right. To my knowledge, that’s the first time I’ve directly repeated a question in one hundred and ninety two episodes. This is a bit if you did that, Yeah, well I often get accused of repeating questions, and I think you did, Brody. I thank you.
00:03:03
Speaker 6: You think you called to sign a conservation organization or something?
00:03:07
Speaker 2: You know what? Yeah, we should start, Uh, we should start finding people more in this room. The Shelby index for today is a four point five, so our winners should get nine correct answers, and with that we’re onto the game of trivia. Play the drop fill. Look, I need to know what I stand to win everything?
00:03:29
Speaker 3: How’s that?
00:03:30
Speaker 1: Just tend to win everything?
00:03:38
Speaker 3: Game?
00:03:38
Speaker 2: On Suckers Question one, the topic is conservation, and this will be multiple choice. Of these states, which one produces the most coal? Is it Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, were West Virginia. Of these states, which one produces the most coal Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, West Virginia as of when twenty twenty two. I think this stat was from.
00:04:10
Speaker 1: On an annual basis.
00:04:11
Speaker 2: Yes, Nate, very quick to answer from Ohio, not from Ohio.
00:04:18
Speaker 6: But you know I stopped around in these states a little bit.
00:04:21
Speaker 2: Do you like your answer, Nate?
00:04:22
Speaker 1: I do?
00:04:22
Speaker 2: Brody, do you like your answer? Of these states, which one produces the most coal? Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, West Virginia.
00:04:33
Speaker 7: I do like my answer. I just don’t know if it’s right.
00:04:36
Speaker 4: I like my answer, but I don’t know my states.
00:04:40
Speaker 2: We did hit you with geography right off the bat. Here is everybody ready? Go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate says West Virginia. Tresa and Laura Cory, the whole room says West Virginia. Everybody got it right. The correct answer is West Virginia. Wyoming produces the most coal in America, responsible for forty one percent of the country’s coal production. That’s followed by West Virginia at fourteen percent, Pennsylvania at seven percent, Illinois at six percent, in Kentucky at five percent. Those five states generate seventy three percent of America’s coal. Question two. The topic is hunting. This is our listener question of the week, which was won by Elijah Dominguez for sending this great question. Elijah is going to get a board game signed by the crew. If you want a chance to win our listener Question of the week, then send your question to Trivia at the meadeater dot com. This knife Company has sold over fifteen million of their one ten Folding Hunters, which they call quote the original folding hunting knife. This knife Company has sold over fifteen million of their one ten folding Hunters, which they call the original folding hunting Knife. Quick to answer again, Very confident player today. He just won last week’s episode. Now he thinks he’s going to start two for two today. Brody, do you have this right?
00:06:17
Speaker 7: I’m not sure.
00:06:18
Speaker 1: Shame on you.
00:06:19
Speaker 2: Do you think you ever owned one of these fifteen million, one ten folding hunters.
00:06:24
Speaker 7: If it’s if I got it right, I did. If I got it wrong, I haven’t.
00:06:28
Speaker 2: Okay.
00:06:28
Speaker 6: I was at an auction when I was like eight, and I got into a bidding war with my brother mmm over the knife.
00:06:35
Speaker 2: Okay, you think it was a one ten folding hunter?
00:06:37
Speaker 1: It was?
00:06:38
Speaker 2: Okay, Corey, do you have this one right?
00:06:40
Speaker 3: Man?
00:06:40
Speaker 5: I got a really good guess.
00:06:44
Speaker 2: As much as he’ll tell us. Yep, it’s everybody ready, Go ahead and reveal your answers, Nate says Buck, Tresa Case, Laura Case, Corey Buck, Marge Bench, Maade, Brody Buck. The correct answer is Buck, Brody Corey. Nate got that right. So you did own one of these, brother Yeah? Okay.
00:07:09
Speaker 7: At some point did you own.
00:07:10
Speaker 2: One of them?
00:07:11
Speaker 1: Corey?
00:07:11
Speaker 2: I don’t think so. I might have been tipped one once. Nate. Did you win this when you were bidding on it?
00:07:16
Speaker 1: Yeah? My dad got real pissed at us. That’s good.
00:07:19
Speaker 2: I owned one as well. So most of the room has owned a one to ten folding hunter. Kansas blacksmith Hoyt Buck made his first buck knife in nineteen oh two. His son and grandson helped the business boom in the nineteen sixties after creating the one ten folding Hunter. The knife is gone through five redesigns, with twenty five variations among them. The biggest change happened in nineteen eighty three when the contoured handle was introduced. Question three, the topic is woodsmanship. Merriam Webster defines this six letter word as quote a sudden brief and intense storm of wind and snow. Nate very quick to answer.
00:08:02
Speaker 1: Dude, we must have been listening to the same stuff this week.
00:08:05
Speaker 2: Now something man, Laura, do you have this one right?
00:08:10
Speaker 4: High confidence?
00:08:10
Speaker 1: Okay?
00:08:11
Speaker 6: I saw this on the weather and looked it up like twenty four hours, forty eight hours.
00:08:15
Speaker 2: Oh wow. Six letter word. That’s defined as a sudden, brief and intense storm of wind and snow.
00:08:23
Speaker 7: Boy, we had some of that this week and Friday.
00:08:26
Speaker 2: We were in Paradise Valley. Same, what were you doing over there.
00:08:31
Speaker 7: Looking at about a thousand elk.
00:08:34
Speaker 2: Ones you couldn’t reach though, m.
00:08:36
Speaker 1: Yeah, we could reach them.
00:08:38
Speaker 7: There is elk everywhere.
00:08:40
Speaker 2: Merriam Webster defines this six letter word as a sudden, brief and intense storm of wind and snow. Did you get your Christmas tree yet, Brody.
00:08:51
Speaker 8: Uh No, think we’re going to take care of that this week.
00:08:54
Speaker 7: You know, have you have you met Pat Steve’s neighbor.
00:08:58
Speaker 8: Yes, you got a nice one, that real nice Christmas tree. Yeah, but it’s not what you would typically think of getting it was. Uh it was a came from a burn. So it was a young, a young lodge pole. Okay, so like not full like a fur or whatever, but like very uniform, kind of nice looking.
00:09:19
Speaker 2: I like a good like Charlie Brown looking tree.
00:09:22
Speaker 3: Yeah.
00:09:23
Speaker 8: Not the fact you can’t expect much from you know, just going out and getting five Christmas trees.
00:09:28
Speaker 2: Anyone else down their Christmas tree hunt? Yeah? March did you did you tag one? Okay? Two of them? Well done. They allow you to get three permits per district, so your family gets two of them really good trees this year.
00:09:43
Speaker 3: One of them is like a Charlie Brown tree, but the other one’s pretty good.
00:09:47
Speaker 2: Yeah, Cory, you do your Christmas fake tree? Now? Whoa you kind of had a bad experience? Was that last year two years ago?
00:09:55
Speaker 7: Is that what’s stuck?
00:09:56
Speaker 5: And then I’m tired of fighting all these folks in the neighboring trailheads around here.
00:10:02
Speaker 2: I have to fight them all during hunting season. And you got bushwhack in there.
00:10:05
Speaker 7: And stay away from the trailheads. Man, find right next to the road.
00:10:09
Speaker 2: Done enough bushwhack.
00:10:10
Speaker 5: And this time, by this time of years, like you’re.
00:10:12
Speaker 8: Like, pull over, you find it from the car, jump out, jump back in.
00:10:16
Speaker 2: I don’t even have to get out of my PJS. Put mine, Nate, what was your Christmas tree hunt?
00:10:21
Speaker 6: Like uht in and out, you know, kind of the Brodi program road hunter.
00:10:26
Speaker 1: Yeah, oh for sure. Yeah.
00:10:28
Speaker 2: Again, we’re on question three Merriam Webster to find there’s the.
00:10:31
Speaker 8: People that make like the whole process out of it.
00:10:35
Speaker 2: It’s fun, good drinks, and the.
00:10:38
Speaker 3: Trail we go with the same people we’ve been going for like nine years.
00:10:42
Speaker 2: That’s fun to get competitive.
00:10:44
Speaker 3: No, they have two little ones so they picked.
00:10:46
Speaker 2: Like so you always win.
00:10:48
Speaker 3: Yeah, they’re getting the little ones are picking out their trees, so it’s fun each get one for the room.
00:10:53
Speaker 1: All right.
00:10:53
Speaker 2: Six letter word defined as a sudden, brief, and intense storm of wind and snow. Go ahead and reveal your answers eight, says TRESSA skirty Laura Squawk, Cory squall squala.
00:11:13
Speaker 7: That fly fisherman.
00:11:15
Speaker 2: I know what she was talking about, says squaw. The correct answer is squall. I will give it to you.
00:11:20
Speaker 5: Mark Ye.
00:11:28
Speaker 2: Squall is s q u a l L. A squall is a temporary, localized blizzard that’s most common around water and mountains. They are often before or after a cold front and occasionally produced lightning and thunder, and needs rare instances, the squall becomes known as thunder snow. Question for the topic is cooking. This next great question is via Leland Heart. Unlike most regional variations, South Carolina barbecue sauce is famously this color.
00:12:01
Speaker 4: M it’s just like a pantone color. How specific should we get?
00:12:06
Speaker 2: You will judge it.
00:12:11
Speaker 7: The designer?
00:12:12
Speaker 2: How specific. Unlike most regional variations, South Carolina barbecue sauce is famously this color.
00:12:24
Speaker 9: What is that code called? Like that’s in front of a color that defines the color.
00:12:29
Speaker 4: It could be pantone, could be hax, code depends depends.
00:12:34
Speaker 2: Have you ever played the board game he was Inclues? No, it’s it’s all about colors. Very fun, tough games that your thank you, march I went on to create one one.
00:12:44
Speaker 4: Time, so it makes sense.
00:12:47
Speaker 2: Destiny Unlike most regional variations, South Carolina barbecue sauce is famously this color. It’s everybody ready. Corey has got no answer down there. Yeah, the other five players are very quick. It’s kind of intimidating, Like I know the ingredient, but color, Okay?
00:13:07
Speaker 1: Do I get an albi some color blind.
00:13:13
Speaker 2: On a day to day basis? How often is that a problem?
00:13:17
Speaker 6: It’s hard to say because I don’t know. It’s only when someone points it out.
00:13:22
Speaker 2: Unlike most regional variations, South Carolina barbecue sauce famously like blue Cory, you ready, go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate says orange, Tresta says yellow, Laura gold, Cordy red, Marge yellow, Brody white. The correct answer is gold, yellow, or mustard. Those are the three, not orange. Orange is definitely what I’m talking about.
00:13:58
Speaker 1: Oe.
00:14:00
Speaker 2: South Carolina barbecue sauce is also referred to as Carolina Gold, the colorful name that comes from its emphasis on mustard and honey. The state’s most popular barbecue meat is pork, which is what the yellow barbecue sauce is best paired with. For a wild game take on this cuisine, go see our recipe on the medeater dot com called South Carolina Pheasant bird Dog. There is a picture of Jenny’s recipe. It’s a pheasant sandwich. You can see some of that Carolina gold drizzled on top of it.
00:14:30
Speaker 4: It’s kind of got like a vinegary tang to it.
00:14:34
Speaker 2: You were quick to answer, Laura, you’re familiar with Carolina gold.
00:14:37
Speaker 4: It’s actually my least favorite barbecue sauce.
00:14:40
Speaker 3: North Carolina barbecue sauce is my least favorite because it’s vinegar.
00:14:47
Speaker 2: Question my husband. Question five, the topic is fishing. This next great question is via Si McMains. Rowland Blank was the first pro angler inducted into the i GFA Hall of Fame, Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame and Bass Fishing Hall of Fame. Brody and Nate quick to answer this one. Roland Blank was the first pro angler inducted into the IGFA Hall of Fame, Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame, and Bass Fishing Hall of Fame. Nate, did you answer so quickly because you know it or super don’t know it?
00:15:25
Speaker 1: I just chose the most common name in America.
00:15:30
Speaker 2: Brody, it’s probably possibly going to be the only person to get this.
00:15:34
Speaker 1: One, So it’s probably not that.
00:15:36
Speaker 2: Roland Blank was the first pro angler inducted into the IGFA Hall of Fame, Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame and Bass Fishing.
00:15:45
Speaker 7: Not a big angler, dude, I don’t know.
00:15:48
Speaker 1: I don’t care about any of this stuff.
00:15:50
Speaker 2: I’m sorry, this is question five. We’ll get a scoreboard angler, Dude.
00:15:57
Speaker 1: I spent the last year trying to get into it.
00:15:59
Speaker 6: I can’t. It’s amazing that I compete at the level I do with the whole category.
00:16:05
Speaker 2: You’re right, that makes it more impressive.
00:16:07
Speaker 6: It just like it’d be like if we wrestled and I only had three limbs.
00:16:10
Speaker 8: Like there’s we’ve talked about this before. There’s like fishermen who don’t hunt, which is like acceptable, but hunters should all fish.
00:16:20
Speaker 1: My buddies telling me this all the time.
00:16:22
Speaker 7: I tried my last life changes. Man, I’m working on it’s the last time you caught a fish?
00:16:28
Speaker 1: Never No, I caught a little a little guy.
00:16:31
Speaker 6: It was like, dude, I sent him to the stratosphere on a fly rod drive fly.
00:16:38
Speaker 1: Pretty big deal.
00:16:40
Speaker 2: Sounds like, good, Corey, do you have this one right? Okay, Flank. It was the first pro angler inducted into the i g F a Hall of Fame, Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame, and Best Fishing Hall of Fame.
00:16:53
Speaker 6: You know when someone like runs a marathon and you’re like, man, that was cool. Then you see a dude run a marathon with like a like a prosthetic leg, and dang.
00:17:01
Speaker 1: That’s cool.
00:17:01
Speaker 2: Is that you fishing?
00:17:02
Speaker 6: I’m not saying that, but okay, no, I’m saying that’s me playing trivia.
00:17:06
Speaker 2: All right, Corey changing his answer, We’re gonna flip over the boards after this.
00:17:14
Speaker 1: Hunts for a giggle.
00:17:16
Speaker 2: Go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate says Jones, Tressa Smith, Laura Johnson, Cory ERTI don dirty, Marge says Smith. Brody says Martin. The correct answer is Martin Roland. Martin started his career as a pro angler in nineteen seventy. He went on to win nineteen tournaments and nine Bass Angler of the Year titles. In a two thousand and five survey, he was voted the second greatest angler of all time, with Rick Klon being first.
00:17:50
Speaker 1: Of course, all.
00:17:51
Speaker 2: Right, fell halfway through the game of trivia. How are things looking?
00:17:55
Speaker 9: It’s pretty close, well closer than last week’s episode. Everyone’s on the board, We’ve got Tressa with two and then Nate, Corey, Maggie, and Laura are all tied up with three points and Brady Henderson has a one point lead with four.
00:18:10
Speaker 2: Question six, the topic is conservation. FSA stands for blank blank Agency and is a branch of the US Department of Agriculture. This is the acronym question for Laura this week. FSA stands for blank blank Agency and it’s a branch of the US Department of egg Nate, do you have this one right?
00:18:38
Speaker 1: Educated guests?
00:18:39
Speaker 2: Just one to answer in the room A.
00:18:42
Speaker 1: Lot better than the last one.
00:18:43
Speaker 2: FSA stands for blank blank Agency and is a branch of the US Department of Agriculture. Brody, do you like your answer?
00:18:55
Speaker 8: Not really, but it’s the only one that makes sense right now.
00:18:59
Speaker 2: He’s got a one point and lead on the rest of the room.
00:19:02
Speaker 3: F s A.
00:19:04
Speaker 8: I’m sure you’re gonna explain how this ties into conservation.
00:19:07
Speaker 2: Certainly will great.
00:19:12
Speaker 8: You’re a little skeptical, No, I mean I’m not if I if I got it right, I’m not.
00:19:17
Speaker 2: Okay, good Corey? Do you like your answer? No, Okay, I don’t.
00:19:22
Speaker 5: I was really hoping it was a culinary question, because there’s the f s A we all know in the culinary world, right, Food Services of America.
00:19:30
Speaker 6: Oh, Flexible Saving account Safety Administration.
00:19:39
Speaker 4: I don’t know.
00:19:42
Speaker 2: Oh, Brody is revisiting it there? Yeah, Laura, do you like your answer?
00:19:48
Speaker 3: No?
00:19:49
Speaker 2: Okay, I don’t I’m good. Is everybody ready? Marge trusted? You want some more time? Thank, Go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate says food safety, Tressa says farming seeds America. Laura says farm standard. Corey says food safety. Marge says federal soil. Brodie says federal soil. The correct answer is farm service. Nobody got it right the Farm Service Agency. The Farm Service Agency oversees a number of voluntary conservation programs that affect hunters and anglers most noticeably. Most notably, they administer the CRP and CRP programs. They are also in charge of the Farmable Wetlands Program, which pays farmers to restore wetlands, the Emergency Conservation Program, which helps landowners affected by natural disasters, in the Grassland Reserve Program, which prevents pasture land from being converted into urban development.
00:20:57
Speaker 1: Question hunting enough for you brought it.
00:21:03
Speaker 7: Questions.
00:21:05
Speaker 2: That’s right. The topic is hunting. It’s customary for companies like Deer’s Leather and pet Skiffer to give hunters this item in exchange for a deer hide. The answer is not money. Can’t can’t say money. It’s customary for companies like Deer’s Leather and pet Skiffer to give hunters this item in exchange for a deer hide.
00:21:32
Speaker 7: You know what you don’t see in this state? You see all the time.
00:21:35
Speaker 8: And Corey, maybe you can tell me, like in Colorado you still see when you’re driving around during hunting season. You still see like fifty five gallon drums everywhere where you can throw hides into them.
00:21:47
Speaker 5: Yeah, you know, I feel like I never sat growing up Montana, But man, I haven’t seen it in forever.
00:21:53
Speaker 2: No, Brody, have you ever done this exchange? If you have it.
00:21:56
Speaker 7: Right, I haven’t. Okay, Corey, I’m pretty sure I got it right.
00:22:00
Speaker 2: No, okay, nay, how about you?
00:22:04
Speaker 1: You also, I’ve never heard of this.
00:22:06
Speaker 2: Oh you don’t. You don’t have it right. It’s customary for companies like Deer’s Leather and Petskiffer to give hunters this item in exchange for a deer hide. Corey and Brody like their answers.
00:22:24
Speaker 7: Not sure why, but I feel like I’ve heard it.
00:22:27
Speaker 2: I feel like I got it right, trusted Laura without answers.
00:22:32
Speaker 6: Good, I’m getting like you know, people will trade you like one bullet for five empty cases or whatever, like you know what I’m talking about, like forums, No, like you know, Okay, that’s kind of the vibe.
00:22:44
Speaker 1: That’s like the train of thought I got.
00:22:46
Speaker 2: That’s customary companies like Deer’s Leather and petsought to give hunters this item in exchange for a deer hide. Baby No, Marge is entertaining herself with her answers, roll it is, everybody ready, go ahead and reveal your answers, saying gloves?
00:23:18
Speaker 1: Who?
00:23:18
Speaker 2: Tresa says an orange hunting vest. Laura says store credit, Corey gloves, Marge a knife, Brody gloves. The correct answer is gloves. This type of gloves for deer hide exchange happens across the country, but it’s unclear when or where it started. It’s now less common than it was thirty years ago, but most states still have a few fur companies that will do the swap. Although prices vary. The value of an untanned deer hide is about seven dollars, while a pair of buckskin gloves is about twenty five dollars, so hunters should feel good about the trade gloves for a deer hide. Question eight the topic is wildlife. The World Wildlife Fund describes these Ecuadorian islands as having quote a wealth of unique plants and animals found nowhere else in the world.
00:24:16
Speaker 8: I’m gonna get to something here in a minute, Spencer, Okay, we’ll leave some space for you.
00:24:21
Speaker 2: World Wildlife Fund described.
00:24:24
Speaker 8: Little disappointed you’re using here.
00:24:28
Speaker 2: Okay, they can still know some things.
00:24:30
Speaker 7: Yeah.
00:24:30
Speaker 8: Well they also they also lie about a lot of ship.
00:24:35
Speaker 2: And so they are. They also sued the World Wrestling Federation.
00:24:41
Speaker 1: We’ve talked about they lose.
00:24:43
Speaker 2: Uh, the World Wrestling Federation lost, and that’s when they became WWE.
00:24:47
Speaker 1: That’s such a shame.
00:24:48
Speaker 2: The World Wildlife Fund describes these Ecuadorian islands as having a wealth of unique plants and animals founded nowhere else in the world.
00:24:58
Speaker 6: Is there like a registry for that glove, like a list for that glove thing?
00:25:02
Speaker 2: I think if you typed in like your state and deer hide trade for gloves, you’d find some examples. I feel like what happens is leather company X goes and sits at a gas station for a day and does their trade then and then the next day they drive eighty miles and they sit at another gas station.
00:25:19
Speaker 7: Yeah, they just hall like a dumpster.
00:25:22
Speaker 2: That’s how it was. When I was a kid, you knew when they were coming, like, you know, within a half hour of your area to go trade in your deer skin for some gloves.
00:25:29
Speaker 1: Did you do it?
00:25:30
Speaker 2: I did it a couple of times.
00:25:31
Speaker 1: What are their gloves like?
00:25:32
Speaker 2: They’re like those they’re called buckskin gloves. I don’t know. They’re like the yellowy tanny just leather gloves.
00:25:40
Speaker 1: That’s cool.
00:25:41
Speaker 2: Yeah, it’s the fun part of it is that you traded a deer hide for it. It’s not that they’re like really special gloves. Again, these Equadorian islands have a wealth of unique plants and animals found nowhere else in the world. This is question eight. Is everybody ready go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate says, Galapagos tressa sanctuary. Laura without an answer, Corey and Marge and Brody say Galapagos. They got it. The correct answer is Galapagos.
00:26:11
Speaker 8: Don’t be using no anti hunting groups as your sources anymore, e A.
00:26:16
Speaker 2: La Pagos. The Galapagos are best known for their tortoises, sea turtles, iguanas, boobies, and penguins. It’s where Darwin famously observed species with unique adaptations that inspired his theory of evolution. The islands are home to one hundred and eighty eight species that are labeled as critically endangered, endangered, or threatened. Right Phil, give us a scoreboard update.
00:26:42
Speaker 9: Still catches me out guard every single time. Real Crow, here we are. After question eight, it is down to Brody who was in first place with six. Nate and Corey are right on his tail with five, and Maggie has four.
00:26:56
Speaker 6: Two questions left with those species that like only on one island. Will they always be endangered or can they get to.
00:27:03
Speaker 2: Like the rest of our lives? I’m guessing so, But.
00:27:05
Speaker 6: Like, will they ever exceed like an amount that would get them off the essay?
00:27:11
Speaker 1: Do you know what I mean?
00:27:12
Speaker 2: I’m sure it could happen, But if you are in dangered species on the Galapagos, you’re probably just staying in endangered species on the Galapagos. Question nine the topic is cooking. Laura Ingles Wilder learns how to smoke venison in chapter one of this children’s book series from the nineteen thirties.
00:27:31
Speaker 1: Honey.
00:27:35
Speaker 2: Laura Ingles Wilder learns how to smoke venison in chapter one of this children’s book series from the nineteen thirties. Nate likes his answer, Brody likes his answer, or other four players not so much. Oh you have Okay, She’s gonna draw us and provide a little doodle that goes along with her correct answer. You have this one, right, March.
00:27:58
Speaker 3: I’m very confident this one.
00:28:01
Speaker 2: Corey, do you have this one? I don’t think you’re gonna be reading these books to Marshall, so it should be Brody. Have you read these No, you’re familiar.
00:28:09
Speaker 1: No, they are my favorite books growing up.
00:28:15
Speaker 2: I love these books. Laura Ingles Wilder learns how to smoke venison in chapter one of this children’s book series from then.
00:28:27
Speaker 8: There’s at least when I was a kid that maybe it was like a sexist thing or whatever, But like the book, these books got.
00:28:35
Speaker 7: Towards pushed towards a certain gender.
00:28:37
Speaker 6: Yeah, sure, and hardy boys went the other way.
00:28:41
Speaker 2: I like those way.
00:28:42
Speaker 3: More and didn’t like these.
00:28:45
Speaker 7: No, I’m not going to read those books. Those books are for girls.
00:28:49
Speaker 2: No. Corey is now revisiting his answer. Laura Ingles Wilder learns how to smoke venison in chapter one of children’s book series from the nineteen thirties, TREESA. Do you have a guess?
00:29:04
Speaker 3: I cannot think of it at all.
00:29:08
Speaker 2: Is everybody ready? Go ahead and reveal your answers? Nate says, little House on the Prairie. Tessa says home, Laura says little House on the Prairie. Corey says Winnie the Pooh. Marge says, little House on the Prairie. Drew us a wagon and a house with some smoke coming out of the chimney. Brody says, little House on the Prairie. They got it. The correct answer is the Little House on the Prairie book set. The Little House series is about Laura Ingalls Wilder’s childhood growing up on the American frontier in the late eighteen hundreds. In the first book, she wakes up one morning to a white tail hanging in the tree of her front yard. She then has fresh venison that night and says it tastes so good that she wishes her family could eat the whole thing. Instead, her dad says they have to salt and smoke the rest of the deer so that they have meat for winter. Goodreads named it the third best children’s book series of all time, only ranking behind Harry Potter and The Chronicles of Narnia bangers Little House on the Prairie. Here’s a correct answer review so far. One was West Virginia two Buck Knives, three Squall four, Gold Barbecue Sauce, five, Roland Martin six, Farm Service Agency, seven Gloves, eight Galapagos nine The Little House Book Series. Phill Let’s get a scoreboard update before question ten.
00:30:35
Speaker 1: Uh.
00:30:35
Speaker 9: Just like last week, Brody and Nate are in the lead at one and two. Brody has seven, Nate has six.
00:30:42
Speaker 2: Question ten, the topic is public lands. This next great question is via Sam Taylor. Name two of the four national parks with the word mount, mountain or mountains in its name. Oh Man, Brody gets it right, he will have eight points and the victory over the rest of the room. But if he gets it wrong and Nate gets it right, we will go to overtime. Name two of the four national parks with the word mount, mountain, or mountains in its name. Looks like a lot of players have come up with one and are still looking for the other three. Nate is better prepared this week for a conservation donation. He declared. It caught him off guard last week, he said, not going to catch him sleeping again. Name two of the four national parks with the word mount, mountain or mountains in its name, Browdy, do you have two of them?
00:31:46
Speaker 7: I’m quite certain I do.
00:31:47
Speaker 2: Okay, puts a lot of pressure on Nate, who only hands one. Trusta, do you have this one right.
00:31:56
Speaker 3: Of the four?
00:31:57
Speaker 2: Oh?
00:31:57
Speaker 4: Okay, give me one of them.
00:32:01
Speaker 2: Two of the four national parks with the word mount, mountain or mountains in its name. Corey, how you doing down there? Oh doesn’t matter, Marge. Do you like your answer?
00:32:19
Speaker 3: Yeah?
00:32:19
Speaker 1: Okay?
00:32:20
Speaker 2: No, doodle this time to go with him. No, we’re not going to hit the Shelby index. It was a four and a half this week, So if Brody has this right, he’ll have eight. We’ll have missed it by a point. Farm Service Agency. That’s that stumped the whole room. Tough one.
00:32:35
Speaker 1: I’m still mad about the gold orange.
00:32:39
Speaker 2: Is not no one who called it orange?
00:32:41
Speaker 9: What you’re ring on your head right now. See that’s orange. I saw a barbecue sauce. It looked like that.
00:32:45
Speaker 1: I would.
00:32:49
Speaker 7: Very helpful.
00:32:49
Speaker 1: Diagram red red, debatable.
00:32:56
Speaker 2: Is everybody ready? Go ahead and reveal your answers? Nate says Great Smoky Mountains and Mount Rushmore. Tressa says Rocky Mountain National Park, Mount Rainier and Great Smoky Mountains. Laura says Mount Rainier and Mount Rushmore. Corey says Blue Ridge and Rocky Mountain. Marge says Mount Rushmore, Great Smoky Mountains. Brody says Rocky Mountain and Smoky Mountain National Park. The four national parks are Great Smoky Mountains, Guadaloupe Mountains, Mount Rainier, and Rocky Mountains Parky. So we had a treesca got three of them.
00:33:36
Speaker 7: Oh you’re not gonna ding me.
00:33:38
Speaker 2: Yeah, it’s important. Did not get it right. We will give it to Brody in this instance. I feel like normally we take these away from Brody, So today, when it doesn’t matter, we’ll give him that eighth point.
00:33:51
Speaker 7: Well, that’s awful.
00:33:54
Speaker 2: Mount Rainier is the oldest of those four, being designated as a National park in eighteen ninety nine. Guadeloup Bay Mountains is the most modern, with it becoming a National park in nineteen seventy two. They are two of the oldest and youngest parks in the National Park system. All Right, Brody is our winner today with eight correct answers. You flipped the script on Nate beat him by two today. Brody, where is your five hundred dollars going to go?
00:34:19
Speaker 8: Since I saw so many elk this last week, un, let’s see the Rocky Mountain Oak Foundation.
00:34:24
Speaker 7: I don’t think we’ve hit them in a while.
00:34:25
Speaker 2: Five hundred dollars going to rm EF, which is a Montana local conservation for Missoli. That’s right, five hundred dollars going their way via Brody and media. Join us next week A game show where conservation always wins.
00:34:41
Speaker 1: By Spencer.
00:34:43
Speaker 7: Yeah, Spencer from South Dakota.
00:34:45
Speaker 1: He’s the host using those smooth mellow tones.
00:34:48
Speaker 7: He lays them questions down.
00:34:56
Speaker 6: He likes taking those two and three year old bucks.
00:35:01
Speaker 7: It is an avid amateur lockhow
Read the full article here
