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'Simpsons'
star on and off the screen at Zoetropolis
Sunday
News article, November 25, 2001
by Laura Knowles, Sunday news correspondent
Do
you know:
Who shot Mr. Burns?
When Moe changed his bar into a family restaurant, what did
he call it?
What are the names of the two Bolivian tree lizards that Bart
helps to hatch?
Fans
of the "Simpsons" TV show know, and they are scrambling
to answer the latest craze to hit Lancaster. At 7:30 p.m.
every Sunday, crowds gather at Zoetropolis independent movie
theatre/coffee cafe at 235 W. Lemon St. to participate in
Simpsons Trivia night, hosted by trivia buff Curtis Earth
of Lititz.
The
theater, which stopped showing alternative films several weeks
ago because of poor attendance, has lately been hosting live
music and special events. Its first Simpsons Trivia Night
six weeks ago was an instant hit.
"The
first night we had it, people had to be turned away. It was
amazing. It is a small theater, only seats around 75 (in theater
seats up front and at cafe tables for two and sofas in the
rear), so space is limited," Earth said.
His
Simpsons Trivia night is a three-hour tribute to the irreverent
cartoon series that has aired on Fox-TV since 1989. The doors
open at 7:30 P.M. and the evening starts with showings of
an older "Simpsons" episode. At 8 P.M. the audience
watches the night's actual broadcast of the TV show on the
wide screen, followed by intermission and a coffee break.
Musical
entertainment is provided by the Justin Unton Orchestra, higlighted
by some added fun with jugglers and other entertainers. By
around 8:40 P.M. the excitement builds with the first round
of the Simpsons Trivia Contest.
There
are three rounds of questions, 10 in each round, for a total
of 30 questions. First-place team gets $25 cash. the runner-up
team gets a traveling trophy -- a used gym bag.
"I
don't think it's the prizes that draw them," Earth said
with a wry smile.
Earth, who hosts a variety of trivia events around the county,
has the contest worked out to a science, with up to 25 teams
participating. Ages range from 10 to mid-50s. Individuals
without teams can band together on the spot. There are only
three rules: no cell phones, no laptops and, above all else,
no blurting out answers.
According
to Earth, blurters are "disqualified, tarred and feathered."
Teams are given answer sheets to record their responses in
writing. In the first round, correct answers are worth one
point each. Sheets are collected, answers tallied, and leaders
announced.
In
the second round the difficulty level increases, and answers
are worth two points each. Sheets are again rounded up and
leaders announced. In the final round, the questions get even
tougher and teams are awarded five points for each correct
answer.
Earth
himself was not a huge "Simpsons" fan, so he got
help from a friend, Mike Horn, the technical services director
at Franklin & Marshall College. Horn, a real "Simpsons"
buff, also designed Earth's Web site (www.curtisearthtrivia.com)
on which the full-time trivia contest host posts his schedule...
...For
first-timers, the Simpsons Trivia Night interaction may seem
a but unusual. The audience responds in "Rocky Horror
Picture Show" fashion, reacting to Homer with exclamations
of "d'oh!" or to Marge with "ummmmh."
It doesn't take long for newcomers to catch on and get into
it.
It's
kind of like a Grateful Dead following -- there is a definite
'Simpsons' culture," Earth said.
It
all started in 1985 when Gracie Films producer-director James
L. Brooks was so intrigued by Matt Groening's "Life in
Hell" comic strip that he invited Groening to propose
a project. Groening's response was an animated "Simpsons"
short for TV's "Tracey Ullman Show." The shorts
were so popular that a half-hour "Simpsons" series
spinoff was put into production during the fourth and final
"Ullman" season.
The series pilot aired in December 1989 and the rest, as they
say, is history.
"There
is really a sort of a cult following for "The Simpsons."
I hadn't realized how big it was until the first trivia night,"
said Earth. "People came from everywhere. It was incredible.
We never expected it to take off like this, but everyone seems
to be having fun."
The
answers to the questions in the first paragraph are: Baby
Maggie, the Family Feedbag, and Chirpy Boy and Bart Jr.
Article
© 2001 Sunday News.
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