Difference between revisions of "Mike Bentley"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(15 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Infobox|Name = Mike Bentley
 
{{Infobox|Name = Mike Bentley
|Image = Bentley.png
+
|Image = Mike-Bentley.jpeg
|Subjects = Computer Science, visual arts, Videogames, maybe some areas of History like the Supreme Court
+
|Subjects = Visual arts, technology, modern world, history
|schoolcur = [[Washington]] (2012ish-presentish)
+
|schoolcur = [[Washington]] (2014)
 
|schoolpast = [[Maryland]] (2005-2008)
 
|schoolpast = [[Maryland]] (2005-2008)
 
|highschool = [[West Chester East]] (2003-2004)
 
|highschool = [[West Chester East]] (2003-2004)
| }}
+
|firstname = Mike
 +
|lastname = Bentley
 +
}}
 +
'''Mike Bentley''' is the VP of Editing of [[PACE]] and a past President and Treasurer. He formerly played quizbowl for the [[Maryland|University of Maryland]], where he also served as President of the club.  He's most famous in the quizbowl world not for his quizbowl ability but for recording the [[Quizbowl Cast]], formerly hosting the [[Main Page|Quizbowl Wiki]], and his [[List of Mike Bentley side events|massive writing and editing work]], including ten visual arts tournaments ([[Eyes That Do Not See]]), the well received [[We Have Never Been Modern]] and sequels and the trash tournaments [[The Chris McCray Tournament For Academic Excellence|Chris McCray]] and [[CULT]].
  
'''Mike Bentley''' is the Treasurer and a past President of [[PACE]]. He formerly played quizbowl for the [[Maryland|University of Maryland]], where he also served as President of the club.  He's most famous in the quizbowl world not for his quizbowl ability but for recording the [[Quizbowl Cast]], formerly hosting the [[Main Page|Quizbowl Wiki]], and his [[List of Mike Bentley side events|massive writing and editing work]], including ten visual arts tournaments ([[Eyes That Do Not See]]), the well received [[We Have Never Been Modern]] and the best [[The Chris McCray Tournament For Academic Excellence|trash]] [[ASS|tournaments]] ever.
+
==PACE==
 +
Mike has been a longtime member of PACE, serving in various roles as President, Treasurer, and Head Editor of the NSC. He regularly is a major contributor to the NSC.
  
 
==High School==
 
==High School==
Line 14: Line 18:
 
Mike only competed in Chip-style questions in high school, although his team was slated to go the [[Princeton|Princeton's]] [[NAQT]] tournament but bad weather intervened.
 
Mike only competed in Chip-style questions in high school, although his team was slated to go the [[Princeton|Princeton's]] [[NAQT]] tournament but bad weather intervened.
  
==College==
+
==University of Maryland==
 
Mike formerly attended the [[Maryland|University of Maryland]], where he was a member of the Maryland Academic Quiz Team since his freshman year in 2004-05.  In 2006 and 2007 he served as Treasurer of the club under club president [[Casey Retterer]], and for the 2008 year took over as club president.
 
Mike formerly attended the [[Maryland|University of Maryland]], where he was a member of the Maryland Academic Quiz Team since his freshman year in 2004-05.  In 2006 and 2007 he served as Treasurer of the club under club president [[Casey Retterer]], and for the 2008 year took over as club president.
  
Mike has served as editor for 2008's [[This Tournament Goes To 11]], the [[Maryland Fall Classic]], [[TIT]] and [[Maryland Spring Classic]].  During the summer he contributed several questions to Jonathan Magin's [[Gaddis]] tournament, edited [[ASS II]] and worked on the [[Gunpei Yokoi Memorial Open]].  In 2007 he edited [[ASS]], [[The Chris McCray Tournament For Academic Excellence]], the [[Maryland Spring Classic]] and some of the [[Maryland Fall Classic]].  Despite these efforts, Mike isn't actually very good at the whole playing quizbowl thing.
+
Probably his best (individual) college performance at Maryland was at the 2008's [[Penn Bowl]].
 
 
Probably his best (individual) college performance was at the 2008's [[Penn Bowl]] where he fraudulently won an individual scoring prize by beating up on far less experienced players in the lower brackets.  Playing only with a very inexperienced teammate, Mike answered considerably more tossups than bonus parts in that tournament, demonstrating his impressive lack of deep knowledge.  He has hypothetically improved since then, although he still has a very high tossup-to-neg ratio.
 
  
 
By attaching himself to teams consisting of [[Jonathan Magin|some]] [[Charles Meigs|of]] [[Chris Ray|the]] better members of the Maryland team, Mike has "won" tournaments like 2008's [[Cardinal Classic]] and [[ACF Regionals]] at Delaware.
 
By attaching himself to teams consisting of [[Jonathan Magin|some]] [[Charles Meigs|of]] [[Chris Ray|the]] better members of the Maryland team, Mike has "won" tournaments like 2008's [[Cardinal Classic]] and [[ACF Regionals]] at Delaware.
  
 
==Seattle==
 
==Seattle==
After graduating from Maryland, Mike moved out to Seattle with [[Brittany Clark]] where he is serving as something of a coach for the [[University of Washington]] quizbowl team.  He also continues to play open tournaments such as the [[Minnesota Open]].  In 2010, Mike played some tournaments as [[Bellevue College]].  That year also saw him create [[Eyes That Do Not See]] and [[CULT]].  Mike also edited some parts of [[ANGST]], served as the history editor for the 2011 [[NSC]], and edited visual arts for the 2012 NSC.
+
After graduating from Maryland, Mike moved out to Seattle with [[Brittany Clark]] where he is serving as something of a coach for the [[University of Washington]] quizbowl team.  He also continues to play open tournaments. In 2010, Mike played some tournaments as [[Bellevue College]].  Playing with [[Matt Bollinger]] Mike finished second at the 2019 [[Chicago Open]].  His proudest accomplishment at an open tournament was first place at the fourth iteration of [[Scattergories]].
 +
 
 +
==University of Washington==
 +
For the 2013-2014 season, Mike played on the [[University of Washington]] team that finished 9th at ACF Nationals 2014.
 +
 
 +
==Writing and Editing==
 +
Mike got his start writing and editing for Maryland's many high school housewrites in the mid-2000s.
 +
 
 +
Mike has served as editor for 2008's [[This Tournament Goes To 11]], the [[Maryland Fall Classic]], [[TIT]] and [[Maryland Spring Classic]].  During the summer he contributed several questions to Jonathan Magin's [[Gaddis]] tournament, edited [[ASS II]] and worked on the [[Gunpei Yokoi Memorial Open]].  In 2007 he edited [[ASS]], [[The Chris McCray Tournament For Academic Excellence]], the [[Maryland Spring Classic]] and some of the [[Maryland Fall Classic]].
 +
 
 +
Mike is a regular contributor to the [[NSC]] as both a writer and an editor. He was the head editor for the 2020 NSC.
 +
 
 +
Other projects include [[CULT]] and [[COLT]], two national trash tournaments. Mike wrote a plurality of questions for the two [[College History Bowl]] tournaments. He regularly writes freelance questions for [[ACF Nationals]] and college [[NAQT]] tournaments.
 +
 
 +
Mike has created 10 iterations of [[Eyes That Do Not See]] a visual arts tournament presented in visual form and is slowly working on an 11th.
 +
He has also written a series of tossup-only tournaments on technology and business, beginning with [[We Have Never Been Modern]]. He is head editing [[The World As It Is]], a modern world tournament scheduled for January 2021.
 +
 
 +
Mike has also written a yearly series of [[Mike Bentley videogame packets|videogame packets]] and a series loosely based on the history and culture of the Pacific Northwest, both of which can be found on the HSQB question archive.
 +
 
 +
He has written two tossup-only videogame side events, [[VAIN]] and [[Impossible Lair]].
 +
 
 +
{{Mike Bentley side events}}
  
 
==Other Stuff==
 
==Other Stuff==
At a mirror of the [[2006 Chicago Open]], Mike had the idea (by way of stealing it from [[9 Minutes]]) of recording the matches on his MP3 player. However, due to his incompetence, he didn't actually record anything audible.  However, Mike got his act together and successfully recorded the [[2007 ACF Regionals]], thus starting the [[Quizbowl Cast]]. He can still be seen at many tournaments with his trademark audio recording device.
+
Mike won ACF's 2018 [[Carper Award]]. He has regularly contributed freelance questions to ACF Nationals.
 
 
Mike wrote a [[four-quarter format]] Nintendo round for the 100th episode celebration for the [http://www.gonintendo.com Go Nintendo Podcast] in July of 2007.  That round is now up on the [[Stanford Archive]].
 
  
Mike hosts [[Wastebin]], a trash question archive.
+
Mike has worked on various quizbowl-related software projects including [[PACEBuzz]], a buzzer system using PlayStation 2 controllers, and [[QEMS2]], a question writing system.
  
Mike edited the history for the [[2011 NSC]]; he became the President of [[PACE]] in July 2011 after a brief vacancy in the office and held that office for three years, then served as Treasurer for 2014-15 before returning to the presidency.
+
Since around 2006, Mike has made recordings of quizbowl matches and posted these as the [[Quizbowl Cast]], although that project has never had a proper RSS feed and thus is technically not a podcast. He continues to make recordings of national tournaments such as the [[NSC]].
  
Mike Bentley is good at writing extremely large volumes of questions for tournaments that need it, such as both incarnations of [[College History Bowl]].
+
Mike hosts [[Wastebin]], a now-deprecated trash question archive.
  
 
Mike is married to former Maryland teammate [[Brittany Clark]].
 
Mike is married to former Maryland teammate [[Brittany Clark]].

Latest revision as of 02:06, 10 February 2023

Mike Bentley
Mike-Bentley.jpeg
Noted subjects Visual arts, technology, modern world, history
Current college Washington (2014)
Past colleges Maryland (2005-2008)
High school West Chester East (2003-2004)
Stats HDWhite • NAQT

Mike Bentley is the VP of Editing of PACE and a past President and Treasurer. He formerly played quizbowl for the University of Maryland, where he also served as President of the club. He's most famous in the quizbowl world not for his quizbowl ability but for recording the Quizbowl Cast, formerly hosting the Quizbowl Wiki, and his massive writing and editing work, including ten visual arts tournaments (Eyes That Do Not See), the well received We Have Never Been Modern and sequels and the trash tournaments Chris McCray and CULT.

PACE

Mike has been a longtime member of PACE, serving in various roles as President, Treasurer, and Head Editor of the NSC. He regularly is a major contributor to the NSC.

High School

Mike played for the West Chester East High School Academic Team in 2003 and 2004. As part of the Varsity Team in 2004 he was on a team that placed 4th at the National Academic Championship. His Typing of the Dead skills allowed him to serve as a moderately successful typist for Chip's Quiznet league, although those were counterbalanced by his terrible spelling skills.

Mike only competed in Chip-style questions in high school, although his team was slated to go the Princeton's NAQT tournament but bad weather intervened.

University of Maryland

Mike formerly attended the University of Maryland, where he was a member of the Maryland Academic Quiz Team since his freshman year in 2004-05. In 2006 and 2007 he served as Treasurer of the club under club president Casey Retterer, and for the 2008 year took over as club president.

Probably his best (individual) college performance at Maryland was at the 2008's Penn Bowl.

By attaching himself to teams consisting of some of the better members of the Maryland team, Mike has "won" tournaments like 2008's Cardinal Classic and ACF Regionals at Delaware.

Seattle

After graduating from Maryland, Mike moved out to Seattle with Brittany Clark where he is serving as something of a coach for the University of Washington quizbowl team. He also continues to play open tournaments. In 2010, Mike played some tournaments as Bellevue College. Playing with Matt Bollinger Mike finished second at the 2019 Chicago Open. His proudest accomplishment at an open tournament was first place at the fourth iteration of Scattergories.

University of Washington

For the 2013-2014 season, Mike played on the University of Washington team that finished 9th at ACF Nationals 2014.

Writing and Editing

Mike got his start writing and editing for Maryland's many high school housewrites in the mid-2000s.

Mike has served as editor for 2008's This Tournament Goes To 11, the Maryland Fall Classic, TIT and Maryland Spring Classic. During the summer he contributed several questions to Jonathan Magin's Gaddis tournament, edited ASS II and worked on the Gunpei Yokoi Memorial Open. In 2007 he edited ASS, The Chris McCray Tournament For Academic Excellence, the Maryland Spring Classic and some of the Maryland Fall Classic.

Mike is a regular contributor to the NSC as both a writer and an editor. He was the head editor for the 2020 NSC.

Other projects include CULT and COLT, two national trash tournaments. Mike wrote a plurality of questions for the two College History Bowl tournaments. He regularly writes freelance questions for ACF Nationals and college NAQT tournaments.

Mike has created 10 iterations of Eyes That Do Not See a visual arts tournament presented in visual form and is slowly working on an 11th. He has also written a series of tossup-only tournaments on technology and business, beginning with We Have Never Been Modern. He is head editing The World As It Is, a modern world tournament scheduled for January 2021.

Mike has also written a yearly series of videogame packets and a series loosely based on the history and culture of the Pacific Northwest, both of which can be found on the HSQB question archive.

He has written two tossup-only videogame side events, VAIN and Impossible Lair.


Other Stuff

Mike won ACF's 2018 Carper Award. He has regularly contributed freelance questions to ACF Nationals.

Mike has worked on various quizbowl-related software projects including PACEBuzz, a buzzer system using PlayStation 2 controllers, and QEMS2, a question writing system.

Since around 2006, Mike has made recordings of quizbowl matches and posted these as the Quizbowl Cast, although that project has never had a proper RSS feed and thus is technically not a podcast. He continues to make recordings of national tournaments such as the NSC.

Mike hosts Wastebin, a now-deprecated trash question archive.

Mike is married to former Maryland teammate Brittany Clark.

Carper Award
Preceded by
Year
Succeeded by
Jonathan Magin
2018
Rob Carson