Trash - The Chris McCray Tournament For Academic Excellence - U. Maryland - 6/24

The Chris McCray Tournament For Academic Excellence – A Summer Trash 
Tournament at the University of Maryland
Sunday, June 24th, 2007

The University of Maryland College Park is pleased to announce our 
first ever (to our knowledge) summer trash tournament to be held on 
Sunday, June 24th, 2007, following our HSNCT mirror.  This primarily 
packet submission trash tournament is open to all players, including 
high school players, high school coaches, undergraduate players, 
graduate players, and unaffiliated players.  The goal of this 
tournament is to offer competitive matches between players of all age 
levels by focusing on more recent pop culture and "culturally 
significant" older pop culture.

Since there will be so many different age groups represented at this 
tournament, we will make an effort to distribute prizes amongst the 
different groups so long as there are enough teams for each division 
(high school, college, open).

We are looking to do some form of a round robin followed by a 
rebracketed playoffs.  The total number of rounds will be between 10 
and 12.

Pricing:
+ $100 – Base Entrance Fee Per Team.
- $10 – Automatic discount for an additional team from the same 
school.
- $60 – Acceptable Packet Submitted by May 26th.
- $20 – Acceptable Half-Packet Submitted by May 26th.
- $30 – Acceptable Packet Submitted by June 2nd.
- $0 – Acceptable Packet Submitted by June 9th.
+ $30 – No packet submitted.  Must inform the Tournament Director by 
May 26th if you are not writing a packet, or else you may be dropped 
from the tournament.
- $5 – Per working buzzer system per school.
- $10 – Per competent moderator (as determined by the Tournament 
Director) per school.
- $10 – Per competent moderator (as determined by the Tournament 
Director) that helped out at our HSNCT mirror that did not apply his 
or her discount at that tournament.
- $10 – Travel discount for coming from over 250 miles away per 
school.

Packet Guidelines:

Each team wishing to submit a packet must write 26 tossup and 26 
bonuses according to the specifications below.  If the packet does 
not meet the specifications, it will be rejected and the team will be 
asked to revise the packet so that it meets those expectations.

Distribution:

26/26 Total:

4/4 Movies – Please vary across genres, films, actors, directors, etc.
4/4 TV – Please vary across genres, shows, actors, creators, etc.
4/4 Music – Please vary across genres, albums, songs, singers, bands, 
etc.
4/4 Sports – 1/1 on Baseball, 1/1 on Football, 1/1 on Basketball, 1/1 
on Other
1/1 Extra on Movies / TV / Music / Sports - Please write on two 
different subjects for your tossup / bonus.
1/1 Video and Computer Games
1/1 Consumerama – Inventions, weird products, advertisements, 
companies, etc.
1/1 Comic Strips and Comic Books
1/1 Food and Drink
1/1 Internet Trash – Non-academic things on the Internet, i.e. 
Hamsterdance.
4/4 Any Subject Not Mentioned Above – This can include recent 
literature, trashy current events, board games and card games, road 
trip stuff, general knowledge, and anything else that relates to pop 
culture but has yet to be mentioned.  Please do not write more than 1/
1 in any particular category.
0/0 Meta Questions – Absolutely do not write a meta question (i.e. 
your cute tossup on the terrible trash tournament you lost in the 
final round on when you were an undergraduate five years ago) for 
this tournament, your packet will be rejected.
0/0 "Adult" Questions – Please refrain from writing about sexually 
explicit subjects like adult films for this tournament since there 
will be a lot of high school teams playing.  While we all may have 
our opinions on what is appropriate for high school students and what 
isn't, just to avoid any problems just refrain from writing questions 
on these subjects.

General note on the Movies, TV, Music, and Sports questions:
2/2 for each of these categories should be on subjects that occurred 
in the 2000s and 1990s.  The remaining 2/2 should be on subjects that 
occurred in the 1980s or earlier.  When writing about early `90's and 
earlier subjects, make sure that the answer is something that is 
still notable today.  This is not the tournament to be asking about 
some awful band of the 1980s or some canceled sitcom that has never 
been released on DVD or in syndication.

Half-Packet Distribution:
13/13 Total:
2/2 Movies
2/2 TV
2/2 Music
2/2 Sports
1/1 Extra Movies, TV, Music, Sports
4/4 Anything else (see above for possible subjects)

Difficulty:

Aim for each tossup to be answered in 90% of the rooms.  Aim for the 
average points per bonus to be above 15 points (i.e. more teams 
should 30 a bonus than 0 it).

First time writers: Remember to write your tossups in such a way that 
the clues get easier as the tossup goes on.  The first clue should be 
answered by people who have really in-depth knowledge on a subject, 
while the last clue should be able to be answered by someone who has 
very little knowledge of a subject (although still a little bit of 
familiarity with what is being asked).

Also, remember to give specific, identifying information about your 
answers in your tossups and bonuses.  Writing a lead in like, "this 
show lasted for eight seasons and was universally liked by critics" 
isn't very helpful.  Instead you would want to mention something 
like, "this show ran from 1980 to 1988 and its character, Mike 
Bentley,…" provides much more detailed information.

Length:

Questions should be between 5.5 and 7.5 complete lines in Size 12, 
Times New Roman Font with 1.25 inch margins on the left and right 
(the default when opening documents in Word).

Bonus questions should in general be no longer than two complete 
lines per part.  Bonus leadins should generally not be longer than 
two lines as well, but occasionally going over this limit is 
acceptable.

Try to have around 75 percent of your bonuses be in the 10-10-10 
format, with the other 25 percent being in other formats like 40-30-
20-10-1, and 10-5.  Please do not write any 15-15 bonuses, or more 
than one or two bonuses with 5 or more parts.  Please do not write 
more than one or two list bonuses (i.e. "For five points each, name 
all six kids on the Brady Bunch.")

Formatting:

Please group your questions by distribution.  Here is what a sample 
of what your videogame distribution might look like.  Not that the 
undescores represent text that should be bolded and underlined.

1/1 Videogames:
1) By holding the joystick down and pressing every button on the 
machine it was possible to play a Battlezone-esque game even in the 
attract mode.  Inputting certain initials on various birthdays made 
unlocked characters such as Godzilla and Raiden of Mortal Kombat.  It 
was one of the first games to feature digital likenesses of its 
players, although Magic Johnson and Michael Jordan were conspicuous 
absences.  FTP, identify this 1993 2 on 2 basketball game known for 
players being "on fire" and show boating slam dunks. 
ANSWER: _NBA Jam_

1) Nintendo consoles have always had some pretty unusual controllers, 
long before the "Wiimote" was dreamed up.  Answer some questions 
about these crazy peripherals, FTPE.
[10] Perhaps the predecessor to the DDR Dance Mat, this NES 
peripheral came packed with World Class Track Meet, a game where the 
player would pound his feet as fast as possible on the feet pads.
ANSWER: _Power Pad_ (also accept _Family Fun Fitness_ but not "Pad of 
Power")
[10] It was rumored to be developed to allow Japanese gamers a free 
hand for adult videogames.  The NES version was featured in the movie 
The Wizard, with Lucas Barton proclaiming he loves the device, it's 
so bad!
ANSWER: _Power Glove_
[10] This bazooka-like Super Nintendo peripheral was seen as the 
successor to the Zapper, and Yoshi's Safari was the most popular game 
to take advantage of it.
ANSWER: _Super Scope_ (also accept _Nintendo Scope_ or _Third Example 
Answer_)

Please format your questions as they appear above.  Note that all 
required parts of an answer should be bolded and underlined.

Please do not use any automatic Word formatting like numbers or tabs.

Do not add power marks to your own questions, they will be added by 
the editing staff.

Mirroring and Obtaining Questions:

The University of Oklahoma will be conducting a mirror of this 
tournament (look for that announcement).  Any other schools 
interested in mirroring this tournament should contact me, Mike 
Bentley, at mike000 at umd dot edu (that's three zeros).

Questions will be distributed for free to those teams that 
participate in the tournament.  People not participating may trade 
for the questions, or purchase them for $15.  The questions will be 
submitted to the Stanford Archive in January 2008.

Freelancing:

Anyone willing to write 8/8 or more in any subject (varied subjects 
preferred) for this tournament will receive the question set for 
free.  Please contact me immediately if you plan on doing this.

Registration:

To register, please contact me, Mike Bentley, at mike000 at umd dot 
edu (that's three zeros).  Please include your real team name (i.e. 
your school or who is on your team for open teams), your level (high 
school, college, or open), how many buzzers you're bringing, how many 
extra moderators you're bringing, any reader discounts you qualified 
for by reading for the HSNCT mirror on the previous day, and any 
travel discounts you think you might qualify for.

Please also include whether you plan on writing a packet, a half 
packet, or no packet, as well as a projection of what deadline you're 
going to submit your packet by.

The actual registration for the tournament will take place from 8:30-
9:00 on Sunday morning in Jimenez Hall, the usual location for our 
college tournaments at our College Park campus.  I will be posting 
more information about the specifics of registration, as well as 
directions to the campus and lunch options later.

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