This morning, the Musers were talking about the ridiculous conclusion to the Scripps National Spelling Bee, where they ran out of words with eight contestants remaining.
I can help them out a bit with their puzzlement over that.
This threatens to reveal my closely-guarded identity -- well, not that closely-guarded, since I introduced myself by name around the Siroises "The Meg" party with my genuwine megalodon tooth and Mike tweeted out my summer-suited image -- but I am a frequent and sought-after pronouncer at various spelling bees in the Collin County school districts and county bees.
The "pronouncer" is the person who . . . pronounces the words for the kids to spell. I would prefer "Word King" or "Spellmeister," but no, it's "pronouncer." I am permitted to, on the speller's request following my initial pronunciation:
-- repeat it a reasonable number of times.
-- give the language/country of origin.
-- use it in a sentence.
-- identify the part of speech (noun, adjective, etc.).
-- give any alternative pronunciations.
Last year, both the first and second place finishers in the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C., were winners in bees I pronounced. These are the two charmers (from the 2018 Collin County Spelling Bee, where they placed 1-2; the young lady placed first in a different bee I pronounced):
There are three factors causing bees to run out of words:
(1) These bees have increased in popularity and prestige, and parents and ambitious students are taking them more seriously. So the kids study their not-yet-overfed asses off. When I began pronouncing bees around 15 years ago, it was the usual mix of kids. For awhile, the Chinese and other Far East Asian kids were dominant. Now, as can be perceived from the eight finalists, and to which I can attest from personal experience, it is the distinguished descendants of the Indian Subcontinent who have lapped the field. (Rishik Gandhasri; Erin Howard; Saketh Sundar; Shruthika Padhy, Sohum Sukhatankar (Texas); Abhijay Kodali (Texas); Christopher Serrao; Rohan Raja (Texas).
No racism here -- they're wonderful kids and the parents have been very gracious to your pronouncer (yeah, there's the occasional asshole mom or dad who see some kind of institutional error in every misspelling their kid issues, and I guarantee you that trait is transracial). Every time I do one of these bees I think that the world will probably end up in pretty good hands if these are the smarties who are going to run things.
These families, and these kids, take education very, very seriously.
(2) At least in the lower rounds, at the individual school level, and, I have been told, the district and county levels, the kids are given lists of words that include the words used in the bees. I don't know what they do at the regional and national level. I have objected to this, but that's the way they do it. And what it means is that these school/district/county bees go on forEVer. I've been on my feet for 4.5 hours trying to eliminate 35-40 kids. This is a ridiculous practice having nothing to do with spelling talent, and should be discontinued.
(3) Poor planning by the Scripps people and the local bees that use the Scripps lists and rules. Several years ago I began alerting bee organizers for bees I was pronouncing that they did not have enough words, and I insisted that they have multiple alternate word lists (usually from prior years) ready to go. We needed them on more than one occasion. No bee I ever pronounced ever ran out of words, but last year, the North Texas Regional Bee (sponsored by the Morning News) did run out of words. Fortunately, there were only two kids left to be co-champions.
Anyway, there's more than you want to know about spelling bees. They're fun, the kids are inspirational, and Your Plainsman developed some notable quizmaster chops to keep kids and parents in line. But they can be grueling.
Can you use me in a sentence, Pronouncer Man? |
NOTE:
Your Plainsman will be out of the country the next two weeks. I hope to find internet access where I'm going, but in the meantime, please keep things both interesting and civil. Thanks.
I disagree that the conclusion was ridiculous. My son represented this part of Texas (Arlington) at the National spelling bee 3 years ago. They do NOT give you a list of words for the regional or national bee. They do give you one (several thousand words) for lower-level bees such as the school and area bees. But when you go to DC, the dictionary is your word list.
ReplyDeleteThose kids last night began at 10:30 am ET and were still going at 11:30 pm (there was a supper break) when the decision was made to award the co-championship to whoever is left standing. It was pretty apparent those final 8 were not going to miss any words. If any kid was to lose at that point, it would have been because of exhaustion, and that wouldn't have been right.
This is not a "participation trophy" scenario. To be one of 8 kids out of millions who started this journey in January is anything but "everyone gets a trophy". These remaining 8 kids were the best of the best.
By the way, continuing the event Friday morning was not really an option. The entire week is planned out for all the participants and their families. They really needed to crown a champion last night in order to not have to cancel the going-away party tonight and other stuff going on, which would have affected all 500+ families. I think they made the right decision.
By the way, did you ever pronounce at the Tarrant county bees? My son won the school bee 3 times, which means he went to the area bee 3 times. Two of those were at Bethesda Christian school, and one at Oak Ridge in Arlington. The one time he won the area bee, he went to TCU for the regional, which he won, and which propelled him to Washington.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.star-telegram.com/news/local/community/arlington/article63701727.html
James: Congratulations to your son!
ReplyDeleteDid not pronounce any Tarrant County Bees. They were all in Collin schools, districts and Collin County.
Respectfully disagree that the kids weren't going to miss any words. Every other year there has been a winner. At least one of the winning kids this year scoffed at the result, expressing the thought that Scripps just wasn't ready, which is my own observation from the lists they offer the schools and counties every year. They're ridiculously easy, and giving out the word lists results in unnecessary marathons. I'm not surprised that they were not ready for this year's group.
I'm glad to hear they don't give out word lists at the higher levels, but all the more reason they should end up with a winner. If we've reached the point where significant numbers of kids know every word there is to know, then there's no reason to have a bee.
You would think in this day and age that Scripps would have an Amazon Prime account. I am pretty sure they could have got same day delivery of additional words. Perhaps buy one get one free or some other type of Amazon deal on words.
ReplyDeleteAlso it was good to see Clock Boy be one of the final 8. I thought he was going to ride the fake clock thing for life. He can spell also.
"It was good to see Clock Boy be one of the final 8"
ReplyDelete"I don't think that's correct." - Norm
The clock boy thing: that's funny!
ReplyDeleteMTC: One other very important note, and a big reason I maintain they wouldn't have been able to get a winner within several hours once they had those final 8 kids:Several of the kids who want to compete at the highest level hired professional spelling bee coaches. We didn't, (which might help explain why Jacob finished in the middle of the 285-contestant pack in 2016), but the kids who finished in the top dozen or two, they did. Not sure what the Bee folks can do about that in the future, but it definitely contributed heavily to the stalemate on Thursday night.
No doubt.
ReplyDeleteAs I suggested -- maybe time to put the National Bee to sleep.
Bob, why wouldn't Howard Cosell be hired today? Why, because he's not a brain dead P C puppet?!
ReplyDeleteWhen even Bob is too liberal for you, it might be time to just turn off the station, little buddy.
ReplyDeleteI don't think we concerned ourselves with it at the time, but I imagine Howard leaned to the liberal side of the road.
ReplyDeleteI've been travelling the plains a bit myself over the last few months but have kept true to my Sports App. I haven't visited these parts in a bit. I turned on the HL a few minutes ago and was witness to their occasional bowing to Michelle Rodriquez. She is one of the select few that has a voice made for TV. I understand why you would want to look at her but who can stand that vocal fry for more than than a few sentences?
ReplyDeleteMichelle Rodriguez from the country station next door is not the same person as “Michelle 3000”, who has worked for Cumulus for 20+ years. The latter is who took part in today’s show, and they appear to be OK with with the vocal fry in exchange for her trademark laugh.
DeleteAlright! A segment coming up about Corby's favorite album. Groovy
ReplyDelete@5:10
ReplyDeleteThis is Ribby, isn't it?
Attention Sat morning guys: You have a good show; don't ruin it by playing insufferable failed Corby pranks. It's cruel enough listeners were subjected once! Yes, I was watching Kimmel (who btw, is not funny) pregame and heard Corby's lame question. Maybe Kimmel should do a "Top-Five" of Hardlines most boring bits!
ReplyDeleteThe Hardline just did a whole segment where Corby complained that he didn't know how he was going to watch NBA finals game 7 and the back 9 of the US Open because they're at the same time. This is what passes for good radio now? Sheezus.
ReplyDeleteAlso getting really tired of hearing racist Twiggy talking about "them damn white people" on that upper decker promo.
ReplyDeleteMTC TEAM -
ReplyDeleteIt's not everyday that I read a local obituary and get what may be an comment that makes me think of 1310 / 96.7.
In the last 4 - 8 weeks The Hardline had a couple of segments (different days) in which they referenced something off a website called "Everyone Loves Texas". I can't even remember what the subject was but I remember everyone on the show said they really enjoyed that website and the segments were entertaining.
Anyone recall what THL was discussing and, more importantly, anyone have a link to said website? I googled it (looked it up on my phone) and of course "love" and "texas" brings up all sorts of sites.
I said all that to share this. The obituary was for a man named David Bryan Douglas and in the obit it says (and I quote)
"David created the web site Everyone Loves Texas (ELT) and he managed and contributed to its success on a daily basis for many years. ELT grew to more than 5,000 members and David continued his role as a fan and teacher of Texas history and lore well into his retirement."
Are these two connected or am I conflating two different issues. TIA
ET P1
Little pumpkin-puss Corby is all worked up over the statue again. How can you legally keep someone from displaying that statue in the WHOLE METROPOLITAN AREA? That's more scary than any so called "racist" statue.
ReplyDeleteI heard THL talking about it costing the city $600,000 to remove the statue. I guess Corby forgot about the guy getting killed in the accident while transporting the necessary equipment needed to remove that HORRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NASTY OL statue. That should have been worth a couple of bucks..huh?
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