Raleigh Chopper
New member
Stephen Hawking and Jim Bowen dying on the same day. I see they kept to the rules that the non darts player goes first.
Oh well done.
You've won the tantalus.
Stephen Hawking and Jim Bowen dying on the same day. I see they kept to the rules that the non darts player goes first.
If only NSC had a simple search facility.............................
It would help would it.
Stephen Hawking and Jim Bowen dying on the same day. I see they kept to the rules that the non darts player goes first.
I think de mortuis nihil nisi bonum is an inappropriate adage. He showed a serious lack of respect when mocking someone for the colour of her skin, completely inappropriate behaviour
Although Bullseye, the show that mixed darts and general knowledge, ran for 14 years and was watched by an average of 13 million viewers at its peak — and an extraordinary 19.8 million for the 1989 Christmas special — its success was not founded on the toughness of its questions, as its host, Jim Bowen, freely admitted.
“We got stick for questions like, ‘Who came second in the last war?’ ” he recalled. “But the contestants weren’t always the brightest tickets — some of their IQs didn’t reach room temperature. Once I accidentally read out the question and the answer: ‘Where was President Kennedy assassinated, in Dallas?’ And the contestant still answered ‘Chicago’.”
It got off to a shaky start. The pilot was so full of expletives that it was untransmittable and Bowen, despite being a former teacher, had difficulty with words and numbers. He struggled to add the scores, and once said “smashing” more than 40 times in one half-hour programme, according to Terry Wogan, who counted them and announced the total on his radio show.
However, things improved: “By series four I was almost competent,” Bowen remarked. “Smashing”, “super” and “great” became his catchwords, although he did not always use them wisely. He once asked a contestant what he did for a living. “I’m unemployed,” came the reply. “Super,” said Bowen. On another occasion, during the miners’ strike, he asked the same question. “I’m a miner , Jim,” the contestant replied. “I’ve been out of work for nine months.” Bowen replied: “Smashing.”