Curved yellow fruit

From QBWiki
Revision as of 20:59, 10 August 2014 by Darrell Frye (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Cyf.jpg

Curved yellow fruit refers to unnaturally easy giveaway clues, or questions that contain them. In the strictest sense, the preceding material must be sufficiently obscure, non-uniquely identifying, or convoluted that almost every buzz on the question will occur on this clue; thus, the entire text of the question reduces to one line that most elementary school kids would be able to answer.

A tossup on Pietro Mascagni that begins with five lines of incredibly difficult information and follows with "FTP name this composer of Cavalleria Rusticana" is not a curved yellow fruit question, since most people outside of opera circles and quizbowl have never heard of the work; rather, it is an extreme example of a difficulty cliff. On the other hand, a tossup on George Washington that begins with five lines of incredibly difficult information and ends "FTP name the first president of the United States" is a curved yellow fruit question, since most second-graders could answer that.

The original curved yellow fruit question was a 20-point, all-or-nothing bonus from CBI Nationals in the 1996, which gave about a line of useless information before "FTP name this curved yellow fruit."

Potential writers of curved yellow fruit questions are encouraged to consult Weiner's Law #1 to discover the error of their ways.