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Programme 10 - The South of England vs Scotland

Kirsty Lang referees a contest between The South of England vs Scotland in the notoriously cryptic quiz. 10/12

(10/12)

Teams from all over the UK will face Kirsty Lang's cryptic questions across the series, with Kirsty offering support and the odd hint where it might be needed.

This tenth contest features the second meeting of The South of England vs Scotland.

You can follow the questions in each edition on the Round Britain Quiz webpages. Each week's questions will be posted on the day before the Sunday transmission.

Teams:
Paul Sinha and Marcus Berkmann - The South of England
Alan McCredie and Val McDermid - Scotland

Questions in today's edition:

Q1 (from Paul Tavatgis) A negotiator at Brest-Litovsk, one of the world's greatest forgers, a Roman fiddler, an Iberian squire, and a pioneer of free speech in comedy, all share a mention in a musical obituary. Who are they and who immortalised them to music

Q2 (from Patrick Haigh) Why should our listeners be careful not to confuse鈥
A Scottish racecourse
A director of the National Theatre
A circuit travelled by an itinerant mediaeval judge
A Yorkshire river
A song-like composition

Q3 (from Phil Ware) Music: The question you have to ponder is: What would Henry Croft do with them?

Q4 (from Peter Geddes) Initially, why would - Prince鈥檚 backing group, a unit of fuel efficiency, Dungeons and Dragons, a common image file, and something that tells you what you鈥檙e watching on the telly - all be grateful for a cup of tea?

Q5 (from Andy Pearson) It鈥檚 not a recipe although you do鈥
Start with a standard egg.
Take it to Nottingham and meet Agamemnon and Menelaus outside a Council House.
Next, sing a song that first became a hit in 1996 and finally came true in 2022.
Then watch a dark British comedy film about terrorism.
How many of what should you be looking for next?

Q6 Music: Listen to these clips and see if you can work out why these would remind us of a poem by Walter de la Mare?

Q7 (from Alan Mortiboys) In what context would Harry from Guys and Dolls come in last place behind - U2鈥檚 first album, a famous British art historian with a secret and Field Marshal Rommel?

Q8 If this emblem of unity contains envy, grief, purity, wealth, passion and calm, over which transformed land does it flutter? And if you add two more, how might this bring you into the Crucible?

TEASER QUESTION
What links Jerry Seinfeld, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Barry, Robin and Maurice, and the proud emblem of Manchester?

Host: Kirsty Lang
Recorded by: Phil Booth
Sound Design: Chris Maclean
Production Coordinator: Caroline Barlow
Producer: Carl Cooper

Questions set by:
Lucy Porter, Alan Poulton, and public contributors.

Available now

28 minutes

RBQ League Table 2025

RBQ League Table 2025
As we go into this week鈥檚 match, here鈥檚 how the scores look

Last week's teaser question

At the end of the previous show Kirsty asked:
Why might it be a short leap from these to a British World Record Holder?
The flower of the humulus lupulus
The captain of a curling team
Something white men can鈥檛 do, according to a 1992 movie?

They represent a Triple Jump - an athletics event sometimes known as the 鈥hop, skip and jump鈥.
The flower of the humulus lupulus is a 贬辞辫.听The common hop is part of the Cannabaceae or hemp family of flowering plants.聽
The captain of a curling team is called a 厂办颈辫.听The skip holds the broom in the house. Which means they dictate the play - the house is the target area.
The 1992 movie was 鈥淲hite Men Can鈥檛 Jump鈥 starring Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes. It鈥檚 about street basketball players in Los Angeles

The UK鈥檚 Jonathan Edwards is the men鈥檚 World Record Holder in the Triple Jump, and has been since 1995.

This week鈥檚 teaser question

ONLINE ONLY聽
Kirsty's question this week is:

Why might you get a buzz out of 鈥 Jerry Seinfeld, Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov And Barry, Robin and Maurice

Broadcasts

  • Sun 13 Jul 2025 16:30
  • Sat 19 Jul 2025 23:30

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