- published: 29 Oct 2016
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Say Anything is a board game designed by Dominic Crapuchettes and Satish Pillalamarri. It was released by North Star Games in 2008 as a follow up to the award-winning Wits & Wagers. Say Anything is very similar to Wits & Wagers except players answer open-ended subjective questions instead of trivia questions. The goal of Say Anything is to get people talking about interesting things and laughing.
Each round, someone will play the role of 'The Judge'. The Judge draws a card and then asks a question from it. Here are some sample questions:
Each of the other players writes an answer on a dry erase board, and places it face-up on the table. Once all of the answers are on the table, the Judge secretly chooses their favorite response. Each other player has two tokens to bet on the answer they think the Judge chose as their favorite. Players receive 1 point for each correct bet. The game ends after a set number of rounds, usually 20 or so.
The 1971 Winston 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series (now Sprint Cup Series) race that took place on May 16, 1971, at Alabama International Motor Speedway (now Talladega Superspeedway) in Talladega, Alabama, USA.
George Altheide, Doc Faustina and David Sisco would make their NASCAR Winston Cup Series debuts in this race. Only manual transmission vehicles were allowed to participate in this race; a policy that NASCAR has retained to the present day.
Twenty-nine thousand people came to see Donnie Allison (racing for the Wood Brothers racing team) defeat his brother Bobby (racing for Holman-Moody) by six car lengths. Both of these siblings were driving 1969 Mercury Cyclone vehicles. The race took three hours and thirty-two minutes to successfully complete. Seven cautions were handed out by NASCAR officials for forty-five laps. Other finishers in the top ten included: Buddy Baker (driving for Petty Enterprises), Pete Hamilton, Fred Lorenzen, Jim Vandiver, James Hylton, Bill Dennis, Dave Marcis, and Larry Baumel. After winning this race, Donnie would be seen as the underdog four years later at the 1975 Winston 500; he would finish in a lowly 42nd place out of 50 competitors on the starting grid.
The 1987 Winston 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series racing event that took place on May 3, 1987, at Alabama International Motor Speedway in Talladega, Alabama, USA.
Unrestricted high-speed races at Talladega Superspeedway ended after this event. While the summer race (Talladega 500) would be run with a smaller carburetor, restrictor plates would end up being compulsory by the end of the year. Had NASCAR kept the pre-1987 status quo into the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season and beyond, the vehicles would have been travelling through the straightaways at over 235 miles per hour or 378 kilometres per hour.
Lap times would have been slower for Bill Elliot and Davey Allison with the radial tires used in the present-day Cup Series compared to the bias-ply tires used in the late 1980s. Bill Elliot's 1987 Thunderbird is on display at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan while the fate of Davey Allison's vehicle is uncertain.
There were supposed to be 188 laps in this event; but various caution flags caused this race to be delayed into the darkness, most notably a wreck on lap 22 when Bobby Allison suffered a blown engine. Debris from the malfunctioning engine cut a tire, causing the car to turn backwards, go airborne, and shear off several feet of the catch fence in front of the start/finish line. Speeds for this event were upwards of 200 miles per hour or 320 kilometres per hour, a major factor in the severity of Allison's crash. Five spectators would be injured as a result of Allison's crash; two of them had to be treated in hospital while three were treated in the infield medical center and promptly released. The crash fortunately did not kill the flagman or any of the spectators in the crash.
The 1976 Winston 500 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series race that took place on May 2, 1976, at Alabama International Motor Speedway (now Talladega Superspeedway) in Talladega, Alabama. By 1980, NASCAR had completely stopped tracking the year model of all the vehicles and most teams did not take stock cars to the track under their own power anymore.
Dave Marcis won the pole position for the race with a lap of 189.197 miles per hour (304.483 km/h). 40 cars started the race. Buddy Baker defeated Cale Yarborough by 35 seconds, in an average speed of 167.887 miles per hour (270.188 km/h). His record of winning three races in a row at Talladega would not be broken until 2002 when Dale Earnhardt, Jr. recorded his fourth consecutive victory at that track. There were 24 different leaders and three cautions for 14 laps. Attendance was 80,000.
Baker had qualified 12th, and two days before the race Bud Moore's team transported the engine for the team's 1976 Ford Torino back to their shop in Spartanburg, SC for examination. The engine was brought back to Talladega the day before the race.
Édon is a commune in the Charente department in southwestern France.
The Lizonne (locally called Nizonne) forms the commune's southeastern border.
The first season of American animated television series Regular Show originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States. Many of the characters are loosely based on those developed for J.G. Quintel's student films at California Institute of the Arts: The Naïve Man From Lolliland and 2 in the AM PM. Quintel pitched Regular Show for Cartoon Network's Cartoonstitute project, in which the network allowed young artists to create pilots with no notes to possibly be optioned as a show. After being green-lit, Quintel recruited several indie comic book artists, plus some of the crewmembers he had worked with on The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack, to compose the staff of the show, as their style matched close to what he desired for the series. Regular Show was picked up by Cartoon Network, who decided to create a twelve-episode first season.
The first episode of Regular Show's first season is "The Power", ending with the season finale "Mordecai and the Rigbys". The season was storyboarded and written by J. G. Quintel, Sean Szeles, Shion Takeuchi, Mike Roth, Jake Armstrong, Benton Connor, Kat Morris, Paul Scarlata, and Kent Osborne, while being produced by Cartoon Network Studios. The show is rated TV-PG and occasionally TV-PG-V. Despite not airing on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim line-up, it is considered more of a traditional adult's animated comedy than a children's cartoon.
Don is an Indian action crime film, Comics and Video game franchise. The franchise is centered on Don, a fictional mafia lord played by Amitabh Bachchan and Shahrukh Khan in the films.
In the series Amitabh Bachchan stars in the first film and Shahrukh Khan in the rest of the films. After the release of Don 2, the latest installment of the series, it was considered to be one of the finest action film series in India along with Dhoom (film series) and Race (film series).
Don is now the fifth highest grossing film series in Bollywood.
NASCAR Winston Cup Series Alabama International Motor Speedway May 3rd, 1987
NASCAR Winston Cup Series Alabama International Motor Speedway May 3rd, 1987
1987 WINSTON 500
NASCAR Winston Cup Series Alabama International Motor Speedway July 26th, 1987
NASCAR Winston Cup Series Rd.9 May 3, 1987 Talladega Superspeedway
Relive Davey Allison's first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series win at Talladega Superspeedway in the 1987 Winston 500.
I copied this race from VHS to digital. Since I've had it requested I did not edit out the commercials. This is from what I would consider the greatest era of NASCAR racing. It was just coming out from being a regional sport and developing a national audience. There were still a few independent drivers, but the superstars were beginning to surface, as well. I was still being true to its roots while also starting to get the big money from sponsorships and national television contracts.
Be sure to watch this 30-minute race cut down of the classic 1987 Winston 500 on its 30th anniversary, featuring pop-up trivia about the race and pop culture in 1987. The show is hosted by Dale Earnhardt Jr. at 9 p.m. ET May 5 on FS1.
30-second "Coming Up" airs before feature. In 1987, Bobby Allison was running well over 205 mph when he crashed in the tri-oval at Talladega. His car became airborne and nearly flew into the grandstands. NASCAR racing has never been the same since...NASCAR implemented the "restrictor plates". So, if any race fan asks...why do they run restrictor plates at Talladega and Daytona? Show them this video. This feature aired in May 2009 on NASCAR Raceday. Produced and Edited by: Mark Traina
Relive the 1987 Winston Western 500 from Riverside International Raceway that saw Rick Hendrick driving his own No. 25 car and Rusty Wallace get the win out on the California road course. Don't miss a lap of the race in this week's 1987 Winston Western 500 from Riverside. ---------- Subscribe to NASCAR on YouTube: https://nas.cr/youtube Visit NASCAR.com for the latest news: https://nas.cr/nascar For more race day in-car cameras check out NASCAR Drive - https://www.nascar.com/drive Shop for your favorite NASCAR gear, diecasts and more: https://nas.cr/store Download the NASCAR Mobile App: https://nas.cr/mobile Weekend schedule for on-track action: https://nas.cr/weekend ---------- Play every weekend! ---------- NASCAR Fantasy Live: https://nas.cr/fantasy ---------- NASCAR on Social M...
Say Anything is a board game designed by Dominic Crapuchettes and Satish Pillalamarri. It was released by North Star Games in 2008 as a follow up to the award-winning Wits & Wagers. Say Anything is very similar to Wits & Wagers except players answer open-ended subjective questions instead of trivia questions. The goal of Say Anything is to get people talking about interesting things and laughing.
Each round, someone will play the role of 'The Judge'. The Judge draws a card and then asks a question from it. Here are some sample questions:
Each of the other players writes an answer on a dry erase board, and places it face-up on the table. Once all of the answers are on the table, the Judge secretly chooses their favorite response. Each other player has two tokens to bet on the answer they think the Judge chose as their favorite. Players receive 1 point for each correct bet. The game ends after a set number of rounds, usually 20 or so.