Site icon The Schumin Web

You know it’s something seriously Metro-geeky when I pull out the safety vest…

And it is. Take a look:

See, we did our annual office trivia contest on Friday, in the usual format. The way that works is that I ask a question, and the first person to get it right wins a prize, which comes from whatever freebie stuff we get over the course of the year. The topics are something I pick. In 2008, it was United States Presidents. In 2009, it was United States geography. In 2010, after complaints that I made the geography questions too easy, I went for something a little harder, yet something that people around here should know more about than they do: the Metro. Thus why I pulled out the safety vest. After all, if one is going to do a trivia contest about Metro, one should at least look the part. Thus I wore my WMATA safety vest at work when I hosted trivia.

It’s funny – people complained that I low-balled the geography questions last year (and rightly so – I did make them fairly easy, opting for speed over challenge). However, this one scared a few folks, and scared enough that they expressed some apprehension about it being too hard before ever seeing a question. I sent out a lot of study materials on this one, including WMATA’s history page, the rail map, as well as John Cambron’s track schematic. Then I also did a lot of stuff that had been in the news. Then to calm people’s nerves on the questions, I gave a few cheat sheets for use in play: the system map, and the track schematic.

Ultimately, I came up with fifty questions about Metro. I figured that fifty would cover any problem scenarios I could think of: a question that totally stumps the group, more prizes than I expected, and an accidental premature answer reveal on the PowerPoint. On that last point, we have a “Smart Board” in our conference room, and in 2008 I discovered during the whole event that touching the board’s surface was equivalent to a mouse click, and I accidentally revealed an answer or two prematurely.

So here are the questions. See how many you can get. I am placing the answers down in the “song” section of this entry, so if you want to test yourself, don’t scroll down that far unless you really mean it.

So how do you think you did? Scroll down to the “Song” section below to find out.

All in all, we had fun, and I got applause afterwards for my efforts. I was surprised a number of times about who got what answers. One person really knew stuff about Prince George’s County stations, and nailed just about every question about stations in PG County. The only question that totally stumped everyone was #6, about the Metro headquarters building, and then I had to make #19 into a multiple-choice on the fly to help people out a little. I was amazed how easily I was able to pull the names of Metro General Managers out of somewhere like I did. And people really did appreciate the maps and the track schematic, and referred to them periodically to narrow some questions down.

Exit mobile version