Talk:College Bowl

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Internet?[edit]

"If the intent was chilling the invitational circuit, it failed, as these developments and the growing Internet community of quiz bowl players led to an explosion of teams, tournaments, and formats."

How many people used the internet in 1987? Modor 16:39, 16 August 2006 (UTC)Modor[reply]

  • The perceived difficulties with CBC in terms of coercion were post-1990. At which time there was an internet community of current and former College Bowlers.--Wehwalt 22:07, 16 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Edits by Moberemb[edit]

Moberemb made these changes twice, so I'm putting it to discussion.

Original:

In the 1987 and 1988 regional tournaments, College Bowl was accused of recycling questions from previous tournaments, thereby corrupting the results (questions for tournaments need to be fresh, or certain teams will have an inherent advantage). The 1987 National Tournament, on the Disney Channel, saw additional controversy, as a number of protested matches proved to strain the television format. In addition, the company claimed a copyright on the idea of quizbowl competitions, and attempted to extract a licensing fee from invitational tournaments; threatening to blacklist schools which hosted invitationals and did not pay the licensing fee. If the intent was chilling the invitational circuit, it failed, as these developments and the growing Internet community of quiz bowl players led to an explosion of teams, tournaments, and formats.

In the 1990s with the rise of the Academic Competition Federation and National Academic Quiz Tournaments, both with their own national championships, the leverage of College Bowl Incorporated withered, and several schools "de-affiliated" from College Bowl (which has a higher participation cost). Factors which contributed to this included restrictive eligibility rules from CBI, the expense of participation, disagreements regarding the quality and difficulty of the questions used, and other minor rules. Over 200 Colleges and Universities currently participate in College Bowl competitions at some level each year.

College Bowl retains the ACUI contract, and administers the Honda Campus All-Star Challenge at historically black colleges and universities.

Changed to:

College Bowl administers the Honda Campus All-Star Challenge at historically black colleges and universities.

What's the complaint? I have my guesses, but I'd like to hear from Moberemb here. --User:Christopherlin 00:59, 20 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Moberemb seems to be noted College Bowl Inc. senior employee Mary Oberembt, and I suspect her agenda in removing this information ties directly to her having an interest in covering up any bad press about CBI. In other words, her editing is a rather poor attempt to hide relevant information to avoid anything that makes her employer look bad. Shame on you, CBI! ——The preceding unsigned comment was added by 140.180.129.25 (talkcontribs) ..
Accusations without evidence don't belong on Wikipedia. Opinions as to the "withering" of College Bowl are just that, opinions, and also don't belong here. User:Dctuttle 05:19, 21 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The neutering of relevant information from this page by people with vested personal interests in hiding the facts is a great example of why Wikipedia is useless. Hey let's adopt a NEUTRAL POINT OF VIEW by simply ignoring the fact that these controversies existed! Let's further trust people firmly on one side of those controversies to enforce that "neutrality" on the article because the people on the other side are too busy doing things more productive than babysitting a fake encyclopedia article such as watching astroturf grow.
(Personal attack removed) —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 68.57.146.64 (talkcontribs) .
There is an obvious problem when people employed or formerly employed by College Bowl edit out factual content that could portray them in a bad light. That clearly violates Wikipedia's alleged doctrine of neutrality. I personally don't think that the statements excised by Moberemb were non-neutral, as two other formats did rise, College Bowl's influence did wane, and people did have those problems. The statements reflect the sentiments of those that departed from College Bowl, not on the broad speculation of a single writer. The passage should be included, and CBI personnel employshould be ashamed of themselves for attempting to censor objective additions to an article on which there is no way they can be objective.—The preceding unsigned comment was added by 128.62.104.19 (talkcontribs) 12:13 (UTC13 April 2006)
Let it be known that according to dctuttle's wikipedia user profile, he is apparently a regular staffer at local CBI tournaments and hasn't played active circuit quiz bowl since the 1980's. I doubt he has the degree of familiarity with NAQT/ACF and the circuit as a whole as he seems to claim in his profile. Clearly he is not either a neutral or informed source, and it's sort of silly that he can hold up the presentation of legitimate information solely because it offends his personal pro-CBI bias and affiliation with the organization. I move that the text which Mary Oberembt deceptively tried to block since it could have hurt the verifiable financial interests she has in the company be reinstated, since it's becoming clear from the flow of this talk page that Mr. Tuttle is just a single biased source with an agenda. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 140.180.144.31 (talkcontribs) .
I concur with these rationale. If you so wish, add them back. However, just to make sure those determined to make a squeaky-clean image of CBI don't get away with future reverts, please cite relevant and credible sources. --KHill-LTown 05:15, 14 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
(Above, 140.180.129.25 attempted to identify a user in 'meatspace', and calling into question user's motives. There's a good point in there, under the ad hominem line of thinking. --Christopherlin 08:35, 14 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I don't think you understand what the phrase "ad hominem" means. The fact that David C. Tuttle is affiliated with College Bowl is extremely relevant to his credibility here. It's not an irrelevant attempt to discredit him with a personal attack. Furthermore, his motives should be called into question. One can "assume good faith" in line with that idiotic policy when one has no information, but when there is ample evidence that the user is not, in fact, contributing in good faith, assumptions should end. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 68.57.146.64 (talkcontribs) .

Actually, I looked up ad hominem before posting that, to make doubly sure. Specifically, Ad hominem#Ad hominem circumstantial: "Of course Moberemb would remove and play down criticisms of CBI, she works for them!" So (although I agree) I'm trying to stay off that line of thinking, even though it's there.
Which policy are you saying is idiotic? Assume good faith? No personal attacks?
I understand and agree that Dctuttle's affiliation is relevant. Not so much toward credibility, but (potential) bias. What are you citing as evidence? Show instead of tell. (I'm trying to act as Devil's Advocate here.)
I think the criticism section should have facts about opinions and present them as such. So that's what the idea behind discussing things here is. I hope that's clearer than mud, as it looks to me. --Christopherlin 06:16, 15 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Actually, the original page that I'm sure the Wiki article was plagiarized from specifically notes that obvious self-interest regarding relevant claims is of course meaningful. The Wiki page totally inverts the meaning of its source material, probably because Wikipedia sucks: http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/circumstantial-ad-hominem.html

Assuming good faith is idiotic because the way that academic review works is to attempt to do your best to criticize and falsify, not to simply accept whatever some random idiot on the Internet says. And this is not even a neutral person, it's someone who we know has a bias. Assuming good faith in his case would be assuming a falsehood. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 68.57.146.64 (talkcontribs) .

Just to be clear, I do think that Moberemb edited with bias and acted in bad faith. Large-scale deletions are generally treated as vandalism. The same of critical material then becomes POV pushing. Dctuttle on the other hand at least left a meaningful edit summary and discussed it on talk (though is now not present).
Assuming good faith has flaws. It doesn't mean that you have to continue to blindly assume so in light of evidence of intentions (in this case, whitewashing and POV pushing).
Wikipedia has flaws. It looks like you care about bias, plagiarism and the other ways that Wikipedia sucks. This is where I encourage you to get more involved (time permitting). I noticed you made an edit back in March noting that Wikipedia articles are plargiarized. The process for that is through Wikipedia:Copyright problems. Or just edit the article to paraphrase, and cite the source. It's a lot of work, but every little bit helps. YMMV. --Christopherlin 17:48, 15 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

POV problems[edit]

Dctuttle, good call on toning down the wording. Still, there are points that ought to be covered, citing reliable sources and all. I think it's verifiable that College Bowl is more expensive than the other circuits. Did they assert copyright over the quizbowl format?

Here are the old passages, for discussion:

(new) ... In addition, the company claimed a copyright on the idea of quizbowl competitions, and attempted to extract a licensing fee from invitational tournaments; threatening to blacklist schools which hosted invitationals and did not pay the licensing fee. ...

(old) In the 1990s with the rise of the Academic Competition Federation and National Academic Quiz Tournaments, both with their own national championships, the leverage of College Bowl Incorporated withered, and several schools "de-affiliated" from College Bowl (which has a higher participation cost). Factors which contributed to this included restrictive eligibility rules from CBI, the expense of participation, disagreements regarding the quality and difficulty of the questions used, and other minor rules. ...

CBI costing more than ACF, NAQT, or circuit events is verifiable. Eligibility rules can be compared without saying that they are more restrictive. When I have more time, I'll go through the CBI documents. --User:Christopherlin 06:54, 21 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

While I am a party to the complaint, so won't post anymore on the article, I will point out the recycling and copyright claim issues were in the air in the 1980s, and probably could be seen in the bulletin boards alt.college.college-bowl in the 1990s. At any rate [1] (1989) clearly identifies the copyright claim problem in an interview I did with Mentis, a company out of Fresno that was attempting to compete for the ACUI contract. For recycling evidence (as opposed to accusation of recycling), all you need to do is look at tournament questions in multiple years, not so hard to do if your school has CBI archives (though of course the contract with CBI required you destroy old questions). User:dml 15:32, 21 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The use of the word "copyright" is incorrect when referring to College Bowl's claims. Questions themselves fall under copyright protection, but the name College Bowl is a trademark and the format, in their argument, fell under the category of "trade dress". The idea of "trade dress" does exist in the legal lexicon -- see "Taco Cabana vs. Two Pesos", it's a very interesting read, and though it was short on precedent and not a matter of settled law, it was far from the black-and-white issue that many on the circuit claimed it was.
The language of "threatening to blacklist schools" is vague and inflammatory - companies who seek to protect their trademarks are required to put forth efforts to do so or forfeit future legal claims. What College Bowl did was just what a trademark lawyer would have said they should do to protect their claims. It often involves a zealous defense with claims of more than it might win in a court of law, but all a court would do is strike the non-enforceable elements and keep the enforceable ones. We non-lawyers generally don't understand that and react accordingly. Also, there is the issue of what exactly is meant by "blacklisting" and what the "threat" is to a school, beyond not allowing them to license College Bowl.
The claims of the "withering of leverage" of College Bowl are ambiguous and specious - they are certain to be magnified by those who frequent the circuit, which represents the majority of teams that withdrew but represent only a relatively small fraction of schools who play College Bowl nationwide. Some parts of the country have seen declines in participation (along with the other events at games tournaments that ACU-I sponsors), but others are at levels similar to 10-15 years ago, and over 64 HBCU teams are now on board with the Honda Campus All-Star Challenge. And games wax and wane in popularity -- witness ACF's actual suspension of active status in the '90s and circuit events that die off due to lack of organization or participation. These things are just not Wikipedia material unless the game shuts down and becomes history.
As for recycling of questions, Mr. Levinson does point out that there is no legitimate way to confirm or deny this, as old questions are supposed to be destroyed after five years per the licensing agreement, and we're talking about accusations going back 15 years or more.
Those who have issues with College Bowl's game play rules and eligibility requirements are stating their preference for a different game - College Bowl's rules are the same as they've been for over 20 years. The only eligibility requirement tweaks in the last 20 years have been to level the playing field between undergraduate-only schools and research universities and to otherwise promote undergraduate participation in an event that was being more and more dominated by graduate students and by those more appropriately positioned in ACF, NAQT, or the circuit. To put it succinctly, College Bowl didn't change, you did :-).
Dctuttle 05:42, 22 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I would rate the departure of 1/5 or so of CBCI's affiliated schools to be worthy of at least some mention. Pretending there was not SOME controversy during the 1990s is simply denying reality. While Random College is the same as (Harvard/Swarthmore/Maryland/Virginia/any of the other schools who have deaffiliated) in terms of CBCI's bottom line, to ignore the existence of a massive contrversy during the 1990s regarding CBCI's questions, treatment of players at tournaments, etc., is disingenious to the utmost. I believe that CBCI employees have a right to say "Look! We've changed!" and list ways in which they have, but the Great Exodus of the mid/late 1990s is certainly a milestone event in CBCI's history. Shawn Pickrell 11:27, 13 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
It is not the case, as DCtuttle says, that CBI's rules have remained the same for over twenty years. Just looking at the eligibility rules, CBI cut down on the number of grad students permitted per team from unlimited to two (1986) to one (sometime post 1990). Other formats have no limit.--Wehwalt 14:07, 18 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Criticism[edit]

Okay, this seemed to work better than edit warring and personal attacks on another article I watch, so here goes. There is a criticism section, which is inherently and admittedly POV. Now, wikipedians and quizbowlers (and the intersection thereof), I task it to you to find sources for these criticisms. Now, as they predate the explosion in the Internet, it will be more difficult. Potential conflicts of interest aside, one user brought up the point that the criticsm that had been there and has been restored was unsourced. But what to do with this? Do you cut it out or tag it as unsourced?

I think that these are valid criticisms, but that they should be backed up. Some relevant links are WP:CITE, WP:RS, and WP:OR. --Christopherlin 08:24, 14 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well, if there is now an "NPOV" criticism section, does that make mentioning current criticism of CBI fair game in its entry? Examples include, but are not limited to, the presence of a heavy amount of pop culture and general knowledge relative to that of academic contact, authoritarian conduct rules at Nationals (e.g. a common complaint is that players aren't allowed to leave the room to go to the bathroom without persmission in the time immediately before rounds), the de facto segregation of African American players through the existence of the parallel Honda tournament, and a Nationals field that is typically far weaker than those of ACF and NAQT nationals because the most involved quiz bowl players tend to boycott CBI (e.g. CBI's 2004/2005 champions, Minnesota, finished in the bottom bracket at the NAQT national tournaments of both years, behind a long list of teams that didn't even choose to attend a CBI tournament).
These all can be backed up with statisics or links to long discussion threads showing the existence of many actively involved quiz bowl players who have these grievances with CBI. Am I right in saying that "NPOV" is violated only when critical remarks are presented as unchallenged fact and not when presenting the fact that substantial criticism of a subject does exist? If that is the case, I plan on adding those criticisms and providing sources for them sometime in the future. After all, there is a substantial difference between the way laymen (e.g. school administrators) view CBI and the way that people who are actively participating in college quiz bowl view it, and I think this disconnect is worthy of being mentioned.—The preceding unsigned comment was added by 140.180.144.31 (talkcontribs) .

I believe, from my point of view, that is totally neutral Point of View, Mysmartmouth

Facts about opinions, yeah. Other facts team performance are fair. Distributions are facts. The history of NAQT and ACF are tied to that of CBI, addressing the concerns of quizbowlers.
Calling it "segregation" is a bit much. Is there a reason historically black colleges can't play College Bowl? Last I saw, there was no "colored quizbowl". I'd love to see HBCs compete in other quizbowl events. --Christopherlin 06:33, 15 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Until 1999, there was a reason that the HBCUs couldn't play -- to be eligible for the HCASC, the players had to agree to forgo participating in any other academic tournaments not run by CBI, and had to choose to play in either the HCASC or the regular CBI tournaments, not both. Since the HCASC offers substantial cash prizes to the winning schools, most schools chose it, and so CBI effectively created a racially segregated world for quizbowl. Under pressure from both HCASC participants and the hosts of other tournaments, the rule was finally lifted, and more and more HBCUs are sending teams to non-CBI tournaments. Pinball22 17:16, 10 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Winners[edit]

Someone might want to fix 1991, it is identical to 1987 (and verify the rest) dml 22:52, 1 May 2006 (UTC).[reply]

5-time winners.  The current text in the television section could give one the impression that all of the five-fold winners are listed.  This is not so.  For example, Lawrence U. won five times in the '64-'65 season. http://www.collegebowl.com/gecollegebowlresultrpt.asp .  If the list isn't too long, a list of all 5-time winners would enhance the article. Kdammers (talk) 02:38, 27 April 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Is There a Need/Demand for a Picture?[edit]

I have a B&W non-copyright picture of a winning College Bowl team, 1962. Would it be useful for the site. If so, how do I post it, as I am a wordsmith, not a picture monger? Bellagio99 13:08, 15 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Addendum to 1994 Results[edit]

I've previously sent a reminder about the 1994 NCT situation to College Bowl; however, I think they have a database behind their records page and are incapable of adding an explanatory note. No such problem here.

The article is correct in that Virginia lost to Chicago in the finals; however, BYU actually finished the round robin in second place but forfeited their place in the Sunday championship series for religious reasons. I was an eyewitness to this as a member of the Cornell team at that NCT, so that might be one source; the Usenet discussion here corroborates this.

Rdunlap1125 (talk) 01:51, 27 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Oh, I don't question you, I was there. I certainly have no objection to an explanatory note at the end of the list of results. As for getting satisfaction out of CBI, fuggetaboutit. I'm still sore about the '87 nationals.--Wehwalt (talk) 06:08, 27 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Focus of the article[edit]

I feel the the article is too occupied with the the College Bowl quizbowl format that existed from 1978 to 2008. The intro should be written to especially reflect the College Bowl television program. --Prisencolinensinainciusol (talk) 01:01, 2 April 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Introduction and offer of assistance[edit]

I'm Tom Michael, and I have participated in quiz bowl, especially College Bowl, as a player, volunteer, coach, employee, or consultant since the 1981-82 academic year. I was employed by the College Bowl Company and worked on College Bowl, Honda Campus All-Star Challenge, and Celtel and Zain Africa Challenges from June, 2006 through November, 2011. Currently, I occasionally serve as a paid consultant to Honda Campus All-Star Challenge and Richard Reid Productions. I also run the College Bowl Valhalla Facebook group, dedicated to exploring and preserving the early history of quiz bowl. I'm here to contribute information that will improve the quality of the College Bowl, HCASC, Africa Challenge and related quiz bowl pages, and also to contribute to unrelated pages that interest me.

I have reviewed Wikipedia's policies and guidelines and will abide by them. Due to conflict of interest rules, my edits will be restricted to talk pages for quiz-bowl related matters, and I will not engage in editing directly any quiz bowl-related article. Instead, I will volunteer information on the talk pages, and ask for Wikipedians' help. I am especially interested in working with a Wikipedia editor to improve the College Bowl, HCASC, and Africa Challenge page by adding numerous requested citations and helping identify unsourceable or incorrect statements. I can also work with College Bowl Company and my extensive personal collection to provide some photos for release into the public domain for illustration, and can assist with providing sources and information for the requested expansion of the section on G.E. College Bowl.

If you want to contact me about anything, and especially if you're an editor who would like to work with me to improve these pages, please leave a note on my talk page, or email me at tfm@africachallenge.com. --Tom Michael 02:09, 10 October 2014 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tfmichael (talkcontribs)

Requested edits for History section[edit]

As noted above in Talk and on my own editor page, I have a WP:COI with this topic and will not make edits directly. There is much I can do, however, to help improve this page; especially when it comes to adding sources and getting photos into public domain. I'll suggest this a bit at a time. Here's how I suggest improving the History section: 1) Call it "Early History" or "Origin and College Quiz Bowl" - the TV section on G.E. College Bowl is also history. 2) Replace the first sentence about the USO show origin story. Don Reid told that story to a lot of people - including me the first time I met him (original research, sorry :)) - but as the introduction to the 2011 University Challenge Quiz Book notes, there is some dispute about this. Exactly where Don got the idea is the subject of ongoing research, and the outcome is unknown. A better sentence, which can be sourced, is "Don Reid presented the general idea for a quiz between college teams to John Moses, and in 1953 the co-creators developed the format along with John Moses employee Allen Ludden." Sources: Grant Tinker, Tinker in Television, and Grant Tinker, interview with the archives of American Television, parts 1 & 2 of 10 at http://www.emmytvlegends.org/interviews/people/grant-tinker . Leave the second sentence about Tinker intact. His involvement becomes relevant again later in the article with the 1983 NBC Television special. 3) The paragraph about the format can be entirely sourced from Carol Nasr's 1970 College Bowl Quiz Book, which is already mentioned at the bottom of the page. Chapter "How to Play" pages 1-4. "Only the captain was allowed to give the answer [on bonuses]" is not correct: the "Captain" as a formal position didn't exist until the second season of the G.E. College Bowl TV show. Anyone could give a bonus answer in theory; in cases of disagreement among team members the Captain decided which answer was the team's official one (Nasr, p. 2). 4) All but the last sentence of the third paragraph of this section can be sourced from http://www.collegebowl.com/gecollegebowlradioresultrptdlg.asp . The last sentence of the third paragraph is an unsourced observation, but I think an accurate, obvious, and noncontroversial one. Tom Michael 21:07, 28 October 2014 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tfmichael (talkcontribs)

External links modified[edit]

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Edit request to update and expand article[edit]

On behalf of College Bowl, I am proposing article updates as part of my work at Web Weaving. Due to conflict of interest, I'd like to avoid direct editing and ask uninvolved editors to review the suggestions for accuracy and neutrality. Client has provided feedback to ensure accuracy.

Edit requests

1. Expanding Introduction to fix inaccuracies, provide better information, as well as add information about Campus All Star Challenge & Africa Challenge. New proposed introduction;

College Bowl (also known as General Electric (G.E.) College Bowl) is a radio, television, and student quiz show. College Bowl first aired on American radio stations in 1953 as College Quiz Bowl. It then moved to American television broadcast networks, airing 1959 to 1963 on CBS and from 1963 to 1970 on NBC. In 1977, the president of College Bowl, Richard Reid, developed it into a non-televised national championship competition on campuses across America through an affiliation with the Association of College Unions International (ACUI), that lasted for 31 years. In 1989, College Bowl introduced a (sponsored) version of College Bowl for Historically Black Colleges (HBCUs) called Honda Campus All-Star Challenge (HCASC) that is ongoing. In 2007, College Bowl produced a new version and format of the game as an international championship in Africa, called Africa Challenge (Celtel Africa Challenge, Zain Africa Challenge). The College Bowl Campus Program and National Championship ran until 2008. In November 2020, NBCUniversal announced a revival of the show, developed from the format of Honda Campus All-Star Challenge and Africa Challenge, with Peyton Manning as host and a ten-episode run has been ordered.[1]

--

References for Honda Campus All-Star Challenge and Africa Challenge are already cited on their wiki pages.

2. In "Television" section, correct inaccuracy with network TV information;

-•	Alumni Fun, which appeared on all three major TV networks in the 1960s and featured former college students 

Should be changed to:

-•	Alumni Fun, which appeared on ABC and CBSTV networks in the 1960s and featured former college students

Thank you for your help! Please let me know if there are any issues with these requests or how they could be improved if necessary. Jerohrer (talk) 03:26, 13 March 2021 (UTC)Jerohrer[reply]

Update: Due to the large edit request log I went ahead and applied my suggested changes, as I believe they are neutral and non-controversial. If another editor disagrees I am more than welcome to revert them and discuss another solution. Thank you! Jerohrer (talk) 23:29, 18 March 2021 (UTC)Jerohrer[reply]

Edit request to Remove/Edit Criticism Section[edit]

Hello! I am coming today to request edits of the Criticism section of this wiki. I know the discussion around the Criticism has been controversial before, which is why I'd prefer another editor review and make the the requested changes. The reason we continue to seek changes for this section is due to the fact the references to the alleged incidents are from biased sources with conflicts of interest, written in non-neutral point of view, and personal opinions with no actual proof provided.

The article links three different sources: a Slate article from 2012, a quiz bowl newsletter from 1988, and the book Brainiac (2006) by Ken Jennings. Each of these sources has significant issues and the problems with Brainiac will be dealt with the most thoroughly, as the book is the essence of being written from a non-neutral point of view, biased, and by an employee of a competitor of College Bowl, and therefore, should not be used as a source on anything about the College Bowl program, the College Bowl Company, or any of its associated productions.

I am going to start with the easiest to refute issues and end with the bias/conflict of interest issues.

Edit requests

1: Requesting Removal of The 1987 National Tournament on the Disney Channel saw additional controversy, as a number of protested matches proved to strain the television format.

Reason: There is no mention of the 1987 Disney Channel tournament in any of the listed sources. I am unclear about how this information ended up on this page in the first place, since the "references" do not mention this at all. This Washington Post article details information about the Disney Channel Tournament, with no mention of issues or controversy. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/tv/1987/09/20/quick-recall-and-competition/ff2e64a3-6d49-4d23-9137-99678a73f86e/ As well as this LA Times Article, https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-10-11-me-13302-story.html, which also does not mention any issues with the Tournament.

If someone can provide a resource confirming this 'controversy', I will retract this removal request, but at this time it appears to be unsourced and false information and should be removed.

2: Requesting removal or edit of In the 1987 regional tournament, College Bowl was accused of recycling questions from previous tournaments, thereby possibly compromising the integrity of results.

Reason: This sentence is not written in a Neutral point of view, according to Wikipedia's guidelines. "Accused", "compromising the integrity of results" is a purposefully negative interpretation of events. The actual article referenced says "...when the teams arrived, they discovered that those were the questions reused by the "College" Bowl Co. this year, and so the regional was postponed until different questions could be obtained." https://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~quizbowl/newsletters/Buzzer3.html

It only documents one incident, in one of 15 regions; which was quickly caught and new questions were issued. I argue that a single, poorly documented incident in a single year, is not notable enough to warrant being mentioned as a "Criticism". I believe it was brought up in bad faith and should also be removed. However, if other editors prefer, it could also be reedited to directly quote the actual article, instead of the negative wording being used now.

3: Disallow information cited from Brainiac by Ken Jennings, https://archive.org/details/brainiac00kenj, and removal of remaining 'criticisms' due to lack of sources, opinion being stated as fact, bias, and conflict of interest.

Reason: The additional information in the Criticism Section are opinion pieces cited from the book Brainiac, by Ken Jennings. Additionally, the Slate article only has one paragraph focuses on criticism of College Bowl and is a direct pull quote from Ken Jennings’ Brainiac(pages 33-34). No other sources are mentioned for this information, meaning these two references are essentially one and the same.

The main issue with this source is that is Mr. Jennings was a writer and editor for National Academic Quiz Tournaments (NAQT), a direct competitor of College Bowl. Mr. Jennings is a well-published writer on quiz bowl and knowledge games in general, and where he has been required to disclose his conflicts of interest, he has often been open about them. Unfortunately, that disclosure is found nowhere his book Brainiac and the cited source on Wikipedia. It is easy to see how earlier Wikipedia editors missed the undisclosed bias. In his book, Mr. Jenning's complaints and issues with College Bowl are not sourced, they are purely personal opinion. Notably, the personal opinion of someone working with College Bowl's direct competitor at the time.

According to Wikipedia:ASSERT's information, "The text of Wikipedia articles should assert facts, but not assert opinions as fact."

In this case, Ken Jennings opinion's are being cited as fact, with no additional proof. If other editors believe this section should remain, it needs to reediting to directly attribute these opinions to Ken Jennings and note his conflict of interest, instead of presenting them like fact. If there were issues with false accusations of Copyright infringement, which I am unable to find references for, it should be presented in a neutral point of view.

I would appreciate any help from other editors with the above issues. I am open to discussion about the best way to proceed with having these issues edited or removed. Thank you so much for your time Jerohrer (talk) 19:17, 28 June 2021 (UTC)Jerohrer[reply]

You're literally being paid by College Bowl to edit this page and you want other people's contributions removed for "bias"? And the part that it "biased" just happens to be the entire criticism section, even though the backlash against College Bowl's demeaning treatment of players and nonexistent quality standards is the entire story of the development of college quizbowl over a 30-year period? Do I have this right? Quizindex (talk) 23:48, 28 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Hello! Thanks for your input. I believe I explained all of the reasoning in my edit request. 1. That some of the cited information doesn't have sources, like the Disney Tournament. 2. The section about question recycling could quote the actual source, which would be more accurate, instead of the negative wording being currently used. 3. The issue with the other sections of criticism is how they are being cited as fact, when they are really the opinions of Ken Jennings, who happens to be an employee of College Bowl's competitor. At the very least, that information should be edited to say they are Ken Jennings's opinions, like I mentioned above, as per Wikipedia:ASSERT's information. As you have demonstrated, there are some people with negative biases towards College Bowl; but I understand it would be frowned upon if I touched that section myself, which is why I am looking for help from a neutral party. Jerohrer (talk) 18:26, 1 July 2021 (UTC)Jerohrer[reply]

Agnes Scott v Princeton[edit]

This game has become very mythologized, but is there a reliable cite for it being considered a particularly big upset or news story at the time? If you watch the available recordings of other episode of the 1960s TV show it doesn't seem that either women as participants, or smaller colleges beating more traditionally prestigious schools, were particularly unusual. I get the sense that there is an over-focus on this match because it is one of the few full-length color games of the original College Bowl show that is available for free on Youtube. Quizindex (talk) 10:42, 29 July 2021 (UTC)[reply]

2021 edition sourcing[edit]

Most of the section about the 2021 edition on NBC is completely unsourced and appears to be just be written by someone who watched the show (or got the results directly from the show’s web site), and is overly detailed to boot. In the interest of Wikipedia integrity, I’m going to delete anything that isn’t properly referenced, unless someone of course can come up with secondary sources for them. NewkirkPlaza (talk) 20:37, 23 August 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Extra space removed[edit]

Until my edit 20 minute ago there was more space than normal between the 2nd and 3rd paragraphs of the British version section, as if a passage had been deleted. I removed what appeared to be the superfluous empty line. Mcljlm (talk) 14:39, 14 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]