I don't know how many of you care about the National Spelling Bee
(I do, because I got as far as my local finals in 1967), but there was
a glaring piece of unfairness on Friday night's telecast that was commented
on by one of the participants to the audience's applause:
It seems that ABC was afraid there wouldn't be enough spellers to fill out
a two-hour telecast and allowed only the ten spellers still on stage at the
end of Friday afternoon's truncated session to take part in the primetime
telecast. The problem is that six did not have to spell a word in the afternoon
and were allowed into the telecast because they came from states near the
top of the alphabet. (Nine spellers had been eliminated in the afternoon round--
ABC deemed 19 too many for the telecast but feared that 10 was too few.)
One finalist, Elizabeth Platz of Shelbina, MO, won the audience's applause when
she said, "I'd rather have five finalists than five who didn't deserve it."
BTW, Anamika Veeramani of North Royalton, OH, correctly spelled a medical term,
"stromuhr" (don't ask me what it means) to win it all, including more than $40,000
in cash and prizes.
If this is the way ABC is going to operate, put the whole thing back on ESPN.
(I do, because I got as far as my local finals in 1967), but there was
a glaring piece of unfairness on Friday night's telecast that was commented
on by one of the participants to the audience's applause:
It seems that ABC was afraid there wouldn't be enough spellers to fill out
a two-hour telecast and allowed only the ten spellers still on stage at the
end of Friday afternoon's truncated session to take part in the primetime
telecast. The problem is that six did not have to spell a word in the afternoon
and were allowed into the telecast because they came from states near the
top of the alphabet. (Nine spellers had been eliminated in the afternoon round--
ABC deemed 19 too many for the telecast but feared that 10 was too few.)
One finalist, Elizabeth Platz of Shelbina, MO, won the audience's applause when
she said, "I'd rather have five finalists than five who didn't deserve it."
BTW, Anamika Veeramani of North Royalton, OH, correctly spelled a medical term,
"stromuhr" (don't ask me what it means) to win it all, including more than $40,000
in cash and prizes.
If this is the way ABC is going to operate, put the whole thing back on ESPN.