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TV ONE newsreader Peter Williams takes on the role of Quizmaster in this highly anticipated quiz of a lifetime. 32 contenders, 32 specialist subjects, 1 title. Who will be crowned New Zealand's Mastermind?

Primary Title
  • Mastermind New Zealand
Date Broadcast
  • Sunday 1 May 2016
Start Time
  • 19 : 45
Finish Time
  • 20 : 30
Duration
  • 45:00
Episode
  • 1
Channel
  • TV One
Broadcaster
  • Television New Zealand
Programme Description
  • TV ONE newsreader Peter Williams takes on the role of Quizmaster in this highly anticipated quiz of a lifetime. 32 contenders, 32 specialist subjects, 1 title. Who will be crowned New Zealand's Mastermind?
Classification
  • G
Owning Collection
  • Chapman Archive
Broadcast Platform
  • Television
Languages
  • English
Captioning Languages
  • English
Captions
Live Broadcast
  • No
Rights Statement
  • Made for the University of Auckland's educational use as permitted by the Screenrights Licensing Agreement.
Hosts
  • Peter Williams (Presenter)
SUSPENSEFUL DRUM MUSIC Captions by Glenna Casalme. www.able.co.nz Captions were made possible with funding from NZ On Air. Copyright Able 2016 Many think they have what it takes to cope with the pressure of the spotlight, but who will handle it better than the others? Join us on the search for NZ's Mastermind. Hello there. Yes, four contenders tonight who all think they have what it takes to be NZ's Mastermind. They'll be on the spotlight not just on their specialist subject but also on general knowledge and then on a subject area of their choice about NZ. Our first consultation tonight is with Auckland doctor Julyan Lawry. Her specialist subject ` the life and works of Stephen Fry. Then comes Ryan Wood ` a librarian from Tauranga. His subject, the NZ wars. Andrew Taylor is a writer from Upper Hutt. Tonight he's answering questions on the Princess Bride. And Don Rae, from Governors Bay, who's a consultant, will display his knowledge of the history of the NZ Trotting Cup. So, would our first contender please come to the chair? SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC CONTINUES < Your name, please. < And your occupation. I'm a GP. < And your specialist subject. So, Stephen Fry for 90 seconds, starting from... now. Writer, actor, comedian and television presenter Stephen Fry met his long-time collaborator, Hugh Laurie, at Cambridge University. What was the theatre company they joined together? Footlights. Correct. The first series of Jeeves and Wooster was filmed in 1989, immediately after Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie recorded which series of Blackadder? Uh, the fourth. Correct. For a 1995 television documentary on satire, Fry walked around London wearing a toga, shouting a verse by which Roman poet? Juvenal. Correct. Fry claims he spent only four months writing his first novel, which was published in 1991. What is it called? The Liar. Correct. At his house in Norfolk, Fry once hosted which two member of the royal family for afternoon tea? The Prince and Princess of Wales. Correct. In 1995, Fry walked out of his role alongside comedian Rik Mayall in the play Cell Mates by Simon Gray. Which of Gray's other plays did Fry appear in with Rik Mayall in 1988? The Common Pursuit. Correct. What remand prison was Fry sent to aged 18 after he was arrested for credit card fraud? Pucklechurch Prison. Correct. Previously awarded to comedian Eric Morecambe and politician Harold Wilson, what award did Fry receive in 2003? The Pipe Smoker of the Year. Correct. What character did Fry play in a 1982 television commercial for Whitbread Best Bitter beer? Count Ivan Skavinsky Skavar. Correct. Fry was best man at which friend's wedding at the Russian Tea Room in New York on the 5th of February 1990? Rowan Atkinson. Correct. Latin` TIMER BEEPS I've started, so I'll finish. 'Latin! or Tobacco and Boys' is a play that Fry wrote at university under what pseudonym? Pass. Sue Denim. Typical Stephen Fry, I suppose. (CHUCKLES) Anyway, you have scored an extremely classy 10 points. We'll see you later in the show. APPLAUSE Let's welcome our second contender to the chair, please. < And your name? < Your occupation? < And your specialist subject? So, 90 seconds on the NZ wars, starting from... now. What was the original name of the township of Russell in the Bay of Islands, where conflict sparked the beginning of the Northland Wars in 1845? Kororareka. Correct. Which war did Lieutenant Duncan Cameron serve in during the mid-1850s before taking up his position in NZ as the commander of the Imperial Forces? The Crimean War. Correct. Who was the female warrior who gave water to dying British soldiers after the Battle of Gate Pa? Pass. Maori tribes fought as one army for the first time against the British in which battle on the 27th of June 1860? The Battle of Puketakauere. Correct. What animal was the Ngapuhi chief Hone Heke likened to by Kotiro, the Maori wife of a European settler ` an insult that filled tensions during the Northern Wars? A dog? A pig. Which of the islands within the Chatham Group was Te Kooti Arikirangi sent to live in exile in 1866? Chatham Island. No, Wharekauri. Who was the one-eyed Ngaruahine leader who boasted about cannibalism to instil terror in his enemies? Uh, Te Ua Haumene? No. Riwha Titokowaru. The Taranaki pa known as Te Kohia is also known by what other name due to its shape? Pass. The NZ wars ended on the 14th of February 1872. What was the name of the Arawa private who fired the last shots? Nikora Te Tuhi. Correct. Who, according to historian James Belich, designed the modern pa with anti-artillery bunkers at Ohaeawai` TIMER BEEPS ...during the Northern Wars? You may answer. Kawiti. Correct. Ryan, you passed on two questions. The female warrior who gave the water to the dying British soldiers was Heni Te Kiri Karamu. And the Taranaki pa known as Te Kohia is also known as L Pa because of its shape. But, Ryan Wood, you've scored five points. APPLAUSE And now would contender number three please come to the chair? < Your name, please. < Your occupation. I'm a writer. < And your specialist subject. 90 seconds, then, on the Princess Bride, starting from now. William Goldman's novel The Princess Bride was published in 1973. In what year was the cult classic film released? '87. Correct. According to the novel, what type of dagger does Count Rugen throw at Inigo in the billiard room? Pass. What is the name of the odourless, tasteless poison placed in the goblets during the battle of the wits between the mysterious man in black and the Sicilian criminal mastermind Vizzini? Iocane powder. Correct. What is the name of the great pirate ship captained by Dread Pirate Roberts? The Revenge. Correct. At which country did the original Dread Pirate Roberts retire? Argentina. Correct. In the novel, three women are described as the most beautiful in the world before Buttercup turns 18. What is the name of one of them ` a 20-year-old from Sussex on the Thames? Pass. What are the grandfather's last three words in the film? As you wish. Correct. In the novel, what was the name of the author who wrote the books published by Harpers on how we screw up our children? Pass. In 2002 the American Film Institute listed the Princess Bride among its 100 greatest love stories of all time. Where did the film rank on the list? 56. 88th. What is the name of the British actor who played the king in the Princess Bride, six years before his death in 1993? Willoughby Gray. Correct. Who was the late Olympic fencer and renowned fight choreographer who was swordmaster for the film? Bob Anderson. Correct. The Princess Bride received an Oscar nomination in 1988` TIMER BEEPS ...for best music, original song` I've started, so I'll finish. Who wrote and sang Storybook Love? Uh, Willy Deville. How could we forget? That is correct. Andrew, you've passed on three. It was a Florinese dagger that Count Rugen threw at Inigo de Montoya. One of the most beautiful women in the world was Adela Terrell. And the name of the author who wrote about 'how we screw up our children' ` it was Edith Neisser. But, Andrew Taylor, you have scored eight points. APPLAUSE And we will be back shortly with our fourth contender in the specialist subject round, and then we'll start testing the contenders' general knowledge. SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC . SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC And welcome back to Mastermind. Time for our fourth contender to please come to the chair. Your name, please. Your occupation. I'm a consultant. And your specialist subject? The history of the NZ Trotting Cup in 90 seconds, starting from... now. The NZ Cup is the most prestigious harness racing event in NZ. Which horse won the first ever cup held in 1904? Monte Carlo. Correct. Which trainer described the 3-year-old Indianapolis who would go on to win the cup in 1934, 1935 and 1936 as the greatest pacer ever foaled? Eugene McDermott. No, Bill Tomkinson. Trotting phenomenon Reta Peter won her second cup in 1921 after a protest against which horse that had crossed her in the straight? Sherwood. Correct. Which previous cup-winning driver had three consecutive wins with two different horses between 2000 and 2010? Todd Mitchell. Correct. Cecil Devine, who won the cup six times in the 1950s was born in which state of Australia? Tasmania. Correct. The photo finish was first used in the NZ Cup in 1946. It showed Integrity a half ahead in front of which other horse? Pass. Which Invercargill trainer described the 1974 cup winner Robalan as being mad as snake? Pass. Which driver was leading by 2.5 furlongs in the 1939 Cup race when tragically, he suffered a fatal heart attack? Eugene McDermott. Correct. In which Scottish town did James Bryce start his career prior to training six cup winners, including Cathedral Chimes and Ahuriri? Edinburgh. No, Govan. Great Adios, winner of the 1967 cup, was the daughter of a mare that Aucklander Neil Morten had won in a game of what? Poker. Correct. Which Canterbury horseman and cup winner claimed to be the owner of the first pneumatic-tyred sulky` TIMER BEEPS ...made in NZ? You may answer. Pass. Don, it was Bert Edwards. Couple of other passed questions. The Invercargill trainer who described Robalan as being mad as snake was Gil Shirley. And in the photo finish in 1946, Integrity was half ahead in front of Josedale Grattan. But, Don Rae, you have scored six points. APPLAUSE So that is the end of the Specialist Subject round. Time to check the scores. In fourth place, on five points, Ryan Wood. In third place, on six points, Don Rae. In second place, on eight points, Andrew Taylor. And our first round leader, with 10 points, Julyan Lawry. APPLAUSE But still two more rounds of questioning to go. It's time for round two ` that's general knowledge. Let's have Ryan Wood back in the chair, please. Ryan's scoring five points on the NZ wars. The Tauranga librarian. Now it's time for general knowledge. Ryan, 90 second for you, starting from now. In Animal Farm, what type of animal propounds the theory that while all animals are equal, some animals are more equal than others? A pig. Correct. Which international lawn tennis trophy named after its donor began in 1900 as a competition between the United States and Britain? Pass. Who collaborated with Ricky Gervais in the writing of series such as The Office and Extras? Stephen Merchant. Correct. What name for a dock worker who loads and unload ships comes from the Spanish for 'to pack' or 'to stow a cargo'? A navy? No, a stevedore. What sculpture completed in 1886 was originally conceived by its designer, Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, as a lighthouse for the Suez Canal entitled Egypt Brings Light to Asia? That Statue of Liberty? Correct. Which planet is usually the brightest when viewed from Earth and is often known as morning or evening star? Venus. Correct. What is the title of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's 1928 version of the Beggar's Opera? The Threepenny Opera. Correct. The leathery seed pod of the carob tree, dried and ground, is often used as a substitute for which confectionary item? Chocolate. Correct. Who won a Best Actress Oscar for the title role in Annie Hall? Diane Lane? No, Diane Keaton. The ancient hilltop palace and fortifications Masada look out over which inland sea? Galilee. No, the Dead Sea. Which country was invaded by Soviet troops in December 1979 and occupied for nine years? Afghanistan. Correct. Which city was the capital of the Russian empire almost continuously from 1712` TIMER BEEPS I've started, so I'll finish. Until the overthrow of the Romanov dynasty in 1918? St Petersburg. Correct. Ryan, you had just the one pass. And the tennis trophy named after its donor, which began back in 1900 is the Davis Cup. But, Ryan Wood, you've done well. You've scored eight points. APPLAUSE And our next contender to the chair is Don Rae. Don with six points after answering questions on the history of the NZ Trotting Cup. Don, let's see how you go now on general knowledge. 90 seconds, starting from now. In the Bible, what was the name of the firstborn son of Adam and Eve who slew his brother Abel? Cain. Correct. What does 'con carne' mean in the name of the Mexican-American dish 'chilli con carne'? With meat. Correct. What is the name of Alice's cat in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass? Pass. Who did Muhammad Ali knock out in the Rumble in the Jungle in Kinshasa in October 1974 to regain the World Heavyweight title? George Foreman. Correct. In which television comedy was the catchphrase of the local French resistance leader Michelle Dubois, 'Listen very carefully; I will say this only once'? 'Allo, 'Allo, 'Allo! Correct. Uh, no, I'm sorry, that's wrong. It's just 'Allo, 'Allo. What term for a person who holds a temporary position in place of another, especially a doctor, is the accusative of the Latin word for 'place'? Locum. Correct. In a heroic portrait by Jacques-Louis David who was depicted at his own request sitting calm on a fiery steed crossing the Alps? Napoleon. Correct. What animal is trapped in a box in a famous thought experiment devised by the physicist Erwin Schrodinger? A cat. Correct. What is the usual colour of the flower of the saffron crocus? Yellow. No. Purple. Which general who commanded the American expeditionary force in Europe during the First World War was known as Black Jack because of his service with black troops earlier in his career? General Pershing. Correct. Who plays Ripley, the sole human survivor of the spaceship Nostromo in the film Alien? Pass. What is the only country`? TIMER BEEPS I've started, so I'll finish. What is the only country to have both the equator and the Tropic of Capricorn running through it? Brazil. Correct. Don, you have two passes. The name of Alice's cat is Dinah. And the person who plays Ripley in the film Alien is... ...Sigourney Weaver. Yes, you should've said that at the time, shouldn't you? You've scored eight points. A good recovery. Don Rae. APPLAUSE And we will return very soon with the two other contenders in the General Knowledge round. SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC . SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC Great to have you here with us on Mastermind as we continue our General Knowledge round. Time for Andrew Taylor, please, to return to the chair. Andrew, who scored eight points on the Princess Bride. Now it is time, sir, for 90 seconds on general knowledge, starting from now. Which botanist and environmentalist became a television star in the 1970s after appearing on a popular television series Don't Ask Me? David Bellamy. Correct. What term for a second crop of grass after the first has been mowed or harvested has come to mean the state of affairs following a significant event, especially one that is destructive? Aftermath. Correct. Stolen in Draguignan in 1999 but later recovered in 2014, the 17th Century painting 'Child with Soap Bubble' was reputedly painted by which Dutch artist? Rembrandt. Correct. The childhood epidemic 'parotitis' that causes severe swellings at the sides of the face is more commonly known by what name? Mumps. Correct. Which American writer best known for his horror novels has also written under the name Richard Bachman? Stephen King. Correct. Gueule de bois, meaning wooden mouth, is French slang for what condition resulting from overindulgence in alcohol? Pass. In the film Shrek, and its sequels, what is the name of the princess voiced by Cameron Diaz? Fiona. Correct. K2, the second-highest mountain in the world lies on the border between China and which other country? Ti` Tibet. No, Pakistan. Which Caribbean republic was a French slave colony known as St Dominique from 1697 until after the revolution of 1791? Guyana? No, Haiti. In which country is the city of Da Nang, the site of a major US airbase in the '60s and early '70s? Guam. No, Vietnam. Who composed Rhapsody in Blue, first performed in New York, in February of 1924? TIMER BEEPS Gershwin. George Gershwin is correct. Andrew, just the one passed question. Gueule de bois ` it's French slang for a hangover. Something I'm sure you're not acquainted with. Anyway, you have scored a further seven points. Well done. APPLAUSE Now let's welcome our first round leader back to the chair. Julyan Lawry with 10 points on the life and works of Stephen Fry. Competition's got very tough in this round of general knowledge questions. Julyan, let's see how you go. 90 seconds... starting from now. What colour carpet is traditionally put down for celebrities to walk on? Red. Correct. Which Benjamin Britten opera based on a story by Henry James features two children and has nursery rhymes woven into the score? Peter and the Wolf? No, The Turn of the Screw. In 2011, what drink did the Russian government decide to reclassify as alcoholic? Previously, drinks of less than 10% alcohol had been categorised as food. Vodka. No, beer. Who was Jerry Leiber's partner in the songwriting team that wrote Elvis Presley's hits Hound Dog and Jailhouse Rock? Pass. The River Danube flows through four capital cities on its way to the Black Sea. Which is the furthest upstream? Budapest. No, Vienna. Which national heroine led the French forces that gained the decisive victory over the English at Orleans in 1429 during the Hundred Years' War? Joan of Arc. Correct. In meteorology, what general term is used for winds between Force 7 and Force 9 on the Beaufort scale? Um, gale force. Correct. Which Russian writer's works include One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich and the Gulag Archipelago? Dostoevsky. No, Solzhenitsyn. Who starred as Freddy Quell, a troubled navy veteran, alongside Philip Seymour Hoffman in the 2012 film The Master? Pass. Which breed of hound known as the royal dog of Egypt and dating back to ancient times was originally bred to hunt gazelle? Pass. Who was the Conservative prime minister of Britain from 1970 until 1974? Um, Heath. Correct. What is the colour`? TIMER BEEPS I've started, so I'll finish. What's the colour of the skullcap, or zucchetto, worn by the Pope, that is a symbol of his rank? White. Correct. Julyan, you passed on three. Jerry Leiber's partner writing Hound Dog and Jailhouse Rock was Mike Stoller. Staring as Freddie Quell in The Master alongside Philip Seymour Hoffman was Joaquin Phoenix, and the breed of hound known as the royal dog of Egypt is saluki. Julyan Lawry, you've scored five points. APPLAUSE All of which means we have an extraordinarily close contest after two rounds. Let's check the numbers to see how the contenders are faring. In fourth place, on 13 points, Ryan Wood. In third place, on 14 points, Don Rae. And tied for first, on 15 points, Julyan Lawry and Andrew Taylor. APPLAUSE So, everybody has everything to play for in round three ` it's our NZ round. Each contender must answer questions, again for 90 seconds, on their choice from one of five subject areas ` arts and literature, history, popular culture, science and nature, including geography and sport. So we'll ask Ryan Wood to please return to the chair. Ryan with 13 points but only two points out of the lead at the moment. You did well on the NZ wars; let's see how you go in wider matters of NZ history. 90 seconds, starting from now. Originally an agricultural college, which university now with campuses in Auckland, Palmerston North and Wellington was first opened in 1928? Massey University. Correct. Between 1893 and 1905, which NZ Liberal Party leader was re-elected five consecutive times? Richard Seddon. Correct. On the 24th of December 1953, 151 people were killed in the Tangiwai disaster. What was the name of the river into which the train crashed? Pass. Bungy pioneer AJ Hackett was arrested by Maritime Police after jumping off which bridge in 1987? London Bridge. No, Auckland Harbour Bridge. What was the colloquial name given to the 1970s police practice of searching for illegal immigrants from the Pacific Islands in the early hours of the morning? Dawn Raids. Correct. Previously Solicitor General and chief executive of the Crown Law Office, which supreme court judge was knighted in the 2016 New Year's Honours? Pass. Wellington replaced which city as the capital of NZ in 1865? Auckland. Correct. Prime Minister Robert Muldoon condemned which organisation led by John Minto for its opposition to the 1981 Springbok tour? HART. Correct. Which Ngati Porou leader was the first Maori to complete a university degree in NZ when he did so in 1893? Apirana Ngata. Correct. Opened on the 28th of September 1990, what is the name of the tourist attraction in Christchurch that also supports scientific research programmes in Antarctica? Pass. Who was the first prime minister to be elected under MMP in 1996? Jim Bolger. Correct. In December 1769` TIMER BEEPS I've started, so I'll finish. Which adventurer on his only visit to NZ spent two weeks in Doubtless Bay before sailing to South America, along with Ngati Kahu leader Ranginui? Um, Marion Dufresne? No, it was Jean de Surville. Ryan, you've passed on three. The river that the train in the Tangiwai disaster crashed into was the Wangaehu River. Uh, the man who was knighted in the New Year's Honours list this year was Sir Terence Arnold, who's a supreme court judge. And in 1990, it was the International Antarctic Centre which opened in Christchurch. But, Ryan Wood, you have scored a further seven points. APPLAUSE Well, he's set the pace. Coming up on Mastermind, our final three contenders are tested in the NZ round. INDICATOR CLICKS RHYTHMICALLY (GASPS) SILENCE (EXHALES SLOWLY) Mate, I'm so sorry. I thought there was time. You just pulled out. I don't have time to stop. It was a simple mistake. LOUD RUMBLING Please. (VOICE TREMBLES) I've got my boy in the back. I'm going too fast. I'm sorry. (SOBS) SEAT BELT CLICKS EERIE CREAKING HARSH WHOOSHING SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC Welcome back to Mastermind. As we continue our NZ round, it could hardly be closer. We have one point separating three contenders. So, with Don Rae. Please return to the chair. Don, who did so well in general knowledge with eight points, to lift him up into third place at this stage. 90 seconds, then, on NZ history, starting from now. On the 6th of August 1985, the NZ Geographic Board approved what new name for Mt Egmont? Uh, Taranaki. Correct. 189 soldiers and sailors lost their lives when which Royal Navy corvette foundered at the entrance to Manukau Harbour on the 7th of February 1863? Uh, the Orpheus. Correct. Dating from 1903 and on long-term loan to Wellington's Te Papa museum, what is the name of NZ's rarest postage stamp? Pass. On the 9th of October 1967, a change in the liquor licensing laws, ending the so-called 6 o'clock swill, allowed pubs to stay open until what time? 10 o'clock. Correct. In May 2006, who became the first ever double amputee to climb Mt Everest despite losing both legs below the knee to frostbite 24 years earlier? Mark Inglis. Correct. By what name was the Upper House of the NZ Parliament known before it was abolished on the 1st of January 1951? Pass. Which denomination of coin was withdrawn from circulation on the 31st of July 2006? Uh, the 5c piece. Correct. On the 17th of June 1929, which settlement was virtually destroyed by a powerful earthquake which left 17 people dead? Murchison. Correct. Which pioneering surgeon performed NZ's first open-heart surgery at Auckland's Greenlane Hospital in 1958? Brian Barratt-Boyes. Correct. In 1969, the poet James K Baxter established a commune at Jerusalem on the banks of which river? Whanganui. Correct. Named by Capt James Cook for the protection from the weather it affords the Hauraki Gulf` TIMER BEEPS ...what is the Maori name for Great Barrier Island? Pass. Don, it is Aotea. The other passed questions, a couple of them ` the Upper House of the NZ Parliament was known as the Legislative Council. And the rarest NZ postage stamp is the Lake Taupo Invert. But, Don Rae, you have scored eight points. APPLAUSE So, a strong score from Don Rae. That's really put the pressure on our co-leaders. Let's bring Julyan Lawry back to the chair. Julyan off to such a hot start with 10 correct answers for the life and works of Stephen Fry. Well, let's see how you go, then, on NZ art and literature. 90 seconds... starting from now. Which Canadian-born NZer won the Man Booker Prize for her novel The Luminaries? Eleanor Catton. Correct. Author Craig Smith created which well-known fictional animal based on a children's song he wrote five years earlier? The Wonky Donkey. Correct. Often drawing on his Ngapuhi and Pakeha heritage in his work, which contemporary artist was made an Officer of the NZ Order of Merit in 2012? Ralph Hotere? No, Shane Cotton. Which soprano's international career was launched when she won NZ's Mobil Song Quest in 1965? Dame Kiri Te Kanawa. Correct. Born on the 23rd of April 1895, which NZ crime writer created the character Inspector Roderick Alleyn? Dame Ngaio` Ngaio Marsh. Correct. The words, 'Surrender to the sky your heart of anger,' is an excerpt from which James K Baxter poem? Pass. Heavenly Creatures and The Frighteners are both films directed by which NZ director? Peter Jackson. Correct. Which NZer's autobiography 'If I Only Had Time' is named after the title of one of his best-known hits? Ray Columbus? No, John Rowles. Which NZ sculptor known for his use of light and recycled objects represented NZ at the 2013 Venice Biennale with his exhibition Front Door Out Back? Pass. Launched in October 1946 and performing its first concert March of 1947, what was the original name of the NZ Symphony Orchestra? Um, the National Orchestra? Correct. Now part of Canterbury Museum's collections, Fred and Myrtle Flutey's Paua House was once a tourist attraction` TIMER BEEPS I've started, so I'll finish ` in which town? Uh, Kaikoura. No. Bluff. (MOUTHS) So, Julyan, two passes. 'Surrender to the sky your heart of anger,' comes from JK Baxter's High Country Weather. And the NZ sculptor at the Venice Biennale in 2103 was Bill Culbert. But you have scored a further six points. APPLAUSE So, he knows what he has to do. Let's bring Andrew Taylor back to the chair. Yes, on 15 points after two rounds, you've chosen NZ popular culture as your NZ topic. 90 seconds, starting from now. The line, 'You're not in Guatemala now, Dr Ropata,' was immortalised in which long-running television series? Shortland Street. Correct. Released in 2010, which NZ feature films features a gang known as the Crazy Horses? Pass. Previously a member of the band Midnight Youth, Clouds Are Alive is the debut solo album of which NZ musician? Pass. Which iconic NZ film includes a scene in which police chase the Blondini Gang through Wellington Central Railway Station? Goodbye Pork Pie. Correct. Who narrated the satirical 2005 television series The Unauthorised History of NZ? Rhys Darby? No. Jeremy Wells. In 1995, which documentary by Peter Jackson and Costa Botes about pioneering film-maker Colin McKenzie was later revealed to be an elaborate hoax? Pass. Founded in 1999, online auction Trade Me was later sold for over $700 million to which Australasian media company? Fairfax Media. Correct. Kirsten Morrell is best known as the female lead vocalist for which NZ band? Goldenhorse. Correct. Which fashion designer, who began her company with husband Lloyd in 1982, is known for her high-quality knitwear and is now one of NZ's most successful designers in the Australasian market? Pass. The lyrics, 'Can I have another piece of chocolate cake?' featured in a 1991 single by which NZ band? Split Enz. No. Crowded House. Run by on-screen characters Mac and Smudge, Illuminator is a fictitious marketing agency in which NZ television series? TIMER BEEPS You may answer. Gloss. No. Nothing Trivial. Oh, of course it was. (CHUCKLES) Andrew, you've passed on four questions. Let's go through them for you. The 2010 film featuring the Crazy Horses was Boy. Uh, previously a member of the band Midnight Youth, Jeremy Redmore debuted with Clouds Are Alive as his, uh, solo album. Uh, the 1995 spoof documentary by Peter Jackson and Costa Botes was Forgotten Silver. And the fashion designer known for her high-quality knitwear was Caroline Sills. But, Andrew Taylor, you've scored four points. Well, it's been a remarkable final round. What does it all mean? Let's check the numbers for tonight's contenders. And in fourth place, with 19 points, Andrew Taylor. In third place, with 20 points, Ryan Wood. In second place, with 21 points, Julyan Lawry. And our winner, on 22 points, Don Rae. Well done. But tonight's other contenders should not give up hope. That's because as well as the heat winners, the next eight-highest scorers across all eight heats will also make it through to the next round. And do you think you could handle the pressure of the Mastermind chair? Well, you can download the app and play the Mastermind game to test your knowledge. We're back next time, with four more contenders in the spotlight, as we search for NZ's Mastermind. Well done Well done. Good one. Well done, mate. Well done. SUSPENSEFUL DRUM MUSIC Captions by Glenna Casalme. Captions were made possible with funding from NZ On Air. Copyright Able 2016.