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HaMerotz LaMillion 8 (TAR ISRAEL 8) Ongoing SHOW Discussion

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G.B.:

--- Quote from: jfarbzz on October 25, 2020, 05:49:49 PM ---So GB, what do you think about Assaf & Netanel? Hope you like them, because two straight legs without your least favorite aspect of HaMerotz has led to two straight leg wins by the most boring team left.

--- End quote ---

Anything is better than elimination via dice roll.

Xoruz:
Show contentAfter two four-episode legs, this leg is going to be condensed.

With the exception of a couple of tasks, I still admire this season's task creativity. Chile has been the site of many earthquakes, so let's have teams stack blocks on an earthquake table.

G.B.:
I don't understand the first task of the Chile leg. From what I understand they listen to a lecture that describes the four famous poets of Chile, and then they transport 50 books. They also get a passage written in Spanish that translates into the lyrics of "Salaam", a Hebrew/Arabic song. But from there, I'm lost. What does this song have to do with the books or the poets?

jfarbzz:

--- Quote from: G.B. on October 29, 2020, 10:22:40 PM ---I don't understand the first task of the Chile leg. From what I understand they listen to a lecture that describes the four famous poets of Chile, and then they transport 50 books. They also get a passage written in Spanish that translates into the lyrics of "Salaam", a Hebrew/Arabic song. But from there, I'm lost. What does this song have to do with the books or the poets?

--- End quote ---

From what I could gather, each book had different lyrics which corresponded to the styles and writing of one of the poets which they had to match at the library? I think?

G.B.:

--- Quote from: jfarbzz on October 29, 2020, 10:49:19 PM ---
--- Quote from: G.B. on October 29, 2020, 10:22:40 PM ---I don't understand the first task of the Chile leg. From what I understand they listen to a lecture that describes the four famous poets of Chile, and then they transport 50 books. They also get a passage written in Spanish that translates into the lyrics of "Salaam", a Hebrew/Arabic song. But from there, I'm lost. What does this song have to do with the books or the poets?

--- End quote ---

From what I could gather, each book had different lyrics which corresponded to the styles and writing of one of the poets which they had to match at the library? I think?

--- End quote ---

Something doesn't feel right about that explanation though, because some teams like Tali & Glil filled up their board with only two kinds of books. I believe they only had red and purple, or something like that. Wouldn't that make the task twice as easy for them if they did that?

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