So in preparation for the audition, I was practicing with some pals and we came across an interesting scenario .. (we were doing straight-up Password, not cashword-style which would have been tremendously easier)..words were chosen by a fellow Password nerd and knew how to pick quality Password-grade words..
and so
(whispering) the password was "EMERALD"
..
Trying to think of the one quintessential clue was tricky, because there were many clues that would have allowed the challengers to lock on the follow-up.. so I couldn't give the clue "GREEN" or "GEM" because either would not obviously yield "Emerald" on the first shot (but would make for an easy 2nd clue solve).. Flashed through a few Oz references, but then decided to loophole it and settle for "GREENSTONE" since that's a somewhat known last name and proper words are acceptable. (upon further review, it's actually also a small city in Canada
) Anyway, the debate comes in the way I pronounced it. I held an ever-so-slight pause (if you can almost imagine Christopher Walken saying it) to suggest them as separate words, but really, it is also one word as well no matter how slow you say it
..
I slowed it down instead of saying it "normally" to avoid any chance they might think I'm trying to get them to guess the first name of someone w/ the last name of Greenstone. devious, perhaps.. allowable? Dunno... I mean, at least on SP you were allowed to stretch words and change pitch and tone to subtly hint .. (uh, anyone remember Christopher Hewett actually SINGING the word "GARY-mm-mm-mmm-mm-mmm-mm-mmm-mmm-mm-mm-mmm-mmm" to the tune of the song "Gary, Indiana" to try to bait the contestant into the easy password of "Indiana"?? (didn't work. btw, quintessential = "hoosiers"
)
so, my question is, would my drawn-out pronunciation of "Greenstone" fly?
Just tryin' to get the record straight so I know what tricks I should and shouldn't unleash incase a call comes in January
cheers
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