[quote name=\'CarShark\' post=\'221546\' date=\'Jul 31 2009, 12:49 AM\']I guess what's central to my misunderstanding is that I'm not as clear on the "essence of the word" rule as I thought.[/quote]
That's because "essence" is such an abstract term that it will never be judged 100% correctly 100% of the time. It's just a very clever way for the powers that be to say, "We think you made a mistake, and it's a mistake because we say so". I'm not saying that it leads to rigging. But much like with professional sports, officials have to make judgment calls. And "essence" is the wiggle room. In professional sports, referees can be consistent throughout a game and be judged not on an individual call, but consistency. If I pitch my fastball into the corner of the box, do I get the same call as the pitcher for the other team? If I'm driving for the hoop, how will blocking vs. charging be called? In a game show, a contestant's "career" can be ended by one bad call. So consistency has to be based not over a given game, but over the life of the show. Thus we all don't care "What Tom Cruise's Dentist Would Say".
Actually, I like another analogy even more -- the law. Decisions in cases are supposed to be made on precedent. Decisions on judging the "essence" is also sometimes made on precedent. "If it was illegal before, then it's just as illegal now." Evidence of the importance of this to our little community can be seen by the clue "A Long Rose".
[quote name=\'tpirfan28\' post=\'221513\' date=\'Jul 30 2009, 07:19 PM\']On an episode of The New $25,000 Pyramid from the week before they instituted the 7-11 card, a very similar situation came up...Patty Duke gave the clue "simplex" for "duplex". Initally ruled correct, but buzzed after the fact for being "too much of the essence of the word". I personally would buzz them both, as each set is too close to each word.[/quote][quote name=\'CarShark\']For those saying I was mistaken, what do you think happened here?[/quote]
If I had to guess... in a game that deals so much with sounds, it's easier to catch things like this live when it happens at the beginning of the word, rather than the end. This means you can sometimes get away with more. But when you play in a text medium, it doesn't matter quite as much where in the word the offense (defense?) happens. So you're less likely to have those situations where one temporarily slips by you.