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5adff35555429925eb1afb79 | Henry Chidley Reynolds, was a New Zealand farm manager, butter manufacturer and exporter, he began manufacturing butter in 1886 and soon adopted as a brand name, Anchor, a brand of dairy products that was founded in New Zealand, in which year? | [
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"text": "Henry Chidley Reynolds (26 May 1849 – 19 September 1925) was a New Zealand farm manager, butter manufacturer and exporter. He was born at Beeny, St Juliot, Cornwall, England, in 1849. He began manufacturing butter in 1886 and soon adopted \"Anchor\" as a brand name. After his butter won an award at the Centennial International Exhibition in Melbourne he began exporting butter to England. Because of financial difficulties he sold his business to the New Zealand Dairy Association in 1896 and the association adopted the \"Anchor\" brand."
},
{
"id": "673586",
"score": 0.7905340194702148,
"text": "Anchor is a brand of dairy products that was founded in New Zealand in 1886 and is one of the key brands owned by the New Zealand-based international exporter Fonterra Co−operative Group. In Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan the Fernleaf brand is used in place of Anchor."
}
] | [
{
"id": "54096458",
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"text": "Anchor Foods or Anchor Foods Pty. Ltd. is an Australian food company based in Western Australia.",
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{
"id": "23619403",
"score": 0.6405664086341858,
"text": "The New Zealand Dairy Board (NZDB) was a statutory board in control of the export all New Zealand dairy products from its formation in 1923 until 2001. It operated through a global network of marketing subsidiaries.",
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{
"id": "11860310",
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"text": "Westland Milk Products is the trading name of Westland Co-operative Dairy Company Limited. Westland is an independent co-operative dairy company in New Zealand, owned by over 429 farmer shareholders that supply milk for processing. Milk is sourced from farms as far north as Karamea and as far south as Haast on the West Coast and from farms throughout Canterbury. Their major processing factory is located in the town of Hokitika on the West Coast of the South Island of New Zealand, with their main warehouse and milk concentration plant near the small town of Rolleston outside Christchurch.",
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},
{
"id": "41583262",
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"text": "A dairy is a small owner-operated convenience store in New Zealand, licensed to sell groceries, milk, eggs, dairy products, perishables, newspapers and other staples during and after normal trading hours.",
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},
{
"id": "48343336",
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"text": "Lewis Road Creamery is a boutique New Zealand dairy company, located in northern New Zealand. They produce a range of milk products, including varieties of milk, cream, ice cream and butter. The company is best known for its brand of chocolate milk, which in 2014, sparked a frenzied, nationwide shortage.",
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{
"id": "5689666",
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"text": "Dairy Farmers Pty Ltd, originally established in 1900, is a brand owned by Lion Dairy & Drinks, and is distributed mainly New South Wales & Queensland in Australia. The core products sold under that Dairy Farmers brand are fresh milk (in NSW and Queensland only) and UHT \"long-life\" milk (Australia wide), as well as various other dairy snacks. It supplies products to local and international markets such as Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Asia.",
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{
"id": "856246",
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"text": "Cadbury Dairy Milk is a brand of milk chocolate manufactured by Cadbury. It was introduced in the United Kingdom in 1905 and now consists of a number of products. Every product in the Dairy Milk line is made with exclusively milk chocolate. In 2014, Dairy Milk was ranked the best-selling chocolate bar in the UK. It is manufactured and distributed by the Hershey Company in the U.S. under license from Cadbury.",
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{
"id": "14343312",
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"text": "Mainland Cheese is a brand of cheese now owned by Fonterra Co-operative Group that is sold throughout Australasia and parts of the Americas. It began as a family business in the South Island of New Zealand (which is jocularly known as the \"mainland\" of New Zealand because it is larger than the North Island).",
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"text": "Clover is a brand of margarine sold in the United Kingdom, produced by the Dairy Crest group. It resembles butter but is easier to spread when cold. It is made from ingredients including vegetable fat and buttermilk. The brand was launched in 1983 and is claimed to be worth £81m at retail value. It is made in Crudgington near Telford.",
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{
"id": "272640",
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"text": "Lever Brothers was a British manufacturing company founded in 1885 by brothers William Hesketh Lever (1851–1925) and James Darcy Lever (1854–1916). They invested in and successfully promoted a new soap-making process invented by chemist William Hough Watson. In 1930, Lever Brothers merged with Margarine Unie to form Unilever.",
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{
"id": "1883348",
"score": 0.6097266674041748,
"text": "Dairy Crest Group plc is a leading British dairy products company. Its brands include Cathedral City Cheddar cheese, Country Life butter, Utterly Butterly, Vitalite and Clover. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index.",
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{
"id": "597646",
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"text": "Fonterra Co-operative Group Limited is a New Zealand multinational dairy co-operative owned by around 10,500 New Zealand farmers. The company is responsible for approximately 30% of the world's dairy exports and with revenue exceeding NZ$17.2 billion, is New Zealand's largest company.",
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{
"id": "46668013",
"score": 0.6065938472747803,
"text": "Australia Dairy Company () is a traditional Hong Kong restaurant, cha chaan teng, in Jordan, Hong Kong, specialising in steamed milk pudding, scrambled eggs, toast and custard dishes. The company was named by the founder, who had worked on an Australian farm in the 1940s.",
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{
"id": "19832980",
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"text": "The Newfoundland Margarine Company (until 1950, the Newfoundland Butter Company) was Canada's first oleomargarine manufacturing company, and a leading producer in the Dominion of Newfoundland and after 1949, the province of Newfoundland and Labrador. It was founded by Sir John Chalker Crosbie in 1925 and was one of three margarine plants established in Newfoundland during the early 20th century. With the expertise of George Ehlers, a Danish chemist, the Crosbie family grew the firm into the largest margarine manufacturing firm in Newfoundland. The Newfoundland Butter Company through acquisition and merger over the years with the other two manufacturing plants was eventually sold to Lever Brothers of England in 1937 and became a subsidiary of Lever Brothers of Canada.",
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"id": "1577220",
"score": 0.6058006882667542,
"text": "Milka is a brand of chocolate confection which originated in Switzerland in 1901 and has been manufactured internationally by the US confectionery company Mondelēz International (formerly known as Kraft Foods) since 1990. For more than 100 years Milka has been primarily produced in Lörrach, Germany, producing about 140,000 tonnes of chocolate in 2012. It is sold in bars and a number of novelty shapes for Easter and Christmas. Milka also produces chocolate-covered cookies and biscuits.",
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{
"id": "1276623",
"score": 0.6033788323402405,
"text": "Kiwi is the brand name of a shoe polish, first launched and sold in Australia in 1906 and as of 2005 sold in almost 180 countries. Previously owned by the Sara Lee Corporation since 1984, it was sold in 2011 to S. C. Johnson. It is the dominant shoe polish in some countries, including the United Kingdom and the United States, where it has about two-thirds of the market.",
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"id": "27961552",
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"text": "The Kiama Pioneer Butter Factory was erected in 1883 and later officially opened on 18 June 1884 in Kiama, New South Wales. It is credited with being the first factory in Australia to use cream separators, a machine that would transform processing techniques in the dairy industry. The Kiama Pioneer Butter Factory was also the first factory in Australia to make a shipment of butter to Great Britain.",
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"id": "1338821",
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"text": "Plugrá is a brand of butter made in the United States by Dairy Farmers of America. It is made with a higher butterfat content than most American butter (82% butterfat, vs. 80%.) The name \"Plugra\" is derived from the French \"plus gras\" (\"more fat\").",
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"text": "Nivea (] ) is a German personal care brand that specializes in skin- and body-care. It is owned by the Hamburg-based company Beiersdorf Global AG. The company was founded on March 28, 1882, by pharmacist Paul Carl Beiersdorf. In 1890, it was sold to Oscar Troplowitz. Troplowitz kept working with his scientific consultant Paul Gerson Unna and the German chemist Isaac Lifschütz on a new skin care cream. In 1900, Lifschütz developed a water-in-oil emulsion as a skin cream with Eucerit, the first stable emulsion of its kind. This was the basis for Eucerin and, later, Nivea. \"Nivea\" comes from the Latin word \"niveus/nivea/niveum\", meaning \"snow-white\".",
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"id": "34446613",
"score": 0.5992910265922546,
"text": "Milk Link is a large dairy company in the United Kingdom. It is the UK's largest dairy cooperative and the UK's largest producer of cheese. In 2012 the company merged with Arla Foods.",
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}
] |
5a7ddbc15542995f4f4022d8 | On what network does The Assistants and About a Girl air? | [
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"text": "The Assistants is a Canadian sitcom that aired from 10 July to 11 September 2009. The series is the second original comedy to air on The N (now TeenNick) after the series \"About a Girl\"."
},
{
"id": "12613020",
"score": 0.7270005941390991,
"text": "About a Girl is a Canadian comedy series which premiered on October 5, 2007 on The N in the U.S. and Global in Canada. It was the first scripted comedy for The N. The series ended with 13 episodes in its only season."
}
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"text": "\"About a Girl\" is the first single by The Academy Is... from their third studio album, \"Fast Times at Barrington High\". The single reached the pop charts at #88, making it the band's first charting single and this song was ranked #74 on MTV latinoamerica list of the Top 100 Hits of 2008. This song was number 39 on \"Rolling Stone\"<nowiki>'</nowiki>s list of the 100 Best Songs of 2008. The song impacted radio on August 12, 2008.",
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"text": "About a Boy is an American single-camera television sitcom that aired on NBC from February 22, 2014 to July 20, 2015. The show was developed by Jason Katims and premiered as a midseason replacement following the 2014 Winter Olympics. It was the second adaptation based on the 1998 novel of the same title by Nick Hornby, preceded by the 2002 theatrical film. The series starred David Walton, Minnie Driver and Benjamin Stockham, and used \"Comeback Kid (That's My Dog)\" by Brett Dennen as its theme song.",
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"text": "\"About a Boy\" is an American comedy series created by Jason Katims for NBC, based on the 1998 novel of the same title by Nick Hornby and using elements from the 2002 film screenplay by Peter Hedges, Chris Weitz and Paul Weitz. The series premiered on February 22, 2014 with a special preview of the pilot episode, before moving to its regular time slot on Tuesday, March 4, 2014, 9:00 pm EST following \"The Voice\".",
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"text": "The Assistant is a reality television show that parodied other reality shows such as \"The Apprentice\", \"The Bachelor\", \"The Bachelorette\", \"Survivor\", \"American Idol\", and \"Fear Factor\". Its eight episodes originally aired on MTV. It featured comedian Andy Dick's search for a new personal assistant. The beginning of the first episode parodied \"The Bachelor\", with the twelve contestants arriving in limousines, and Dick waiting outside to greet them with his maid and butler. A \"rose ceremony\" immediately followed, and one contestant was eliminated.",
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"text": "Girls is an American television series that premiered on HBO on April 15, 2012. Created by and starring Lena Dunham and executive produced by Judd Apatow, \"Girls\" is a comedy-drama following the lives of four young women living in New York City. The show's premise and major aspects of the main character—including being cut off financially from her parents, becoming a writer and making unfortunate decisions—were drawn from Dunham's own life. Apatow said he was drawn to Dunham's imagination after watching her independent feature film \"Tiny Furniture\" (2010), and added that \"Girls\" would provide men with an insight into \"realistic females\".",
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"text": "What I Like About You is an American television sitcom set mainly in New York City, following the lives of two sisters, older sister Valerie Tyler (Jennie Garth) and teenaged sister Holly (Amanda Bynes). The series ran on The WB from September 20, 2002, to March 24, 2006, with a total of 86 episodes produced. With the exception of a brief period early in the second season, \"What I Like About You\" was a headline on The WB's Friday Night Comedy Lineup.",
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"text": "About a Girl is a LP album by the Canadian indie pop band Winter Gloves. It was released on 24 March 2009 under the Paper Bag Records label.",
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"text": "\"Girls\" is an American comedy-drama television series created by Lena Dunham, who serves as executive producer along with Judd Apatow and Jenni Konner. The series premiered on HBO on April 15, 2012. \"Girls\" stars Dunham as Hannah Horvath, an aspiring writer in her 20s trying to navigate her personal and professional life in New York City after her parents discontinue their financial support. Allison Williams, Jemima Kirke, Zosia Mamet, Adam Driver, and Alex Karpovsky co-star as Hannah's circle of friends, who are also trying to figure out their own lives and relationships. During the course of the series, episodes of \"Girls \" aired over seasons.",
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"text": "Mya is an Italian wntertainment TV channel, owned by Mediaset and broadcast on Premium Gallery, a pay television network available on digital terrestrial television in Italy. Its transmission started on January 18, 2008 with the pilot episode of \"Gossip Girl\".",
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"text": "New Girl is an American sitcom television series that premiered on Fox on September 20, 2011. Developed by Elizabeth Meriwether under the working title \"Chicks & Dicks\", the series revolves around a kooky teacher, Jess (Zooey Deschanel), after she moves into a Los Angeles loft with three men, Nick (Jake Johnson), Schmidt (Max Greenfield), and Winston (Lamorne Morris); Jess' best friend Cece (Hannah Simone) and on-again-off-again loft mate Coach (Damon Wayans Jr.) also appear regularly. The show combines comedy and drama elements as the characters, who are in their early thirties, deal with maturing relationships and career choices. The sixth and most current season premiered on September 20, 2016.",
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"text": "Hey Girl is an American weekly half-hour sketch comedy television series that aired on MTV. It was developed by Daniel Powell and Jessi Klein, and stars JC Coccolli, Daniella Pineda, Esther Povitsky, Ali Wong, Emily Axford, Laura Willcox, Shelby Fero, Sasheer Zamata, and Wendy McColm. It aired on Sundays at 9pm, first in a \"sneak peek\" airing of four episodes on July 28, 2013, and then with an official premiere on October 27, 2013, with new episodes at 9pm and 9:30pm. The show was pulled from the broadcast schedule after the second week, having aired eight episodes. Four additional episodes were gradually released at MTV.com in February and March 2014.",
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"text": "The sixth season of the American comedy series \"New Girl\" premiered September 20, 2016 on Fox at 8:30pm (Eastern) and concluded on April 4, 2017. During the series, it moved to 8:00pm (Eastern) in early 2017.",
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"text": "Chiara Zanni (born July 19, 1978) is a Canadian comedian, actress, singer and voice actress. As an actress, Zanni is known for playing, Amy Ryan, the titular character in the 2007 television series \"About a Girl\" for The N, as well as for her previous role as Maggie Buckman on CBC's adult drama \"Edgemont\" (2001–2005)",
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"text": "Love That Girl! is an American sitcom that airs on TV One and debuted on January 19, 2010. The series started off as a four episode, independently produced series presentation that aired as a special three-night event, and was later ordered to series on October 15, 2010. \"Love That Girl!\" is the first scripted series for the network. The series went on hiatus until TV One announced in May 2013, that the series would return for its fourth season on October 11, 2013. Tatyana Ali did not return for the fourth season due to a contract agreement with the BET series, \"Second Generation Wayans\".",
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"text": "The Arrangement is an American drama television series created by Jonathan Abrahams which airs on E!. A first trailer was released on May 16, 2016. The series premiered on March 5, 2017. On April 13, 2017, E! announced that it had renewed the series for a 10-episode second season.",
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"text": "About a Girl is a 2014 German comedy film directed by Mark Monheim.",
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"text": "My Roommate's an Escort is an original Canadian comedy web series created, written by and starring Katie Uhlmann and Trish Rainone. All 11 episodes of the first season are directed by Uhlmann, and the series premiered on YouTube on April 3rd, 2017. Rainone plays a non-confrontational, small-town girl living in Toronto who suspects her new roommate Kesha, played by Uhlmann, is a call girl.",
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"text": "Love That Girl! is an American sitcom that airs on TV One and debuted on January 19, 2010. The series started off as a four episode, on Friday, October 11, 2013",
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"text": "Two Guys and a Girl (originally titled Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place) is an American sitcom created by Kenny Schwartz and Danny Jacobson. It was originally broadcast on ABC from March 10, 1998, to May 16, 2001. Eighty-one episodes were aired over four seasons.",
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"text": "The Associates is an American sitcom that aired on ABC from 1979–1980. The series starred Martin Short and was cancelled after nine of its thirteen episodes aired, but was nominated for two Golden Globes after its cancellation. The series was produced by Paramount Television.",
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5a7f445c5542992e7d278cd6 | What highway is the closest town to Montague Island located on? | [
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"text": "Montague Island is a continental island contained within the Montague Island Nature Reserve, a protected nature reserve that is located offshore from the South Coast region of New South Wales, in eastern Australia. The nearest town located onshore from the 81 ha reserve and island is Narooma , situated approximately 9 km to the northwest."
},
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"text": "Narooma is a town in the Australian state of New South Wales on the far south coast. The town is on the Princes Highway and the name Narooma is said to be derived from the Aboriginal word meaning ‘clear blue waters’. At the 2016 census , Narooma had a population of 2,605 people."
}
] | [
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"text": "Montague Gold Mines (located at 44°43'06\"N, 63°30'48\"W) is a suburban community in the Halifax Regional Municipality of Nova Scotia, located on the Montague Road off of exit 14 of Highway 107 three kilometers from Dartmouth.",
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"text": "Montague (2011 CA pop. 6,011) is a Canadian town and the largest population centre in Kings County, Prince Edward Island.",
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"text": "Montague Island is an island in the Gulf of Alaska lying at the entrance to Prince William Sound in the state of Alaska, United States. The island has a land area of 790.88 km² (305.36 sq mi), making it the 26th largest island in the United States. As of the 2000 census, Montague did not have a permanent resident population, making it at that time the largest uninhabited island in the United States. Since then, the 2010 abandonment of the Coast Guard station on Attu Island in the Aleutian Islands, which at 344.7 square miles is larger than Montague Island, causes Attu to claim that title. Montague Island is well known among sport fishing out of the Seward port as it is referred to as 'The Land of the Giants'. In 2007 it produced a 350 lb halibut and many boats full of fish over 100 lbs. Montague Island was named by Captain James Cook in honor of John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, one of his greatest supporters.",
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"text": "Montague Road is an east-west route across the suburbs of Adelaide, about 12 km north of the city centre. It connects Port Wakefield Road at Cavan across Main North Road at Pooraka to North East Road at Modbury.",
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"text": "Montague Harbour Marine Provincial Park is a provincial park in British Columbia, Canada, located on Galiano Island, one of the Gulf Islands off BC's South Coast in Canada. It is accessible by BC Ferries from Swartz Bay on Vancouver Island or Tsawwassen on the Mainland. The Island's ferry terminal is at Sturdies Bay, about 6km from Montague.",
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"id": "562312",
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"text": "Montagu Island is the largest of the South Sandwich Islands, located in the Weddell Sea off the coast of Antarctica. It is a part of the British Overseas Territory, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands. It is located 60 km northeast from Bristol Island and 62 km south from Saunders Island.",
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"id": "51686193",
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"text": "Route 22 is a 28.6 km , two-lane, uncontrolled-access, secondary highway in eastern Prince Edward Island. Its southern terminus is at Route 210 and Route 320 in Montague and its northern terminus is at Route 2 in Mount Stewart. The route is in Kings and Queens counties.",
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"text": "Montague Island, known in Spanish as Isla Montague, is an island at the mouth of the Colorado River in the municipality of Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico, and is part of the Colorado River Delta and part of a broader region called the Salton Trough. It is about 32 km in length along its longest axis.",
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"id": "51652539",
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"text": "Route 17, known along some sections as Point Pleasant Road, is a 36.9 km , two-lane, uncontrolled-access, secondary highway in eastern Prince Edward Island. Its southern terminus is at Route 4 in Murray River and its northern terminus is at Route 4 in Montague. The route is entirely in Kings County.",
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"id": "26138866",
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"text": "Montague Regional High School (MRHS), is a Canadian secondary school in Montague, Prince Edward Island for students from the southern part of Kings County and the south eastern part of Queens County, including the towns of Montague and Georgetown.",
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"id": "116778",
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"text": "Montague is a town in Franklin County, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 8,437 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Springfield, Massachusetts metropolitan statistical area.",
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"id": "51727402",
"score": 0.6661317348480225,
"text": "Route 315, also known as Wood Islands Road, is a 23.1 km , two-lane, uncontrolled-access, local highway in Prince Edward Island. Its southern terminus is at Route 1 in Wood Islands, and its northern terminus is at Route 4 in Montague. It generally forms a straight line between the termini. The route is in Queens and Kings counties.",
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"id": "28662051",
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"text": "Montague Island Light is an active lighthouse on Montague Island, an island 9 km offshore from Narooma on the south coast of New South Wales, Australia. The lighthouse is located at the highest point of the island.",
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"id": "2389498",
"score": 0.6621640920639038,
"text": "Highway 102 is a north-south highway in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia that runs from Halifax to Onslow, immediately north of the town of Truro. It is the busiest highway in Atlantic Canada.",
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"id": "2401679",
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"text": "Montagu is a town in the Western Cape province of South Africa, about 180 km from Cape Town in western Little Karoo. It is named after former secretary of the Cape Colony, John Montagu, but was once known as Agter Cogman’s Kloof, Cogman’s Kloof linking the town and railway station. It is situated at the confluence of the Keisie and Kingna rivers.",
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"id": "54689413",
"score": 0.6600138545036316,
"text": "Route 380 (also known as the Beothuck Trail) is a highway in Newfoundland and Labrador. There are five communities along the route, beginning with South Brook near the Trans-Canada Highway, and ending at the community of Brighton. The route travels through three islands, including Pilley's Island and Brighton Tickle Island. Triton is the most populous community along the route.",
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"id": "423246",
"score": 0.6584338545799255,
"text": "Montague is a township in eastern Ontario, Canada, in Lanark County on the Rideau River. The township administrative offices are located on Roger Stevens Drive east of Smiths Falls.",
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"id": "18400663",
"score": 0.6564907431602478,
"text": "Montague is an unincorporated community in King George County, Virginia, United States.",
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"text": "Route 2, also known as Veterans Memorial Highway and the All Weather Highway, is a 216 km two-lane uncontrolled access highway traversing Prince Edward Island, Canada from Tignish to Souris. Route 2 was recognized as the first numbered highway in the province in 1890, when it opened between Charlottetown and Summerside.",
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"text": "Route 10, also known as the eastern portion of the Irish Loop Drive and the Southern Shore Highway, is a 173 km , uncontrolled-access highway in Newfoundland and Labrador. Its southern terminus is at Route 90 in St. Vincent's-St. Stephen's-Peter's River and its northern terminus is at Route 2 and Columbus Drive in St. John's. The route is in Division No. 1 and winds along the southern and eastern coasts of Avalon Peninsula on the island of Newfoundland.",
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5ae2aafb5542996483e64a2c | Who wrote the 2006 horror film of which "Hillside Cannibals" is a mockbuster? | [
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"text": "Hillside Cannibals is a 2006 American horror film directed by Leigh Scott and produced by The Asylum. The film is a mockbuster of the film \"The Hills Have Eyes\", another film released around the same month, but its plot also incorporates elements from other films, including \"Cannibal Holocaust\", \"The Texas Chainsaw Massacre\" and \"House of 1000 Corpses\"."
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"text": "The Hills Have Eyes is a 2006 American horror film and remake of Wes Craven's 1977 film of the same name. Written by filmmaking partners Alexandre Aja and Grégory Levasseur of the French horror film \"Haute Tension\", and directed by Aja. The film follows a family that is targeted by a group of murderous mutants after their car breaks down in the desert."
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"text": "The Hills Have Eyes is an American horror franchise that consists of four slasher films, as well as a graphic novel and merchandise. The first film was released in 1977, \"The Hills Have Eyes\"; the series was rebooted in a 2006 remake. The films focus on a group of people stranded in a desert who become hunted by a clan of deformed cannibals in the surrounding hills. The films collectively grossed over $132 million at the box-office worldwide. The series was created by Wes Craven who is known for the \"A Nightmare on Elm Street\" films and \"Scream\" films. The series has featured actors and actresses including Dee Wallace, Aaron Stanford, Michael Berryman and Emilie de Ravin. The unrelated film \"Mind Ripper\" was marketed as a sequel in some areas, but has no direct connection to the first two films.",
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"text": "Hannibal Rising is a 2007 horror film and the fifth film of the \"Hannibal Lecter\" franchise. It is a prequel to the previous three films: \"Red Dragon\", \"The Silence of the Lambs\", and \"Hannibal\". The film is an adaptation of Thomas Harris' 2006 novel \"Hannibal Rising\" and tells the story of Lecter's evolution into a cannibalistic serial killer.",
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"text": "Cannibal is a 2006 German direct-to-video horror film written, directed and produced by Marian Dora.",
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"text": "Welcome to the Jungle is a 2007 American found footage mockumentary-horror film directed by Jonathan Hensleigh and starring Sandy Gardiner, Callard Harris, Nickolas Richey and Veronica Sywak. A stylistic homage to the highly controversial cult horror film \"Cannibal Holocaust\", the film follows a group of ambitious reporters who run afoul of a bloodthirsty native tribe.",
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"text": "Tooth and Nail is a 2007 horror film written, directed and edited by Mark Young, about a group of people in a post-apocalyptic world who must fight to survive against a band of vicious cannibals.",
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"text": "Creepshow 3 is a 2006 American horror film, and a sequel to Stephen King and George A. Romero's 1982 and 1987 horror anthology classics \"Creepshow\" and \"Creepshow 2\". The film, like its predecessors, is a collection of tales of light-hearted horror: \"Alice\", \"The Radio\", \"Call Girl\", \"The Professor's Wife\" and \"Haunted Dog\", although there is no EC Comics angle this time around.",
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"text": "Halloween is a 2007 American slasher film written, directed, and produced by Rob Zombie. The film is a remake/reimagining of the 1978 horror film of the same name; the first in the rebooted \"Halloween\" film series and the ninth installment of the \"Halloween\" franchise. The film stars Tyler Mane as the adult Michael Myers, Malcolm McDowell as Dr. Sam Loomis, and Scout Taylor-Compton as Laurie Strode; Daeg Faerch portrays a ten-year-old Michael Myers. Rob Zombie's \"reimagining\" follows the premise of John Carpenter's original, with Michael Myers stalking Laurie Strode and her friends on Halloween night. Zombie's film goes deeper into the character's psyche, trying to answer the question of what drove him to kill people, whereas in Carpenter's original film Michael did not have an explicit reason for killing.",
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"text": "Paranormal Entity is a 2009 American supernatural horror film written, directed by and starring Shane Van Dyke and produced by The Asylum in 2009. It is one of many films dubbed as a \"mockbuster\", a movie designed to capitalize on the success of a more popular film. \"Paranormal Entity\" is a copycat of the successful low-budget horror film \"Paranormal Activity\". The film was followed by indirect sequels \"\" (also known as \"Paranormal Entity 2\") in 2010, \"\" (also known as \"Paranormal Entity 3\") in 2011, and \"\" (also known as \"Paranormal Entity 4\") in 2012.",
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"text": "Bram Stoker's Dracula's Curse (also known simply as Dracula's Curse) is a 2006 horror film by The Asylum, written and directed by Leigh Scott. Despite featuring Bram Stoker's name in the title, the film is not directly based on any of his writings or a mockbuster to the 1992 film \"Bram Stoker's Dracula\", but shares similarities to films such as \"\", \"Dracula 2000\", \"\" and \"Van Helsing\". The film also shares some similarities with the 1971 Hammer horror film \"Countess Dracula\", which also features a Dracula-esque femme fatale in the lead role.",
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"id": "21620643",
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"text": "Halloween Night is a 2006 American horror film produced by The Asylum. Despite sharing a similar title with the 1978 film \"Halloween\", \"Halloween Night\" is itself an original film as opposed to a mockbuster film.",
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"text": "Woodchipper Massacre is a 1988 American horror comedy Z movie directed by Jon McBride, who also directed \"Cannibal Campout\". The film was also written by McBride.",
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"text": "Exorcism: The Possession of Gail Bowers is a 2006 direct-to-DVD horror film by The Asylum, written and directed by Leigh Scott. It is considered to be a mockbuster of the 2005 film \"The Exorcism of Emily Rose.\"",
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"text": "Scary Movie 4 is a 2006 American horror comedy film and the fourth film in the \"Scary Movie\" franchise, as well as the first film in the franchise to be released under The Weinstein Company banner since the purchase of Dimension Films. It was directed by David Zucker, written by Jim Abrahams, Craig Mazin, and Pat Proft, and produced by Robert K. Weiss and Craig Mazin.",
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{
"id": "25201527",
"score": 0.6135683059692383,
"text": "A list of horror films released in 2006.",
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"text": "Halloween II is a 2009 American slasher film written, directed, and produced by Rob Zombie. The film is a sequel to Zombie's 2007 remake of 1978's \"Halloween\", and the tenth installment of the franchise. Picking up where the 2007 film ended and then jumping ahead one year, \"Halloween II\" follows Laurie Strode as she deals with the aftermath of the previous film's events, Dr. Loomis who is trying to capitalize on those events by publishing a new book that chronicles everything that happened, and Michael Myers as he continues his search for Laurie so that he can reunite with his sister. The film sees the return of lead cast members from the 2007 film Malcolm McDowell, Scout Taylor-Compton, and Tyler Mane, who portray Dr. Loomis, Laurie Strode, and Michael Myers, respectively.",
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"text": "Slither is a 2006 American science fiction-comedy horror film written and directed by James Gunn in his directoral debut, and starring Nathan Fillion, Elizabeth Banks, Gregg Henry, and Michael Rooker. The film was produced by Paul Brooks and Eric Newman. The film has similar themes and concepts as the 1986 B-movie \"Night of the Creeps\".",
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"text": "April Fools is a 2007 horror film written and directed by Nancy Norman.",
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"text": "Stupid Teenagers Must Die! (early title \"Blood & Guts\") is a 2006 spoof film directed by Jeff C. Smith and written by Smith and Curtis Andersen. During production and initial festival screenings, the film was titled \"Blood & Guts\", but before sending it to distributors, the change to the current title was made to better reflect the humor intended by the filmmakers, as they thought the original title implied more carnage than the film supplied.",
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"text": "The Plague (also known as Clive Barker's The Plague) is a 2006 horror film directed by Hal Masonberg and written by Masonberg and Teal Minton. It was produced by Clive Barker.",
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"text": "Stan Helsing is a 2009 Canadian-American horror comedy parody film, known in some parts of Asia as Scary Movie 5, in Italy as Horror Movie and in Germany as Mega Monster Movie. Like \"Scary Movie\", it parodies horror films, TV shows, people and pop cultural events.",
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}
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5a817471554299260e20a28f | Which division did Oklahoma City Thunder win in 2015-16, their first season under current head coach Billy Donovan? | [
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"text": "The 2015–16 Oklahoma City Thunder season was the 8th season of the franchise in Oklahoma City and the 50th in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the first under head coach Billy Donovan. After coming just short of making the playoffs the previous season, the Thunder won the Northwest Division and clinched the third seed in the Western Conference. The team reached the Western Conference Finals for the fourth time in a span of six seasons, but was eliminated by the Golden State Warriors in seven games after leading the series 3-1. After the season Kevin Durant left the team in free agency for the Warriors."
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"text": "William John Donovan Jr. (born May 30, 1965) is an American professional basketball coach who is currently the head coach for the Oklahoma City Thunder of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He previously spent 19 seasons at the University of Florida, where his Florida Gators teams won back-to-back NCAA championships in 2006 and 2007. Donovan has more wins than any other coach in the history of the Florida basketball program, and he coached the Gators to more NCAA tournament appearances, NCAA tournament wins, and Southeastern Conference (SEC) championships than all other Florida coaches combined."
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"text": "The Oklahoma City Thunder are an American professional basketball team based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The Thunder competes in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the league's Western Conference Northwest Division. The team plays its home games at Chesapeake Energy Arena.",
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"text": "The Oklahoma City Thunder is an American professional basketball franchise based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. It plays in the Northwest Division of the Western Conference in the National Basketball Association (NBA). It was known as the Seattle SuperSonics from 1967 to 2008. The team plays its home games at the Chesapeake Energy Arena. As of October 2008, the Thunder is currently owned by Professional Basketball Club LLC and coached by Billy Donovan, with Sam Presti as its general manager. The team was formed in 1967. After spending 41 seasons in Seattle, Washington, the SuperSonics moved to Oklahoma City. Owner Clay Bennett, who purchased the team in 2006, sought to get public funding for a new arena in Seattle, or a major renovation of the KeyArena in 2007. After failing to do so, he decided to move the team to Oklahoma City. Seattle sued Bennett's group to enforce the lease that required the team to stay until 2010. The two sides reached a $45 million settlement to pay off the team's lease with KeyArena in July 2008.",
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"text": "The Oklahoma City Thunder are a professional basketball team based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. They play in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and are a member of the NBA Western Conference's Northwest Division. The Thunder were founded in 1967 as the Seattle SuperSonics as one of two franchises that joined the NBA in the 1967–68 season. The SuperSonics moved to Oklahoma City after the 2007–08 season. The move from Seattle to Oklahoma City marks only the second time that a current franchise won a title in one city and moved some time afterwards to another city (the 2nd are the Atlanta Hawks who left St. Louis after winning the 1958 title there).",
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"text": "The Seattle SuperSonics (commonly known as the Sonics) were an American professional basketball team based in Seattle, Washington. They played in the Pacific and Northwest Divisions of the National Basketball Association (NBA) from 1967 until 2008. After the 2007–08 season ended, the team relocated to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and now plays as the Oklahoma City Thunder.",
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"text": "The Seattle SuperSonics, commonly known as the Sonics, were an American professional basketball team based in Seattle, Washington. The SuperSonics played in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member club of the league's Western Conference Pacific and Northwest divisions from 1967 until 2008. After the 2007–08 season ended, the team relocated to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and now plays as the Oklahoma City Thunder.",
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"text": "William Connor Donovan III is an American professional basketball coach for the Austin Spurs. He is the son of Billy Donovan the head coach for the Oklahoma City Thunder of the National Basketball Association (NBA).",
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"text": "The Atlantic Division is one of the three divisions in the Eastern Conference of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The division consists of five teams, the Boston Celtics, the Brooklyn Nets, the New York Knicks, the Philadelphia 76ers and the Toronto Raptors. All teams, except the Raptors, are located on the East Coast of the United States. However, Toronto sports teams have over the years enjoyed rivalries with teams in the Northeastern United States (particularly, Toronto teams also share divisions with Boston teams in Major League Baseball and the National Hockey League, with the former also containing a team in New York City).",
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"text": "The Southwest Division is one of the three divisions in the Western Conference of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The division is located in the South Central United States and consists of five teams, the Dallas Mavericks, the Houston Rockets, the Memphis Grizzlies, the New Orleans Pelicans and the San Antonio Spurs. Three of the teams, the Mavericks, Rockets, and Spurs, are based in Texas.",
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"text": "The Phoenix Suns are a professional basketball team based in Phoenix, Arizona, United States. They are members of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Suns began playing in the NBA as an expansion team in the 1968–69 NBA season. In their inaugural season, the Suns posted a win–loss record of 16—66. They participated in the playoffs only once in their first seven seasons.",
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"text": "The New Orleans Pelicans are an American professional basketball team based in New Orleans, Louisiana. They play in the Southwest Division of the Western Conference of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Pelicans were established as the New Orleans Hornets in the when then-owner of the Charlotte Hornets, George Shinn, relocated the franchise to New Orleans. During the 2005–07 period, the Hornets played 71 games in Oklahoma City due to the damage caused by Hurricane Katrina. The team officially changed its name to the New Orleans Pelicans on April 18, 2013.",
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"text": "The 2015–16 NBA season was the 70th season of the National Basketball Association. The regular season began on Tuesday, October 27, 2015 at the United Center, home of the Chicago Bulls, with their game against the Cleveland Cavaliers. The 2016 NBA All-Star Game was played at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on February 14, 2016. The regular season ended on April 13, 2016. The playoffs started on April 16, 2016 and ended with the 2016 NBA Finals on June 19, 2016, with Cleveland winning their first NBA title after defeating the defending champion Golden State Warriors in seven games.",
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"text": "The Oklahoma City Blue are an NBA G League team based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and the minor league affiliate of the Oklahoma City Thunder. The franchise began as the Asheville Altitude in 2001, before moving to Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 2005 and becoming the Tulsa 66ers. After nine seasons in Tulsa, the franchise moved to Oklahoma City in 2014 and were subsequently renamed the Oklahoma City Blue.",
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"text": "The Dallas Wings are a professional basketball team based in Arlington, Texas. The Wings play in the Western Conference in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). The team is owned by a group which is led by Chairman Bill Cameron; Chris Christian is vice chairman and managing partner and Greg Bibb is COO of basketball operations. The team was founded in Detroit, Michigan, before the 1998 WNBA season began and moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma, before the 2010 season; on July 20, 2015, Cameron announced that the franchise would move to Arlington for the 2016 WNBA season.",
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5ade09e85542995b365fabe1 | Imaginaerum, is a 2012 Finnish-Canadian musical fantasy film co-written and directed by who, it was developed with and features music from Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish's seventh studio album of the same name; Nightwish's keyboardist and songwriter Tuomas Holopainen co-wrote the film, a Finnish songwriter, multi-instrumentalist musician (but mainly keyboardist) and record producer | [
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"text": "Imaginaerum (also promoted as Imaginaerum by Nightwish) is a 2012 Finnish-Canadian musical fantasy film co-written and directed by Stobe Harju. It was developed with and features music from Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish's seventh studio album of the same name; Nightwish's keyboardist and songwriter Tuomas Holopainen co-wrote the film. \"Imaginaerum\", which is produced by Markus Selin from Solar Films Inc. along with Nightwish, is the feature film debut of Stobe Harju."
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"text": "Tuomas Lauri Johannes Holopainen (born 25 December 1976) is a Finnish songwriter, multi-instrumentalist musician (but mainly keyboardist) and record producer, best known as the founder, leader, keyboardist and songwriter of symphonic metal band Nightwish. He has also studied jazz and classical styles, but prefers to be influenced by harmonic film music."
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"text": "Imaginaerum is the seventh studio album by Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish. According to Nightwish songwriter Tuomas Holopainen, the album is a concept album that tells the story of an old composer who is reminiscing of his youth on his deathbed. The album was produced alongside the movie of the same name, directed by Stobe Harju, who previously directed Nightwish's \"The Islander\" music video, and the album and the film share the same themes and general story. It is their second and last album with vocalist Anette Olzon.",
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"id": "33586636",
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"text": "Imaginaerum World Tour was the fifth world tour by Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish, in support of their seventh studio album, \"Imaginaerum\".",
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"text": "Nightwish is a symphonic metal band from Kitee, Finland. The band was formed in 1996 by lead songwriter and keyboardist Tuomas Holopainen, guitarist Emppu Vuorinen, and former lead singer Tarja Turunen. The band soon picked up drummer Jukka Nevalainen, and then bassist Sami Vänskä after the release of their debut album, \"Angels Fall First\" (1997). In 2001, Vänskä was replaced by Marco Hietala, who also took over the male vocalist role previously filled by Holopainen or guest singers.",
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"text": "Last Ride of the Day is the eleventh track from the Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish's seventh studio album \"Imaginaerum\". This track has been chosen as the official anthem for the Ice Hockey World Championships 2012 in Finland/Sweden.",
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"id": "10669147",
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"text": "This is the line-up of Nightwish, an Echo-winning band from Kitee, Finland, formed in 1996 by songwriter/keyboardist Tuomas Holopainen, guitarist Emppu Vuorinen, and former vocalist Tarja Turunen. Nightwish is Finland's most successful band with more than 7 million sold albums worldwide, 1 silver award, 11 gold awards and 30 platinum awards.",
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"id": "32956862",
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"text": "\"Storytime\" is a song from the Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish's seventh studio album \"Imaginaerum\", as well as the first single from the album. It was released on November 9, 2011, twenty days prior to the album, along with a music video. The song premiered on Radio Rock, a Finnish radio station at 9.00 GMT +2 on November 7, 2011, two days before its commercial release.",
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"text": "\"The Crow, the Owl and the Dove\" is the second single from the Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish's seventh studio album \"Imaginaerum\" and was released on March 2, 2012. The single includes the unreleased song \"The Heart Asks Pleasure First,\" a cover of the song with the same name from the film \"The Piano\" to which Nightwish added vocals, originally scored by Michael Nyman. The song was originally recorded in the \"Dark Passion Play\" sessions, but Nyman did not provide permission for the song to be released in time for album's release. The song debuted at number one in the Finnish Singles Chart.",
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"text": "Inni (] , \"Within\") is a live motion picture and album by Icelandic band Sigur Rós released in 2011. The concert footage was directed by Vincent Morisset and filmed at the Alexandra Palace in 2008. It was released on 7 November 2011 on various formats, including vinyl, DVD, Blu-ray and CD. Theatrical versions were shown around the world in late 2011.",
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"text": "Once is the fifth studio album by Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish, released on 7 June 2004 by Spinefarm Records and Nuclear Blast. It is the last album to feature Tarja Turunen on lead vocals. The album cost nearly €250,000 to make, (1,000,000 including the videos) which made it Finland's most expensive recording ever until the release of Nightwish's next album, \"Dark Passion Play\", which cost over €500,000 to produce. As of 2013, \"Once\" has sold 2.3 million copies worldwide, being Nightwish's most successful album to date.",
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"text": "\"FantasMic\" is a song by the Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish from their album \"Wishmaster\".",
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"text": "\"Sleeping Sun\" is a power ballad by Nightwish. The song was written by Tuomas Holopainen and dedicated to the solar eclipse that arose on the European sky in 1999. It was first released on the MaxiCD of the same name in 1999, with a re-recorded version released in late October/early November 2005.",
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"id": "11312191",
"score": 0.6500099301338196,
"text": "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus is a 2009 fantasy film directed by Terry Gilliam and written by Gilliam and Charles McKeown. The film follows a travelling theatre troupe whose leader, having made a bet with the Devil, takes audience members through a magical mirror to explore their imaginations and present them with a choice between self-fulfilling enlightenment or gratifying ignorance.",
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{
"id": "11783144",
"score": 0.6443290710449219,
"text": "\"While Your Lips Are Still Red\" is a 2007 song written by Tuomas Holopainen and Marco Hietala of the Finnish metal quintet Nightwish. It was performed by Holopainen, Hietala, and Jukka Nevalainen for the Finnish film \"Lieksa!\", which was written and directed by renowned Finnish director Markku Pölönen; the film premiered in Finland in September 2007. The song is included on Nightwish's \"Amaranth\" single, which was released on 22 August 2007 as the second single of their sixth studio album, \"Dark Passion Play\". It was also released on their live / compilation EP \"Made in Hong Kong (And in Various Other Places)\" in 2009.",
"topk_rank": 12
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{
"id": "10007332",
"score": 0.6436200737953186,
"text": "The discography of the Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish consists of eight studio albums, one extended play, four live albums, seven compilations, thirteen music videos and twenty one singles. The band was formed in 1996 by songwriter and keyboardist Tuomas Holopainen, guitarist Emppu Vuorinen, and former vocalist Tarja Turunen; Nightwish's current line-up has six members although Turunen has been replaced by Anette Olzon, and the original bassist, Sami Vänskä, has been replaced by Marco Hietala, who also took over the male vocalist part. Olzon left the band in 2012 and was replaced by Floor Jansen.",
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{
"id": "9894973",
"score": 0.6408638954162598,
"text": "Dark Passion Play is the sixth studio album by Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish, released on 26 September 2007 in Finland, 28 September in Europe and 2 October 2007 in the United States. It is the first album without original vocalist Tarja Turunen, who was dismissed in 2005, as well as the first album involving future member Troy Donockley on uilleann pipes and tin whistle. It is the first of only two albums with vocalist Anette Olzon, who was eventually dismissed in 2012 after the release of the band's subsequent album, \"Imaginaerum\". Tuomas Holopainen has referred to it as the \"album that saved his life\".",
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{
"id": "51722214",
"score": 0.6377726793289185,
"text": "Winter's Gate is the seventh studio album by the Finnish melodic death metal band Insomnium. It was released worldwide on September 23, 2016 via Century Media Records. It is a concept album said to be about “a group of Vikings who set out to find a fabled island west of Ireland, despite the treacherous winter drawing near.” The album consists of a single 40-minute track, but it was split into seven separate tracks for the digital download and streaming version.",
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{
"id": "24710258",
"score": 0.6349945664405823,
"text": "This is a list of songs either recorded by, or performed by, the Finnish band Nightwish:",
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{
"id": "2242129",
"score": 0.6321730613708496,
"text": "Michael James Owen Pallett (born September 7, 1979) is a Canadian composer, violinist, keyboardist, and vocalist, who performs solo as Owen Pallett or, before 2010, under the name Final Fantasy. As Final Fantasy, he won the 2006 Polaris Music Prize for the album \"He Poos Clouds\".",
"topk_rank": 17
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{
"id": "34485177",
"score": 0.6317750215530396,
"text": "Jack and the Cuckoo-Clock Heart is a 2013 animated fantasy film based on the concept album by the French rock band Dionysos, and on the illustrated novel \"La Mécanique du cœur\" written by the band's lead singer Mathias Malzieu. The music of the film was entirely composed by Dionysos.",
"topk_rank": 18
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{
"id": "41701069",
"score": 0.631263792514801,
"text": "Music Inspired by the Life and Times of Scrooge is the first solo album by Finnish songwriter and keyboardist Tuomas Holopainen, best known for his work in the symphonic metal band Nightwish. It was based on cartoonist Don Rosa's \"The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck\", a graphic novel which featured the Carl Barks Disney comics character of the same name. Rosa contributed the cover artwork. The first single, \"A Lifetime of Adventure\" was released on February 5, 2014 along with a music video directed by Ville Lipiäinen.",
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}
] |
5a8b88c25542995d1e6f13e0 | Of the two fighters in the "Rumble in the Jungle" which one is also an ordained minister? | [
{
"id": "744312",
"score": 0.6007801294326782,
"text": "When We Were Kings is a 1996 Academy Award winning documentary film directed by Leon Gast about the famous \"Rumble in the Jungle\" heavyweight championship match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman. The fight was held in Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) on October 30, 1974."
},
{
"id": "150091",
"score": 0.6259406208992004,
"text": "George Edward Foreman (born January 10, 1949) is an American former professional boxer who competed from 1969 to 1977, and from 1987 to 1997. Nicknamed \"Big George\", he is a two-time world heavyweight champion and an Olympic gold medalist. Outside the sport he is an ordained minister, author, and entrepreneur."
}
] | [
{
"id": "188163",
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"text": "The Rumble in the Jungle was a historic boxing event in Kinshasa, Zaire (now Democratic Republic of the Congo) on October 30, 1974 (at 4:00 am). Held at the 20th of May Stadium (now the Stade Tata Raphaël), it pitted the undefeated world heavyweight champion George Foreman against challenger Muhammad Ali, a former heavyweight champion; the attendance was 60,000. Ali won by knockout, putting Foreman down just before the end of the eighth round. It has been called \"arguably the greatest sporting event of the 20th century\". The event was one of Don King's first ventures as a professional boxing promoter.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "26629314",
"score": 0.6220415830612183,
"text": "Fight Pastor is a Christian ministry organization led by Pastor Brandon Beals of Canyon Creek Church in Mill Creek, Washington. The ministry provides the mixed martial arts (MMA) community with a wide range of services, including chaplaincy and MMA news from a Christian perspective.",
"topk_rank": 1
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{
"id": "39365082",
"score": 0.6173832416534424,
"text": "The Fight is a 1975 non-fiction book by Norman Mailer about the boxing title fight between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman at Kinshasa in Zaire in 1974, known as the \"Rumble in the Jungle\".",
"topk_rank": 2
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{
"id": "690865",
"score": 0.6132478713989258,
"text": "William Franklin \"Billy\" Graham Jr. KBE (born November 7, 1918) is an American evangelical Christian evangelist, ordained as a Southern Baptist minister, who rose to celebrity status in 1949 reaching a core constituency of middle-class, moderately conservative Protestants. He is widely regarded as the most influential preacher of the 20th century. He held large indoor and outdoor rallies; sermons were broadcast on radio and television, some still being re-broadcast into the 21st century. In his six decades of television, Graham is principally known for hosting the annual \"Billy Graham Crusades\", which he began in 1947, until he concluded in 2005, at the time of his retirement. He also hosted the popular radio show \"Hour of Decision\" from 1950 to 1954. He repudiated segregation and, in addition to his religious aims, helped shape the worldview of fundamentalists and evangelicals, leading them to appreciate the relationship between the Bible and contemporary secular viewpoints. Graham has preached to live audiences of nearly 215 million people in more than 185 countries and territories through various meetings, including BMS World Mission and Global Mission. He has also reached hundreds of millions more through television, video, film, and webcasts.",
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{
"id": "23727247",
"score": 0.608793318271637,
"text": "Soul Power is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jeff Levy-Hinte about the Zaire 74 music festival in Kinshasa which accompanied the Rumble in the Jungle heavyweight boxing championship match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman in October 1974.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "40110720",
"score": 0.6030330061912537,
"text": "Tony Anthony (born as Andonis Andreou Athanasiou on 30 July 1971, name changed by deed poll in 1975 to Andonis Andrew Anthony, but known since childhood as Tony) is a British Christian evangelist. He became prominent following the 2004 publication of his autobiography, \"Taming The Tiger\", in which he claimed to have been a violent criminal before converting to Christianity. The book was well received by the Christian community, and Anthony began an international ministry as an evangelist. However, an independent investigation in 2013 concluded that large sections of the book are false.",
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{
"id": "1805125",
"score": 0.591648519039154,
"text": "Whisky priest (sometimes Whiskey priest) is a priest or ordained minister who shows clear signs of moral weakness, while at the same time teaching a higher standard. A whisky priest's shortcomings may include many vices, but usually include alcoholism. Graham Greene cites another person using the term in his travel book, \"Lawless Road\", published in 1939. Greene also used \"whisky priest\" to refer to the unnamed main character in his 1940 novel \"The Power and the Glory\".",
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{
"id": "3041760",
"score": 0.587800920009613,
"text": "Fabrício Werdum (] ; born July 30, 1977) is a Brazilian mixed martial artist and former UFC Heavyweight Champion. He is also a two-time Brazilian jiu-jitsu world champion, a two-time Abu Dhabi Combat Club World Heavyweight Champion and European jiu-jitsu champion. He holds black belts in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Judo, and Muay Thai. Werdum has competed in PRIDE, the UFC, Strikeforce, and Jungle Fight.",
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{
"id": "31397783",
"score": 0.5872175693511963,
"text": "Elmo Henderson born April 8, 1935 is an African-American former boxer from Texas. Despite his dubious claim of a 1972 win against Muhammad Ali in an exhibition match in San Antonio, Texas, he did not become particularly well known in the boxing community; John Spong of the \"Texas Monthly\" said that the match was the \"shot not heard round the world\". However, people who attended the exhibition say Elmo Henderson did not defeat Ali, and newspaper reports after the exhibition made no mention of Ali losing. After the match, Henderson became a part of George Foreman's Rumble in the Jungle event in Zaire and won a libel suit against Norman Mailer and \"Playboy\". As of 2003, Henderson was a homeless man in Austin, Texas. As of 2015, Henderson lives in a care home in Northern California.",
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{
"id": "1715408",
"score": 0.5870553851127625,
"text": "Kirkconnel (Gaelic: \"Cille Chonaill\") is a small parish and city in Dumfries and Galloway, southwestern Scotland. It is located on the A76 near the head of Nithsdale. Kirkconnel led a more wild existence than neighboring towns like Sanquhar. Principally it has been a sporting community. In the village there is a world famous chip shop called Frankies. The city has also hosted two Olympics. It was in this city that the Rumble in the Jungle fight took place. The name comes from The Church of Saint Conal. In 1850 the village had only a single street 400 yd long. Next to Kirkconnel is a separate village called Kelloholm.",
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{
"id": "44039493",
"score": 0.5865449905395508,
"text": "The year 2004 is the 2nd year in the history of Jungle Fight, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Brazil. In 2004 Jungle Fight held 2 events beginning with, \"Jungle Fight 2\".",
"topk_rank": 10
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{
"id": "34945862",
"score": 0.584736704826355,
"text": "John Lineker dos Santos de Paula (born January 1, 1990) known professionally as John Lineker, is a Brazilian mixed martial artist who currently competes in the Bantamweight division of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. John Lineker is named after English football striker Gary Lineker. A professional competitor since 2008, he is the former Jungle Fight Bantamweight Champion. As of October 04, 2016, he is #3 in the official UFC Bantamweight rankings. Known for his aggressive fighting style, punching power and durability, Lineker holds the record for most weight misses in UFC history with five.",
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{
"id": "46336652",
"score": 0.584507942199707,
"text": "Chris Whaley (born August 7, 1954) is an American author, Southern Baptist pastor and former professional wrestler who competed in Florida using the ring name The Saint. His novel \"The Masked Saint\" was turned into a movie in 2016. He grew up in Auburndale, Florida and graduated from Auburndale High School in 1972.",
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{
"id": "26183343",
"score": 0.5844976305961609,
"text": "Dorrel \"Dory\" Dixon (born February 1, 1935) is a Jamaican retired professional wrestler who worked for the majority of his career in Mexico, where he eventually became a Mexican citizen. He is currently a pastor for the Seventh-day Adventist Church, preaching about religion and physical health all over Mexico.",
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{
"id": "43831497",
"score": 0.5844013690948486,
"text": "The year 2003 is the 1st year in the history of Jungle Fight, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Brazil. In 2003 Jungle Fight held 1 event, \"Jungle Fight 1\".",
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{
"id": "3570136",
"score": 0.5838818550109863,
"text": "Bishop Frederick Douglas Washington (January 1, 1914 - January 12, 1988) was a renowned Pentecostal minister of the Washington Temple Church of God in Christ (COGIC) in Brooklyn, New York. His most famous protege is Rev. Al Sharpton, whom he licensed and ordained as a minister at the age of nine.",
"topk_rank": 15
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{
"id": "1658467",
"score": 0.5827809572219849,
"text": "Hosea Lorenzo Williams (January 5, 1926 – November 16, 2000) was a United States civil rights leader, ordained minister, businessman, philanthropist, scientist, and politician. He may be best known as a trusted member of fellow famed civil rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize winner Martin Luther King, Jr.'s inner circle. Under the banner of their flagship organization, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, King depended on Williams to organize and stir masses of people into nonviolent direct action in myriad protest campaigns they waged against racial, political, economic, and social injustice. King alternately referred to Williams, his chief field lieutenant, as his \"bull in a china closet\" and his \"Castro\".",
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{
"id": "690034",
"score": 0.5820829272270203,
"text": "Eldridge Wayne Coleman (born June 7, 1943) is an American retired professional wrestler currently signed to WWE under a Legends Contract. An iconic figure in professional wrestling, he worked under the ring name \"Superstar\" Billy Graham and gained recognition for his tenure as the WWWF Heavyweight Champion in 1977–1978. As an award-winning bodybuilder, he was a training partner and close friend of Arnold Schwarzenegger. Graham is best remembered for revolutionizing the interview and physique aspects of the professional wrestling industry as well as for his highly charismatic performance style. Some of his wrestling proteges have included Hulk Hogan, Jesse Ventura, and Ric Flair.",
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{
"id": "690231",
"score": 0.5796014666557312,
"text": "Kenneth Shamrock (born Kenneth Wayne Kilpatrick; February 11, 1964) is an American mixed martial artist, Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) Hall of Famer, and retired professional wrestler. He emerged as one of the biggest stars in the history of mixed martial arts, headlining over 15 main events and co-main events in the UFC and Pride Fighting Championships during the course of his career and set numerous pay-per-view records with his drawing power. Shamrock is widely considered to be a legendary figure and icon in the sport of mixed martial arts. Shamrock was named The World's Most Dangerous Man by ABC News in a special entitled \"The World's Most Dangerous Things\" in the early part of his UFC career, a moniker which has stuck as his nickname.",
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{
"id": "9314942",
"score": 0.5782799124717712,
"text": "Billy Graham (September 9, 1922 – January 22, 1992) was an American boxer from New York City who had an impressive professional record of 102 wins and 15 losses. Though a leading lightweight contender, Graham was never the recipient of a world title. Graham did however, have the remarkable distinction of never having been knocked off his feet in his long career. He was elected into the World Boxing Hall of Fame in 1987, and is also in the International Boxing Hall of Fame.",
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}
] |
5a7cc52d554299452d57ba41 | What city did the key suspect in the 2001 anthrax attacks work in? | [
{
"id": "18974154",
"score": 0.7236655950546265,
"text": "Bruce Edwards Ivins (April 22, 1946 – July 29, 2008) was an American microbiologist, vaccinologist, senior biodefense researcher at the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), Fort Detrick, Maryland, and the key suspect in the 2001 anthrax attacks."
},
{
"id": "80877",
"score": 0.8,
"text": "Fort Detrick is a United States Army Medical Command installation located in Frederick, Maryland. Historically, Fort Detrick was the center of the US biological weapons program from 1943 to 1969. Since the discontinuation of that program, it has hosted most elements of the United States biological defense program."
}
] | [
{
"id": "18974173",
"score": 0.7089312672615051,
"text": "The 2001 anthrax attacks, also known as Amerithrax from its Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) case name, occurred within the United States over the course of several weeks beginning on September 18, 2001, one week after the September 11 attacks. Letters containing anthrax spores were mailed to several news media offices and two Democratic U.S. Senators, killing five people and infecting 17 others. According to the FBI, the ensuing investigation became \"one of the largest and most complex in the history of law enforcement.\"",
"topk_rank": 0
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{
"id": "774136",
"score": 0.6807790994644165,
"text": "Dale L. Watson is the former Assistant Director for the Counterterrorism Division of the FBI, as such he headed the FBI investigation into the September 11, 2001 attacks and the 2001 anthrax attacks.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "31535",
"score": 0.6500644087791443,
"text": "Timothy James McVeigh (April 23, 1968 – June 11, 2001) was an American domestic terrorist convicted and executed for the detonation of an ammonium nitrate fertilizer and nitromethane truck bomb in front of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995. Commonly referred to as the Oklahoma City bombing, the attack killed 168 people and injured over 600. According to the United States government, it was the deadliest act of terrorism within the United States prior to the September 11 attacks, and remains the most significant act of domestic terrorism in United States history.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "2980738",
"score": 0.6460935473442078,
"text": "Emad A. Salem is an FBI informant, who was a key witness in the trial of Ramzi Yousef, Abdul Hakim Murad, and Wali Khan Amin Shah, convicted in the World Trade Center bombing of February 26, 1993.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "1803244",
"score": 0.6460088491439819,
"text": "Iyman Faris (a.k.a. Mohammad Rauf; born June 4, 1969) is a Pakistani American who served for months as a double agent for the FBI before pleading guilty in May 2003 of providing material support to Al Qaeda. A United States citizen since 1999, he had worked as a truck driver and lived in Columbus, Ohio. As of September 2003, Faris is the \"only confessed al Qaeda sleeper caught on U.S. soil.\"",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "2055069",
"score": 0.6457390189170837,
"text": "Abdelmajid Dahoumane ( ; born January 6, 1967, in Algeria) is wanted by the FBI in connection with the 2000 Millennium Plot to blow up Los Angeles International Airport.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "49540569",
"score": 0.6455614566802979,
"text": "Leonard William Hatton Jr. (August 16, 1956 – September 11, 2001) was an American special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). He was killed in the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City when he entered one of the towers to help evacuate the occupants and stayed when the towers collapsed.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "19269984",
"score": 0.6436992883682251,
"text": "9/11 or the September 11 attacks were a series of attacks in the United States in 2001 by al-Qaeda.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "28156",
"score": 0.6427369117736816,
"text": "Salem al-Hazmi (Arabic: سالم الحازمي , \"Sālam al-Ḥāzmī\" , also transliterated as Alhazmi) (February 2, 1981 – September 11, 2001) was one of five hijackers of American Airlines Flight 77 as part of the September 11 attacks.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "148652",
"score": 0.642693281173706,
"text": "John Patrick O'Neill (February 6, 1952September 11, 2001) was an American counter-terrorism expert, who worked as a special agent and eventually a Special Agent in Charge in the Federal Bureau of Investigation until late 2001. In 1995, O'Neill began to intensely study the roots of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing after he assisted in the capture of Ramzi Yousef, who was the leader of that plot.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "20487",
"score": 0.6407584547996521,
"text": "Mohamed Mohamed el-Amir Awad el-Sayed Atta (Arabic: محمد محمد الأمير عوض السيد عطا \"Muḥammad Muḥammad al-Amir ‘Awaḍ as-Sayyid ‘Aṭā \" ] ; September 1, 1968 – September 11, 2001) was an Egyptian hijacker and one of the ringleaders in the September 11 attacks who served as the hijacker-pilot of American Airlines Flight 11, crashing the plane into the North Tower of the World Trade Center as part of the coordinated attacks. At 33 years of age, he was the oldest hijacker to take part in the attacks.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "210432",
"score": 0.6404885053634644,
"text": "Waleed Mohammed al-Shehri (Arabic: وليد الشهري , \"Walīd ash-Shehrī\" , also transliterated as Alshehri) (December 20, 1978 – September 11, 2001) was one of five hijackers of American Airlines Flight 11, which was crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center as part of the September 11 attacks in 2001.",
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},
{
"id": "17655420",
"score": 0.6379330158233643,
"text": "American Airlines Flight 11 was a domestic passenger flight that was hijacked by five al-Qaeda members on September 11, 2001, as part of the September 11 attacks. Mohamed Atta deliberately crashed the plane into the North Tower of the World Trade Center in New York City, killing all 92 people aboard and an unknown number in the building's impact zone. The aircraft involved, a Boeing 767-223ER, registration N334AA, was flying American Airlines' daily scheduled morning transcontinental service from Logan International Airport, in Boston, Massachusetts, to Los Angeles International Airport, in Los Angeles, California.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "867270",
"score": 0.6378332376480103,
"text": "The Hamburg cell (German: \"Hamburger Zelle\" ) or Hamburg terror cell (German: \"Hamburger Terrorzelle\" ) was, according to U.S. and German intelligence agencies, a group of radical Islamists based in Hamburg, Germany that included students who eventually came to be key operatives in the 9/11 attacks. Important members included Mohamed Atta, who led the four hijacking teams in 2001 and piloted American Airlines Flight 11; Ramzi bin al-Shibh, who conspired with the other three members but was unable to enter the United States; and Marwan al-Shehhi, who piloted United Airlines Flight 175, Ziad Jarrah, who piloted United Airlines Flight 93 and failed to hit a target in Washington D.C., claimed by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to have been the Capitol. Less important members included Said Bahaji, Zakariya Essabar, Mounir el-Motassadeq, and Abdelghani Mzoudi.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "390851",
"score": 0.634638786315918,
"text": "Said Bahaji (Arabic: سعيد بحجي , also transliterated as Saeed Bahaji, also known as Zuhayr al-Maghribi, born 15 July 1975 in Haselünne, Lower Saxony), was a citizen of Germany, electrical engineer, and an alleged member of the Hamburg cell that provided money and material support to the perpetrators of the September 11 attacks.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "19932",
"score": 0.633232057094574,
"text": "A former law student, Majed Mashaan Ghanem Moqed (Arabic: ماجد مشعان موقد , \"Mājad Mashaʼān Mūqad\" ; also transliterated as Moqued) (June 18, 1977 – September 11, 2001) was one of five hijackers of American Airlines Flight 77 as part of the September 11 attacks.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "85201",
"score": 0.6324955224990845,
"text": "Ramzi bin al-Shibh (Arabic: رمزي بن الشيبة , \"Ramzī bin ash-Shībah\" ; also transliterated as bin al-Shaibah) (born May 1, 1972) is a Yemeni citizen being held by the United States as an enemy combatant detainee at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. He is accused of being a \"key facilitator for the September 11 attacks\" in 2001 in the United States.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "2436824",
"score": 0.6317208409309387,
"text": "Robert K. \"Bob\" Stevens (June 20, 1938 – October 5, 2001), an American photojournalist for the \"Sun\", a subsidiary of American Media, located in Boca Raton, Florida, United States was the first journalist killed in the 2001 anthrax attacks when letters containing anthrax were mailed to multiple media outlets in the United States. The anthrax attacks also killed four others in the United States and sickened seventeen others.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "5864094",
"score": 0.6283661127090454,
"text": "The alleged Prague connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda came through an alleged meeting between September 11 hijacker Mohamed Atta and Iraqi consulate Ahmad Samir al-Ani in April 2001. This alleged connection is notable because it was a key claim used by the Bush administration to justify the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. The Czech counterintelligence service claimed that Mohamed Atta al-Sayed, a September 11 hijacker, met with Ahmad Samir al-Ani, the consul at the Iraqi Embassy in Prague, in a cafe in Prague. This claim, sometimes known as the \"Prague connection\", is generally considered to be false and has been said to be unsubstantiated by the Senate Intelligence Committee in the United States.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "44106",
"score": 0.6282427906990051,
"text": "Marwan Yousef Mohamed Rashid Lekrab al-Shehhi (Arabic: مروان يوسف محمد رشيد لكراب الشحي , \"Marwān Yūsuf Muḥammad Rashīd Lekrāb ash-Sheḥḥī\" , also transliterated as Alshehhi; 9 May 1978 – 11 September 2001) was the hijacker-pilot of United Airlines Flight 175, crashing the plane into the South Tower of the World Trade Center as part of the September 11 attacks.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5ac0e54e554299294b219044 | My Name Is Anthony Gonsalves is a song that includes the playback vocals of a singer of what nationality? | [
{
"id": "7167114",
"score": 0.791159987449646,
"text": "\"My Name is Anthony Gonsalves\" is a popular comic song from the 1977 Bollywood film \"Amar Akbar Anthony\". One unusual feature of this song is that the actor featured in its picturization, Amitabh Bachchan, provides vocals along with the playback singer Kishore Kumar. Amitabh speaks and Kishore Kumar sings."
},
{
"id": "334547",
"score": 0.6348904967308044,
"text": "Kishore Kumar (4 August 1929 – 13 October 1987) was an Indian playback singer, actor, lyricist, composer, producer, director, and screenwriter. He is considered one of the successful playback singers in the Hindi film industry."
}
] | [
{
"id": "11176488",
"score": 0.7664077281951904,
"text": "My Name Is Anthony Gonsalves is a Bollywood drama film starring newcomer Nikhil Dwivedi, Amrita Rao and Mithun Chakraborty as the lead protagonists. The film is directed by Eeshwar Nivas. The name of the movie is derived from the 1977 hit movie Amar Akbar Anthony's famous song, \"My Name Is Anthony Gonsalves.\" It was released on 11 January 2008 and was a box office bomb.",
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"id": "10518588",
"score": 0.6853030323982239,
"text": "Vijay Yesudas is an Indian film playback singer and occasional actor.",
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{
"id": "11460095",
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"text": "Anthony Prabhu Gonsalves (12 June 1927 – 18 January 2012) was an Indian musical composer, music arranger and teacher born in the village of Majorda (near Margao in Portuguese Goa), who during the mid-1950s, attempted to merge the symphonies of his Goan heritage with the Hindustani melodies and rhythms in films of the day.",
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{
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"text": "Kattassery Joseph Yesudas (born 10 January 1940) is an Indian musician and film playback singer. Yesudas sings Indian classical, devotional and cinematic songs. He has recorded more than 100,000 songs in a number of Indian languages as well as Russian, Arabic, Latin and English during a career spanning more than five decades. He has performed in most Indian languages except Assamese, Konkani and Kashmiri. He also composed a number of Malayalam film songs in the 1970s and 1980s. Yesudas is fondly called \"Gana Gandharvan\" (\"The Celestial Singer\"). He is considered to be a cultural icon of the Malayalam language - as well as of its ethnic group spread across the world - due largely to the fact that his songs have been profoundly ingrained into the minds of Malayalam speaking people for five decades.",
"topk_rank": 3
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{
"id": "33661381",
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"text": "Sripathi Panditaradhyula Balasubrahmanyam ( ; born 4 June 1946) is an Indian film playback singer, actor, music director, voice actor and film producer. He is mostly referred to as S. P. B. or Balu. He has won the Guinness World Record for recording the highest number of songs. He has garnered six National Film Awards for Best Male Playback Singer, and twenty five Nandi Awards for his works towards Telugu cinema. In 2012, He received the Andhra Pradesh state NTR National Award for his contributions to Indian cinema.",
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{
"id": "222789",
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"text": "Lata Mangeshkar ( ) (born 28 September 1929) is an Indian playback singer and occasional music composer. She is one of the best-known and most respected playback singers in India. Mangeshkar's career started in 1942 and has spanned over seven decades. She has recorded songs for over a thousand Hindi films and has sung songs in over thirty-six regional Indian languages and foreign languages, though primarily in Marathi and Hindi. She is the recipient of three National Film Awards, 12 Bengal Film Journalists' Association Awards, four Filmfare Best Female Playback Awards and many more. The Dadasaheb Phalke Award was bestowed on her in 1989 by the Government of India. She is also the second vocalist, after M. S. Subbulakshmi, to have ever been awarded the Bharat Ratna in 2001, India's highest civilian honour. She has four siblings—Asha Bhosle, Hridaynath Mangeshkar, Usha Mangeshkar and Meena Mangeshkar—of which she is the eldest.",
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{
"id": "47833209",
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"text": "Sripathi Panditaradhyula Balasubrahmanyam ( ) is an Indian film playback singer, actor, music director, voice actor and film producer. He is mostly referred to as S. P. B. or Balu. He has won the Guinness World Record for recording the highest number of songs. He won the National Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer six times and the Nandi Awards in Telugu cinema 25 times from the Government of Andhra Pradesh.",
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},
{
"id": "16788401",
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"text": "Sudesh Bhosle (born 1 July 1960) is an Indian playback singer who primarily sings for Bollywood films. He was born to N.R. Bhosle and Sumantai Bhosle. Bhosle is known for his ability to mimic actor Amitabh Bachchan, having sung for him in various films.",
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{
"id": "18702143",
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"text": "Anthony (born Llewellyn Anthony Gonsalves on 11 September 1973 in Chennai, India) is a Tamil film editor. He has worked in over twenty Tamil, Malayalam, Kannada and Telugu language films. This makes him one of the few editors to have worked for the four biggest film industries in India. He is also an inspiration for many young editors.",
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},
{
"id": "251081",
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"text": "Asha Bhosle (born 8 September 1933), is an Indian singer. She is best known as a playback singer in Hindi cinema, although she has a wider repertoire. Bhosle's career started in 1943 and has spanned over six decades. She has done playback singing for over a thousand Bollywood movies. In addition, she has recorded several private albums and participated in numerous solo concerts in India and abroad. Bhosle is the sister of playback singer Lata Mangeshkar.",
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{
"id": "43652210",
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"text": "Rita Thyagarajan (born 10 June 1984), known by the mononym Rita, is an Indian playback singer who sings in Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam.",
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{
"id": "7742732",
"score": 0.6439394950866699,
"text": "P. Unnikrishnan (born 9 July 1966) is a Carnatic vocalist and a national award-winning playback singer.",
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},
{
"id": "30676879",
"score": 0.6424701809883118,
"text": "Devan Ekambaram (born 25 December) is an Indian American film playback singer, actor and composer. He began his career as a playback singer in Tamil films and later branched out to many other south Indian languages as well like Telugu, Kannada and has so far sung over 500 songs.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "21812043",
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"text": "Ranjith also known as K.G. Ranjith is an Indian playback singer, working in the Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada film industries.",
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{
"id": "22871111",
"score": 0.6350384950637817,
"text": "Porayathu Leela (19 May 1934 – 31 October 2005), popularly known as P Leela, was an Indian playback singer.",
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{
"id": "1368369",
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"text": "Kedarnath Bhattacharya, better known as Kumar Sanu, is a leading Indian playback singer, Born on 23 September 1957, mostly popular for rendering his voice in Bollywood movies of the 1990s and early 2000s. He holds the Guinness Book world record for recording the most songs in a day, 28, in the year 1993. He was awarded the Filmfare Best Male Playback Singer Award for five consecutive years. In 2009, the Government of India awarded him Padma Shri, India's fourth-highest civilian honour, in recognition of his achievements.",
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{
"id": "592444",
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"text": "A playback singer is a singer whose singing is pre-recorded for use in movies. Playback singers record songs for soundtracks, and actors or actresses lip-sync the songs for cameras; the actual singer does not appear on screen.",
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{
"id": "6093697",
"score": 0.629447340965271,
"text": "K. J. Yesudas is a multilingual singer, singing Indian classical music, devotional, light music, and Film songs. His commercially published recordings span multiple genres.",
"topk_rank": 17
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{
"id": "15162266",
"score": 0.62716144323349,
"text": "Mohit Chauhan (born 11 March 1966) is an Indian singer, most known for his work as a playback singer for Bollywood,Tollywood, & Kollywood movies as well as the former front-man of the Indipop band Silk Route. He is a two-time recipient of the Filmfare Award for Best Male Playback Singer and three times Zee Cine Award For Best Male Playback Singer as well as several other awards mentioned below.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "38791750",
"score": 0.6264118552207947,
"text": "Amit Kumar (born 1952) is an Indian film playback singer, actor, director, and music director.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5ae0d70c554299603e41846d | What famous document was signed into law in the largest city in Uganda? | [
{
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"text": "The Common Man's Charter was a document submitted to the Ugandan People's Congress by Ugandan President Milton Obote, forming a part of the country's so-called \"Move to the Left\". In it, he asserts several key principles of his vision for Uganda, including a commitment to democracy in the country. It built on agreements from the June 1968 conference, and was signed into law on the 24 October 1969, in an emergency meeting in Kampala. It was subtitled \"First Steps for Uganda to Move to the Left\", heralding the start of the movement within Uganda."
},
{
"id": "56689",
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"text": "Kampala is the capital and largest city of Uganda. The city is divided into five boroughs that oversee local planning: Kampala Central Division, Kawempe Division, Makindye Division, Nakawa Division, and Rubaga Division. The city is conterminous with Kampala District. Surrounding Kampala is the rapidly growing Wakiso District, whose population more than doubled between 2002 and 2014 and now stands at over 2 million."
}
] | [
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"id": "9869494",
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"text": "The Constitution of Uganda is the supreme law of Uganda. The current constitution was adopted on October 8, 1995. It sanctions a republican form of government with a powerful president. Amendments in 2005 removed presidential term limits and legalized a multi-party political system.",
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{
"id": "55054759",
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"text": "Uganda is a country in Africa.",
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{
"id": "23501518",
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"text": "Namuwongo is a location in Kampala, the capital of Uganda and the largest city in that country.",
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{
"id": "3500411",
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"text": "Kololo is a hill in Kampala, the largest city and capital of Uganda.",
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{
"id": "297540",
"score": 0.6821989417076111,
"text": "Buganda is a subnational kingdom within Uganda. The kingdom of the Ganda people, Buganda is the largest of the traditional kingdoms in present-day Uganda, comprising all of Uganda's Central Region, including the Ugandan capital Kampala. The 6 million \"Baganda\" (singular \"Muganda\"; often referred to simply by the root word and adjective, Ganda) make up the largest Ugandan ethnic group, representing approximately 16.9% of Uganda's population.",
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{
"id": "25679014",
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"text": "Kampala Hill, commonly referred to as Old Kampala, is a hill in the center of Kampala, Uganda's capital and largest city.",
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{
"id": "2674364",
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"text": "Makerere ( ) is a neighborhood in the city of Kampala, Uganda's capital city. The name also applies to the hill on which this neighborhood is perched; one of the original seven hills that constituted Kampala at the time of its founding, in the early 1900s.",
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{
"id": "293409",
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"text": "Yoweri Kaguta Museveni ( ; born 15 September c. 1944) is a Ugandan politician who has been President of Uganda since 29 January 1986.",
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{
"id": "36549889",
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"text": "Kampala Tower, sometimes referred to as the East African Trade Centre, is a proposed building in Kampala, the capital of Uganda and the largest city in that country.",
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{
"id": "2711088",
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"text": "The 1999 Nairobi Agreement was a deal signed by Presidents Yoweri Museveni of Uganda and Omar al-Bashir of Sudan in Nairobi, Kenya, on 8 December 1999. The stated intent of the agreement was to \"provide the critical impetus for resolving the northern Uganda conflict.\" The deal was brokered by former US president Jimmy Carter.",
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{
"id": "31282051",
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"text": "Uganda, today the Republic of Uganda, was a Commonwealth realm between 1962 and 1963. When British rule ended in 1962, the Uganda Independence Act 1963 transformed the Uganda Protectorate into an independent country called Uganda that retained the British monarch, Elizabeth II, as head of state. The royal succession was governed by the English Act of Settlement of 1701.",
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},
{
"id": "38615489",
"score": 0.6641608476638794,
"text": "The following is a of the history of the city of Kampala, Buganda, Uganda.",
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{
"id": "14513597",
"score": 0.663744330406189,
"text": "The National Library of Uganda was established by an Act of Parliament in 2003, replacing the Public Libraries Board itself established in 1964. It is the legal deposit library for Uganda and is under the directorship of Gertrude Kayaga Mulindwa. The National Library building is on Buganda Road in the city of Kampala.",
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{
"id": "2710869",
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"text": "The Nairobi Agreement was a peace deal between the Ugandan government of Tito Okello and the National Resistance Army (NRA) rebel group led by Yoweri Museveni. The accords were signed in Nairobi, Kenya in December 1985.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "70842",
"score": 0.6619440913200378,
"text": "Idi Amin Dada ( ; 1923 2816 August 2003) was a Ugandan political leader and military officer who was the President of Uganda from 1971 to 1979.",
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{
"id": "23704382",
"score": 0.6601312756538391,
"text": "Kansanga is a location in Kampala, Uganda's capital and largest city.",
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{
"id": "31816",
"score": 0.6596202850341797,
"text": "Uganda ( or ), officially the Republic of Uganda, is a landlocked country in East Africa. It is bordered to the east by Kenya, to the north by South Sudan, to the west by the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to the south-west by Rwanda, and to the south by Tanzania. The southern part of the country includes a substantial portion of Lake Victoria, shared with Kenya and Tanzania. Uganda is in the African Great Lakes region. Uganda also lies within the Nile basin, and has a varied but generally a modified equatorial climate.",
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{
"id": "25529162",
"score": 0.6587337851524353,
"text": "Bugoloobi, sometimes spelled as Bugolobi, is a location in Kampala, Uganda's capital and largest city.",
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{
"id": "297696",
"score": 0.6581272482872009,
"text": "Entebbe is a major town in Central Uganda. On a Lake Victoria peninsula, approximately 37 km southwest of the Ugandan capital, Kampala, it was once the seat of government for the Protectorate of Uganda prior to independence, in 1962. Entebbe is the location of Entebbe International Airport, Uganda's largest commercial and military airport, best known for the dramatic rescue of 100 hostages kidnapped by the resistance group of the PFLP-EO and Revolutionary Cells (RZ) organizations. Entebbe is also the location of State House, the official office and residence of the President of Uganda.",
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{
"id": "2077765",
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"text": "Makerere University Kampala ( ; MUK) is Uganda's largest and third-oldest institution of higher learning, first established as a technical school in 1922. In 1963, it became the University of East Africa, offering courses leading to general degrees from the University of London. It became an independent national university in 1970 when the University of East Africa was split into three independent universities: University of Nairobi (Kenya), University of Dar es Salaam (Tanzania), and Makerere University. Today, Makerere University is composed of nine colleges and one school offering programmes for about 36,000 undergraduates and 4,000 postgraduates.",
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}
] |
5ab89be055429919ba4e2334 | In which year was this experiment in student-run alternative education and co-operative living in Toronto, Ontario, founded by Howard Adelman initiated? | [
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"id": "20868091",
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"text": "Howard Adelman {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (born January 7, 1938) is a Canadian philosopher and former university professor. He retired as Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at York University in 2003. Adelman was one of the founders of Rochdale College, as well as the founder and director of York's Centre for Refugee Studies. He was editor of \"Refuge\" for ten years, and since his retirement he has received several honorary university and governmental appointments in Canada and abroad. Adelman was the recipient of numerous awards and grants, and presented the inaugural lecture in a series named in his honor at York University in 2008."
},
{
"id": "1157115",
"score": 0.7075586318969727,
"text": "Opened in 1968, Rochdale College was an experiment in student-run alternative education and co-operative living in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It provided space for 840 residents in a co-operative living space. It was also a free university where students and teachers would live together and share knowledge. The project ultimately failed when it could not cover its financing and neighbours complained that it had become a haven for drugs and crime. It was closed in 1975."
}
] | [
{
"id": "41696789",
"score": 0.6245608925819397,
"text": "Campus Apartments is a student housing company headquartered in Philadelphia, United States. The CEO is David J. Adelman. The company was founded in 1958 by Alan Horowitz, a friend of the Adelman family.",
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{
"id": "10866771",
"score": 0.6243718266487122,
"text": "School of Experiential Education (SEE) is a small alternative high school located in Toronto's west end of Etobicoke. SEE's take on alternative education includes small class sizes, discussion-based courses, thematic English courses, as well as opportunities for independent and project-based learning. SEE delivers all courses required for the completion of the Ontario Secondary School Diploma. In addition, SEE offers opportunities to participate in media, technology, and photography courses, with equipment such as cameras, two computer labs, recording equipment and a dark room available for student use. SEE has a full curriculum that includes the arts, math, humanities and sciences, as well as physical education, technology and business. SEE is a semestered school.",
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{
"id": "19921703",
"score": 0.6217705607414246,
"text": "WillowWood School is an alternative private school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada offering an Ontario Ministry of Education-inspected Grades 1 through 12 program. It was founded in 1980 by owner/principal Joy Kurtz.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "7955325",
"score": 0.6217156052589417,
"text": "The University of Toronto (U of T, UToronto, or Toronto) is a public research university in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on the grounds that surround Queen's Park. It was founded by royal charter in 1827 as \"King's College\", the first institution of higher learning in the colony of Upper Canada. Originally controlled by the Church of England, the university assumed the present name in 1850 upon becoming a secular institution. As a collegiate university, it comprises twelve colleges, which differ in character and history, each with substantial autonomy on financial and institutional affairs. It has two satellite campuses in Scarborough and Mississauga.",
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{
"id": "39348802",
"score": 0.6156915426254272,
"text": "ALPHA Alternative School is an alternative school in Toronto, Canada. It is Toronto's oldest public alternative school. It was created by parents, and based on the Ontario government's Hall-Dennis Report. ALPHA stands for \"A lot of people hoping for an alternative.\" It is located downtown on Brant Street, near Adelaide St.",
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{
"id": "300275",
"score": 0.6094464659690857,
"text": "The University of Ontario Institute of Technology, commonly referred to as UOIT, is a public research university located in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada. It was founded in 2002 by the \"University of Ontario Institute of Technology Act, 2002\" passed by the Government of Ontario, and its first students were accepted in 2003, making it one of Canada's newest universities.",
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{
"id": "3949326",
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"text": "THESTUDENTSCHOOL, founded in 1979, is an alternative high school in the Toronto District School Board. It has approximately 160 students and generally offers 11th and 12th grade academic courses. It is in the same building as Western Technical-Commercial School and Ursula Franklin Academy.",
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{
"id": "16156672",
"score": 0.6073827147483826,
"text": "Toronto Experimental Artists (also known as TEA) began around 1988 as an independent, artist-run cassette label. It was founded by Mark Harrington and Ed Sinclair, who were then students at York University in Toronto, Canada. Within a year or so, it expanded to include their joint independent video productions (some of which were music-related, some humorous, and some were social commentaries in documentary form). The predominant goal of the artists involved was to experiment with various electronic media, and use these in new or interesting ways to create significant works of art on a very low budget. Often obsolete or older technology was employed such as reel to reel four track machines or a Casio SK1 Sampler Keyboard which was designed more as a toy than a real instrument. With the desktop publishing revolution, small press publications (photocopied chapbooks or zines) became another low-cost, low-tech means of communication embraced by the artists involved. In the spirit of Factory Records (i.e. the New Order 'label' as seen in 24-Hour Party People) TEA was meant to be a non-label, inasmuch as there was no 'business' end to it, and is/was very much DIY.",
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{
"id": "41052094",
"score": 0.6064649820327759,
"text": "David J. Adelman is an American businessman. He is currently the president and CEO of Campus Apartments LLC, based in Philadelphia, and co-founder and chairman of FS Investments (formerly Franklin Square Capital Partners).",
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{
"id": "673122",
"score": 0.6041736602783203,
"text": "The Humber Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning, commonly known as Humber College, is a publicly funded college in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.",
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{
"id": "29635628",
"score": 0.6037366986274719,
"text": "Hillel of Greater Toronto is the Hillel Foundation organization for Jewish student life in Toronto. It provides programming and events for undergraduate and graduate students at the University of Toronto, York University, Ryerson University and 'emerging campuses' such as Seneca College, Humber College, George Brown College, OCAD and the satellite campuses of York (Glendon) and U of T (University of Toronto Mississauga and University of Toronto Scarborough).",
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{
"id": "1058750",
"score": 0.6034180521965027,
"text": "Now (styled as NOW), also known as Now Magazine, is a free alternative weekly newspaper in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.",
"topk_rank": 11
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{
"id": "1230388",
"score": 0.6026444435119629,
"text": "Tartu College is an independently owned and maintained student residence on the north side of Bloor Street West, just east of Madison Avenue, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Most of its residents are students of the University of Toronto.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "1092796",
"score": 0.5954781174659729,
"text": "The Triangle Program is an alternative education program in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, designed for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students who are at risk of dropping out or committing suicide because of homophobic and transphobic harassment in regular schools. It is also open to anyone who has been affected by homophobia or transphobia.",
"topk_rank": 13
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{
"id": "1453346",
"score": 0.5948042869567871,
"text": "St. Lawrence College (SLC) is a College of Applied Arts and Technology with three campuses in Eastern Ontario, namely Brockville (1970), Cornwall (1968) and Kingston (founded September 1969).",
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{
"id": "16920296",
"score": 0.5936998128890991,
"text": "Subway Academy I is a public alternative high school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Originally, Subway Academy I was simply called \"Subway Academy\", but after Subway Academy II opened, the name was changed to \"Subway Academy I\". It was founded in September 1973, making it one of the oldest secondary alternative schools in Toronto. The original staff were Achim Krull, Judith Robertson and Murray Shukyn. The school was a reflection of the Ivan Illich \"deschooling\" movement, which proposed that people would learn best from community resources. As a result, a directory of resources along the Toronton subway system was created, and the school derives its name from that initiative. The community resource aspect of the program however faded very quickly. Students were more interested in formal credit courses and academic courses leading to admission to university or college admission.",
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{
"id": "3456399",
"score": 0.5933420658111572,
"text": "The Underground is the official student publication of the University of Toronto Scarborough. It began distributions in 1982 as a newspaper and in 2009, transitioned into magazine format. Servicing about 12 500 students, the issues are distributed monthly over the course of the academic school year producing a total of eight issues per volume.",
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{
"id": "36449585",
"score": 0.5931391716003418,
"text": "The Free University of New York (FUNY) was an educational social enterprise initiated by Allen Krebs, Sharon Krebs and James Mellen in July 1965.",
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},
{
"id": "34415757",
"score": 0.5929405093193054,
"text": "Toronto New School is an independent, not for profit secondary school in Toronto, Ontario. Toronto New School opened its doors in February 2010, offering an interdisciplinary curriculum to high school students in grades 9 through 12. The school emerged after SOLA (School of Liberal Arts) went bankrupt. The principle and vice principle of SOLA created Toronto New school.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "182663",
"score": 0.5926640629768372,
"text": "The Sudbury Valley School was founded in 1968 by a community of people including, Mimsy Sadofsky, Hanna Greenberg, and Daniel Greenberg, in Framingham, Massachusetts, United States. There are over 50 schools that claim to be based on the Sudbury Model in the United States, Belgium, Brazil, Denmark, France, Germany, Israel, Japan and Switzerland. The model has three basic tenets: educational freedom, democratic governance and personal responsibility. It is a private school, attended by children from the ages of 4 to 19.",
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}
] |
5a7cd08b55429907fabef042 | Miami University, home of the Redskins football team is based not in Florida nor a renowned seat of learning in England, but in which Ohio town? | [
{
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"text": "The 1985 Miami Redskins football team was an American football team that represented Miami University in the Mid-American Conference (MAC) during the 1985 NCAA Division I-A football season. In its third season under head coach Tim Rose, the team compiled an 8–2–1 record (7–1–1 against MAC opponents), finished in second place in the MAC, and outscored all opponents by a combined total of 266 to 211."
},
{
"id": "295150",
"score": 0.716008722782135,
"text": "Miami University (also referred to as Miami of Ohio or simply Miami) is a public research university located on a 2,138-acre campus in Oxford, Ohio, 35 miles north of Cincinnati. Founded in 1809, although classes were not held until 1824, Miami University is the 10th oldest public university and 32nd oldest higher education institution in the United States. The university also has regional campuses in Hamilton, Middletown and West Chester, as well as the Dolibois European Center in Luxembourg. Miami University is classified by the Carnegie Foundation as a research university with a high research activity. It is affiliated to the University System of Ohio."
}
] | [
{
"id": "128966",
"score": 0.6952847838401794,
"text": "Oxford is a city in northwestern Butler County, Ohio, United States, in the southwestern portion of the state. It lies in Oxford Township, originally called the College Township. The population was 21,371 at the 2010 census. This college town was founded as a home for Miami University. In 2014, Oxford was rated by \"Forbes\" as the \"Best College Town\" in the United States, based on a high percentage of students per capita and part-time jobs, and a low occurrence of brain-drain.",
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"id": "6512082",
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"text": "The Miami RedHawks football (known as the Miami Redskins before 1996) program represents Miami University, located in Oxford, Ohio, in college football at the NCAA Division I FBS level. The RedHawks compete in the Mid-American Conference and are known for producing several high-profile head coaches, earning it the nickname \"Cradle of Coaches\". The team is currently coached by Chuck Martin and play their home games at Yager Stadium.",
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"text": "Ohio University is a large, primarily residential, public research university in Athens, Ohio, United States. The first university chartered by an Act of Congress and the oldest in Ohio, it was chartered in 1787 and subsequently reapproved for the territory in 1802 and state in 1804, opening for students in 1809. s of 2016 , the university's total enrollment, including all campuses, was more than 36,800.",
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"text": "Ohio University is a major public university located in the Midwestern United States in Athens, Ohio, situated on an 1800 acre campus. Founded in 1804, it is the oldest university in the Northwest Territory and ninth oldest public university in the United States. Ohio University has 197,000 living alumni, of whom approximately 105,000 stay in the state. Many have gone on to achieve success in a variety of fields, including athletics, journalism, and government.",
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"text": "The Ohio State University, commonly referred to as Ohio State or OSU, is a large, primarily residential, public university in Columbus, Ohio. Founded in 1870 as a land-grant university and ninth university in Ohio with the Morrill Act of 1862, the university was originally known as the Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College (Mech). The college began with a focus on training students in various agricultural and mechanical disciplines but was developed into a comprehensive university under the direction of then Governor (later, President) Rutherford B. Hayes, and in 1878 the Ohio General Assembly passed a law changing the name to \"The Ohio State University\". It has since grown into the third-largest university campus in the United States. Along with its main campus in Columbus, Ohio State also operates a regional campus system with regional campuses in Lima, Mansfield, Marion, Newark, and Wooster.",
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"text": "Ohio Stadium, also known as the Horseshoe, \"the Shoe\", and \"the House that Harley built\", is an American football stadium in Columbus, Ohio, United States, on the campus of The Ohio State University. Its primary purpose is the home venue of the Ohio State Buckeyes football team and the Ohio State University Marching Band; it also serves as the site for the university's Spring Commencement ceremonies each May.",
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{
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"text": "Ohio Wesleyan University (also known as Wesleyan or OWU) is a private liberal arts college in Delaware, Ohio, United States. It was founded in 1842 by Methodist leaders and Central Ohio residents as a nonsectarian institution, and is a member of the Ohio Five — a consortium of Ohio liberal arts colleges. Ohio Wesleyan has always admitted students irrespective of religion or race and maintained that the university \"is forever to be conducted on the most liberal principles.\"",
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{
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"text": "Athens is a city in and the county seat of Athens County, Ohio, United States. It is located along the Hocking River in the southeastern part of Ohio. A historic college town, Athens is home to Ohio University(home of about 30,000 students in Athens, and is the principal city of the Athens, Ohio Micropolitan Statistical Area. The official population of Athens in the 2010 U.S. Census was 23,832.",
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{
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"text": "Oxford is a city in Oxfordshire, England, famous for the University of Oxford.",
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"id": "87011",
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"text": "The University of Miami (informally referred to as UM, U of M, or The U) is a private, nonsectarian research university in Coral Gables, Florida, United States. s of 2015 , the university enrolls 16,848 students in 12 separate colleges/schools, including the Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine in Miami's Health District, a law school on the main campus, and the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science focused on the study of oceanography and atmospheric sciences on Virginia Key, with research facilities at the Richmond Facility in southern Miami-Dade County.",
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{
"id": "31797",
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"text": "The University of Oxford (informally Oxford University or simply Oxford) is a collegiate research university located in Oxford, England. It has no known date of foundation, but there is evidence of teaching as far back as 1096, making it the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the world's second-oldest university in continuous operation. It grew rapidly from 1167 when Henry II banned English students from attending the University of Paris. After disputes between students and Oxford townsfolk in 1209, some academics fled north-east to Cambridge where they established what became the University of Cambridge. The two \"ancient universities\" are frequently jointly referred to as \"Oxbridge\".",
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{
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"text": "Bob Hitchens (born c. 1952) was a college football running back at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio from 1971–1973.",
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{
"id": "870648",
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"text": "Denison University is a private, coeducational, and residential four-year liberal arts college in Granville, Ohio, about 30 mi east of Columbus. Founded in 1831, it is Ohio's second-oldest liberal arts college. Denison is a member of the Five Colleges of Ohio and the Great Lakes Colleges Association, and competes in the North Coast Athletic Conference.",
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{
"id": "6840361",
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"text": "Miami Field was a multi-purpose stadium at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.",
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},
{
"id": "1095791",
"score": 0.6229052543640137,
"text": "Capital University (commonly referred to as Capital, Cap, or CU) is a private accredited liberal arts and research university in Bexley, a suburb of Columbus, Ohio. Capital was founded as the Theological Seminary of the",
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},
{
"id": "93135",
"score": 0.6228261590003967,
"text": "Butler County is a county in the U.S. state of Ohio. As of the 2010 census, the population was 368,130. Its county seat is Hamilton. It is named for General Richard Butler, who died in 1791 during St. Clair's Defeat. It is also home to Miami University, an Ohio public university.",
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{
"id": "70348",
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"text": "Newcastle upon Tyne ( ; ), commonly known as Newcastle, is a city in Tyne and Wear, North East England, 103 miles (166 km) south of Edinburgh and 277 miles (446 km) north of London on the northern bank of the River Tyne, 8.5 mi from the North Sea. Newcastle is the most populous city in the North East, and forms the core of the Tyneside conurbation, the eighth most populous urban area in the United Kingdom. Newcastle is a member of the English Core Cities Group and is a member of the Eurocities network of European cities. Newcastle was part of the county of Northumberland until 1400, when it became a county of itself, a status it retained until becoming part of Tyne and Wear in 1974. The regional nickname and dialect for people from Newcastle and the surrounding area is Geordie. Newcastle also houses Newcastle University, a member of the Russell Group, as well as Northumbria University.",
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{
"id": "6000172",
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"text": "The Ohio State Buckeyes football team is a college football team that competes as part of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, representing The Ohio State University in the East Division of the Big Ten Conference. Ohio State has played their home games at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio since 1922.",
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{
"id": "129309",
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"text": "Wilberforce is a census-designated place (CDP) in Greene County, Ohio, United States. The population was 2,271 at the 2010 census, up from 1,579 at the 2000 census. The community was named for the English statesman William Wilberforce, who worked for the abolition of slavery and achieved the end of the slave trade in the United Kingdom and its empire. The community is home to Wilberforce University and Central State University, two historically black universities.",
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{
"id": "30039703",
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"text": "Williams Hall is located on the campus of Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. It is the home of Miami University's Department of Journalism and Department of Communications.",
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}
] |
5ab790175542995dae37e95f | Which American spy film did Claude Rains star in? | [
{
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"text": "William Claude Rains (10 November 188930 May 1967) was an English film and stage actor whose career spanned 46 years. After his American film debut as Dr. Jack Griffin in \"The Invisible Man\" (1933) he appeared in classic films like \"The Adventures of Robin Hood\" (1938), \"Mr. Smith Goes to Washington\" (1939), \"The Wolf Man\" (1941), \"Casablanca\" and \"Kings Row\" (both 1942), \"Notorious\" (1946), and \"Lawrence of Arabia\" (1962)."
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"id": "255198",
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"text": "Notorious is a 1946 American spy film noir directed and produced by Alfred Hitchcock, starring Cary Grant, Ingrid Bergman and Claude Rains as three people whose lives become intimately entangled during an espionage operation. It was shot in late 1945 and early 1946, and was released by RKO Radio Pictures in August 1946."
}
] | [
{
"id": "34272759",
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"text": "Strange Holiday is a 1945 American film directed by Arch Oboler. Claude Rains stars as a man who returns from a fishing trip to find America overtaken by fascists.",
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{
"id": "13522995",
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"text": "The Man Who Watched Trains Go By (1952) is a crime drama film, based on the 1938 novel by Georges Simenon and released in the United Kingdom with an all-European cast, including Claude Rains in the lead role of Kees Popinga, who is infatuated with Michele Rozier (Märta Torén). The film was released in the United States in 1953 under the title The Paris Express. It was directed by Harold French. This was Rains' seventh film in color, his first being \"Gold Is Where You Find It\" (1938).",
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{
"id": "14339615",
"score": 0.608292818069458,
"text": "Mr. Dryden is a fictional character in the film \"Lawrence of Arabia\" (1962). He is portrayed by veteran actor Claude Rains. He is a diplomat and political leader, the head of the Arab Bureau, who first enlists T. E. Lawrence (Peter O'Toole) for work as a liaison to the Arab Revolt, and manipulates Lawrence and the Arabs to ensure Allied dominion over the post-war Middle East.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "19862870",
"score": 0.6023392081260681,
"text": "The Dirty Game (German: Spione unter sich , French: Guerre secrète , Italian: La guerra segreta ) is a 1965 anthology spy film starring Henry Fonda and Robert Ryan.",
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},
{
"id": "736814",
"score": 0.6001186966896057,
"text": "The Rains Came is a 1939 20th Century Fox film based on an American novel by Louis Bromfield (published in June 1937 by Harper & Brothers). The film was directed by Clarence Brown and stars Tyrone Power, Myrna Loy, George Brent, Brenda Joyce, Nigel Bruce, and Maria Ouspenskaya.",
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},
{
"id": "5492248",
"score": 0.5999208092689514,
"text": "John Rain is a fictional character created by Barry Eisler. He appears in eight of Eisler's espionage novels as an assassin for hire who specializes in making his victims appear to have died of natural causes. Rain is a Vietnam War veteran who served with the Special Forces; he was later recruited by the CIA, but by the time he appears in the first of the \"John Rain\" novels, \"Rain Fall\", he is working \"freelance,\" offering his assassination services to any client willing to follow his three rules: 1) No women or children, 2) No secondary team working separately on an assassination Rain is handling, 3) Principal actors only (i.e., no hits on family members, etc., in order to \"send a message\").",
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},
{
"id": "7725707",
"score": 0.5959843397140503,
"text": "Deception is a 1946 movie released by Warner Brothers, and directed by Irving Rapper. The film is based on the play \"Monsieur Lamberthier\" by Louis Verneuil. The screenplay was written by John Collier and Joseph Than. It stars Bette Davis, Paul Henreid, and Claude Rains who had also appeared together in the highly successful \"Now, Voyager\" (1942).",
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},
{
"id": "43117078",
"score": 0.5950283408164978,
"text": "Bridge of Spies is a 2015 historical drama legal thriller film directed and co-produced by Steven Spielberg, written by Matt Charman, Ethan and Joel Coen and stars Tom Hanks, Mark Rylance, Amy Ryan, and Alan Alda. Set during the Cold War, the film tells the story of lawyer James B. Donovan, who is entrusted with negotiating the release of Francis Gary Powers—a U.S. Air Force pilot whose U-2 spy plane was shot down over the Soviet Union in 1960—in exchange for Rudolf Abel, a convicted Soviet KGB spy held under the custody of the United States, whom he represented at trial. The name of the film refers to the Glienicke Bridge, which connects Potsdam with Berlin, where the prisoner exchange took place. The film was an international co-production of the United States and Germany.",
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},
{
"id": "617029",
"score": 0.5948345065116882,
"text": "Barry Nelson (April 16, 1917 – April 7, 2007) was an American actor, noted as the first actor to portray Ian Fleming's secret agent James Bond.",
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},
{
"id": "289591",
"score": 0.5942113995552063,
"text": "Spy Game is a 2001 American spy film directed by Tony Scott and starring Robert Redford and Brad Pitt. The film grossed $62 million in the United States and $143 million worldwide and received mostly positive reviews from film critics.",
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},
{
"id": "23172101",
"score": 0.5938159823417664,
"text": "Lisbon is a 1956 American film noir crime film produced and directed by Ray Milland and starring Milland, Maureen O'Hara, Claude Rains, Edward Chapman, and Jay Novello. An American smuggler based in Lisbon is hired to rescue a wealthy industrialist from behind the Iron Curtain.",
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},
{
"id": "33954113",
"score": 0.5917321443557739,
"text": "Frederick William Rains (c. 1860 – 3 December 1945) was a British actor and film director. He was the father of the actor Claude Rains.",
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},
{
"id": "2461592",
"score": 0.5905976295471191,
"text": "Casino Royale is a 1967 spy comedy film originally produced by Columbia Pictures featuring an ensemble cast. It is loosely based on Ian Fleming's first James Bond novel. The film stars David Niven as the \"original\" Bond, Sir James Bond 007. Forced out of retirement to investigate the deaths and disappearances of international spies, he soon battles the mysterious Dr. Noah and SMERSH. The film's tagline: \"Casino Royale is too much... for one James Bond!\" refers to Bond's ruse to mislead SMERSH in which six other agents are pretending to be \"James Bond\", namely, baccarat master Evelyn Tremble (Peter Sellers), millionaire spy Vesper Lynd (Ursula Andress), Bond's secretary Miss Moneypenny (Barbara Bouchet), Mata Bond (Joanna Pettet), Bond's daughter by Mata Hari; and British agents \"Coop\" (Terence Cooper) and \"The Detainer\" (Daliah Lavi).",
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},
{
"id": "40806780",
"score": 0.5889462828636169,
"text": "I Was An American Spy is a 1951 film dramatizing the true story of Claire Phillips, an American of Filipino descent who spied on the Japanese during World War II, and was captured, tortured, and sentenced to death before being rescued. The film, produced by Allied Artists and directed by Lesley Selander, starred Ann Dvorak in the title role. The filmmakers brought Phillips on as a consultant, and she and Dvorak became good friends, with Phillips admiring Dvorak's professional dedication in this difficult role.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "724258",
"score": 0.588032066822052,
"text": "Mission: Impossible is a 1996 American action spy film directed by Brian De Palma, produced by and starring Tom Cruise. Based on the , the plot follows Ethan Hunt (Cruise) and his mission to uncover the mole who has framed him for the murders of his entire Impossible Missions Force (IMF) team. Work on the script had begun early with filmmaker Sydney Pollack on board, before De Palma, Steven Zaillian, David Koepp, and Robert Towne were brought in. \"Mission: Impossible\" went into pre-production without a shooting script. De Palma came up with some action sequences, but Koepp and Towne were dissatisfied with the story that led up to those events.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "12812600",
"score": 0.5878822803497314,
"text": "Nazi Agent is a 1942 American spy film directed by Jules Dassin, in his first feature-length film for MGM. It stars Conrad Veidt playing identical twins, one loyal to the United States (U.S.), the other a dedicated German Nazi.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "3529964",
"score": 0.5876754522323608,
"text": "Black Rain is a 1989 American action thriller film directed by Ridley Scott, starring Michael Douglas, Andy García, Ken Takakura, Kate Capshaw and Yusaku Matsuda. The story centers on two New York City police officers who arrest a member of the Yakuza and must escort him back to Japan. Once there, he escapes, and the two police officers find themselves dragged deeper and deeper into the Japanese underworld.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "1623363",
"score": 0.5867339968681335,
"text": "5 Fingers, known also as \"Five Fingers\", is a 1952 American spy film directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz and produced by Otto Lang. The screenplay by Michael Wilson was based on the book \"Operation Cicero\" (Original German: \"Der Fall Cicero\") (1950) by Ludwig Carl Moyzisch, Nazi commercial attaché at the German Embassy in Ankara (1943-44). In the film, James Mason plays Ulysses Diello (Cicero), the character based on Elyesa Bazna. The rest of the cast includes Danielle Darrieux, Michael Rennie, Herbert Berghof and Walter Hampden.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "4338749",
"score": 0.5863261818885803,
"text": "I Spy is a 2002 American spy comedy film directed by Betty Thomas, and starring Eddie Murphy and Owen Wilson. The film is based on the television series of the same name that aired in the 1960s and starred Robert Culp and Bill Cosby. The film was released in the United States on November 1, 2002.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "9126014",
"score": 0.5861218571662903,
"text": "Across the Pacific is a 1942 American spy film set on the eve of the entry of the United States into World War II. The film was directed first by John Huston, then by Vincent Sherman after Huston joined the United States Army Signal Corps. It stars Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, and Sydney Greenstreet. Despite the title, the action of the film never progresses across the Pacific, concluding in Panama.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5a7e42ee5542994959419955 | Who was in a pop duo with the man who writes songs for a cartoon about a spider monkey? | [
{
"id": "1965056",
"score": 0.5935015082359314,
"text": "Andrew Douglas Paley (born 1952) is an American songwriter, record producer, composer, and multi-instrumentalist who was one half of the Paley Brothers, a 1970s power pop duo formed with his brother Jonathan Paley. Following their disbandment, Andy was a staff producer at Sire Records, producing albums for artists such as Brian Wilson, Jonathan Richman, NRBQ, John Wesley Harding, the Greenberry Woods, and Jerry Lee Lewis. Since then, Paley has also worked in film and television, composing scores and writing songs mostly for cartoons such as \"SpongeBob SquarePants\" and \"Camp Lazlo\"."
},
{
"id": "2062051",
"score": 0.5254919528961182,
"text": "Camp Lazlo (stylized as CAMP LAZLO!) is an American animated television series created by Joe Murray and produced by Cartoon Network Studios. The show revolves around Lazlo, a spider monkey who attends a Boy Scout-like summer camp with a cast of anthropomorphic animal characters. The series has a style of humor similar to Murray's previous series, \"Rocko's Modern Life\"."
}
] | [
{
"id": "2379482",
"score": 0.632941722869873,
"text": "Loggins and Messina is an American rock-pop duo consisting of Kenny Loggins and Jim Messina who achieved their success in the early to mid-1970s. Among their well-known songs are \"Danny's Song\", \"House at Pooh Corner\", and \"Your Mama Don't Dance\". After selling more than 16 million records and becoming one of the leading musical duos of the 1970s, Loggins and Messina broke up in 1976. Although Messina would find only limited popularity following the breakup, Loggins went on to be a 1980s hitmaker. In 2005 and again in 2009, Loggins and Messina have rejoined for tours in the United States.",
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{
"id": "31417",
"score": 0.6202669143676758,
"text": "The Monkees are an American rock and pop band originally active between 1965 and 1971, with subsequent reunion albums and tours in the decades that followed. They were formed in Los Angeles in 1965 by Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider for the American television series \"The Monkees\", which aired from 1966 to 1968. The musical acting quartet was composed of Americans Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith and Peter Tork and British stage and television actor and singer Davy Jones. The band's music was initially supervised by producer Don Kirshner, backed by the songwriting duo of Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "47341170",
"score": 0.6174015402793884,
"text": "\"Together We Two\" is a song released by The Archies, a fictional bubblegum pop band from the Archie Comics universe in 1970. It was written by Jeff Barry and Andy Kim It failed to chart the Billboard Hot 100 peaking at No. 22 on the U.S. Bubbling Under Singles chart.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "5460875",
"score": 0.6172909736633301,
"text": "\"Monkey\" is a US number-one hit song by George Michael. It was released as a single in 1988 and reached number-one on the US \"Billboard\" Hot 100 and number 13 on the UK Singles Chart. \"Monkey\" debuted at number 42 on 9 July 1988, reaching number-one for two weeks, beginning on 27 August 1988.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "1494749",
"score": 0.6139523386955261,
"text": "Mitchell and Webb are a British comedy double act, composed of David Mitchell (born 14 July 1974) and Robert Webb (born 29 September 1972). They are best known for starring in the Channel 4 sitcom \"Peep Show\" and their sketch show \"That Mitchell and Webb Look\". The duo first met at the Footlights in 1993 and collaborated for the 1995 Revue whilst studying at the University of Cambridge.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "30130048",
"score": 0.6118214130401611,
"text": "\"Sugar Daddy\" is a song by British pop group Thompson Twins, released in 1989 as the lead single from their seventh studio album \"Big Trash\". It was written and produced by Alannah Currie and Tom Bailey. The single's B-Side, \"Monkey Man\", was exclusive to this single.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "39905410",
"score": 0.6087969541549683,
"text": "The Buggles, a duo consisting of bassist Trevor Horn and keyboardist Geoff Downes, have a discography of two studio albums, a compilation album and video live album, a promotional extended play, nine singles, and three music videos. The Buggles also produced three songs, \"Back of My Hand\" by The Jags, \"Monkey Chop\" by Dan-I, and \"Film Star\" by Tom Marshall. The group formed in 1977 in Wimbledon, South West London, and were signed by Island Records to record and publish their debut studio album, \"The Age of Plastic\", which was released in 1980. The album charted in the UK, Canada, the Netherlands, France, Sweden, and Japan.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "1147577",
"score": 0.6057824492454529,
"text": "Edward Thomas Rabbitt (November 27, 1941 – May 7, 1998) was an American singer and songwriter. His career began as a songwriter in the late 1960s, springboarding to a recording career after composing hits such as \"Kentucky Rain\" for Elvis Presley in 1970 and \"Pure Love\" for Ronnie Milsap in 1974. Later in the 1970s, Rabbitt helped to develop the crossover-influenced sound of country music prevalent in the 1980s with such hits as \"Suspicions\" and \"Every Which Way but Loose.\" His duets \"Both to Each Other (Friends and Lovers)\" and \"You and I\", with Juice Newton and Crystal Gayle respectively, later appeared on the soap operas \"Days of Our Lives\" and \"All My Children\".",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "4295794",
"score": 0.605674684047699,
"text": "Brian and Michael are a British music duo best known for their 1978 UK number one hit single, \"Matchstalk Men and Matchstalk Cats and Dogs\". Without further chart entries, they remain one-hit wonders in the UK. They comprise two members: Michael Coleman and Kevin Parrott.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "158197",
"score": 0.605553388595581,
"text": "\"Puff, the Magic Dragon\" (or \"Puff\") is a song written by Leonard Lipton and Peter Yarrow, and made popular by Yarrow's group Peter, Paul and Mary in a 1963 recording.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "621166",
"score": 0.6037018895149231,
"text": "\"Happy Together\" is a 1967 song from the Turtles' album of the same name. Released as a single in February 1967, the song knocked The Beatles' \"Penny Lane\" out of the number one slot for three weeks on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100. It was the group's only chart-topper in the United States. \"Happy Together\" reached number 12 on the UK Singles Chart in April 1967 and number 13 on Top 100 Singles of 1967 in Canada The song was written by Garry Bonner and Alan Gordon, former members of a band known as The Magicians. The song had been rejected a dozen times before it was offered to the Turtles, and the demo acetate was worn out.\"",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "8397",
"score": 0.6027173399925232,
"text": "Daniel Robert Elfman (born May 29, 1953) is an American composer, singer, songwriter, and record producer. Elfman is best known for his work scoring films and television shows, in particular his frequent collaborations with director Tim Burton, and for being the lead singer and songwriter for the band Oingo Boingo from 1974 to 1995.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "287868",
"score": 0.5972999334335327,
"text": "Peter Mark Sinclair \"Marc\" Almond (born 9 July 1957) is an English singer-songwriter and musician. Almond first began performing and recording in the synthpop/new wave duo Soft Cell. He has also had a diverse career as a solo artist. His collaborations include a duet with Gene Pitney on the 1989 UK number one single \"Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart\". Almond has sold over 30 million records worldwide.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "34682523",
"score": 0.5965138673782349,
"text": "Len Beadle (13 February 1932 – 1 June 2000) was an English music publisher, songwriter, music producer and performer, most famous for writing the theme to the hit children's TV show \"The Adventures of Rupert Bear\". He formed the vocal harmony group The Raindrops together with Jackie Lee.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "21859691",
"score": 0.5960204601287842,
"text": "Garfunkel and Oates is an American comedy–folk duo operating out of Los Angeles, California, consisting of actresses and songwriters Riki Lindhome (Garfunkel) and Kate Micucci (Oates). The band name is derived from \"two famous rock-and-roll second bananas\", Art Garfunkel and John Oates.",
"topk_rank": 14
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{
"id": "296767",
"score": 0.5953230261802673,
"text": "Barnes & Barnes, fictional twin brothers Art Barnes and Artie Barnes (Bill Mumy and Robert Haimer, respectively), are a comedy rock duo based in \"Lumania\", a fictional mythological civilization (similar to Lemuria or Atlantis). Most of their music is standard rock or pop with heavy comedic elements. They are best known for their 1978 song \"Fish Heads\".",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "11953919",
"score": 0.5952407121658325,
"text": "The Pipkins were a short-lived novelty duo, best known for their hit single \"Gimme Dat Ding\" (written by Albert Hammond and Mike Hazlewood), which reached No. 6 in the UK Singles Charts, No. 7 in Canada (RPM Top Singles), and No. 9 on the US \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart in 1970. They were Roger Greenaway, best known as a member of several songwriting teams, and Tony Burrows, a singer who had fronted several groups (often simultaneously) such as Edison Lighthouse, The Flower Pot Men, White Plains, The First Class and Brotherhood of Man.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "15157034",
"score": 0.594902515411377,
"text": "Cliff Friend (October 1, 1893 – June 27, 1974) was an accomplished songwriter and pianist. A member of Tin Pan Alley, Friend co-wrote several hits including \"Lovesick Blues\", \"My Blackbirds Are Bluebirds Now\" and \"The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down\", also known as the theme song to the \"Looney Tunes\" cartoon series.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "2278273",
"score": 0.5948284864425659,
"text": "The Nylons are an a cappella group founded in 1978 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, best known for their covers of pop songs such as The Turtles' \"Happy Together\", Steam's \"Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye\", and \"The Lion Sleeps Tonight\".",
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},
{
"id": "40130148",
"score": 0.5947334170341492,
"text": "Tim Cahill (born February 4, 1966) is an American producer, writer and animator who co-created the Cartoon Network series \"My Gym Partner's a Monkey\" with his wife Julie McNally Cahill. He, along with his wife, have co-created and are story editors for the 2012 \"Litlest Pet Shop\" series, and is a writer for \"The High Fructose Adventures of Annoying Orange\". He and his wife also worked for Warner Bros. on \"Histeria\", \"Detention\", \"Animaniacs\" and \"The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries\".",
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}
] |
5abdb0e855429965af743dc8 | Pasek and Paul are a duo that won an Academy Award for the song that was performed by whom in La La Land? | [
{
"id": "10290539",
"score": 0.7650550007820129,
"text": "Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, known together as Pasek and Paul, are an American songwriting duo and composing team for musical theater, films, and television. Their works include \"\", \"Dogfight\", \"Edges\", \"Dear Evan Hansen\", and \"James and the Giant Peach\". Their original songs have been featured on NBC's \"Smash\", and in the film \"La La Land\", for which they won both the Golden Globe and Academy Award for Best Original Song for the song \"City of Stars\"."
},
{
"id": "52814172",
"score": 0.6950851082801819,
"text": "\"City of Stars\" is a song performed by Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone from the film \"La La Land\" (2016). The music of the song was composed by Justin Hurwitz while the lyrics were provided by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul. The song won numerous awards, including the award for Best Original Song at both the 74th Golden Globe Awards and 89th Academy Awards."
}
] | [
{
"id": "52969975",
"score": 0.6945825815200806,
"text": "\"Audition (The Fools Who Dream)\" is a song from the film \"La La Land\" (2016). The music of the song was composed by Justin Hurwitz while the lyrics were provided by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul. In the film, the song is performed by Emma Stone. It received a nomination for Best Original Song at the 89th Academy Awards.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "52639947",
"score": 0.659121572971344,
"text": "\"Another Day of Sun\" is the opening number from the 2016 musical film \"La La Land\". The ensemble number portrays an ensemble of drivers in a Los Angeles traffic jam on a highway ramp singing and dancing about their aspirations to succeed in Hollywood. The song was filmed on location on a 130-foot-high express ramp of the Judge Harry Pregerson Interchange in three shots, edited with hidden cuts to give the illusion of a single six-minute take. The song was composed by Justin Hurwitz with lyrics by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, and choreography by Mandy Moore.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "20932510",
"score": 0.6429944038391113,
"text": "\"La La Land\" is a song recorded by American singer Demi Lovato. It was written by Lovato, Joe Jonas, Nick Jonas and Kevin Jonas and produced by the Jonas Brothers alongside John Fields, for Lovato's debut studio album, \"Don't Forget\" (2008). It was released as the album's second single on April 10, 2009, through Hollywood Records. \"La La Land\" is one of six songs on the album co-written by the Jonas Brothers, who also contributed backing vocals and guitars to the track. Lovato said that she wrote the song about being yourself in Hollywood and not letting other people change who you are. Musically, the song is a guitar-driven pop rock song and the lyrics speak of Lovato feeling \"out of place\" in Hollywood.",
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},
{
"id": "47204682",
"score": 0.6256251335144043,
"text": "La La Land is a 2016 American musical romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Damien Chazelle. It stars Ryan Gosling as a jazz pianist and Emma Stone as an aspiring actress, who meet and fall in love in Los Angeles while pursuing their dreams. The film's title refers simultaneously to music, the city of Los Angeles, and to the idiom for being out of touch with reality.",
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{
"id": "52726450",
"score": 0.6203960180282593,
"text": "La La Land: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack album to the 2016 film \"La La Land\". The soundtrack album was released through Interscope Records on December 9, 2016. The album has peaked at number 2 on the US \"Billboard 200\" and number 1 on the UK Albums Chart.",
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{
"id": "52583447",
"score": 0.6153660416603088,
"text": "\"La La Land\" is a 2016 American romantic musical comedy-drama film written and directed by Damien Chazelle. Starring Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone, the film focuses on two young people struggling to make ends meet in Los Angeles, while pursuing their dreams as artists. Justin Hurwitz composed the film's musical score, while Linus Sandgren was the cinematographer. David and Sandy Reynolds-Wasco were responsible for the production design and Mary Zophres designed the costumes.",
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},
{
"id": "6077969",
"score": 0.6002559065818787,
"text": "\"Spies Like Us\" is the title song to the 1985 Warner Bros. motion picture of the same name, starring Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd, and Donna Dixon. It was written and performed by Paul McCartney, and was a top ten hit in the United States in early 1986, reaching No. 7 on the singles chart. It also reached #13 in the UK.",
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{
"id": "38372792",
"score": 0.5989532470703125,
"text": "La La Land is a 2001 techno song by Cajmere.",
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{
"id": "19982053",
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"text": "Edges (sometimes produced as \"Edges: A Song Cycle\") is a work of musical theatre by Pasek & Paul. It is a song cycle about coming of age, growth and self-discovery of people mostly in their 20s. Its most famous song, \"Be My Friend\", has come to be commonly known as the \"Facebook song\".",
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{
"id": "10697810",
"score": 0.5941028594970703,
"text": "\"The Impossible Dream (The Quest)\" is a popular song composed by Mitch Leigh, with lyrics written by Joe Darion. The song is the most popular song from the 1965 Broadway musical \"Man of La Mancha\" and is also featured in the 1972 film of the same name starring Peter O'Toole.",
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},
{
"id": "100691",
"score": 0.5913450121879578,
"text": "Paul Albert Anka {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (born July 30, 1941) is a Canadian-American singer, songwriter, and actor. Anka became famous during the late 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s with hit songs like \"Diana\", \"Lonely Boy\", \"Put Your Head on My Shoulder\", and \"(You're) Having My Baby\". He wrote such well-known music as the theme for \"The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson\" and one of Tom Jones's biggest hits, \"She's a Lady\", as well as the English lyrics on Claude François and Jacques Revaux's music, for Frank Sinatra's signature song, \"My Way\", which has been covered by many including Elvis Presley. He was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame in 2005.",
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{
"id": "666748",
"score": 0.5912625193595886,
"text": "Paul Waaktaar-Savoy (born Pål Waaktaar Gamst, 6 September 1961) is a Norwegian musician and songwriter. He was named Knights First Class of the Order of St. Olav by King Harald for his services to Norwegian music and his international success. Pål Savoy is best known for his work as the main songwriter and guitarist in the Norwegian pop band A-ha. He has written or co-written most of the band's biggest hits, including \"The Sun Always Shines on T.V.\", \"Hunting High and Low\", \"Take On Me\", the James Bond theme \"The Living Daylights\" and the ballad \"Summer Moved On\". In addition, Waaktaar-Savoy is also a painter. The band A-ha has sold more than 50 million albums worldwide.",
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},
{
"id": "3773025",
"score": 0.5886597037315369,
"text": "\"A Love That Will Never Grow Old\" is a song from the film \"Brokeback Mountain\". Its music was composed by Argentine composer Gustavo Santaolalla, with lyrics by Bernie Taupin, and performed by singer Emmylou Harris. It won the 2005 Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, the Satellite Award and the Internet Movie Award for Best Original Song. The song was nominated at the World Soundtrack Awards for Best Original Song Written Directly for a Film but was not eligible for Academy Award consideration owing to its insufficient air time in the movie. It is available on the .",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "5747670",
"score": 0.5882009267807007,
"text": "\"Live and Let Die\" is the main theme song of the 1973 James Bond film \"Live and Let Die\", written by Paul and Linda McCartney and performed by Paul McCartney's band Wings. It was one of the group's most successful singles, and the most successful Bond theme to that point, charting at No. 2 on the US \"Billboard\" Hot 100 and No. 9 on the UK Singles Chart.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "47535900",
"score": 0.5867730379104614,
"text": "Dear Evan Hansen is a musical with music and lyrics by Pasek and Paul, and a book by Steven Levenson.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "33544319",
"score": 0.5852463841438293,
"text": "La La Land is the fifth and final studio album by Texas noise rock band Ed Hall, released on May 23, 1995 by Trance Syndicate.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "36659242",
"score": 0.5827714204788208,
"text": "\"The Green Leaves of Summer\" is a song by Paul Francis Webster, with music by Dimitri Tiomkin, written for the 1960 film \"The Alamo\". It was performed in the film's score by the vocal group The Brothers Four. In 1961 the song was nominated for an Academy Award; its parent soundtrack, for the film \"The Alamo\", was awarded a Golden Globe Award for \"Best Original Score\".",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "413210",
"score": 0.5806952714920044,
"text": "Paul Francis Webster (December 20, 1907 – March 18, 1984) was an American lyricist who won three Academy Awards for Best Song and was nominated sixteen times for the award.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "22638677",
"score": 0.5802642703056335,
"text": "\"Fly with Me\" is the second single by American pop rock band Jonas Brothers from their fourth studio album \"Lines, Vines and Trying Times\". It was released on June 9, 2009, through Hollywood Records. The song was featured in the film \"\", in which the Brothers provided voiceover work. It was written by the group and their bassist, Greg Garbowsky, about Kevin and Danielle's relationship before marriage, despite both of them being far apart from each other. A Cantonese version of the song is played in the \"Flights of Fantasy Parade\", a parade at Hong Kong Disneyland in Hong Kong.",
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},
{
"id": "15368369",
"score": 0.5802314281463623,
"text": "\"Let the River Run\" is a song first featured in the 1988 film \"Working Girl\", with music and lyrics by Carly Simon. The song won the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 1989. The song also won a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song at the 46th Golden Globe Awards, tying with \"Two Hearts\" by Phil Collins and Lamont Dozier from \"Buster\", in 1989, and a Grammy Award for Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or Television in 1990.",
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}
] |
5adf9a085542995ec70e904b | Tana and Riri is an Indian story about two girls born around 1564, who were asked to sing in the court of Akbar, and later Akbar the Great, was the third Mughal emperor, who reigned from which span of years? | [
{
"id": "1211576",
"score": 0.7892886996269226,
"text": "Tana and Riri is an Indian story about two girls born around 1564, who were asked to sing in the court of Akbar. The story has become part of Gujarati folk culture."
},
{
"id": "18945005",
"score": 0.7487547993659973,
"text": "Abu'l-Fath Jalal-ud-din Muhammad Akbar (15 October 1542 – 27 October 1605), popularly known as Akbar I (, literally \"the great\") and later Akbar the Great, was the third Mughal emperor, who reigned from 1556 to 1605. Akbar succeeded his father, Humayun, under a regent, Bairam Khan, who helped the young emperor expand and consolidate Mughal domains in India. A strong personality and a successful general, Akbar gradually enlarged the Mughal Empire to include nearly all of the Indian Subcontinent north of the Godavari river. His power and influence, however, extended over the entire country because of Mughal military, political, cultural, and economic dominance. To unify the vast Mughal state, Akbar established a centralised system of administration throughout his empire and adopted a policy of conciliating conquered rulers through marriage and diplomacy. To preserve peace and order in a religiously and culturally diverse empire, he adopted policies that won him the support of his non-Muslim subjects. Eschewing tribal bonds and Islamic state identity, Akbar strove to unite far-flung lands of his realm through loyalty, expressed through an Indo-Persian culture, to himself as an emperor who had near-divine status."
}
] | [
{
"id": "16294",
"score": 0.6645987033843994,
"text": "Mirza Nur-ud-din Beig Mohammad Khan Salim, known by his imperial name Jahangir (Persian for \"conqueror of the world\" (31 August 1569 – 28 October 1627)), was the fourth Mughal Emperor who ruled from 1605 until his death in 1627. Much romance has gathered around his name (Jahangir means 'conqueror of the world', 'world-conqueror' or 'world-seizer'; Jahan = world, gir the root of the Persian verb gereftan, gireftan = to seize, to grab), and the tale of his relationship with the Mughal courtesan, Anarkali, has been widely adapted into the literature, art and cinema of India.",
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},
{
"id": "2200804",
"score": 0.6645557284355164,
"text": "The Akbarnama which translates to \"Book of Akbar\", is the official chronicle of the reign of Akbar, the third Mughal Emperor (r. 1556–1605), commissioned by Akbar himself by his court historian and biographer, Abul Fazl who was one of the \"nine jewels in Akbar's court\". It was written in Persian, the literary language of the Mughals, and includes vivid and detailed descriptions of his life and times.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "577465",
"score": 0.6462995409965515,
"text": "Tansen (c. 1500 – 1586), also referred to as Tan Sen or Mian Tansen, was a prominent figure of North Indian (Hindustani) classical music. Born in a Hindu family, he learnt and perfected his art in the northwest region of modern Madhya Pradesh. He began his career and spent most of his adult life in the court and patronage of the Hindu king of Rewa State, Ram Chand, where Tansen's musical abilities and studies gained widespread fame. This reputation brought him to the attention of the Mughal Emperor Akbar, who sent messengers to Ram Chand requesting Tansen to join the musicians at the Mughal court. Tansen did not want to go, Ram Chand encouraged him to gain wider audience, and sent him along with gifts to Akbar. In 1562, about the age of 60, the Vaishnava musician Tansen joined the Akbar court, and his performances became a subject of many court historians.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "42742588",
"score": 0.640537679195404,
"text": "Maham Begam or Mahim Begum (died 28 March 1534; Persian: ماهم بیگم ; meaning \"My moon\") was Empress of the Mughal Empire from 20 April 1526 to 26 December 1530 as the third wife and chief consort of Babur, the founder of the Mughal Empire and the first Mughal emperor.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "26921054",
"score": 0.6385008692741394,
"text": "Grand Mughal or Mogul, also \"Great Mughal\", is a title coined by Europeans for the ruler of the Mughal Empire of India. It is especially associated with the third in the line, Akbar the Great (1542-1605). The Mughals themselves used the title \"Padishah\".",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "38254503",
"score": 0.6379595994949341,
"text": "Salima Sultan Begum (Urdu: سلیمہ سلطان بیگم) (February 23, 1539 – January 2, 1613) was the fourth wife of Emperor Akbar.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "517224",
"score": 0.6360756158828735,
"text": "Akbar II (22 April 1760 – 28 September 1837), also known as \"Akbar Shah II\", was the penultimate Mughal emperor of India. He reigned from 1806 to 1837. He was the second son of Shah Alam II and the father of Bahadur Shah II.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "36234039",
"score": 0.6339451670646667,
"text": "Daniyal Mirza (11 September 1572 – 8 April 1604) was an Imperial Prince of the Mughal Empire who served as the Viceroy of Deccan. He was the third son of Emperor Akbar the Great and the brother of the Emperor Jahangir. His two sons were executed by his nephew Shah Jahan on 23 January 1628.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "23787346",
"score": 0.630147397518158,
"text": "Hamida Banu Begum ( 1527 – 29 August 1604, Persian: حمیدہ بانو بیگم , \"Ḥamīda Banū Begum \" ) was a wife of the second Mughal emperor Humayun and the mother of his successor, the third Mughal emperor Akbar. She is also known by the title Maryam Makani, which was given to her by her son, Akbar.",
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},
{
"id": "24217897",
"score": 0.6297228336334229,
"text": "The Mughal Empire (Urdu: , \"Mughliyah Salṭanat \" ) or Mogul Empire, self-designated as Gurkani (Persian: گورکانیان , \"Gūrkāniyān\", meaning \"son-in-law\"), was an empire in the Indian subcontinent, founded in 1526. It was established and ruled by a Muslim dynasty with Turco-Mongol Chagatai roots from Central Asia, but with significant Indian Rajput and Persian ancestry through marriage alliances; only the first two Mughal emperors were fully Central Asian, while successive emperors were of predominantly Rajput and Persian ancestry. The dynasty was Indo-Persian in culture, combining Persianate culture with local Indian cultural influences visible in its traits and customs.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "1169220",
"score": 0.6283000707626343,
"text": "Abu'l Muzaffar Muin ud-din Muhammad Shah Farrukh-siyar Alim Akbar Sani Wala Shan Padshah-i-bahr-u-bar (Shahid-i-Mazlum), or Farrukhsiyar (20 August 1685 – 19 April 1719), was the Mughal emperor from 1713 to 1719 after he murdered Jahandar Shah. Reportedly a handsome man who was easily swayed by his advisers, he lacked the ability, knowledge and character to rule independently. Farrukhsiyar was the son of Azim-ush-Shan (the second son of emperor Bahadur Shah I) and Sahiba Nizwan.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "432324",
"score": 0.6255726218223572,
"text": "The Mughal emperors, from the early 16th century to the early 18th century, built and ruled the Mughal Empire on the Indian subcontinent, mainly corresponding to the modern countries of Bangladesh, India and Pakistan. The Mughals were a branch of the Timurid dynasty. Their power rapidly dwindled during the 18th century and the last of the emperors was deposed in 1857, with the establishment of the British Raj. The dynasty had Turco-Mongol roots from a Central Asian area now part of modern-day Uzbekistan, and the emperors claimed direct descent from both Timur (generally known in the West as Tamerlane the Great) and Genghis Khan, through his son Chagatai Khan.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "368552",
"score": 0.6255428194999695,
"text": "Mumtaz Mahal (] ; meaning \"the Exalted One of the palace\"; born Arjumand Banu) (27 April 1593 – 17 June 1631) was Empress consort of the Mughal Empire from 19 January 1628 to 17 June 1631 as the chief consort of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan. The UNESCO World Heritage Site, Taj Mahal in Agra, often cited as one of the Wonders of the World, was commissioned by adithya Kumar samynd to act as her final resting place.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "455443",
"score": 0.6246411800384521,
"text": "Nur Jahan (born Mehr-un-Nissa) (31 May 1577 – 17 December 1645) was Empress consort of the Mughal Empire from 25 May 1611 to 28 October 1627 as the eighteenth (and last) wife of the Mughal emperor Jahangir. She was also his most beloved and influential wife and acted as his chief consort and \"Padshah Begum\", officially from 1620–1627, after the title's previous holder, Saliha Banu Begum (the Padshah Begum for most of Jahangir's reign), died in 1620.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "38244567",
"score": 0.6246092319488525,
"text": "Badr-un-Nissa Begum (Persian: بدرالنساء بیگم ; meaning \"Full moon among women\"; 17 November 1647 – 9 April 1670) was the third daughter of Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb, and his wife Nawab Bai Ji.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "14055",
"score": 0.6234851479530334,
"text": "Nasir-ud-Din Muḥammad (6 March 1508 – 27 January 1556) better known by his regnal name, Humayun, was the second emperor of the Mughal Empire, who ruled over territory in what is now Afghanistan, Pakistan, and parts of northern India from 1531–1540 and again from 1555–1556. Like his father, Babur, he lost his kingdom early but regained it with the aid of the Safavid dynasty of Persia, with additional territory. At the time of his death in 1556, the Mughal Empire spanned almost one million square kilometres.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "1934742",
"score": 0.6223070621490479,
"text": "Shah Jahan III (1711 – 1772), (شاه جہان ۳) also known as Muhi-ul-millat was Mughal Emperor briefly. He was the son of Muhi-us-sunnat, the eldest son of Muhammad Kam Baksh who was the youngest son of Aurangzeb. He was placed on the Mughal throne in December 1759 as a result of the intricacies in Delhi with the help of Imad-ul-Mulk. He was later deposed by Maratha Sardars.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "2425",
"score": 0.6211228966712952,
"text": "Muhi-ud-Din Muhammad (3 November 1618 – 3 March 1707), commonly known by the sobriquet Aurangzeb (Persian: \"Ornament of the Throne\") or by his regnal title Alamgir (Persian: \"Conqueror of the World\"), was the sixth, and widely considered the last effective Mughal emperor. His reign lasted for 49 years from 1658 until his death in 1707.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "3035985",
"score": 0.6193796992301941,
"text": "Mariam-uz-Zamani (Persian: مریم الزمانی , 'Mary of the Age' ), ( 1542 – 19 May 1623) was a wife of Emperor Akbar. Her actual name is unknown, but in an 18th-century genealogy of her clan (the Kachwahas), she is referred to as Harkhan Champavati. She is also referred to as Harkha Bai or Jodhabai which perhaps indicates that she was a princess of Jodhpur by birth (although mostly she is said to have been a princess of Amber). Mariam-uz-Zamani was the respectful Persian title by which she was known at her husband's court. In the Mughal Empire, non-Muslim noblewoman who entered the imperial harem were given titles as a mark of honour (which she received only after the birth of her son) and this is the reason why her actual name is rather obscure.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "7020107",
"score": 0.6154919862747192,
"text": "Gulbadan Begum ( 1523 – 7 February 1603) was a Mughal princess and the youngest daughter of Emperor Babur, the founder of the Mughal Empire and the first Mughal emperor. She is best known as the author of \"Humayun-Nama\", the account of the life of her half-brother, Emperor Humayun, which she wrote on the request of her nephew, Emperor Akbar.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5add24a55542994ed6169c99 | American composer John Adams cites the work of a composer from what country that is best know for his symphonies, masses, and motets? | [
{
"id": "31635112",
"score": 0.626151442527771,
"text": "Naïve and Sentimental Music is a symphonic work by the American composer John Adams. The title of the work alludes to an essay by Friedrich Schiller, \"On Naïve and Sentimental Poetry\", that contrasts a creative personality that creates art for its own sake (the \"naïve\") versus one conscious of other purposes, such as art’s place in history (the \"sentimental\"). The composer cites both the slowly developing harmonies of Bruckner's Fourth Symphony and the atmosphere of the Sonoma coastline (where the piece was composed) as inspirations for the work. The piece was co-commissioned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Ensemble Modern, the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. It received its first public performance by the Los Angeles Philharmonic conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen on February 19, 1999. A recording by Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic was subsequently released by Nonesuch Records."
},
{
"id": "44012",
"score": 0.648674726486206,
"text": "Josef Anton Bruckner (] ; (1824--)04 1824 (1896--)11 1896 ) was an Austrian composer best known for his symphonies, masses, and motets. The first are considered emblematic of the final stage of Austro-German Romanticism because of their rich harmonic language, strongly polyphonic character, and considerable length. Bruckner's compositions helped to define contemporary musical radicalism, owing to their dissonances, unprepared modulations, and roving harmonies."
}
] | [
{
"id": "16518",
"score": 0.6898873448371887,
"text": "John Coolidge Adams (born February 15, 1947) is an American composer of classical music and opera, with strong roots in minimalism.",
"topk_rank": 0
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{
"id": "637104",
"score": 0.6729179620742798,
"text": "John Luther Adams (born January 23, 1953) is an American composer whose music is inspired by nature, especially the landscapes of Alaska where he lived from 1978 to 2014 . His orchestral work \"Become Ocean\" was awarded the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Music .",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "4508248",
"score": 0.6557449102401733,
"text": "John Adams (1704 – January 1740) was an American poet.",
"topk_rank": 2
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{
"id": "38357672",
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"text": "My Father Knew Charles Ives is an orchestral triptych by the American composer John Adams. The work was commissioned by the San Francisco Symphony. It was first performed by the San Francisco Symphony under the direction of Michael Tilson Thomas at the Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall on April 30, 2003.",
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{
"id": "9906294",
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"text": "Johann Sebastian Bach (31 March [O.S. 21 March] 1685 28 July 1750) was a German composer and musician of the Baroque period. He is known for instrumental compositions such as the \"Brandenburg Concertos\" and the \"Goldberg Variations\", and vocal music such as the \"St Matthew Passion\" and the Mass in B minor. Since the 19th-century Bach Revival he has been generally regarded as one of the greatest composers of all time.",
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{
"id": "34995432",
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"text": "Samuel Adams (born December 30, 1985) is an American composer. He was born in San Francisco, California and lives in Chicago, Illinois.",
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{
"id": "2048183",
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"text": "John Knowles Paine (January 9, 1839 – April 25, 1906) was the first American-born composer to achieve fame for large-scale orchestral music. The senior member of a group of composers collectively known as the Boston Six, Paine was one of those responsible for the first significant body of concert music by composers from the United States. The Boston Six's other five members were Amy Beach, Arthur Foote, Edward MacDowell, George Chadwick, and Horatio Parker.",
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{
"id": "6868972",
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"text": "John Adams (September 18, 1772 – April 24, 1863) was an American educator noted for organizing several hundred Sunday schools. His life was celebrated by Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. in his poem, \"The School Boy\", which was read at the centennial celebration of Phillips Academy in 1878, thus recalls him:",
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{
"id": "16638420",
"score": 0.6353413462638855,
"text": "American Standard is an early ensemble work by noted American composer John Adams. It consists of three movements: a march, a hymn, and a jazz standard. The piece in its entirety has only been recorded once for commercial release, by Adams himself. The middle movement, \"Christian Zeal and Activity\", has achieved individual notability.",
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{
"id": "30024318",
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"text": "John Massari (born Giovanni Massari in New York City, New York) is an American composer.",
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{
"id": "42491547",
"score": 0.6345785856246948,
"text": "The Gospel According to the Other Mary is an opera/oratorio by contemporary American composer John Adams. The world premiere took place on May 31, 2012, at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles with Gustavo Dudamel conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic who also premiered the staged version on March 7, 2013, at the same venue.",
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{
"id": "39753",
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"text": "John Philip Sousa ( ; ; November 6, 1854 – March 6, 1932) was an American composer and conductor of the late Romantic era, known primarily for American military and patriotic marches. Because of his mastery of march composition, he is known as \"The March King\", or the \"American March King\" due to his British counterpart Kenneth J. Alford also being known by the former nickname. Among his best-known marches are \"The Stars and Stripes Forever\" (National March of the United States of America), \"Semper Fidelis\" (Official March of the United States Marine Corps), \"The Liberty Bell\" (used as the theme for Monty Python's Flying Circus), \"The Thunderer\" and \"The Washington Post\".",
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{
"id": "250979",
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"text": "Johann Christian Bach (September 5, 1735 – January 1, 1782) was a composer of the Classical era, the eleventh surviving child and youngest son of Johann Sebastian Bach. He is sometimes referred to as \"the London Bach\" or \"the English Bach\", due to his time spent living in the British capital, where he came to be known as John Bach. He is noted for influencing the concerto style of Mozart.",
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"text": "Harmonium is a composition for chorus and orchestra that could be considered a choral symphony in all but name, by the American composer John Adams, written in 1980-1981 for the first season of Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco, California. The work is based on poetry by John Donne and Emily Dickinson. It is regarded as one of the key compositions of Adams' \"minimalist\" period. The San Francisco Symphony and the San Francisco Symphony Chorus, with conductor Edo de Waart, gave the premiere of the work on 15 April 1981, and subsequently recorded it. The UK premiere was on 13 October 1987 at Birmingham Town Hall, with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra (CBSO) conducted by Simon Rattle. Rattle and the CBSO gave the London premiere on 28 July 1990 at The Proms.",
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{
"id": "16736869",
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"text": "Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791) composed several masses and separate mass movements (such as Kyrie). Mozart composed most of his masses as a church musician in Salzburg:",
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{
"id": "14135",
"score": 0.6269039511680603,
"text": "Henry Purcell ( or ; c. 10 September 1659 – 21 November 1695) was an English composer. Although incorporating Italian and French stylistic elements into his compositions, Purcell's legacy was a uniquely English form of Baroque music. He is generally considered to be one of the greatest English composers; no other native-born English composer approached his fame until Edward Elgar, Ralph Vaughan Williams, William Walton and Benjamin Britten in the 20th century.",
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{
"id": "31267949",
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"text": "\"Christian Zeal and Activity\" is the middle movement of American composer John Adams' three-part ensemble work \"American Standard\". The piece has achieved individual notability and is often performed and recorded without the other movements.",
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"id": "1555328",
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"text": "On the Transmigration of Souls is a composition for orchestra, chorus, children's choir, and pre-recorded tape by the American composer John Adams (born 1947). It was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic and Lincoln Center's Great Performers (and an anonymous but prominent New York family) shortly after the September 11 terrorist attacks of 2001. Adams began writing the piece in late January 2002, and the music was premiered by the New York Philharmonic on September 19, 2002 at Avery Fisher Hall. The work is composed in a single movement and has a duration of approximately 25 minutes. Its sheet music is published by Boosey & Hawkes.",
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{
"id": "56374",
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"text": "This list provides a guide to opera composers, as determined by their presence on a majority of compiled lists of significant opera composers. (See the \"Lists Consulted\" section for full details.) The composers run from Jacopo Peri, who wrote the first ever opera in late 16th century Italy, to John Adams, one of the leading figures in the contemporary operatic world. The brief accompanying notes offer an explanation as to why each composer has been considered major. Also included is a section about major women opera composers, compiled from the same lists. For an introduction to operatic history, see opera. The organisation of the list is by birthdate.",
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{
"id": "33163",
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"text": "Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart ( ; ; ] ; 27 January 1756 – 5 December 1791), baptised as Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart, was a prolific and influential composer of the Classical era.",
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] |
5a7cfc9c55429907fabef08d | What year was the album Hitchin' a Ride is on released? | [
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"text": "\"Hitchin' a Ride\" is a song by American punk rock band Green Day. It was released as the first single from their fifth album, \"Nimrod\"."
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"text": "Nimrod (stylized as nimrod.) is the fifth studio album by American punk rock band Green Day, released on October 14, 1997 through Reprise Records. The group began work on the album in the wake of their cancellation of a European tour after the release of \"Insomniac\" (1995). Recorded at Conway Studios in Los Angeles, the album was written with the intent of creating a set of stand-alone songs as opposed to a cohesive album."
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] | [
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"text": "Hitchhiker is the thirty-eighth studio album by Canadian singer-songwriter Neil Young, released on September 8, 2017 on Reprise Records. Co-produced by Young and David Briggs with post-production from John Hanlon, the album was originally recorded on August 11, 1976 at Indigo Ranch Recording Studio in Malibu, California.",
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"text": "\"Hitchin' a Ride\" is a song written by Mitch Murray and Peter Callander issued as a single by the UK-based band, Vanity Fare in late 1969. It reached number 16 on the UK Singles Chart in February 1970, but was a bigger hit in the United States, reaching number 5 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 in the spring of 1970. \"Billboard\" ranked the record as the No. 14 song of 1970.",
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"id": "14501922",
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"text": "Vanity Fare (due to the similarity of the novel and magazine title often misspelled \"Vanity Fair\") are a UK pop/rock group formed in 1966, best remembered for its million-selling song, \"Hitchin' a Ride\", which became a worldwide hit in 1970.",
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{
"id": "30862450",
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"text": "Ride This Train is the eighth album by country singer Johnny Cash. It was originally released in September 1960 (see 1960 in music) and re-issued on March 19, 2002, (see 2002 in music) with four bonus tracks.",
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{
"id": "2795168",
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"text": "Hitchhike to Rhome is the first studio album by American country/rock band Old 97's, first released on November 1, 1994 (see 1994 in music). The title comes from the song, \"Stoned,\" and refers to Rhome, Texas.",
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{
"id": "36724173",
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"text": "Hitch On The Leaves is the debut studio album by Australian dream pop band Gaslight Radio. Allmusic called the album \"a wonderful debut album from this quintet, equal parts pretty Cocteau Twins-inspired shoegaze and fragile rock drive.\"",
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{
"id": "8165270",
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"text": "Ride is an album by the band Godspeed, released in 1994 on the Atlantic Records label.",
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{
"id": "2993691",
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"text": "Hitch hike was a dance craze of the 1960s. It started with the 1963 Marvin Gaye hit \"Hitch Hike\" and refueled with the gold disc of Vanity Fare, \"Hitchin' a Ride\" (1969).",
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{
"id": "49942762",
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"text": "The Ride is the second studio album by British indie rock band Catfish and the Bottlemen. It was released on 27 May 2016 through Capitol Records.",
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{
"id": "8804299",
"score": 0.6375317573547363,
"text": "Ticket to Ride is the first album by American music duo Carpenters. At the time of its initial release in 1969, it was issued under the title Offering, with a completely different cover photo. It was a commercial failure and produced only one minor hit single, a ballad version of the Lennon-McCartney song \"Ticket to Ride\".",
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{
"id": "1517433",
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"text": "Third Eye Blind is the debut studio album by American rock band Third Eye Blind, released on April 8, 1997. The album spawned five singles, including the top ten chart hits \"Semi-Charmed Life\", \"Jumper\", and \"How's It Going to Be\".",
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{
"id": "435025",
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"text": "The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking is the first solo album by Roger Waters; it was released in 1984, the year before Waters announced his departure from Pink Floyd. The album was certified gold in the United States by the Recording Industry Association of America in April 1995.",
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{
"id": "35965422",
"score": 0.6321873068809509,
"text": "Privateering is the seventh solo studio album by British singer-songwriter and guitarist Mark Knopfler, released on 3 September 2012 by Mercury Records. The first studio double-album of Knopfler's 35-year career as a recording artist, \"Privateering\" consists of twenty original songs, and integrates meticulously crafted blues rock with traditional folk and country genres. Recorded between March and December 2011, the album received generally positive reviews throughout Europe, and reached the number one position on album charts in Austria, Germany, Norway, and the Netherlands, as well as the number two or three position in Belgium, Italy, New Zealand, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland. The album peaked at number eight in the United Kingdom.",
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{
"id": "3347955",
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"text": "Nowhere is the debut album by British rock band Ride, released 15 October 1990. \"Rolling Stone\" called the album \"a masterpiece\", and online magazine \"Pitchfork\" called it \"one of [shoegazing's] enduring moments\".",
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{
"id": "14518380",
"score": 0.6294406652450562,
"text": "Geronimo's Cadillac is the debut album of American singer-songwriter Michael Martin Murphey, released on May 25, 1972 by A&M Records (4358). Recorded at Columbia Recording Studios in Nashville, Tennessee and London, England, the album is considered one of his finest albums. The title track was Murphey's first Top 40 hit, and was also recorded by Cher and Hoyt Axton. The Monkees recorded \"What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round?\" in June 1967 for their album \"Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd.\". John Denver recorded \"Boy from the Country\" in 1980 for his album \"Some Days Are Diamonds\". \"Geronimo's Cadillac\" peaked at number 160 on the \"Billboard\" 200.",
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{
"id": "52627036",
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"text": "Trip Away is the debut and only studio album by German progressive rock band Sitting Bull, released by CBS Records in 1971. A remastered version of the album including two bonus tracks, which were previously released as singles in the early 1970s, was released in 2015 by Long Hair Records.",
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{
"id": "484086",
"score": 0.6233655214309692,
"text": "Joyride is the third studio album by Swedish pop duo Roxette, released on 28 March 1991 by EMI as the follow-up to their international breakthrough \"Look Sharp!\" (1989), as well as the non-album single \"It Must Have Been Love\", from the soundtrack to \"Pretty Woman\" (1990). The album was recorded over an 11-month period in Sweden. The duo experienced considerable pressure from their record label to deliver a successful follow-up album, and resisted pressure to relocate to Los Angeles and work with experienced American producers.",
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{
"id": "43701695",
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"text": "Ride Out is the seventeenth studio album by American rock singer–songwriter Bob Seger. The album was released on October 14, 2014. Although Seger had previously stated that this may be his final album, a followup album entitled \"I Knew You When\" will be released on November 17, 2017.",
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{
"id": "985819",
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"text": "America's Sweetheart is the debut studio album by American alternative rock musician Courtney Love, released worldwide on February 10, 2004 by Virgin Records. Her first official release after her former band Hole's break-up, the album's sound diverged significantly in musical and lyrical content to Hole's three previous studio albums: \"Pretty on the Inside\" (1991), \"Live Through This\" (1994) and \"Celebrity Skin\" (1998). The recording process of the album began in summer 2001 in Los Angeles, California, however, was affected drastically by a number of personal and legal issues by Love; including her drug problems, the disbandment of Hole, the controversy surrounding Nirvana's upcoming box set, and legal problems with various record labels. In spring 2003, Love traveled to southern France to re-record the album, however, according to Love, she \"just wanted to be in a château for six months and do drugs.\" The album had three main producers, one of whom, James Barber, was Love's partner at the time.",
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{
"id": "26409689",
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"text": "Saddle Tramp is the seventh studio album by The Charlie Daniels Band, released on March 29, 1976.",
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] |
5abb0d655542992ccd8e7edf | Nipponanthemum and Dionysia, are types of which shared entity? | [
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"text": "Nipponanthemum nipponicum, common names \"Nippon daisy\" or \"Montauk daisy,\" is a plant species native to coastal regions of Japan but cultivated as an ornamental in other regions. It is now naturalized as an escape along seashores in New York and New Jersey. It is the only species in the genus Nipponanthemum, formerly considered part of \"Chrysanthemum\"."
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"id": "37417035",
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"text": "Dionysia is a genus containing 49 species of flowering plants in the family Primulaceae. They are small, cushion-forming alpines native to mountains in central Asia. They are usually evergreen perennials with felted leaves, covered with bright yellow or pink, five-petalled flowers in spring. They are often difficult to cultivate if the correct conditions are not provided."
}
] | [
{
"id": "5294287",
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"text": "Rohdea japonica is a species of plant native to Japan, China and Korea. Common names include Nippon lily, sacred lily, and Japanese sacred lily.",
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{
"id": "338573",
"score": 0.6161696314811707,
"text": "Dionaea is the generic name of two groups of organisms. It can refer to:",
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{
"id": "25708048",
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"text": "Anemone hupehensis, Anemone hupehensis\" var. \"japonica, and Anemone\" × \"hybrida (commonly known as the Chinese anemone or Japanese anemone, thimbleweed, or windflower) are species of flowering herbaceous perennials in the Ranunculaceae family.",
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"text": "The Dionysia ( ) was a large festival in ancient Athens in honor of the god Dionysus, the central events of which were the theatrical performances of dramatic tragedies and, from 487 BC, comedies. It was the second-most important festival after the Panathenaia. The Dionysia actually consisted of two related festivals, the Rural Dionysia and the City Dionysia, which took place in different parts of the year. They were also an essential part of the Dionysian Mysteries.",
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{
"id": "76143",
"score": 0.605211615562439,
"text": "The garden pansy is a type of large-flowered hybrid plant cultivated as a garden flower. It is derived by hybridization from several species in the section \"Melanium\" (\"the pansies\") of the genus \"Viola\", particularly \"Viola tricolor\", a wildflower of Europe and western Asia known as heartsease. Some of these hybrids are referred to as \"Viola\" × \"wittrockiana\" Gams ex Nauenb. & Buttler. For simplicity, the older name \"Viola tricolor\" var. \"hortensis\" is often used.",
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{
"id": "39026888",
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"text": "Spiraea nipponica is a species of flowering plant in the family Rosaceae, native to Japan. Growing to 1.2 - tall and broad, it is a deciduous shrub with clusters of small, bowl-shaped white flowers in midsummer.",
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{
"id": "24690670",
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"text": "Xylanthemum is a genus of Asian plants in the daisy family.",
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{
"id": "296542",
"score": 0.5965574979782104,
"text": "Chrysanthemums ( ), sometimes called mums or chrysanths, are flowering plants of the genus Chrysanthemum in the family Asteraceae. They are native to Asia and northeastern Europe. Most species originate from East Asia and the center of diversity is in China. There are countless horticultural varieties and cultivars.",
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{
"id": "2797398",
"score": 0.5921509861946106,
"text": "Maianthemum (Latin \"Māia \" \"May\" and Greek \"ánthemon \" \"flower\"; including former \"Smilacina\") is a genus of rhizomatous, herbaceous, perennial flowering plants, native to the understory of woodlands. It is widespread across much of North America, Europe and Asia.",
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{
"id": "10621538",
"score": 0.5904849171638489,
"text": "Henosis (Ancient Greek: ἕνωσις ) is the classical Greek word for mystical \"oneness\", \"union\" or \"unity.\" In Platonism, and especially Neoplatonism, the goal of henosis is union with what is fundamental in reality: the One (Τὸ Ἕν), the Source, or Monad. The Neoplatonic concept has precedents in the Greek mystery religions as well as parallels in Eastern philosophy. It is further developed in the Corpus Hermeticum, in Christian theology, soteriology and mysticism, and is an important factor in the historical development of monotheism during Late Antiquity.",
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{
"id": "42583842",
"score": 0.5889304876327515,
"text": "Allodemis dionysia is a species of moth of the Tortricidae family. It is found on Sumatra.",
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{
"id": "23663345",
"score": 0.5860291719436646,
"text": "Neonesomia is a genus of North American flowering plants in the aster tribe within the sunflower family.",
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{
"id": "6936143",
"score": 0.5857590436935425,
"text": "Athyrium niponicum, commonly known as Oriental ladyfern and Japanese painted fern is a species of fern native to eastern Asia.",
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{
"id": "76142",
"score": 0.5855826735496521,
"text": "Hydrangea ( ; common names hydrangea or hortensia) is a genus of 70–75 species of flowering plants native to southern and eastern Asia (China, Japan, Korea, the Himalayas, and Indonesia) and the Americas. By far the greatest species diversity is in eastern Asia, notably China, Japan, and Korea. Most are shrubs 1 to 3 meters tall, but some are small trees, and others lianas reaching up to 30 m by climbing up trees. They can be either deciduous or evergreen, though the widely cultivated temperate species are all deciduous.",
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{
"id": "5354120",
"score": 0.5855388045310974,
"text": "The Apollonian and Dionysian is a philosophical and literary concept, or dichotomy, based on certain features of ancient Greek mythology. Many Western philosophical and literary figures have invoked this dichotomy in critical and creative works.",
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{
"id": "55234250",
"score": 0.5853145122528076,
"text": "Dionysos is an opera by Wolfgang Rihm based on Friedrich Nietzsche's \"Dionysian-Dithyrambs\". The composer wrote the libretto and subtitled his work: \"Opernphantasie nach Texten von Friedrich Nietzsche / Szenen und Dithyramben\" (\"Operatic fantasy after texts by Friedrich Nietzsche / Scenes and dithyrambs). It premiered at the Salzburg Festival on 27 July 2010.",
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{
"id": "12902018",
"score": 0.5847722291946411,
"text": "Neottianthe is a genus of plants in the family Orchidaceae. It is native to Asia and to eastern Europe from Japan and Sakhalin to Poland, including China, Siberia, Ukraine, the Himalayas, etc.",
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{
"id": "7675918",
"score": 0.5835896730422974,
"text": "A pseudanthium (Greek for \"false flower\") or flower head is a special type of inflorescence, in which anything from a small cluster to hundreds or sometimes thousands of flowers are grouped together to form a single flower-like structure. Pseudanthia take various forms. The individual flowers of a pseudanthium commonly are called florets. The real flowers (the florets) are generally small and often greatly reduced, but the pseudanthium itself can sometimes be quite large (as in the heads of some varieties of sunflower).",
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{
"id": "22493519",
"score": 0.5820298194885254,
"text": "Melanthium is a genus of herbaceous perennial plants native to North America. They are closely related to \"Veratrum\", and in fact are included in that genus by some authors. The distinction between \"Melanthium\" and \"Veratrum\" is based on various morphological traits, but it is not yet clear where the line is best drawn.",
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{
"id": "34544312",
"score": 0.5817967653274536,
"text": "Faveria dionysia is a species of moth in the family Pyralidae. It was described by Zeller in 1846. It is found in Spain, Portugal, Italy, Greece, Iraq, Namibia, South Africa, Gambia and the United Arab Emirates.",
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] |
5a803adc5542996402f6a48c | The Crocoduck was imagined by what New Zealand-born American minister? | [
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"text": "The crocoduck is an imagined hybrid animal with the head of a crocodile and the body of a duck proposed by Ray Comfort and Kirk Cameron. It became recurrent in debates on the topic of evolution between creationists and proponents of science, being used as a symbol directed at those who do not understand the basic principles of evolution."
},
{
"id": "1109104",
"score": 0.5861440896987915,
"text": "Ray Comfort (born December 5, 1949) is a New Zealand-born American Christian minister and evangelist. Comfort started Living Waters Publications and \"The Way of the Master\" in Bellflower, California, and has written a number of books."
}
] | [
{
"id": "1192370",
"score": 0.6230367422103882,
"text": "Samuel Marsden (25 June 1765 – 12 May 1838) was an English born cleric of the Church of England and a prominent member of the Church Missionary Society, believed to have introduced Christianity to New Zealand.",
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{
"id": "2417908",
"score": 0.621488630771637,
"text": "Michael Dowd (born November 19, 1958) is an American Progressive Christian minister, author, and eco-theologian known as an advocate of Big History, religious naturalism, sustainability, climate activism, and the epic of evolution.",
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{
"id": "28739447",
"score": 0.5951095223426819,
"text": "Daniel Dole (September 9, 1808 – August 26, 1878) was a Protestant missionary educator from the United States to the Hawaiian Islands.",
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{
"id": "49675189",
"score": 0.592581033706665,
"text": "Samuel Weed Barnum (June 4, 1820 – November 18, 1891) was an American minister and author.",
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{
"id": "31725994",
"score": 0.589076817035675,
"text": "Ian Sidney Ardern (born 28 February 1954) has been a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) since 2011. A resident native of New Zealand at the time of his call, he is the second general authority from New Zealand in the church's history.",
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"id": "179266",
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"text": "Michael Joseph Savage {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (23 March 1872 – 27 March 1940) was an Australian-born New Zealand statesman who served as the 23rd Prime Minister of New Zealand, heading the First Labour Government from 6 December 1935 until his death.",
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{
"id": "46463476",
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"text": "Joseph Emerson (May 28, 1821-August 4, 1900) was an American minister and theologian.",
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{
"id": "34430489",
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"text": "was a New Zealand presbyterian minister and educationalist.",
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{
"id": "47474844",
"score": 0.5712518692016602,
"text": "Samuel Rockwell (April 18, 1803 – December 25, 1880) was an American minister and politician.",
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{
"id": "601696",
"score": 0.5705673694610596,
"text": "Sir Thomas Mackenzie {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (10 March 1853 – 14 February 1930) was a Scottish-born New Zealand politician and explorer who briefly served as the 18th Prime Minister of New Zealand in 1912, and later served as New Zealand High Commissioner in London.",
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{
"id": "23234778",
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"text": "Titus Coan (February 1, 1801 – December 1, 1881) was an American minister from New England who spent most of his life as a Christian missionary to the Hawaiian Islands.",
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{
"id": "3546622",
"score": 0.5677146315574646,
"text": "David Williams is an author, journalist and theologian, based in New Zealand.",
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{
"id": "169082",
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"text": "Francis Asbury ( ; August 20 or 21, 1745 – March 31, 1816) was one of the first two bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States. As a young man in October 1771, the Englishman traveled to America and, during his 45 years there, he devoted his life to ministry, traveling on horseback and by carriage thousands of miles to those living on the frontier.",
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{
"id": "11711197",
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"text": "Ian Wishart (born 1964) is a New Zealand journalist, author and publisher, and the editor of \"Investigate\" magazine. He is a conservative Christian, an opponent to the hypothesis of anthropogenic climate change, and has been described as a \"professional controversialist\".",
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{
"id": "915731",
"score": 0.5653308629989624,
"text": "Sheldon Jackson (May 18, 1834 – May 2, 1909) was a Presbyterian minister, missionary, and political leader. During this career he travelled about one million miles (1.6 million km) and established more than one hundred missions and churches, mostly in the Western United States. He is best remembered for his extensive work in Colorado and thereater during the final quarter of the 19th century in the massive, rugged, and remote Alaska Territory, which in 1959 would become the 49th U.S. state of Alaska, and his efforts to suppress Native American languages.",
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{
"id": "1401732",
"score": 0.5638719201087952,
"text": "Samuel Hopkins (September 17, 1721 – December 20, 1803) was an American Congregationalist theologian of the late colonial era of the United States, and from whom the Hopkinsian theology takes its name. He was also an opponent of slavery, saying that it was in the interest and duty of the U.S. to set free all of their slaves.",
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{
"id": "12715868",
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"text": "Michael D. Jackson (born 1940) is a New Zealand poet and anthropologist who has taught in anthropology departments at Massey University, the Australian National University, Indiana University Bloomington, and the University of Copenhagen. He is currently distinguished professor of world religions at Harvard Divinity School.",
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},
{
"id": "1094267",
"score": 0.5636830925941467,
"text": "Barry Crump, {'1': \", '2': \", '3': 'MBE', '4': \"} (15 May 1935 – 3 July 1996), was a New Zealand author of semi-autobiographical comic novels based on his image as a rugged outdoors man. Taken together his novels have sold more than a million copies domestically, equating to one book sold for every four New Zealanders. Crump's 1986 work \"Wild Pork and Watercress\" was adapted into the 2016 Taika Waititi film \"Hunt for the Wilderpeople\".",
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{
"id": "3872122",
"score": 0.5633290410041809,
"text": "David Franklin Fasold (February 23, 1939 – April 26, 1998) was a former United States Merchant Marine officer and salvage expert who is best known for his book \"The Ark of Noah\", chronicling his early expeditions to the Durupınar Noah's Ark site in eastern Turkey. Repudiating and then changing his views about the site, Fasold was a participant in a suit with Australian geologist and skeptic Ian Plimer against an Australian creationist group. The suit, dubbed the \"Monkey Trial II,\" was an important case in the debate between science and religion and its role in society .",
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{
"id": "22302685",
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"text": "Churchill Julius (15 October 1847 – 1 September 1938) was an Anglican cleric in England, then in Australia and New Zealand, becoming the first Archbishop of New Zealand.",
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}
] |
5adea27e55429939a52fe91d | Lindley Miller Garrison, was a New Jersey lawyer who served as Secretary of War under U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, between which years, Wilson was an American politician and academic who served as the 28th President? | [
{
"id": "1247314",
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"text": "Lindley Miller Garrison (November 28, 1864 – October 19, 1932) was a New Jersey lawyer who served as Secretary of War under U.S. President Woodrow Wilson between 1913 and 1916."
},
{
"id": "33523",
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"text": "Thomas Woodrow Wilson (December 28, 1856 – February 3, 1924) was an American politician and academic who served as the 28th President of the United States from 1913 to 1921. A member of the Democratic Party, Wilson served as the President of Princeton University from 1902 to 1910 and then ran and was elected as a progressive Democrat to the office of Governor of New Jersey. Wilson's victory in the 1912 presidential election made him the first Southerner elected to the presidency since Zachary Taylor in 1848. He also led the United States during World War I, establishing an activist foreign policy known as \"Wilsonianism.\" He was a major leader at the Paris [Versailles] Peace Conference in 1919, where he championed the proposed League of Nations. However, he was unable to obtain Senate approval for U.S. membership. After he suffered debilitating strokes in September 1919, his wife and staff members handled most of his presidential duties."
}
] | [
{
"id": "40230835",
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"text": "Woodrow Wilson (1856–1924) was the 28th President of the United States.",
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{
"id": "54028210",
"score": 0.688259482383728,
"text": "This is a list of memorials to Woodrow Wilson, 28th president of the United States.",
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{
"id": "7639128",
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"text": "The presidency of Woodrow Wilson began on March 4, 1913 at noon when Woodrow Wilson was inaugurated as President of the United States, and ended on March 4, 1921. Wilson, a Democrat, took office as the 28th United States president after winning the 1912 presidential election, gaining a large majority in the Electoral College and a 42 percent plurality of the popular vote in a four–candidate field. Four years later, in 1916, Wilson defeated Republican Charles Evans Hughes by nearly 600,000 votes in the popular vote and secured a narrow majority in the Electoral College by winning several swing states with razor-thin margins. He was the first Southerner elected as president since Zachary Taylor in 1848, and the first Democratic president to win re-election since Andrew Jackson in 1832.",
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},
{
"id": "40620361",
"score": 0.6608600616455078,
"text": "Wilson is a 2013 biography of the 28th President of the United States Woodrow Wilson by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author A. Scott Berg. The book is a \"New York Times\" Best Seller.",
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},
{
"id": "31362",
"score": 0.655248761177063,
"text": "Thomas Riley Marshall (March 14, 1854 – June 1, 1925) was an American Democratic politician who served as the 28th Vice President of the United States from 1913 to 1921. A prominent lawyer in Indiana, he became an active and well known member of the Indiana Democratic Party by stumping across the state for other candidates and organizing party rallies that later helped him win election as the 27th Governor of Indiana. In office, he proposed a controversial and progressive state constitution and pressed for other progressive era reforms. The Republican minority used the state courts to block the attempt to change the constitution.",
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{
"id": "25241797",
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"text": "The Thomas Woodrow Wilson Boyhood Home is located in Columbia, South Carolina and was one of the childhood homes of the 28th President of the United States, Woodrow Wilson.",
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{
"id": "43283378",
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"text": "The 1915 State of the Union Address was given by Woodrow Wilson, the 28th President of the United States on Tuesday, December 7, 1915. It was given to a joint session of the 64th United States Congress, to the United States Senate and United States House of Representatives. It was given shortly before the United States entered World War I. He said these words: \"The moral is, that the states of America are not hostile rivals but cooperating friends, and that their growing sense of community or interest, alike in matters political and in matters economic, is likely to give them a new significance as factors in international affairs and in the political history of the world.\"",
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{
"id": "1664372",
"score": 0.6503784656524658,
"text": "George Maxwell Robeson (March 16, 1829 – September 27, 1897) was an American Republican Party politician, lawyer from New Jersey, Union army general during the American Civil War, Secretary of the Navy appointed by President Ulysses S. Grant serving from 1869 to 1877, and U.S. Representative for New Jersey serving from 1879 to 1883.",
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{
"id": "102830",
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"text": "Robert Lansing ( ; October 17, 1864 – October 30, 1928) was an American lawyer and Conservative Democratic politician who served as Legal Advisor to the State Department at the outbreak of World War I, and then as United States Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson from 1915 to 1920. Before U.S. involvement in the war, Lansing vigorously advocated in favor of the principles of freedom of the seas and the rights of neutral nations. He later advocated U.S. participation in World War I, negotiated the Lansing–Ishii Agreement with Japan in 1917 and was a member of the American Commission to Negotiate Peace at Paris in 1919.",
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{
"id": "6195",
"score": 0.6422297358512878,
"text": "John Calvin Coolidge Jr. ( ; July 4, 1872 – January 5, 1933) was the 30th President of the United States (1923–29). A Republican lawyer from Vermont, Coolidge worked his way up the ladder of Massachusetts state politics, eventually becoming governor of that state. His response to the Boston Police Strike of 1919 thrust him into the national spotlight and gave him a reputation as a man of decisive action. Soon after, he was elected as the 29th vice president in 1920 and succeeded to the presidency upon the sudden death of Warren G. Harding in 1923. Elected in his own right in 1924, he gained a reputation as a small-government conservative, and also as a man who said very little, although having a rather dry sense of humor.",
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{
"id": "4926661",
"score": 0.639001727104187,
"text": "George Allison Wilson (April 1, 1884September 8, 1953) was a United States Senator and 28th Governor of Iowa.",
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{
"id": "43415193",
"score": 0.6381677985191345,
"text": "The 1916 State of the Union Address was given by Woodrow Wilson, the 28th President of the United States, on Tuesday, December 5, 1916. He personally addressed the 64th United States Congress. It was given on the eve of the United States' intervention in World War I. He said, \"And, sixth, the lodgment in the hands of the Executive of the power, in case of military necessity, to take control of such portions and such rolling stock of the railways of the country as may be required for military use and to operate them for military purposes, with authority to draft into the military service of the United States such train crews and administrative officials as the circumstances require for their safe and efficient use.\" He ended with, \"Inasmuch as this is, gentlemen, probably the last occasion I shall have to address the Sixty-fourth Congress, I hope that you will permit me to say with what genuine pleasure and satisfaction I have co-operated with you in the many measures of constructive policy with which you have enriched the legislative annals of the country.\" The 1916 presidential election was over, and Wilson had been re-elected.",
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{
"id": "43415769",
"score": 0.6354394555091858,
"text": "The 1918 State of the Union Address was given by the 28th President of the United States, Woodrow Wilson, on Monday, December 2, 1918, to the houses of the 65th United States Congress. He gave these war statistics, \"A year ago we had sent 145,918 men overseas. Since then we have sent 1,950,513, an average of 162,542 each month, the number in fact rising, in May last, to 245,951, in June to 278,760, in July to 307,182, and continuing to reach similar figures in August and September, in August 289,570 and in September 257,438.\" By the end of 1918, America had won the peace, and World War I was over. He said, \"And throughout it all how fine the spirit of the nation was: what unity of purpose, what untiring zeal!\" He ended with, \"I shall make my absence as brief as possible and shall hope to return with the happy assurance that it has been possible to translate into action the great ideals for which America has striven.\"",
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{
"id": "952660",
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"text": "USS \"Woodrow Wilson\" (SSBN-624), a \"Lafayette\" class ballistic missile submarine, was the only ship of the United States Navy to be named for Woodrow Wilson (1856–1924), the 28th President of the United States (1913–1921). She later was converted into an attack submarine and redesignated SSN-624.",
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{
"id": "4517223",
"score": 0.6313055753707886,
"text": "Samuel Miller Breckinridge Long (May 16, 1881 – September 26, 1958) was an American diplomat and politician who served in the administrations of Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Delano Roosevelt.",
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{
"id": "764977",
"score": 0.6296335458755493,
"text": "Peter Buell Porter (August 14, 1773 – March 20, 1844) was an American lawyer, soldier and politician who served as United States Secretary of War from 1828 to 1829.",
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{
"id": "43386013",
"score": 0.628372073173523,
"text": "The 1913 State of the Union Address was given by Woodrow Wilson, the 28th President of the United States, on Tuesday, December 2, 1913. It was given directly to the 63rd United States Congress by the president. Wilson was the first to do so since John Adams in 1800. With a few exceptions all addresses since then have been given directly following Wilson's lead.",
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{
"id": "89160",
"score": 0.628096342086792,
"text": "Henry Wilson (born Jeremiah Jones Colbath; February 16, 1812 – November 22, 1875) was the 18th Vice President of the United States (1873–75) and a Senator from Massachusetts (1855–73). Before and during the American Civil War, he was a leading Republican, and a strong opponent of slavery. He devoted his energies to the destruction of the \"Slave Power\" – the faction of slave owners and their political allies which anti-slavery Americans saw as dominating the country.",
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{
"id": "43374749",
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"text": "The 1914 State of the Union Address was given by the 28th United States President, Woodrow Wilson, on Tuesday, December 8, 1914, to both houses of 63rd United States Congress. He concluded it with, \"To develop our life and our resources; to supply our own people, and the people of the world as their need arises, from the abundant plenty of our fields and our marts of trade to enrich the commerce of our own States and of the world with the products of our mines, our farms, and our factories, with the creations of our thought and the fruits of our character,-this is what will hold our attention and our enthusiasm steadily, now and in the years to come, as we strive to show in our life as a nation what liberty and the inspirations of an emancipated spirit may do for men and for societies, for individuals, for states, and for mankind.\"",
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{
"id": "10042889",
"score": 0.6278029680252075,
"text": "George Grafton Wilson (born in Plainfield, Connecticut on 29 March 1863 – died in Cambridge, Massachusetts on 30 April 1951) was distinguished professor of International Law during the first half of the 20th century, serving on the faculties of Brown University, Harvard University, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, and the U.S. Naval War College.",
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}
] |
5ac2483f5542992f1f2b382d | How long after take off did ValuJet Flight 592, causing the first crash with a female captain that died? | [
{
"id": "2109043",
"score": 0.747916042804718,
"text": "Candalyn \"Candi\" Kubeck (née Chamberlain, May 10, 1961May 11, 1996) was an American commercial airline pilot and the captain of ValuJet Flight 592. This flight crashed in the Everglades on May 11, 1996, after oxygen generators illegally placed in a cargo hold started and maintained a fire that disrupted aircraft functionality and flooded the cabin and cockpit with smoke. The crash made Kubeck the first female captain to die in a commercial airline crash."
},
{
"id": "375120",
"score": 0.7123501300811768,
"text": "ValuJet Flight 592 was a regularly scheduled flight from Miami International Airport to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. On May 11, 1996, the ValuJet Airlines McDonnell-Douglas DC-9 operating the route crashed into the Everglades about 11 minutes after taking off from Miami as a result of a fire in the cargo compartment caused by improperly stored cargo. All 110 people on board perished. The airline already had a poor safety record before the crash, and the accident brought widespread attention to the airline's problems. The airline was grounded for several months after the accident. When operations resumed, ValuJet's reputation was so tarnished that it was forced to merge with AirTran Airways and rebrand itself as such to stay in business. To date, the accident remains the deadliest in the history of Florida."
}
] | [
{
"id": "18316537",
"score": 0.6635482311248779,
"text": "Captain Beverly Lynn Burns is the first woman to captain the Boeing 747 jumbo jet. On the afternoon of July 18, 1984, Burns made her maiden voyage as Captain when she commanded People Express aircraft 604 from Newark International Airport to Los Angeles International Airport.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "8221894",
"score": 0.6538184881210327,
"text": "Air France Flight 007, crashed on June 3, 1962, while on take-off from Orly Airport. Air France had just opened its new office in downtown Atlanta and this was the inaugural flight. Air France was doing its best to publicize the flight and hence it was filled with Atlanta's elite. The only survivors of the disaster were two flight attendants, Mademoiselle Françoise AUTHIE and Jacqueline GILLE seated in the back of the aircraft; the rest of the flight crew and all 122 passengers on board the Boeing 707 were killed. The crash was at the time the worst single-aircraft disaster, the first single civilian jet airliner disaster with more than 100 deaths, and the second deadliest aviation disaster in history.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "35261941",
"score": 0.6483771204948425,
"text": "On 7 January 1972, Iberia Airlines Flight 602 crashed into a mountain near Ibiza Town, Spain. The Sud Aviation SE 210 Caravelle operating the flight had taken off from Valencia Airport in Valencia, Spain, destined for Ibiza Airport on the Balearic island of Ibiza, also in Spain. All 98 passengers and 6 crew died in the crash.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "22450601",
"score": 0.6456847786903381,
"text": "Invicta International Airways Flight 435 (IM435) was a Vickers Vanguard 952, flying from Bristol Lulsgate to Basel-Mulhouse, that ploughed into a snowy, forested hillside near Hochwald, Switzerland. It somersaulted and broke up, killing 108, with 37 survivors. To date, this is the deadliest accident involving a Vickers Vanguard and the deadliest aviation accident to occur on Swiss soil. Many of the 139 passengers on the charter flight were women, members of the Axbridge Ladies Guild, from the Somerset towns and villages of Axbridge, Cheddar, Winscombe and Congresbury. The accident left 55 children motherless.",
"topk_rank": 3
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{
"id": "52998364",
"score": 0.6436210870742798,
"text": "Judy Cameron (born 1954), is a Canadian retired commercial airline pilot. She was the first Canadian woman pilot to fly for Air Canada, the second woman to fly for a Canadian commercial airline, the first Canadian female captain of a Boeing 767 and the first Canadian female captain of a Boeing 777.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "773821",
"score": 0.6434730887413025,
"text": "Northwest Airlines Flight 255, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82, crashed shortly after takeoff from Detroit Metropolitan Airport on August 16, 1987, at about 8:46 p.m. EDT (00:46 UTC August 17), killing all six crew members and 148 of its 149 passengers, along with two people on the ground. The sole survivor was a 4-year-old girl, Cecelia Cichan, who sustained serious injuries. It was the second-deadliest aviation accident at the time in the United States.",
"topk_rank": 5
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{
"id": "15616793",
"score": 0.6411279439926147,
"text": "Lynn Rippelmeyer is the first woman to fly a Boeing 747 (SWA F/O July 2, 1980), and the first to captain the \"Jumbo Jet\" across the Atlantic Ocean. On July 18, 1984 she was captain of People Express Airlines flight #2 from Newark International Airport to London Gatwick airport, departing at 7:35pm. She was also part of the first all-female crew for a scheduled US carrier (with Captain Emily Jones, Air Illinois, DHC-6 Twin Otter, 30 December 1977).",
"topk_rank": 6
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{
"id": "26185082",
"score": 0.6404524445533752,
"text": "Aviateca Flight 901 was a Boeing 737-200 (registration N125GU) that crashed into the San Vicente volcano in El Salvador on approach to the airport on 9 August 1995. The accident killed all 65 passengers and crew on board.",
"topk_rank": 7
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{
"id": "41923364",
"score": 0.6388466954231262,
"text": "On 16 December 1951, a Miami Airlines Curtiss C-46 Commando airliner crashed in the town of Elizabeth, New Jersey, shortly after taking off from nearby Newark Airport. All 56 people on board were killed. At the time, it was the second-deadliest aviation accident on US soil, behind Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 2501.",
"topk_rank": 8
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{
"id": "52699879",
"score": 0.6385679244995117,
"text": "Rita Maiburg (23 June 1952 - 9 September 1977) was a German airline pilot. She was the world's first female captain of a commercial passenger airliner.",
"topk_rank": 9
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{
"id": "7091337",
"score": 0.6380876302719116,
"text": "Nivedita Bhasin (born 1963) of Indian Airlines became the youngest woman pilot in world civil aviation history to command a commercial jet aircraft on 1 January 1990 at the age of 26.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "578107",
"score": 0.6380528211593628,
"text": "Eastern Air Lines Flight 401 was a Lockheed L-1011-1 Tristar jet that crashed into the Florida Everglades at 11:42 pm December 29, 1972, causing 101 fatalities. All three pilots, two of 10 flight attendants, and 96 of 163 passengers died, while 75 passengers and crew survived. The crash occurred while the entire flight crew was preoccupied with a burnt-out landing gear indicator light. They failed to notice that the autopilot had inadvertently been disconnected and, as a result, the aircraft gradually lost altitude and crashed. It was the first crash of a widebody aircraft and at the time, the second-deadliest single-aircraft disaster in the United States.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "11113346",
"score": 0.6346818208694458,
"text": "Judith Neuffer \"Judy\" Bruner (born Judith Ann Neuffer on 13 June 1948) is an American naval aviator and NASA manager, the first woman to serve as a P-3 pilot in the United States Navy. Part of the first group of eight women receiving orders for Navy Flight Training in 1973, she was the first of the six who went on to earn their pilot's wings. She was the first female Navy pilot to fly through a hurricane, and ultimately attained the rank of Navy Captain. She currently serves as a senior manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, where she has led numerous large programs.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "26323617",
"score": 0.6345627903938293,
"text": "Kaniz Fatema Roksana was the first Bangladeshi woman commercial pilot. She died on 5 August 1984 in a plane crash in a marsh near Zia International Airport in Dhaka. With a total death toll of 49 people, it is the deadliest aviation disaster to occur on Bangladeshi soil. She was licensed as a commercial pilot in 1977.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "24199745",
"score": 0.6344457864761353,
"text": "MK Airlines Flight 1602 was a MK Airlines Boeing 747-200F cargo flight on a flight from Halifax Stanfield International Airport, Nova Scotia, Canada to Zaragoza Airport, Spain. It crashed on take-off killing the crew of 7.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "2644224",
"score": 0.6327999234199524,
"text": "On December 28, 1997, United Airlines Flight 826 was operated by a Boeing 747-100 flying from New Tokyo Airport (which changed its name to Narita Airport in 2004), Japan to Honolulu International Airport, Hawaii. Two hours into the flight, at an altitude of 31000 ft , the plane received reports of severe clear-air turbulence in the area and the seat belt sign was turned on. Moments later, the aircraft suddenly dropped around 100 ft , seriously injuring 15 passengers and 3 crew members. The plane turned around and landed safely back in Tokyo, but one passenger, a 32-year-old Japanese woman, was killed.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "24872630",
"score": 0.6312599778175354,
"text": "On the 15 January 1953, \"VX562\", a twin-engined Vickers Valetta transport aircraft of the Royal Air Force (RAF), collided over the Mediterranean Sea with a four-engined RAF Avro Lancaster maritime patrol aircraft. A total of 26 people were killed.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "52514442",
"score": 0.6292418241500854,
"text": "Captain Tamar Ariel (d.2014) was an Israeli Air Force navigator, Israel’s first female Orthodox pilot. She died in a Himalayan blizzard in 2014, aged 25.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "38978585",
"score": 0.6289861798286438,
"text": "Richarda Morrow-Tait (22 November 1923 – 17 December 1982) was the first woman pilot to fly around the world, accomplishing the feat after a number of mishaps in a year and a day.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "1619486",
"score": 0.6284559369087219,
"text": "Kara Spears Hultgreen (5 October 1965 – 25 October 1994) was a Lieutenant and Naval Aviator in the United States Navy and the first female carrier-based fighter pilot in the U.S. Navy. She died just months after she was certified for combat, when her F-14 Tomcat crashed into the sea on final approach to .",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5ae677cd5542996d980e7b6d | Which Michael Jackson cover song was recorded by the American band which has shared the stage with The Ascendicate? | [
{
"id": "21976391",
"score": 0.6750746965408325,
"text": "The Ascendicate, originally known as The 7 Method is a Christian metal band from High Point, North Carolina. The band formed in 1999, but went on hiatus in 2012. The band put out tracks of one of their albums, which fell into the hands of Jimmy Ryan and Ryan Clark , and the band signed to Solid State Records. They have shared stages with Staple, Extol, Alien Ant Farm, Disciple, Project 86, and Pillar. Guitarist Ryan Helm joined Demon Hunter, and then formed Damien Deadson."
},
{
"id": "169989",
"score": 0.629432201385498,
"text": "Alien Ant Farm is an American rock band that formed in Riverside, California, United States, in 1996. Their name comes from an idea original guitarist Terry Corso had about aliens and the Earth: \"it was just my daydream about our planet being seeded by entities from other dimensions.\" They have released five studio albums, and have sold over 5 million units worldwide. The band is best known for their Michael Jackson cover \"Smooth Criminal.\""
}
] | [
{
"id": "33296062",
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"text": "Immortal is a remix album of music originally recorded by American recording artist Michael Jackson, and featuring The Jackson 5/The Jacksons, released on November 21, 2011 by Epic Records. The album is a soundtrack to Cirque du Soleil's , which debuted on October 2, 2011 in Montreal.",
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{
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"text": "Michael Jackson: Live at the Apollo was a concert by Michael Jackson. The concert was performed at the Apollo Theater in New York City on April 24, 2002. The concert was a fundraiser for the Democratic National Committee and former President Bill Clinton. The money collected would be used to encourage citizens to vote. It raised almost $3 million. Dave Navarro played guitar during the song \"Black or White\". This was Jackson's final on-stage performance.",
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"text": "Ascend is the fourth studio album from Nine Lashes. BEC Recordings are releasing the album on March 11, 2016.",
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"text": "\"Behind the Mask\" is a song written and originally recorded by Japanese electronic band Yellow Magic Orchestra in 1978 and 1979 in Japan. In 1982, a cover version was recorded by American singer Michael Jackson for his album \"Thriller\", but managerial disputes prevented its release. On February 21, 2011, the song was released by Epic Records as the third single from the posthumous album \"Michael\". Shanice provides background vocals on the song.",
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"id": "2262983",
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"text": "\"Who Is It\" is a song by American recording artist Michael Jackson. It was released by Epic Records on August 31, 1992, as the fifth single from Jackson's eighth studio album, \"Dangerous\" (1991). The song was written and composed by Jackson, and produced by Jackson and Bill Bottrell. The song's lyrics pertain to despair over being left by someone you love; some critics noted a comparison to the lyrics of the song to Jackson's single, \"Billie Jean\", from the album \"Thriller\". As part of the promotion for the song, two music videos were released in 1992. The song was not performed by Jackson on any of his world concert tours. He did, however, perform a small segment of the song in his interview with Oprah Winfrey in early 1993. An instrumental portion of the song was supposed to be used during the \"This Is It\" comeback concerts in London, which were canceled due to Jackson's death.",
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"text": "\"Ascendead Master\" is the fourth single by Versailles, but their first single on a major label. Released on June 24, 2009, this is also the band's last single to feature original bassist Jasmine You. Both \"Ascendead Master\" and \"Gekkakou\" were \"remastered\" for their first major album \"Jubilee\".",
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"id": "1659916",
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"text": "Ascendancy is the second studio album by American heavy metal band Trivium. Released on March 15, 2005 by Roadrunner Records.",
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"id": "47045181",
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"text": "Ascend the Hill, formerly Ben Davis, are an American worship music band, and they primarily play indie folk and indie rock, all the while being folk rock. They come from Tampa, Florida. The band started making music in 2008, and currently their members are vocalist and guitarist, Joel Davis, lead guitarist, Seth Davis, bassist, Hayden Davidson, and drummer, Jonathan Thomas. The band released one extended play, as Ben Davis, who was their former frontman until his departure in 2009, \"Ben Davis\", in 2008 independently by themselves. When they signed to Come&Live! Records, they changed their name to Ascend the Hill. Their next release, a studio album, \"Ascend the Hill\", was released in 2009. They released, another studio album, \"Hymns: Take the World, but Give Me Jesus\", in 2010, with Come&Live! Records. The subsequent album, also released by Come&Live! Records, \"O Ransomed Son\", came out in 2012.",
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"id": "27926451",
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"text": "\"Fall Again\" is a song written by Walter Afanasieff and Robin Thicke. Michael Jackson recorded a demo of the song in 1999, which was released in 2004. In 2010, a version by Kenny G with Thicke on vocals became a hit. The song has been performed by many artists.",
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{
"id": "31515907",
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"text": "Michael Jackson is a UK male singer who was lead vocalist with the heavy metal band Satan/Pariah.",
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"id": "1023623",
"score": 0.5953884720802307,
"text": "Invincible is the final studio album by American recording artist Michael Jackson, released on October 30, 2001, by Epic Records. Similar to Jackson's previous material, \"Invincible\" explores themes such as love, romance, isolation, media criticism, and social issues. It was Jackson's sixth studio album released through Epic, and his final studio album released before his death in 2009.",
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"id": "32037971",
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"text": "I Wanna Be Like Michael Jackson is an American folk rock band. The band consists of Mark Williams (singer-songwriter) and Amy Hoffmann (guitarist, vocalist). Thomas Borden (bass player, vocalist), Eric Gibbons (guitarist) and Dirk Sell (guitarist) have also recorded with the band.",
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{
"id": "30909744",
"score": 0.5930173397064209,
"text": "This is a list of recording music artists who have covered one or more songs originally recorded by American pop singer Michael Jackson. A cover is a new performance or recording of a previously recorded, commercially released song.",
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"id": "9474608",
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"text": "United We Stand: What More Can I Give was a benefit concert led by Michael Jackson held on October 21, 2001 at RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C. The concert was the third major concert held in tribute to the victims of the September 11 attacks. The other two were held in New York City.",
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"id": "33945877",
"score": 0.589739978313446,
"text": "Rise to It is a song by the American hard rock band Kiss, released on the band's fifteenth studio album, \"Hot in the Shade\" in 1989. It is the opening track on the album and was released as the third and final single on April 1, 1990. However, it only charted on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 and Mainstream Rock Tracks. The band only performed the song during the Hot in the Shade Tour.",
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{
"id": "23635002",
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"text": "\"A Place with No Name\" is a song by American singer Michael Jackson. A 24-second snippet of the full song was released posthumously by website TMZ.com on July 16, 2009, three weeks after the singer's death. The full version leaked online on December 3, 2013. The track resembles \"A Horse with No Name\", a hit song by rock band America. At the time of the leak, America stated that they were \"honored\" that Michael Jackson chose to sample their work.",
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"id": "29574516",
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"text": "\"Hold My Hand\" is a duet performed by American recording artist Michael Jackson and Senegalese-American singer-songwriter Akon, from Jackson's first posthumous album \"Michael\". The song was originally recorded by Akon and Jackson in 2008. The song was an international top 10 hit in nations such as Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Hungary, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.",
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"id": "42828248",
"score": 0.5865810513496399,
"text": "\"As Long as You Love Me\" is the debut and coronation song for American rock singer and \"American Idol\" season thirteen winner, Caleb Johnson. The song was written by The Darkness frontman Justin Hawkins in 2010 and will serve as a bonus track from Johnson's debut album, \"Testify\".",
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{
"id": "31054090",
"score": 0.5836052298545837,
"text": "Never Can Say Goodbye: The Music of Michael Jackson",
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"id": "19823680",
"score": 0.582187831401825,
"text": "\"King of Rock\" is a 1985 single by Run–D.M.C. and the title track from their album \"King of Rock\". It was featured on the video games \"\", \"\", and is a downloadable track on \"Rock Band 3\". The song was sampled for Michael Jackson's song \"2 Bad\" and was performed by the group at the 1985 Live Aid concert. Eddie Martinez is the song's lead guitarist and appears in the video.",
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}
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5a77cbcc5542997042120b3c | Which actor lived longer, Edward F. Cline or Tom Forman? | [
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"text": "Edward Francis Cline (November 4, 1891 – May 22, 1961) was an American screenwriter, actor, writer and director best known for his work with comedians W. C. Fields and Buster Keaton. He was born in Kenosha, Wisconsin and died in Hollywood, California."
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"text": "Tom Forman (February 22, 1893 – November 7, 1926) was an American motion picture actor, director, writer, and producer of the early 1920s."
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"text": "Edward Cline (born 1946 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is an American novelist and essayist. He is best known for his \"Sparrowhawk\" series of novels, which are set in England and Virginia before the American Revolutionary War.",
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"text": "Tom Forman (May 2, 1936 – May 18, 1996) was an American comic strip cartoonist, co-creator of the classic comic strip \"Motley's Crew\" along with Ben Templeton. His pre-1997 take on the comic strip involved Mike Motley's career as a blue-collar worker, sports, and his friends. After Forman died of cancer, the storylines of the comic strip he helped create became more feminine and had \"touchy-feely\" parts at various points in the storyline. They dealt with being forced to say \"hi\" to the in-laws under embarrassing conditions, attending various weddings, and letting out bottled emotions. This new spin on the comic strip alienated many older male viewers and may have led to its retirement on January 1, 2000.",
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"text": "Forman Brown (1901–1996) was one of the world's leaders in puppet theatre in his day, as well as an important early gay novelist. He was a member of the Yale Puppeteers and the driving force behind Turnabout Theatre. He was born in Otsego, Michigan, in 1901 and died in 1996, two days after his 95th birthday. Brown briefly taught at North Carolina State College, followed by an extensive tour of Europe.",
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"id": "676060",
"score": 0.5900912880897522,
"text": "Edward Macdonald Carey (March 15, 1913 – March 21, 1994) was an American actor, best known for his role as the patriarch Dr. Tom Horton on NBC's soap opera \"Days of Our Lives\". For almost three decades, he was the show's central cast member.",
"topk_rank": 3
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{
"id": "3634618",
"score": 0.5851260423660278,
"text": "Thomas Gregory Clines (August 18, 1928 - July 30, 2013) was a Central Intelligence Agency covert operations officer who was a prominent figure in the Iran-Contra Affair.",
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{
"id": "9148793",
"score": 0.5763632655143738,
"text": "Joey Forman (November 18, 1929 – December 9, 1982) was an American comedian and comic actor.",
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{
"id": "3311579",
"score": 0.5759680271148682,
"text": "Thomas N. \"Tom\" Hill (June 2, 1927 – April 20, 2009) was an American character actor and director on stage for decades before starting in film in the mid-1960s and on television in the 1980s.",
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"text": "David Cline (January 8, 1947 – September 14, 2007) was an American anti-war and veterans rights activist. He was best known as National President of Veterans For Peace (VFP) from 2000 to 2006, Chapter Vice President of Alan Reilly - Gene Glazer VFP Chapter 21, and co-founder of the Vietnam Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign. Cline was featured in the 2006 film \"Sir! No Sir!\", which documented the GI antiwar movement during the Vietnam war as well as in the book \"Winter Soldiers: An Oral History of Vietnam Veterans Against the War\" by Richard Stacewicz.",
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"id": "1855139",
"score": 0.5672851204872131,
"text": "Thomas \"Tom\" Tryon (January 14, 1926September 4, 1991) was an American film and television actor, best known for playing the title role in the film \"The Cardinal\" (1963), featured roles in the war films \"The Longest Day\" and \"In Harm's Way\" and as the Walt Disney television character \"Texas John Slaughter\" (1958–1961). He later turned to the writing of prose fiction and screenplays, and wrote several science fiction, horror and mystery novels.",
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"id": "9793838",
"score": 0.5647484660148621,
"text": "Oliver Monroe \"Ollie\" Cline (December 31, 1925 – May 12, 2001) was a college and professional American football fullback who played for the Ohio State Buckeyes, Cleveland Browns and Detroit Lions in the 1940s and 1950s. A standout high school athlete in his hometown of Fredericktown, Ohio, Cline attended Ohio State University starting in 1944. He became the football team's primary fullback that year as the school went unbeaten and was ranked second in the nation in the AP Poll. The following year, Cline was named the most valuable player in the Big Ten Conference, rushing for 936 yards as Ohio State built up a 7–2 record and was ranked 12th in the AP Poll. Following a brief stint in the U.S. Army at the end of World War II, Cline returned to Ohio State for a final season in 1947.",
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"score": 0.5632847547531128,
"text": "Thomas \"Tom\" Forman (26 October 1879 – after 1911) was a professional footballer who played for Nottingham Forest, Manchester City, Sutton Town, Barnsley, Tottenham Hotspur and Sutton Junction.",
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{
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"score": 0.5630638599395752,
"text": "Alex Cline (born January 4, 1956) is an American jazz drummer.",
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{
"id": "12621551",
"score": 0.5628188848495483,
"text": "Edward Francis Tamblyn (January 5, 1908 – June 22, 1957) was an American actor. He was the father of actor Russ Tamblyn and The Standells keyboardist Larry Tamblyn, as well as the grandfather of actress Amber Tamblyn.",
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{
"id": "149813",
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"text": "Edward Montgomery \"Monty\" Clift ( ; October 17, 1920July 23, 1966) was an American film and stage actor. \"The New York Times\"’ obituary of Clift noted his portrayal of \"moody, sensitive young men\". He is best remembered for roles in \"Red River\" (1948), \"The Heiress\" (1949), George Stevens's \"A Place in the Sun\" (1951), as a Catholic priest in Alfred Hitchcock's \"I Confess\" (1952), as the self-destructive soldier Prewitt in Fred Zinnemann's \"From Here to Eternity\" (1953), in Edward Dmytryk's \"The Young Lions\" (1958), and as a mentally challenged, sterilized concentration camp survivor in Stanley Kramer's \"Judgment at Nuremberg\" (1961). He received four Academy Award nominations during his career: three for Best Actor and one for Best Supporting Actor.",
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{
"id": "22586249",
"score": 0.5596613883972168,
"text": "Allan Bruce Cline (born November 14, 1931) is a former Canadian ice hockey right winger. He played in the NHL for the New York Rangers.",
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{
"id": "38956415",
"score": 0.5591880679130554,
"text": "Thomas Pears Gordon Forman (b Repton 27 January 1885 - 22 November 1965) was Archdeacon of Lindisfarne from 1944 until 1955.",
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{
"id": "5221256",
"score": 0.5564622282981873,
"text": "Eugene Anthony \"Gene\" Clines (born October 6, 1946) is a former outfielder in Major League Baseball, Clines played for the Pittsburgh Pirates (1970–74), New York Mets (1975), Texas Rangers (1976) and Chicago Cubs (1977–79). He was also the hitting coach for the Chicago Cubs from 2005 to 2006. From 2003 to 2004, he was the team's first base coach before being promoted to hitting coach. He batted and threw right-handed. He is a 1966 graduate of Harry Ells High School in Richmond, California.",
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{
"id": "45095744",
"score": 0.5553361773490906,
"text": "Bill Cline (born September 2, 1943) is a retired Canadian football player who played for the Ottawa Rough Riders and Saskatchewan Roughriders. He played college football at East Carolina University.",
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{
"id": "11587473",
"score": 0.5550405383110046,
"text": "Cyrus Cline (July 12, 1856 – October 5, 1923) was a U.S. Representative from Indiana.",
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},
{
"id": "275498",
"score": 0.5550045967102051,
"text": "Brock Peters or Brock G. Peters (born George Fisher; July 2, 1927 – August 23, 2005) was an American actor, best known for playing the role of Tom Robinson in the 1962 film \"To Kill a Mockingbird\" and for his role as \"Crown\" in the 1959 film version of \"Porgy and Bess\". In later years, he gained recognition among \"Star Trek\" fans for his portrayals of Fleet Admiral Cartwright in two of the \"Star Trek\" feature films and , father of Benjamin Sisko, in \"\". He was also notable for his role as Hatcher in \"Soylent Green\".",
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5abe1b5a5542991f661060cc | What do Oswego Canal and Buena Vista Canal have in common? | [
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"text": "The Oswego Canal is a canal in the New York State Canal System located in New York, United States. Opened in 1828, it is 23.7 miles (38.1 km) in length, and connects the Erie Canal at Three Rivers (near Liverpool) to Lake Ontario at Oswego. The canal has a depth of 14 ft (4.2 m), with seven locks spanning the 118 ft (36 m) change in elevation."
},
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"text": "Buena Vista Canal is an irrigation canal in Kern County, California. It originates from the Carrier Canal at Coffee Road. The canal terminates at Lake Webb (and Buena Vista Lakebed) and the Kern River."
}
] | [
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"text": "The New York State Canal System (formerly known as the New York State Barge Canal) is a successor to the Erie Canal and other canals within New York. Currently, the 525 mi system is composed of the Erie Canal, the Oswego Canal, the Cayuga–Seneca Canal, and the Champlain Canal. In 2014 the system was listed as a national historic district on the National Register of Historic Places in its entirety, and in 2016 it was designated a National Historic Landmark.",
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"text": "Buena Vista Slough was the joint outlet of an overflowing Buena Vista Lake and a distributary of the Kern River into Tulare Lake. It is now diverted into a system of canals by the Outlet Canal of the Central Valley Project.",
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"text": "The Erie Canal is a canal in New York that is part of the east–west, cross-state route of the New York State Canal System (formerly known as the New York State Barge Canal). Originally, it ran 363 mi from Albany, on the Hudson River, to Buffalo, at Lake Erie. It was built to create a navigable water route from New York City and the Atlantic Ocean to the Great Lakes. When completed in 1825, it was the second longest canal in the world (after the Grand Canal in China) and greatly affected the development and economy of New York, New York City, and the United States.",
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"text": "Buena Vista is an unincorporated community in Polk County, Oregon, United States. It is located on the Willamette River, and is the western landing for the Buena Vista Ferry. It is approximately 6 miles south-southeast of Independence.",
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"text": "The Buena Vista Ferry connects Marion County and Polk County across the Willamette River in the U.S. state of Oregon. It is located a few miles south of Independence, near the community of Buena Vista. The river is approximately 720 feet (220 m) wide at the crossing. The cable ferry has a capacity of six vehicles.",
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"id": "37856012",
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"text": "The Port of Oswego is the main waterfront area of the City of Oswego in Oswego County, New York. Over the course of its history, the Port of Oswego has been the focus of military conflict and conquest, asite of record trade revenue, and a significant part in the History of American expansion and industrialism. Today the Port of Oswego is a shadow of its once-powerful self but still proves to be useful as trade continues in the central New York region.",
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"id": "259977",
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"text": "Oswego is a town in Oswego County, New York. The population was 7,984 at the 2010 census.",
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"id": "2743171",
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"text": "The Champlain Canal is a 60 mi canal that connects the south end of Lake Champlain to the Hudson River in New York. It was simultaneously constructed with the Erie Canal and is now part of the New York State Canal System and the Lakes to Locks Passage.",
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"text": "Oswego Theater, now known as Oswego 7 Cinemas, is a historic movie theater located at Oswego in Oswego County, New York. It was designed in 1940 in the Art Deco style and opened in 1941. The front features bands of yellow, red, and dark red brick that create broad horizontal and perpendicular belts. A pair of cast stone, accordion pleated vertical stripes are included on the facade. It was designed by noted architect John Eberson (1875–1964).",
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"text": "Buena Vista is an unincorporated community located along Richland Creek in Stephenson County, Illinois at latitude 42.426 and longitude -89.678. The elevation is 797 feet. Buena Vista is in Orangeville Community School District. The Jane Addams bike trail passes through Buena Vista.",
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{
"id": "30706348",
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"text": "Affleck Canal is an inlet in Southeast Alaska, U.S.A. It extends 32 km north from Sumner Strait, nearly cutting Kuiu Island in two. It was first charted in 1793 by Joseph Whidbey, master of the HMS \"Discovery\" during George Vancouver's 1791-95 expedition. Vancouver named it for Admiral Philip Affleck, RN.",
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{
"id": "2260316",
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"text": "The Okeechobee Waterway or Okeechobee Canal is a relatively shallow man-made waterway in the United States, stretching across Florida from Fort Myers on the west coast to Stuart on Florida's east coast. The waterway can support tows such as barges or private vessels up to 50 ft wide x 250 ft long which draw less than 10 ft , as parts of the system, especially the locks may have low water depths of just ten feet. The system of channels runs through Lake Okeechobee and consists of the Caloosahatchee River to the west of the lake and the St. Lucie Canal (C-44) east of the lake.",
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{
"id": "12370648",
"score": 0.6127889752388,
"text": "Canal Hollywood is a movies cable channel available in Spain and Portugal. For most of its history it was a single channel airing for all Iberia with feeds in Portuguese or Spanish, it later split. In 2011 was created a version in HD in Spain and Portugal.",
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{
"id": "1056354",
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"text": "The Oswego River is a river in upstate New York in the United States. It is the second-largest river (after the Niagara River) flowing into Lake Ontario. James Fenimore Cooper’s novel \"The Pathfinder, or The Inland Sea\" is set in the Oswego River valley.",
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{
"id": "19714897",
"score": 0.6105074882507324,
"text": "Buena Vista is a neighborhood in Miami, Florida, United States. It is located south of Little Haiti, north of the Miami Design District.",
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{
"id": "2395636",
"score": 0.6101542711257935,
"text": "The following canals have existed in New York, United States.",
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},
{
"id": "109539",
"score": 0.60582435131073,
"text": "Lake Buena Vista is a city in Orange County, Florida, United States. It is mostly known for being the mailing address for Walt Disney World—although almost all of the resort facilities, including all four theme parks, are physically located in the adjacent city of Bay Lake. It is one of two Florida municipalities controlled by The Walt Disney Company, the other being Bay Lake. The permanent residential population of Lake Buena Vista was 10 at the 2010 census.",
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{
"id": "4551887",
"score": 0.604375958442688,
"text": "The Shinnecock Canal (also known as the Shinnecock and Peconic Canal) is a canal that cuts across the South Fork of Long Island at Hampton Bays, New York. At 4700 ft long, it connects Great Peconic Bay and the north fork of Long Island with Shinnecock Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. The canal opened to traffic in 1892.",
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{
"id": "46863852",
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"text": "Buena Vista is a corregimiento in Colón District, Colón Province, Panama with a population of 14,285 as of 2010. Its population as of 1990 was 7,547; its population as of 2000 was 10,428.",
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},
{
"id": "37301228",
"score": 0.6034687757492065,
"text": "The Conoy Canal Trail is a section of the planned Northwest Lancaster County River Trail, that runs for 3.75 miles along the Conewago Canal which stretches from Bainbridge to Falmouth. The canal was opened in 1797. As a trail, it has been opened to hikers, bikers, fisherman, and runners for more than a decade.",
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}
] |
5abbf9db554299114383a0c6 | Sendapperuma Archchige Rasanjali Chandima de Alwis, is a Sri Lankan cricketer who played one women's test match and 22 women's one-day internationals including the 1997 Women's Cricket World Cup in India and the 2000 Women's Cricket World Cup in New Zealand, one of only three married couples along with the Australians Mitchell Starc, and Alyssa Starc, a cricketer who plays for New South Wales and the Australian women's team, born in which year? | [
{
"id": "10082608",
"score": 0.8587415814399719,
"text": "Sendapperuma Archchige Rasanjali Chandima de Alwis (née Silva; born 26 November 1971) is a Sri Lankan cricketer who played one women's test match and 22 women's one-day internationals including the 1997 Women's Cricket World Cup in India and the 2000 Women's Cricket World Cup in New Zealand. Silva later married Sri Lankan Wicket Keeper Guy de Alwis. They are one of only three married couples along with and the English Roger Prideaux and Ruth Prideaux (née Westbrook) and the Australians Mitchell Starc and Alyssa Starc (née Healy) to have both played Test cricket."
},
{
"id": "18501459",
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"text": "Alyssa Jean Healy (born 24 March 1990 on the Gold Coast, Queensland) is a cricketer who plays for New South Wales and the Australian women's team. She made her international debut in February 2010."
}
] | [
{
"id": "22127779",
"score": 0.6908636093139648,
"text": "Mitchell Aaron Starc (born 30 January 1990), is an Australian cricketer who currently plays first-class cricket for the New South Wales Blues. He is a left-arm fast bowler and a capable lower order left-handed batsman. He was a prominent member of the victorious Australian squad that won the 2015 Cricket World Cup and was declared Man of the Tournament as a result of his consistent performances.",
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{
"id": "52553405",
"score": 0.6278690695762634,
"text": "Warnakolasooriya Rose Priyanka Fernando (born 28 July 1979) is a former Sri Lankan women's cricketer who represented the country in one Women's Test match, 37 WODIs and three WT20I. Her sister Hiruka also played cricket for Sri Lanka.",
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},
{
"id": "6948795",
"score": 0.62392657995224,
"text": "Lisa Carprini Sthalekar (born 13 August 1979) is an Indian-born female former captain of Australia's international women's cricket team. In domestic cricket she represents New South Wales. She is a right-handed all rounder who bowls off spin, and was rated as the leading all rounder in the world when rankings were introduced. She is the first woman to score 1,000 runs and take 100 wickets in ODIs. She announced her retirement from international Cricket a day after Australian team won the 2013 Women's Cricket World Cup.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "7565435",
"score": 0.6222595572471619,
"text": "The Rose Bowl series is a series of Women's One Day International cricket matches between Australia and New Zealand that has been running since February 1985. It was originally known as the \"Shell Rose Bowl\"; the name was changed to the \"Rose Bowl Series\" in 2001.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "2154946",
"score": 0.6170200109481812,
"text": "The Australian women's national cricket team (nicknamed the Southern Stars) represent Australia in international women's cricket. The team is currently captained by Meg Lanning and coached by former Victoria and Queensland batsman Matthew Mott. As of 20 October 2015, the Southern Stars are ranked first in all forms of women's international cricket.",
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{
"id": "17721394",
"score": 0.6135515570640564,
"text": "The 1997 Women's Cricket World Cup, known also as the Hero Honda Women's World Cup, was that year's World Cup in Women's One-day International cricket, and was held in India. With 32 matches between a record 11 teams across 25 cricket grounds, England, Australia, New Zealand and India reached the semi-finals, with Australia and New Zealand progressing to the final match, which was played on 29 December 1997. Australia defeated New Zealand in front of 80,000 spectators to win their 4th championship title.",
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{
"id": "51690679",
"score": 0.6099129915237427,
"text": "Manage Don Nipuni Hansika (born 3 August 1994) is a Sri Lankan cricketer who plays for Sri Lanka's women's cricket team. She made her One Day International (ODI) debut against the West Indies on 24 February 2013.",
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},
{
"id": "24405927",
"score": 0.6074750423431396,
"text": "Rupanjali Shastri (Hindi: रुपांजलि शास्त्री ; b. 14 November 1975 in Indore, Madhya Pradesh) is a former Test and One Day International cricketer who represented India. She is a right-hand batsman and bowls right-arm off breaks. She has played one Test and 12 ODIs for India.",
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{
"id": "24951170",
"score": 0.6050547361373901,
"text": "Denise Audrey Annetts (born 30 January 1964, Sydney) (married name Denise Anderson) is a former women's cricketer for New South Wales Breakers and Australia whose international playing career ran from 1985 until 1993. A right-handed batsman, Annetts scored centuries in both Tests and One Day Internationals.",
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{
"id": "2274963",
"score": 0.6050096750259399,
"text": "Deborah \"Debbie\" Ann Hockley, MNZM (born 7 November 1962, in Christchurch) is a former New Zealand cricketer. Hockley played in 19 women's Test matches, making a high score of 126 not out and averaging 52.04. Hockley captained New Zealand in six Tests, drawing them all. In women's one-day internationals, Hockley averaged 41.89 in her 118 games. She captained in 27 of them, winning 12 and losing 15. She was also the Man of the match in World Cup final played in India in 1997.",
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{
"id": "40721390",
"score": 0.6049313545227051,
"text": "Renee Kathleen Chappell (born 7 July 1983) is an Australian cricketer who has played international cricket for Australia national women's cricket team. She made her debut in 2013, playing in two Twenty20 matches against New Zealand. A right-handed batsman and right-arm off break bowler, she plays her domestic cricket for the Western Fury, for whom she has taken over 120 wickets.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "52743961",
"score": 0.6024918556213379,
"text": "Gemma Louise Triscari (born 24 January 1990) is an Australian cricketer. A bowler, she is a current member of the Melbourne Stars Women and the Australian women's cricket team.",
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},
{
"id": "39091707",
"score": 0.6024178266525269,
"text": "The 2013 Women's Cricket World Cup squads consisted of 120 players from 8 national women's cricket teams. Organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC), the 2013 Women's Cricket World Cup, held in India, was the tenth edition of the competition. Australia won the tournament for the sixth time, defeating the West Indies by 114 runs in the final.",
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},
{
"id": "31317733",
"score": 0.6020146012306213,
"text": "The 2013 Women's Cricket World Cup was the tenth Women's Cricket World Cup, which was hosted by India for the third time. India previously hosted the World Cup in 1978 and 1997. Australia won the tournament for the sixth time, beating West Indies by 114 runs in the final.",
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{
"id": "46279915",
"score": 0.6017537117004395,
"text": "The 2000 Women's Cricket World Cup Final was a women's One Day International cricket match between New Zealand and Australia played on 23 December 2000 at the Bert Sutcliffe Oval in Lincoln, New Zealand. It was the culmination of the 2000 Women's Cricket World Cup, the seventh Women's Cricket World Cup. New Zealand won by 4 runs, clinching their first World Cup title, after finishing as runners-up in both the 1993 and 1997 tournaments. Rick Eyre of \"ESPNcricinfo\" suggested that it was \"the greatest World Cup final ever.\"",
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{
"id": "54253061",
"score": 0.6014567017555237,
"text": "Belinda Vakarewa (born 22 January 1998) is an Australian cricketer who plays as a pace bowler for New South Wales Breakers and Sydney Thunder. In May 2017, she was named in the 15-player Australian squad for the 2017 Women's Cricket World Cup. She made her Women's One Day International (WODI) debut for Australia against Sri Lanka in the 2017 Women's Cricket World Cup on 29 June 2017.",
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{
"id": "42472574",
"score": 0.6002687215805054,
"text": "Inoka Ranaweera (born 18 February 1986) is a Sri Lankan cricketer and the current One Day International (ODI) captain. She has played at both ODI and Twenty20 International (T20I) level for the Sri Lankan national side. In an ODI against New Zealand in November 2015, she took three wickets from the last three balls of the innings, becoming the first Sri Lankan woman to take an ODI hat-trick.",
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},
{
"id": "3105984",
"score": 0.6002529263496399,
"text": "Handunnettige Deepthi Priyantha Kumar Dharmasena (born 24 April 1971) more commonly known as Kumar Dharmasena or by his nickname Unanduwa, is a Sri Lankan cricket umpire and former international cricketer, who played Tests and ODIs for Sri Lanka. He was a key member of the Sri Lanka team that won the 1996 Cricket World Cup. He was a right-handed batsman and a right-arm off break bowler. .",
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{
"id": "24391850",
"score": 0.6000692844390869,
"text": "Sunetra Arun Paranjpe (born 9 May 1980 in Bombay, India) is a Test and One Day International cricketer who represents India. She is a right-hand batsman and right-arm medium fast bowler. She has played three Tests and 28 ODIs.",
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{
"id": "12130006",
"score": 0.599795401096344,
"text": "Kate Starre (born 18 September 1971 in Armadale, Western Australia) is a former field hockey midfielder from Australia, who competed for her native country in three consecutive Summer Olympics, starting in 1992 (Barcelona, Spain). She was a member of the Australian Women's Hockey Team, best known as the \"Hockeyroos\", that won the gold medals at the 1996 and the 2000 Summer Olympics. She is the head coach for Canterbury Ladies 1XI, in England, from the start of the 2017-18 season.",
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}
] |
5a846203554299123d8c222e | Willie Charles Young played college football at a univeristy founded in what year? | [
{
"id": "46542022",
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"text": "Willie Charles Young (November 12, 1947 – September 3, 2008) was an American football offensive tackle who played three seasons in the National Football League with the Buffalo Bills and Miami Dolphins. He played college football at Alcorn State University and attended Brinkley High School in Jackson, Mississippi. He was also a member of the Edmonton Eskimos of the Canadian Football League."
},
{
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"text": "Alcorn State University (Alcorn) is a historically black comprehensive land-grant institution located northwest of Lorman, Mississippi in rural Claiborne County. It was founded in 1871 by the Reconstruction-era legislature to provide higher education for freedmen. It is the first black land grant college established in the United States. The university is counted as a census-designated place and had a resident population of 1,017 at the 2010 census."
}
] | [
{
"id": "23899663",
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"text": "Willie James Young Jr. (born September 19, 1985) is an American football outside linebacker for the Chicago Bears of the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the Detroit Lions in the seventh round of the 2010 NFL Draft. He played college football at NC State.",
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{
"id": "15473098",
"score": 0.6748298406600952,
"text": "Charles Lee Young (born October 13, 1952) is a former American football running back in the National Football League for the Dallas Cowboys. He was drafted in the first round (22nd overall) of the 1974 NFL Draft. He played college football at North Carolina State University.",
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{
"id": "11210942",
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"text": "William A. Young, Jr (May 20, 1914 – January 21, 1994) was an American football player and coach. He played a lineman in the National Football League (NFL) for the Washington Redskins. Young served as the head football coach of Furman University from 1950 to 1954.",
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{
"id": "530869",
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"text": "Youngstown State University (YSU), founded in 1908, is an urban research university located in Youngstown, Ohio, United States. As of fall 2010, there were 15,194 students and a student-faculty ratio of 19:1. The fall 2010 enrollment figure is the highest since 1990, when the number of students on campus was 15,454. Records show that 11,803 of the students are undergraduates. Beyond its current student body, YSU claims more than 94,000 alumni.",
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{
"id": "289781",
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"text": "Mississippi College is a Christian university located in Clinton, Mississippi, just west of the capital city of Jackson. Founded in 1826, MC is the second-oldest Baptist-affiliated college in the United States and the oldest college in Mississippi. With more than 5,000 students, Mississippi College is the largest private university in the state.",
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{
"id": "384695",
"score": 0.6634138822555542,
"text": "The University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign (also known as U of I, Illinois, or colloquially as the University of Illinois or UIUC) is a public research university in the U.S. state of Illinois. Founded in 1867 as a land-grant institution in the twin cities of Champaign and Urbana, it is the flagship campus of the University of Illinois system and a founding member of the Big Ten Conference.",
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{
"id": "19817390",
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"text": "The University of Maryland, College Park (often referred to as the University of Maryland, Maryland, UM, UMD, UMCP, or College Park) is a public research university located in the city of College Park in Prince George's County, Maryland, approximately 4 mi from the northeast border of Washington, D.C. Founded in 1856, the university is the flagship institution of the University System of Maryland. With a fall 2010 enrollment of more than 37,000 students, over 100 undergraduate majors, and 120 graduate programs, Maryland is the largest university in the state and the largest in the Washington Metropolitan Area. It is a member of the Association of American Universities and competes in athletics as a member of the Big Ten Conference.",
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{
"id": "23964683",
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"text": "The University of Missouri (also, Mizzou, or MU) is a public land-grant research university located in Columbia, Missouri, U.S. It was founded in 1839 as the first public institution of higher education west of the Mississippi River. As the largest university in the state, it enrolled 32,266 students in 2016, offering over 300 degree programs in 20 academic colleges. It is the flagship campus of the University of Missouri System, which also maintains campuses in Kansas City, Rolla, and St. Louis.",
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{
"id": "323072",
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"text": "The University of Oklahoma (OU) is a coeducational public research university in Norman, Oklahoma. Founded in 1890, it had existed in Oklahoma Territory near Indian Territory for 17 years before the two became the state of Oklahoma. In Fall 2016 the university had 31,250 students enrolled, most at its main campus in Norman. Employing nearly 3,000 faculty members, the school offers 152 baccalaureate programs, 160 master's programs, 75 doctorate programs, and 20 majors at the first professional level. David Lyle Boren, a former U.S. Senator and Oklahoma Governor, has served as the university's president since 1994.",
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{
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"text": "The University of North Dakota (also known as UND or North Dakota) is a public research university in Grand Forks, North Dakota. Established by the Dakota Territorial Assembly in 1883, six years before the establishment of the state of North Dakota, it is the state's oldest.",
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{
"id": "444279",
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"text": "The University of Indianapolis, or UIndy, is a university located in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States, which is affiliated with the United Methodist Church. Established in 1902, the university offers associate's, bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees, and has more than 5,400 students. It was formerly known as Indiana Central College and Indiana Central University.",
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{
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"text": "The College of Charleston (also known as CofC, The College, or simply, Charleston) is a public sea-grant and space-grant university located in historic downtown Charleston, South Carolina, United States. Founded in 1770 and chartered in 1785, it is the oldest college in South Carolina, the 13th oldest institution of higher learning in the United States, and the oldest municipal college in the country. The founders of The College include three (at that time) future signers of the Declaration of Independence (Edward Rutledge, Arthur Middleton and Thomas Heyward) and three future signers of the United States Constitution (John Rutledge, Charles Pinckney and Charles Cotesworth Pinckney). Founded to \"encourage and institute youth in the several branches of liberal education,\" the university is one of the oldest universities in the United States.",
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{
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"text": "Oral Roberts University (ORU), based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in the United States, is an interdenominational, Christian, comprehensive liberal arts university with 4,000 students. Founded in 1963, the university is named after its founder, evangelist Oral Roberts, and accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA).",
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{
"id": "32426240",
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"text": "William L. Young (born August 17, 1946) is an American football coach whose career has spanned more than 45 years at the high school, collegiate, and professional levels. He has served as the defensive coordinator at prominent college football programs like Ohio State (1988–1995), Oklahoma (1996–1997), USC (1998–2000), Miami (2008), and Oklahoma State (2009–2012).",
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{
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"text": "The BYU Cougars football team is the college football program representing Brigham Young University (BYU), a private university owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and located in Provo, Utah. The Cougars began collegiate football competition in 1922, and have won 23 conference championships and one national championship in 1984. The team has competed in several different athletic conferences during its history, but since July 1, 2011, it has competed as an Independent. The team plays home games at the 63,470-seat LaVell Edwards Stadium, which is named after legendary head coach LaVell Edwards. Edwards won 20 conference championships, seven bowl games, and one national championship (1984) while coaching at BYU, and is regarded as the most successful coach in BYU program history.",
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{
"id": "6321810",
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"text": "The Oklahoma Sooners football program is a college football team that represents the University of Oklahoma (variously \"Oklahoma\" or \"OU\"). The team is currently a member of the Big 12 Conference, which is in Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly Division I-A) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The program began in 1895 and is one of the most successful programs since World War II with the most wins (606) and the highest winning percentage (.762) since 1945. The program has 7 national championships, 45 conference championships, 154 All-Americans (76 consensus), and five Heisman Trophy winners. In addition, the school has had 23 members (five coaches and 18 players) inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame and holds the record for the longest winning streak in Division I history with 47 straight victories, a record that stands to this day. Oklahoma is also the only program that has had four coaches with 100+ wins. They became the sixth NCAA FBS team to win 850 games when they defeated the Kansas Jayhawks on November 22, 2014. The Sooners play their home games at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium in Norman, Oklahoma. Lincoln Riley is currently the team's head coach.",
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{
"id": "22693291",
"score": 0.6544898152351379,
"text": "Abilene Christian University (ACU) is a private, non-profit university in Abilene, Texas, affiliated with Churches of Christ. ACU was founded in 1906, as Childers Classical Institute. Abilene Christian University's fall 2014 enrollment was 4,427 students of which 777 were graduate students.",
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{
"id": "323078",
"score": 0.6543776988983154,
"text": "Oklahoma State University (also referred to informally as Oklahoma State, OKState, and OSU), is a land-grant, sun-grant, coeducational public research university located in Stillwater, Oklahoma, United States. OSU was founded in 1890 under the Morrill Act. Originally known as Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College (Oklahoma A&M), it is the flagship institution of the Oklahoma State University System. Official enrollment for the fall 2010 semester system-wide was 35,073, with 23,459 students enrolled at OSU-Stillwater. Enrollment shows the Freshman class of 2012 was the largest on record with 4,298 students. OSU is classified by the Carnegie Foundation as a research university with high research activity.",
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},
{
"id": "15985917",
"score": 0.6536632776260376,
"text": "Charles E. Young (c. 1867 – March 21, 1908) was an American football coach. He was the seventh head football coach at the University of Missouri and he held that position for the 1897 season. His career coaching record at Missouri was 5–6. He died of typhoid in 1908.",
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{
"id": "293288",
"score": 0.6534871459007263,
"text": "Tuskegee University is a private, historically black university (HBCU) located in Tuskegee, Alabama, United States. It was established by Booker T. Washington. The campus is designated as the Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site by the National Park Service and is the only one in the U.S. to have this designation. The university was home to scientist George Washington Carver and to World War II's Tuskegee Airmen.",
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}
] |
5a89b2155542992e4fca837a | Are the IBM PS/1 and the Aamber Pegasus both types of home computer? | [
{
"id": "35992404",
"score": 0.7058282494544983,
"text": "The IBM PS/1 is a brand for a line of personal computers that marked IBM's return to the home market in 1990, five years after the IBM PCjr. It was replaced by the IBM Aptiva in September 1994."
},
{
"id": "27092622",
"score": 0.7769784927368164,
"text": "The Aamber Pegasus is a home computer first produced in New Zealand in 1981 by Technosys Research Labs."
}
] | [
{
"id": "1986672",
"score": 0.7127063274383545,
"text": "Pegasus was an early vacuum tube (valve) computer built by Ferranti, Ltd of Great Britain.",
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{
"id": "22846368",
"score": 0.6663954854011536,
"text": "Pegasus was a video game system sold in Poland, Serbia, and Bosnia. It was a hardware clone of the Nintendo Famicom (Japanese model of NES). It was being sold in Poland by Bobmark International.",
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{
"id": "164464",
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"text": "The IBM Series/1 is a 16-bit minicomputer, introduced in 1976, that in many respects competed with other minicomputers of the time, such as the PDP-11 from Digital Equipment Corporation and similar offerings from Data General and HP. The Series/1 was typically used to control and operate external electro-mechanical components while also allowing for primitive data storage and handling.",
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{
"id": "17651761",
"score": 0.6581067442893982,
"text": "The IBM Energy or PS/2E (IBM 9533) is an IBM Personal System/2 computer. It was the first Energy Star compliant personal computer and featured very low power consumption (compared to other computers of its time) and made extensive use of recycled materials during the manufacturing process.",
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{
"id": "37521628",
"score": 0.6571304202079773,
"text": "The Schretzmann S.W.1 Pegasus is a Swiss homebuilt single seat sports aircraft first flown in 1972. Only one was built.",
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{
"id": "5217947",
"score": 0.6554584503173828,
"text": "The Pegasus is a hovercraft vehicle made for educational purposes. The plans could be purchased from an article in the January 1984 issue of Popular Mechanics.",
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{
"id": "30126024",
"score": 0.6382917761802673,
"text": "Pegasus 1 or I, known before launch as Pegasus A, was an American satellite which was launched in 1965 to study micrometeoroid impacts in low Earth orbit. It was the first of three Pegasus satellites to be launched. The Pegasus spacecraft were manufactured by Fairchild Hiller, and operated by NASA.",
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{
"id": "9749048",
"score": 0.6363863348960876,
"text": "The ACS-1 and ACS-360 are two related supercomputers designed by IBM as part of the IBM \"Advanced Computing Systems\" project from 1961 to 1969. Although the designs were never finished and no models ever went into production, the project spawned a number of organizational techniques and architectural innovations that have since become incorporated into nearly all high-performance computers in existence today. Many of the ideas resulting from the project directly influenced the development of the IBM RS/6000 and, more recently, have contributed to the Explicitly Parallel Instruction Computing (EPIC) computing paradigm used by Intel and HP in high-performance processors.",
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{
"id": "25122906",
"score": 0.6334013342857361,
"text": "Home computers were a class of microcomputers entering the market in 1977, and becoming common during the 1980s. They were marketed to consumers as affordable and accessible computers that, for the first time, were intended for the use of a single nontechnical user. These computers were a distinct market segment that typically cost much less than business, scientific or engineering-oriented computers of the time such as the IBM PC, and were generally less powerful in terms of memory and expandability. However, a home computer often had better graphics and sound than contemporary business computers. Their most common uses were playing video games, but they were also regularly used for word processing, doing homework, and programming.",
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{
"id": "13181273",
"score": 0.6316940188407898,
"text": "LUNA was a computer product line of OMRON Tateishi Electric from the late 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s. The LUNA was a 20MHz/m68030 desktop computer. NetBSD, has supported the LUNA since 1.4.2, released in 2000.",
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{
"id": "858524",
"score": 0.6293215155601501,
"text": "The IBM System/4 Pi is a family of avionics computers used, in various versions, on the F-15 Eagle fighter, E-3 Sentry, AWACS, Harpoon Missile, NASA's Skylab, MOL, and the Space Shuttle, as well as other aircraft. It descends from the approach used in the System/360 mainframe family of computers in that members of the family were intended for use in many varied user applications. Previously custom computers had been designed for each aerospace application, which was extremely costly.",
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{
"id": "63145",
"score": 0.6291752457618713,
"text": "The Acorn Archimedes is a family of personal computers designed by Acorn Computers Ltd in Cambridge, England and sold in the late-1980s to mid-1990s, their first general purpose home computer based on their own ARM architecture (then the CPU and architecture was known as Acorn RISC Machine, or ARM, that later became one of the most widely used CPU architectures in the world, e.g. used in most smartphones). The first Archimedes was launched in 1987.",
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{
"id": "181443",
"score": 0.6278020739555359,
"text": "Apollo Computer Inc., founded 1980 in Chelmsford, Massachusetts by William Poduska (a founder of Prime Computer) and others, developed and produced Apollo/Domain workstations in the 1980s. Along with Symbolics and Sun Microsystems, Apollo was one of the first vendors of graphical workstations in the 1980s. Like computer companies at the time and unlike manufacturers of IBM PC compatibles, Apollo produced much of its own hardware and software.",
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{
"id": "72155",
"score": 0.6264036893844604,
"text": "The VIC-20 (in Germany: VC-20; In Japan: VIC-1001) is an 8-bit home computer that was sold by Commodore Business Machines. The VIC-20 was announced in 1980, roughly three years after Commodore's first personal computer, the PET. The VIC-20 was the first computer of any description to sell one million units.",
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{
"id": "23264555",
"score": 0.625539243221283,
"text": "PHM Pegasus is a ship simulation and action game released for the Commodore 64, Apple II, Amstrad CPC, and ZX Spectrum. The title refers to the USS Pegasus (PHM-1), one of the Pegasus-class hydrofoils which were used by the U.S. Navy in the 1970s.",
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{
"id": "218204",
"score": 0.6235858201980591,
"text": "The Personal System/2 or PS/2 was IBM's third generation of personal computers. Released in 1987, it officially replaced the IBM PC, XT, AT, and PC Convertible in IBM's lineup.",
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},
{
"id": "15032",
"score": 0.622553288936615,
"text": "The IBM Personal Computer, commonly known as the IBM PC, is the original version and progenitor of the IBM PC compatible hardware platform. It is IBM model number 5150, and was introduced on August 12, 1981. It was created by a team of engineers and designers under the direction of Don Estridge of the IBM Entry Systems Division in Boca Raton, Florida.",
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{
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"text": "Accusoft Pegasus was founded in 1991 as Pegasus Imaging, by Jack Berlin, the current CEO and President. It is a privately held software company that is headquartered in Tampa, Florida with additional office locations in Boston, Massachusetts, and Atlanta, Georgia.",
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"text": "A personal supercomputer (PSC) is a high-performance computer system with capabilities and costs between those of standard personal computers and supercomputers. They allow an individual or organization to have access to a significant amount of computing power and are often used for a single purpose. They are typically built by the user, but commercial models are available. Although considerably more expensive than a personal computer, PSCs are affordable to many people.",
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"text": "Apple Computer 1, also known later as the Apple I, or Apple-1, is a desktop computer released by the Apple Computer Company (now Apple Inc.) in 1976. It was designed and hand-built by Steve Wozniak. Wozniak's friend Steve Jobs had the idea of selling the computer. The Apple I was Apple's first product, and to finance its creation, Jobs sold his only motorized means of transportation, a VW Microbus, for a few hundred dollars, and Wozniak sold his HP-65 calculator for $500; however, Wozniak said that Jobs planned to use his bicycle if necessary. It was demonstrated in July 1976 at the Homebrew Computer Club in Palo Alto, California.",
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5a90aeec5542990a9849369a | What was Jack Buck's younger brother's job? | [
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"text": "Robert “Bob” Buck (1938 – January 22, 1996), was an American sportscaster and sports director. He was the younger brother of late St. Louis Cardinals radio broadcaster Jack Buck, and was the uncle of national television sportscaster Joe Buck."
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"text": "John Francis \"Jack\" Buck (August 21, 1924 – June 18, 2002) was an American sportscaster, best known for his work announcing Major League Baseball games of the St. Louis Cardinals. His play-by-play work earned him recognition from numerous Halls of Fame, such as the National Baseball Hall of Fame, the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and the National Radio Hall of Fame. He has also been inducted as a member of the St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame Museum."
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"text": "Marshall Latham Bond was one of two brothers who were Jack London's landlords and among his employers during the autumn of 1897 and the spring of 1898 during the Klondike Gold Rush. They were the owners of the dog that Jack London fictionalized as Buck.",
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"text": "John Stephen Bugas (April 26, 1908 – December 2, 1982), known as Jack Bugas, was the second in command at Ford Motor Company during the presidency and chairmanship reign of Henry Ford II (the oldest grandson of founder Henry Ford). He is best known for wresting control of the company from Harry Bennett—including drawing pistols on each other—following the death of Edsel Ford.",
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"text": "John Harrison Younger (1851 – March 17, 1874) was an American outlaw, the brother of Cole, Jim and Bob. He was briefly a member of the James–Younger Gang, a band of outlaws that also included the infamous Jesse James.",
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"text": "James \"Jimmy\" Golden (born August 1, 1950) is a third generation American professional wrestler, who was known as Bunkhouse Buck between the 1970s and 1990s. He also appeared in 2010 as Jack Swagger Sr.",
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{
"id": "33316771",
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"text": "John Caldwell Colt (March 1, 1810 – November 18, 1842), the brother of Samuel Colt of Colt firearm fame, was an American fur trader, bookkeeper, law clerk, and teacher. He briefly served as a Marine, forging a letter to get himself discharged after three months. After numerous business ventures he became an authority on double-entry bookkeeping and published a textbook on the subject, which went through 45 editions and remained in continuous publication 13 years after his death.",
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"id": "1653433",
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"text": "Samuel \"Sam\" Houston Johnson III (January 31, 1914 – December 11, 1978) was an American businessman. He was the younger brother of President Lyndon B. Johnson.",
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"text": "William Henry Trotter \"Bucky\" Bush (born July 14, 1938) is an American businessman. He was the youngest son of Prescott Sheldon Bush and Dorothy Walker Bush, the youngest brother of former President George H. W. Bush, and the uncle of former President George W. Bush.",
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"text": "John Day \"Jack\" Gleason (July 14, 1854 in St. Louis, Missouri – September 4, 1944 in St. Louis, Missouri) was a 19th-century professional baseball player who primarily played third base. His younger brother, Bill Gleason, also was a ballplayer.",
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"text": "William Buck was a baseball umpire.",
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"text": "The Jack Buck is a fireboat operated by the St. Louis Fire Department in St. Louis, Missouri.",
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"text": "James Cooksey Earp (June 28, 1841 – January 25, 1926) was a lesser known older brother of Old West lawman Virgil Earp and lawman/gambler Wyatt Earp. Unlike his brothers, he was a saloon-keeper and was not present at the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral on October 26, 1881.",
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"text": "John Aloysius McKeon ( ; born November 23, 1930), nicknamed \"Trader Jack,\" is an American former Major League Baseball manager and front-office executive.",
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"text": "Jack Pickford (born John Charles Smith; August 18, 1896 – January 3, 1933) was a Canadian-born American actor, film director and producer. He was the younger brother of actresses Mary and Lottie Pickford.",
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"text": "A younger brother is a male individual who has at least one older sibling.",
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"text": "Joseph Francis \"Joe\" Buck (born April 25, 1969) is an American sportscaster and the son of sportscaster Jack Buck. He has won numerous Sports Emmy Awards for his work with Fox Sports, including his roles as lead play-by-play announcer for the network's National Football League and Major League Baseball coverage, and is a three-time recipient of the National Sportscaster of the Year award. Since 1996, he has served as the play-by-play announcer for the World Series, each year, with the exceptions of 1997 and 1999.",
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"text": "Jack Rockwell Trowbridge (October 6, 1890 – November 10, 1947) was a Mexican-born American film actor. He appeared in over 250 between 1930 and 1947. His brother was Charles Trowbridge.",
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"text": "George Willard Dickey [Skeets] (July 10, 1915 – June 16, 1976) was a backup catcher in Major League Baseball who played for two different teams between 1935 and 1947. Listed at 6 ft , 180 lb., Dickey was a switch-hitter and threw right-handed. He was the younger brother of Hall of Famer Bill Dickey.",
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"text": "Jack Eagle (January 15, 1926 – January 10, 2008) was an American actor. He was best known for his work in television commercials, including his role as Brother Dominic in a Super Bowl commercial for Xerox.",
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"text": "William Clyde Hitchcock (July 31, 1916 – April 9, 2006) was an American professional baseball infielder, coach, manager, and scout in Major League Baseball (MLB). In Minor League Baseball, he served as president of the Double-A Southern League in 1971–80. His older brother, Jimmy Hitchcock, played briefly for the 1938 Boston Braves.",
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"text": "Francis Donald Nixon (November 23, 1914 – June 27, 1987) was the younger brother of former United States President Richard Nixon.",
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5ab8f1fa5542991b5579f077 | Are Gary Lightbody and Dustin Kensrue from the same country? | [
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"text": "Gary Lightbody (born 15 June 1976) is a Northern Irish singer, songwriter, guitarist and multi-instrumentalist, best known as the lead singer and rhythm guitarist of the Northern Irish-Scottish rock band Snow Patrol."
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"text": "Dustin Michael Kensrue (pronounced KENZ-roo) (born November 18, 1980) is a vocalist, lyricist, and rhythm guitarist in the Orange County, California, post-hardcore/experimental rock quartet Thrice, as well as a solo artist."
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] | [
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"text": "Stuart Lightbody (born 16 October 1992) is an Irish male badminton player. Lightbody was a social secretary in Ulster University Sports Union. In 2012, he became the runner-up of Irish Future Series tournament in mixed doubles event with his partner Caroline Black.",
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"text": "Tired Pony is a music supergroup consisting of Gary Lightbody, Richard Colburn, Iain Archer, Jacknife Lee, Peter Buck, Scott McCaughey and Troy Stewart. Lightbody formed the group out of his appreciation for country music, and has during the early planning phase described the group's music once as \"country-tinged\" but explained later that in the end the album's development turned out much more to Americana than country during the whole creative process in the studio. The group visited Portland, Oregon in January 2010 to record this debut album, which was produced by member Lee; \"The Place We Ran From\" was released on 12 July 2010. Tired Pony began recording their second album \"The Ghost of the Mountain\" on 19 February 2013, which was released on 19 August 2013.",
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"text": "Snow Patrol are a Northern Irish-Scottish rock band formed in 1993, consisting of Gary Lightbody (vocals, guitar), Nathan Connolly (guitar, backing vocals), Paul Wilson (bass guitar, backing vocals), Jonny Quinn (drums), and Johnny McDaid (piano, guitar, backing vocals). Initially an indie rock band, the band rose to prominence in the early-mid 2000s as part of the post-Britpop movement.",
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{
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"text": "The Water & the Blood is the third studio album from Christian indie musician Dustin Kensrue, which was released on September 30, 2013 by BEC Recordings and Mars Hill Music, and the album was produced by Brian Eichelberger. The album has seen commercial and critical success.",
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{
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"text": "Please Come Home is the first studio album by Dustin Kensrue, released in 2007.",
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"id": "19336983",
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"text": "Gary Clark (born 10 March 1962, Dundee, Scotland) is a Scottish musician, songwriter and record producer. As a performer he is best known as the frontman of 1980s pop band Danny Wilson and mid-1990s rock band King L (as well as for being a member of Transister). Since the mid-1990s he has concentrated on songwriting and production.",
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"text": "The Reindeer Section are a Scottish indie rock supergroup formed in 2001 by Gary Lightbody of Snow Patrol, which released albums and gigged in 2001 and 2002.",
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"text": "Gordon Meredith Lightfoot Jr. {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (born November 17, 1938) is a Canadian singer-songwriter who achieved international success in folk, folk-rock, and country music, and has been credited for helping define the folk-pop sound of the 1960s and 1970s. He has been referred to as Canada's greatest songwriter and internationally as a folk-rock legend.",
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{
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"text": "Thoughts That Float on a Different Blood is the fifth album by Dustin Kensrue, and his first live album. Vagrant Records released the album on March 18, 2016. The album was recorded over two shows at the Constellation Room in Santa Ana, California in December 2015.",
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{
"id": "28158069",
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"text": "Gary Taylor, also known as Gary Taylor Sabo, is an American bassist, singer, and songwriter who has worked with bands including Angeldust, with Criss Angel, Klayton, Saraya, D.L. Byron, Garbo Talks, and NYC. He was born Gary T. Szabo on November 27, 1960, and is of Hungarian and Irish ancestry.",
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"text": "Gary James Kemp (born 16 October 1959) is a British pop musician and actor who is the guitar player and chief songwriter for the 1980s new wave band Spandau Ballet. His brother, Martin Kemp, plays bass guitar in the band. Gary Kemp also provided backing vocals on many of the tracks to lead singer Tony Hadley.",
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{
"id": "34225663",
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"text": "Gary Grainger (born 20th century) is an English rock, blues, jazz and pop songwriter and guitarist, most known for his work with Rod Stewart.",
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{
"id": "46494210",
"score": 0.5593403577804565,
"text": "Carry the Fire is the fourth studio album by Dustin Kensrue. Vagrant Records alongside Staple Records released the album on April 21, 2015.",
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"id": "409281",
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"text": "Kevin Patrick Shields (born 21 May 1963) is an American-born Irish musician, singer-songwriter, composer and producer, best known as the vocalist and guitarist of the alternative rock band My Bloody Valentine. Shields performed in a number of small unsuccessful bands in Dublin, Ireland, as a teenager, before forming My Bloody Valentine with drummer Colm Ó Cíosóig in 1983. Although initially experiencing limited success, the band would later become extremely influential on the evolution of alternative rock with their two original studio albums \"Isn't Anything\" (1988) and \"Loveless\" (1991), both of which pioneered a subgenre known as shoegazing. Shields' texturised guitar sound and his experimentation with his guitars' tremolo systems resulted in the creation of the \"glide guitar\" technique, which became a recognisable aspect of My Bloody Valentine's sound, along with his meticulous production techniques.",
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{
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"text": "Shrug were a three-piece alternative rock band from Northern Ireland formed by students Gary Lightbody, Mark McClelland and Michael Morrison in September 1994 while in their first year at the University of Dundee.",
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"text": "Gary Cooper (born 31 May 1957) is a British former boxer who was British light middleweight champion in 1988.",
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"text": "Gary Duncan (born Gary Ray Grubb, September 4, 1946, San Diego, California) is an American musician, once guitarist with The Brogues, then most notably with Quicksilver Messenger Service, where the complex interplay between himself and fellow-guitarist John Cipollina did much to define the unique sound of that San Francisco based band.",
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"text": "Harold Owen \"Gary\" Wilmot (born 8 May 1954) is an English singer, actor, and comedian who rose to fame as a contestant on \"New Faces\". As a television presenter, he is best known as the host of \"So You Want To Be Top\" and \"Showstoppers\".",
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"text": "Gary Wallis (born 10 June 1964 in Westminster, London) is a British drummer, percussionist, drum programmer, producer and musical director. He has worked with a wide range of artists and bands, including Nik Kershaw, Pink Floyd, 10cc, Il Divo, Westlife, Girls Aloud, Atomic Kitten, Paul Carrack, Dusty Springfield, Bonnie Tyler, Mike Rutherford, Mike + The Mechanics, Tom Jones, Jean Michel Jarre, Helene Fischer and Schiller.",
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"text": "Gary Innes (born 1981) is a Scottish musician, a former shinty player and a broadcaster from Spean Bridge, Lochaber, Scotland.",
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] |
5ab4969c5542991779162cf9 | Frank Skartados is an assemblyman for the district in New York that includes a city with what 2010 population? | [
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"text": "Frank Skartados ( ; born January 3, 1956) is the Assemblyman for the 104th district of the New York State Assembly which includes both the City of Newburgh and the Town of Newburgh; as well as the City of Beacon, the City of Poughkeepsie, the Hamlet of Marlboro, and the Town of Lloyd. He defeated 14-year incumbent Thomas Kirwan in 2008. A Democrat, Skartados was the Assemblyman of the 100th district from 2008 – 2010. Kirwan narrowly recaptured the seat in 2010 but died in late 2011. On March 20, 2012, a special election was held for the vacant seat, which Skartados won with more than 60 percent of the vote. He was re-elected for a full term on November 6, 2012 and on November 4, 2014 by 60% of the vote."
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"id": "126365",
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"text": "Beacon is a city located in Dutchess County, New York, United States. The 2010 census placed the city total population at 15,541. Beacon is part of the Poughkeepsie–Newburgh–Middletown, New York Metropolitan Statistical Area as well as the larger New York–Newark–Bridgeport, New York–New Jersey–Connecticut–Pennsylvania Combined Statistical Area. It was named to commemorate the historic beacon fires that blazed forth from the summit of the Fishkill Mountains to alert the Continental Army about British troop movements."
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] | [
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"text": "Cortland is a city in Cortland County, New York, United States of America. Cortland is in New York's Southern Tier region. As of the 2010 census, the city had a population of 19,204. It is the county seat of Cortland County.",
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"text": "United States House of Representatives, New York District 19 is located in New York's Hudson Valley and Catskills regions. District 19 lies north of the New York City metropolitan area and mostly south of Albany. It is currently represented by Republican John Faso.",
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"text": "Plattsburgh is a city in and the seat of Clinton County, New York, United States. The population was 19,989 at the 2010 census. The population of the unincorporated areas within the Town of Plattsburgh was 11,870 as of the 2010 census, making the population for the immediate Plattsburgh region 31,859.",
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"text": "Benjamin Kallos (born February 5, 1981) is the Council member for the 5th District of the New York City Council. He is a Democrat. The district includes East Harlem, Midtown, Murray Hill, Roosevelt Island and the Upper East Side of Manhattan.",
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"id": "259728",
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"text": "Homer is a town in Cortland County, New York, United States of America. The population was 6,405 at the 2010 census. The name is from the Greek poet Homer.",
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"text": "New York's 17th Congressional District is a congressional district for the United States House of Representatives located in Southern New York. It includes all of Rockland County, and portions of central and northwestern Westchester County, including the city of White Plains and the Tappan Zee Bridge.",
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"text": "George Elmer Pataki ( ; born June 24, 1945) is an American lawyer and politician who served as the 53rd Governor of New York (1995–2006). A member of the Republican Party, Pataki was a lawyer who was elected mayor of his home town of Peekskill, later going on to be elected to State Assembly, then State Senate. In 1994, Pataki ran for governor against three-term incumbent Mario Cuomo, defeating him by over a three-point margin as part of the Republican Revolution of 1994. Pataki, succeeding a three-term governor, would himself be elected to three consecutive terms, and was the third Republican Governor of New York elected since 1923, the other two being Thomas Dewey and Nelson Rockefeller. Pataki, as of January 2017 is the last Republican to serve as Governor of New York.",
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"text": "Greece is a town in Monroe County, New York, United States. As of the 2010 United States census, the town had a total population of 96,095. The town motto is \"Discover the Promise.\"",
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"text": "Bill de Blasio ( ; born Warren Wilhelm Jr.; May 8, 1961) is an American politician who is the 109th and current mayor of New York City. From 2010 to 2013, he was New York City's public advocate. He formerly was a New York City Council member, representing the 39th district in Brooklyn, which contains Borough Park, Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill, Gowanus, Kensington, Park Slope, and Windsor Terrace. De Blasio, the Democratic Party nominee for mayor of New York City in the 2013 election, defeated Republican Joe Lhota with more than 73 percent of the vote. De Blasio is the first Democratic mayor of the city since David Dinkins, from 1990 to 1993.",
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"text": "The 4th Congressional District of New York is a congressional district for the United States House of Representatives in central and southern Nassau County. It includes the communities of Baldwin, Bellmore, East Rockaway, East Meadow, the Five Towns, Lynbrook, Floral Park, Franklin Square, Garden City, Hempstead, Long Beach, Malverne, Freeport, Merrick, Mineola, Carle Place, New Hyde Park, Oceanside, Rockville Centre, Roosevelt, Uniondale, Wantagh, West Hempstead, Westbury and parts of Valley Stream. Democrat Kathleen Rice has represented the district since 2015.",
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"text": "Concord is a neighborhood located in the borough of Staten Island in New York City, New York, United States.",
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"text": "New York's 10th Congressional District is a congressional district for the United States House of Representatives, formerly located from 2003 to 2013 in Brooklyn, New York City, currently represented by Democrat Jerrold Nadler. The district contains the southern portion of Morningside Heights, the Upper West Side of Manhattan, the west side of Midtown Manhattan, the west side of Lower Manhattan, including Greenwich Village and the Financial District, and parts of Brooklyn, including Borough Park.",
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"text": "The 1st Congressional District of New York is a congressional district for the United States House of Representatives in eastern Long Island. It includes most of Central and Eastern Suffolk County, including most of Smithtown, as well as the entirety of the towns of Brookhaven, Riverhead, Southold, Southampton, East Hampton, and Shelter Island. The district encompasses extremely wealthy enclaves such as the Hamptons, middle class suburban towns such as Selden, Centereach and Lake Grove, working-class neighborhoods such as Mastic, Shirley, and Riverhead and rural farming communities such as Mattituck and Jamesport on the North Fork. The district currently is represented by Republican Lee Zeldin. In the 2014 election, Zeldin defeated Democrat Tim Bishop, who had represented the district since 2003.",
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"text": "Cortland County is a county located in the U.S. state of New York. As of the 2010 census, the population of Cortland County was 49,336. The county seat is Cortland. The county is named after Pierre Van Cortlandt, president of the convention at Kingston that wrote the first New York State Constitution in 1777, and first lieutenant governor of the state.",
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"text": "Skaneateles ( or ) is a town in Onondaga County, New York, United States. The population was 7,209 at the 2010 census. The name is from the Iroquois term for the adjacent \"Skaneateles\" Lake, which means \"long lake.\" The town is on the western border of the county and includes a village, also named Skaneateles. Both town and village are southwest of Syracuse.",
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"text": "Homer is a village in Cortland County, New York, United States. The population was 3,291 at the 2010 census. The village name is derived from the surrounding town, which was named after the poet Homer.",
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"text": "Staten Island is one of the five boroughs of New York City in the U.S. state of New York. In the southwest of the city, Staten Island is the southernmost part of both the city and state of New York, with Conference House Park at the southern tip of the island and the state. The borough is separated from New Jersey by the Arthur Kill and the Kill Van Kull, and from the rest of New York by New York Bay. With a 2016 Census-estimated population of 476,015, Staten Island is the least populated of the boroughs but is the third-largest in area at 58 sqmi . Staten Island is the only borough of New York with a non-Hispanic White majority.",
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"text": "Bedford–Stuyvesant ( ; colloquially known as Bed–Stuy and occasionally Stuyford) is a neighborhood of 153,000 inhabitants in the north central portion of the New York City borough of Brooklyn. The neighborhood is part of Brooklyn Community Board 3, Brooklyn Community Board 8, and Brooklyn Community Board 16. The neighborhood is patrolled by the NYPD's 79th and 81st precincts. In the City Council, the district is represented by Robert Cornegy of the 36th Council District.",
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"id": "259762",
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"text": "Rhinebeck is a town in Dutchess County, New York, United States. The population was 7,548 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Poughkeepsie-Newburgh-Middletown metropolitan area as well as the larger New York metropolitan area.",
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},
{
"id": "259758",
"score": 0.6341826915740967,
"text": "Poughkeepsie ( ), officially the Town of Poughkeepsie, is a town in Dutchess County, New York, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the population was 43,341. The name is derived from the native term \"Uppuqui\" ( ) meaning \"lodge-covered\", plus \"ipis\" meaning \"little water\", plus \"ing\" meaning \"place\", all of which translates to \"the reed-covered lodge by the little water place\", or \"Uppuqui-ipis-ing\". This later evolved into \"Apokeepsing\", then into \"Poughkeepsing\", and finally \"Poughkeepsie\".",
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}
] |
5a8241a755429940e5e1a818 | Both the Jack and Coke and Orange Tundra can can be poured into what kind of glass? | [
{
"id": "9262377",
"score": 0.692258894443512,
"text": "Jack and Coke (also referred to as JD and Coke, Jack Coke, or a Lemmy) is a cocktail made with Jack Daniel's whiskey and Coca-Cola. The drink is usually served with ice in an old-fashioned glass or a Collins glass."
},
{
"id": "15763023",
"score": 0.7722844481468201,
"text": "The Orange Tundra is a cocktail of Vodka, Kahlúa, Creme Soda, and Orange juice. It is traditionally poured over 2 to 3 cubes of ice in an old-fashioned 8-12 oz. glass."
}
] | [
{
"id": "4374043",
"score": 0.6409332752227783,
"text": "An Orange Safari is a cocktail made with three parts orange juice and one part Safari (liqueur). It is served with ice in a highball glass.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "11631766",
"score": 0.6331307888031006,
"text": "An Orange Whip is a sweet cocktail, made with rum and vodka, containing the base alcohols mixed with cream and orange juice. It is typically blended to a froth like a milkshake, and poured over ice in a Collins glass.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "14866819",
"score": 0.6310847401618958,
"text": "Scotch and soda is a cocktail.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "5234126",
"score": 0.6287621259689331,
"text": "The Old Fashioned glass or rocks glass is a short tumbler used for serving tan spirits, such as whisky, with ice cubes (\"on the rocks\"). It is also normally used to serve certain cocktails, such as the Old Fashioned, from which it receives its name.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "654150",
"score": 0.6226931810379028,
"text": "A cocktail glass is a stemmed glass with an inverted cone bowl. The term is often used interchangeably with \"martini glass.\"",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "1358265",
"score": 0.6162852644920349,
"text": "Orange soft drinks (called orange soda or orange pop in certain regions of the United States and Canada, orangeade in the UK, aranciata in Italy, or the genericised trademark orangina in France) are carbonated orange drinks.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "211894",
"score": 0.6151425838470459,
"text": "A collins glass is a glass tumbler which typically will contain 300 to . It is used to serve mixed drinks, especially Tom Collins cocktails. It is cylindrical in shape and narrower and taller than a highball glass.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "1412877",
"score": 0.614240825176239,
"text": "An ice cream float or soda (United States, United Kingdom, Canada, South Africa and East Asia), coke float (United Kingdom), root beer float (United States, Canada) or spider (Australia and New Zealand), is a beverage that consists of ice cream in either a soft drink or in a mixture of flavored syrup and carbonated water.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "485338",
"score": 0.6122458577156067,
"text": "A shot glass is a small glass designed to hold or measure alcoholic spirits or liquor, which is either drunk straight from the glass (\"a shot\") or poured into a cocktail. Alcoholic beverages served in a shot glass, typically consumed quickly, may also be known as a \"shooter\".",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "29396",
"score": 0.6112505197525024,
"text": "A screwdriver is a popular alcoholic highball drink made with orange juice and vodka. While the basic drink is simply the two ingredients, there are many variations; the most common one is made with one part vodka, one part of any kind of orange soda, and one part of orange juice. Many of the variations have different names in different parts of the world. The International Bartender Association has designated this cocktail as an IBA Official Cocktail.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "1892358",
"score": 0.6099873781204224,
"text": "A pint glass is a form of drinkware made to hold either a British (\"imperial\") pint of 20 impoz or an American pint of 16 USoz . These glasses are typically used to serve beer, and also often for cider.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "27333409",
"score": 0.6068770289421082,
"text": "Table-glass or granyonyi stakan (Russian: гранёный стакан , literally \"faceted glass\") (Ukrainian: granchak гранчак , derived from \"грань\", meaning \"facet\") is a type of drinkware made from especially hard and thick glass and having a faceted form. It is a very widespread form of drinking glass in Russia and the former Soviet Union. Granyonyi stakan has certain advantages over the other drinkware, since due to its form and hardness it is more difficult to break. It is arguably handier in usage on moving trains or rolling ships, where it is less prone to decline and fall, or slip from hands, and less likely to be broken when hitting the floor, compared to non-faceted types of drinking glasses.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "33947361",
"score": 0.6055945158004761,
"text": "Diet Coke with Citrus Zest is a type of Coca-Cola with lime and citrus added to it. Diet Coke with Citrus Zest is produced by the Coca-Cola Company and was introduced in 2007. It was available in the United Kingdom and Bosnia for purchase as was the other variant to be used after Diet Coke and Diet Coke With Lime. It was flavored with both lime and citrus zest.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "26996307",
"score": 0.6010256409645081,
"text": "An Agent Orange is a highball drink made with carrot juice, vodka, and rum. Consisting of only two ingredients, Agent Orange was first recorded as a drink at the 2007 San Mateo County Fair's cocktail competition held in San Mateo, California. It won \"Best New Cocktail of Fair\" award. Since 2007 it has become somewhat of a local favorite being offered in many hotels throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. Because it generally uses organic carrot juice and Svedka Vodka as its prime components, it is usually only available in hotels serving organic juices.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "262391",
"score": 0.6005444526672363,
"text": "Moscow mule is a cocktail made with vodka, spicy ginger beer, and lime juice, garnished with a slice or wedge of lime. It is a type of buck and therefore sometimes known as a vodka buck. The Moscow mule is popularly served in a copper mug. Public health advisories recommend the mugs be plated with nickel or stainless steel on the inside and the lip.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "1146396",
"score": 0.6004256010055542,
"text": "Orange Crush is a carbonated soft drink brand, originally marketed as an orange soda, now with various flavors of Crush.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "9597188",
"score": 0.595706045627594,
"text": "Ski is a citrus soda made from orange and lemon juices manufactured by the Double Cola Company.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "5031184",
"score": 0.5955289602279663,
"text": "Soda-lime glass, also called soda-lime-silica glass, is the most prevalent type of glass, used for windowpanes and glass containers (bottles and jars) for beverages, food, and some commodity items. Glass bakeware is often made of tempered soda-lime glass. Soda-lime glass accounts for about 90% of manufactured glass.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "7126640",
"score": 0.5947309732437134,
"text": "Ving is a vodka mix drink made from Ting (a Jamaican grapefruit soda) and citrus vodka. The drink consists of approximately 1 part Smirnoff Citrus Vodka and 2 parts Ting, able to be mixed in any amounts.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "8713082",
"score": 0.5945661664009094,
"text": "The Godfather is a duo mixed drink made of Scotch whisky and amaretto. Typically, the drink is served on the rocks in an old fashioned glass.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5a7e264055429965cec5eaa4 | Fulda Cathedral is the burial place of the leading figure in what? | [
{
"id": "28227842",
"score": 0.6980138421058655,
"text": "Fulda Cathedral (German: \"Fuldaer Dom\" , also \"Sankt Salvator\") is the former abbey church of Fulda Abbey and the burial place of Saint Boniface. Since 1752 it has also been the cathedral of the Diocese of Fulda, of which the Prince-Abbots of Fulda were created bishops. The abbey was dissolved in 1802 but the diocese and its cathedral have continued. The dedication is to Christ the Saviour (Latin: \"Salvator\" ). The cathedral constitutes the high point of the Baroque district of Fulda, and is a symbol of the town."
},
{
"id": "28172",
"score": 0.6354327201843262,
"text": "Saint Boniface (Latin: \"Bonifatius\" ; 675 – 5 June 754 AD), born Winfrid, Wynfrith, or Wynfryth in the kingdom of Wessex in Anglo-Saxon England, was a leading figure in the Anglo-Saxon mission to the Germanic parts of the Frankish Empire during the 8th century. He established the first organized Christianity in many parts of Germania. He is the patron saint of Germania, the first archbishop of Mainz and the \"Apostle of the Germans\". He was killed in Frisia in 754, along with 52 others. His remains were returned to Fulda, where they rest in a sarcophagus which became a site of pilgrimage. Facts about Boniface's life and death as well as his work became widely known, since there is a wealth of material available—a number of \"vitae\", especially the near-contemporary \"Vita Bonifatii auctore Willibaldi\", and legal documents, possibly some sermons, and above all his correspondence."
}
] | [
{
"id": "23923021",
"score": 0.6852323412895203,
"text": "Fulda Abbey, or the Princely Abbey of Fulda, or the Imperial Abbey of Fulda (German: Fürstabtei Fulda , Hochstift Fulda , Kloster Fulda ) was a Benedictine abbey as well as an ecclesiastical principality centered on Fulda, in the present-day German state of Hesse. It was founded in 744 by Saint Sturm, a disciple of Saint Boniface. Through the 8th and 9th centuries, Fulda Abbey became a prominent center of learning and culture in Germany, and a site of religious significance and pilgrimage following the burial of Boniface. The growth in population around Fulda would result in its elevation to a prince-bishopric in the second half of the 18th century.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "7567080",
"score": 0.6669883131980896,
"text": "Martin Luther ( ; ] ; 10 November 1483 – 18 February 1546), O.S.A., was a German professor of theology, composer, priest, monk and a seminal figure in the Protestant Reformation.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "2731583",
"score": 0.6481664180755615,
"text": "Adolf Hitler (] ; 20 April 1889 – 30 April 1945) was a German politician who was the leader of the Nazi Party (\"Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei\"; NSDAP), Chancellor of Germany from 1933 to 1945 and Führer (\"Leader\") of Nazi Germany from 1934 to 1945. As dictator, Hitler initiated World War II in Europe with the invasion of Poland in September 1939, and was central to the Holocaust.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "213765",
"score": 0.6437650918960571,
"text": "Führer (] , spelled Fuehrer when the umlaut is not available) is a German word meaning \"leader\" or \"guide\". As a political title it is most associated with the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, who was the only person to hold the position of Führer. The word \"Führer\" in the sense of \"guide\" remains common in German, and it is used in numerous compound words. However, because of its strong association with Hitler, the isolated word usually comes with stigma and negative connotations when used with the meaning of \"leader\", especially in political contexts. The word \"Führer\" has cognates in the Scandinavian languages, spelled \"fører\" in Danish and Norwegian and \"förare\" in Swedish, which have the same meaning and use as the German word, but without necessarily having political connotations.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "27485376",
"score": 0.6414265632629395,
"text": "Henry V (German: \"Heinrich V.\" ; 11 August 1081/86 – 23 May 1125) was King of Germany (from 1099 to 1125) and Holy Roman Emperor (from 1111 to 1125), the fourth and last ruler of the Salian dynasty. Henry's reign coincided with the final phase of the great Investiture Controversy, which had pitted pope against emperor. By the settlement of the Concordat of Worms, he surrendered to the demands of the second generation of Gregorian reformers.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "331457",
"score": 0.6396162509918213,
"text": "Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse (13 November 1504 – 31 March 1567), nicknamed \"der Großmütige \" (\"the magnanimous\") was a leading champion of the Protestant Reformation and one of the most important of the early Protestant rulers in Germany.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "16619022",
"score": 0.6372883319854736,
"text": "Fulda is a city in Hesse, Germany.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "22981696",
"score": 0.635554850101471,
"text": "Anton Füster, also spelled as Fister (5 January 1808 – 12 March 1881) was an Austrian Roman Catholic priest, theologian, pedagogue, radical political activist and author of Slovene origin. He was one of the leaders of the Viennese March Revolution of 1848.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "10818779",
"score": 0.6343377232551575,
"text": "Rudolf of Fulda (d. March 8, 865) was a monk of the Benedictine order during the Carolingian period in the ninth century. Rudolf devoted his life-work to the monastery of Fulda which is located in the present day German state of Hesse. Many of the works composed by Rudolf of Fulda have not withstood the test of time. However, we are fortunate enough to have surviving copies of Rudolf’s Annals of Fulda and Vita Leobae, (The Life of St. Leoba). These works document his contribution to the monastery, to history, and establishes Rudolf of Fulda as one of the most well-learned scholars of his time. (citation)",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "27485249",
"score": 0.634059488773346,
"text": "Henry VII (German: \"Heinrich\"; c. 1275 – 24 August 1313) was the King of Germany (or \"Rex Romanorum\") from 1308 and Holy Roman Emperor from 1312. He was the first emperor of the House of Luxembourg. During his brief career he reinvigorated the imperial cause in Italy, which was racked with the partisan struggles between the divided Guelf and Ghibelline factions, and inspired the praise of Dino Compagni and Dante Alighieri; however, his premature death undid his life's work.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "16634",
"score": 0.6334584355354309,
"text": "Konrad Hermann Joseph Adenauer (] ; 5 January 1876 – 19 April 1967) was a German statesman who served as the first post-war Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) from 1949 to 1963. He led his country from the ruins of World War II to a productive and prosperous nation that forged close relations with France, the United Kingdom and the United States. During his years in power West Germany achieved democracy, stability, international respect and economic prosperity (\"\"Wirtschaftswunder\"\", German for \"economic miracle\"). He was the first leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), a Christian Democratic party that under his leadership became one of the most influential parties in the country.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "1034084",
"score": 0.6311631202697754,
"text": "Adolf Hitler (20 April 1889 – 30 April 1945) was the leader of the National Socialist German Workers' Party and Chancellor of Nazi Germany from 1933 (Führer from 1934) to 1945. Hitler has been represented in popular culture ever since he became a well-known politician in Germany. His distinctive image was often parodied by his opponents. Parodies became much more prominent outside Germany during his period in power. Since the end of World War II representations of Hitler, both serious and satirical, have continued to be prominent in popular culture, sometimes generating significant controversy. In many periodicals, books, and movies, Hitler and Nazism fulfill the role of archetypal evil. This treatment is not confined to fiction but is widespread amongst nonfiction writers who have discussed him in this vein. Hitler has retained a fascination from other perspectives; among many comparable examples is an exhibition at the German Historical Museum which was widely attended.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "13602",
"score": 0.6309603452682495,
"text": "Huldrych Zwingli or Ulrich Zwingli (1 January 1484 – 11 October 1531) was a leader of the Reformation in Switzerland. Born during a time of emerging Swiss patriotism and increasing criticism of the Swiss mercenary system, he attended the University of Vienna and the University of Basel, a scholarly center of Renaissance humanism. He continued his studies while he served as a pastor in Glarus and later in Einsiedeln, where he was influenced by the writings of Erasmus.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "84199",
"score": 0.6307942867279053,
"text": "Dietrich Bonhoeffer (] ; 4 February 1906 – 9 April 1945) was a German pastor, theologian, spy, anti-Nazi dissident, and key founding member of the Confessing Church. His writings on Christianity's role in the secular world have become widely influential, and his book \"The Cost of Discipleship\" has become a modern classic.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "12007",
"score": 0.6305009126663208,
"text": "Johann Gottlieb Fichte ( ; ] ; May 19, 1762 – January 27, 1814), was a German philosopher who became a founding figure of the philosophical movement known as German idealism, which developed from the theoretical and ethical writings of Immanuel Kant. Recently, philosophers and scholars have begun to appreciate Fichte as an important philosopher in his own right due to his original insights into the nature of self-consciousness or self-awareness. Fichte was also the originator of \"thesis–antithesis–synthesis\", an idea that is often erroneously attributed to Hegel. Like Descartes and Kant before him, Fichte was motivated by the problem of subjectivity and consciousness. Fichte also wrote works of political philosophy; he has a reputation as one of the fathers of German nationalism.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "38823",
"score": 0.6302706003189087,
"text": "Fulda (] ) (historically in English called Fuld) is a city in Hesse, Germany; it is located on the river Fulda and is the administrative seat of the Fulda district (\"Kreis\"). In 1990, the town hosted the 30th Hessentag state festival.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "39209",
"score": 0.6255781650543213,
"text": "Philip Melanchthon ( ; Latin: \"Philippus Melanchthon\" ; 16 February 1497 – 19 April 1560), born Philipp Schwartzerdt (] ), was a German Lutheran reformer, collaborator with Martin Luther, the first systematic theologian of the Protestant Reformation, intellectual leader of the Lutheran Reformation, and an influential designer of educational systems.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "194276",
"score": 0.6255064010620117,
"text": "Thomas Müntzer (] ; December 1489 – 27 May 1525) was a radical German preacher and theologian of the early Reformation whose opposition to both Luther and the Roman Catholic Church led to his open defiance of late-feudal authority in central Germany. Müntzer was foremost amongst those reformers who took issue with Luther’s compromises with feudal authority. He became a leader of the German peasant and plebeian uprising —commonly known as the German Peasants' War— of 1525, was captured after the battle of Frankenhausen, and was tortured and executed.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "13487",
"score": 0.6254854202270508,
"text": "Hermann Wilhelm Göring (or Goering; ] ; 12 January 1893 – 15 October 1946) was a German political and military leader as well as one of the most powerful figures in the Nazi Party (NSDAP) that ruled Germany from 1933 to 1945. A veteran World War I fighter pilot ace, he was a recipient of the \"Pour le Mérite\". He was the last commander of \"Jagdgeschwader\" 1, the fighter wing once led by Manfred von Richthofen.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "285509",
"score": 0.6254535913467407,
"text": "The Fulda (] ) is a river in Hesse, Germany. It is one of two headstreams of the Weser (the other one being the Werra). The Fulda is 220.7 km long.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5a724ceb5542990c210a40d5 | In which Swiss city is the builder and designer the Stealth roller coaster located? | [
{
"id": "3923825",
"score": 0.7355065941810608,
"text": "Stealth is a steel roller coaster located in the Amity area of Thorpe Park in Surrey, England, UK. Built and designed by Intamin of Switzerland for £12 million, the Accelerator Coaster model opened in 2006. Riders reach a maximum height of 62.5 m and accelerate from 0-80 mph in 1.9 seconds. It has the fastest acceleration of any coaster in the UK, and is the tallest among launch coasters in the country. At the base of the top hat element on either side, riders may experience up to 4.5 G."
},
{
"id": "1263966",
"score": 0.6357935070991516,
"text": "Intamin Worldwide is a designing and manufacturing company in Wollerau, Switzerland. It is best known for creating thrill rides and roller coasters worldwide. The Intamin brand name is an abbreviation for \"international amusement installations\". The company has offices throughout the world including three in Europe, three in Asia and two in the United States."
}
] | [
{
"id": "1037325",
"score": 0.6882064938545227,
"text": "Bolliger & Mabillard, officially Bolliger & Mabillard Consulting Engineers Inc., and often abbreviated B&M, is a roller coaster design consultancy based in Monthey, Switzerland. The company was founded in 1988 by Walter Bolliger and Claude Mabillard, with Bolliger as president and Mabillard as vice-president. B&M has built over a hundred roller coasters around the world and pioneered several new ride technologies, most notably the inverted roller coaster. In North America, B&M coaster designs have been manufactured by Ohio company Clermont Steel Fabricators since 1990. B&M has grown significantly since its founding, originally employing four to as many as 37 in 2012, consisting primarily of engineers and draftsmen. In 2016, the company completed its 100th roller coaster.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "3923527",
"score": 0.6623961329460144,
"text": "Colossus is a roller coaster at Thorpe Park in Surrey, England, and the park's first major attraction. It was built by Swiss manufacturers Intamin and designed by Werner Stengel as an adaptation of \"Monte Makaya\" in Brazil, with consultation from Tussauds attraction developer John Wardley. \"Colossus\" was the world's first roller coaster with ten inversions; an exact replica, called the \"10 Inversion Roller Coaster\", was later built at Chimelong Paradise in Guangzhou, China. It retained its title of having the most inversions on any other roller coaster in the world until \"The Smiler\" at Alton Towers took the record in 2013.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "2203263",
"score": 0.6524103879928589,
"text": "Werner Stengel (born 22 August 1936 in Bochum) is a German roller coaster designer and engineer. Stengel is the founder of Stengel Engineering, also known as Ingenieur Büro Stengel GmbH (or Ingenieur Buero Stengel GmbH).",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "25513531",
"score": 0.6430270671844482,
"text": "Montaña Suiza (\"Swiss Mountain\") is a steel scenic railway roller coaster located at Parque de Atracciones Monte Igueldo, on the coast at San Sebastián, Spain. It was designed and built by German engineer Erich Heidrich and opened at the site in 1928. It is the oldest steel roller coaster still operating in the world.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "16865139",
"score": 0.6334444284439087,
"text": "Avalanche is the first steel bobsled roller coaster constructed in the United Kingdom. It was built by Mack of Germany in 1988 at Pleasure Beach Blackpool, an amusement park in Blackpool, England.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "50371551",
"score": 0.6309952735900879,
"text": "Alpenexpress Enzian (formerly Grottenblitz) is a powered roller coaster with optional virtual reality manufactured by Mack Rides in Europa Park in Rust, Germany. It is located in the Austria section of the park, and was built in 1984. Alpenexpress was the first roller coaster built at the park.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "29922525",
"score": 0.6295035481452942,
"text": "Eskil Suter (born 29 June 1967) is a former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer and current motorcycle chassis constructor from Switzerland.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "53584992",
"score": 0.621188223361969,
"text": "The Stealth Key is the world's first fully 3D metal printed security key. Invented in October 2013 by UrbanAlps AG in Switzerland ( ), it is a 3D metal printed key which hides the mechanical security features inside of the key - rendering it unscannable.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "22860501",
"score": 0.6198838353157043,
"text": "The Stealth is a single-handed sailing skiff. Manufactured by CL Sailboats in Fort Erie, Ontario, Canada. Its flat design features wings for efficient hiking and instant planing on water. An asymmetrical spinnaker can be hoisted and retracted from a pocket on the foredeck. A trapeze is not needed, making this an intermediate to advance level boat, somewhere between Laser type boats and single handed skiffs.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "49749",
"score": 0.6198574900627136,
"text": "The city of Bern (] ) or Berne (] ; Italian: \"Berna\" ] ; Romansh: \"Berna\" ] ; Bernese German: \"Bärn\" ] ) is the de facto capital of Switzerland, referred to by the Swiss as their (e.g. in German) \"Bundesstadt,\" or \"federal city\". With a population of 141,762 (November 2016), Bern is the fifth-most populous city in Switzerland. The Bern agglomeration, which includes 36 municipalities, had a population of 406,900 in 2014. The metropolitan area had a population of 660,000 in 2000. Bern is also the capital of the canton of Bern, the second-most populous of Switzerland's cantons.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "11734555",
"score": 0.6193559765815735,
"text": "Swiss Bob (or \"Bobbaan\" in Dutch) is a Bobsled roller coaster in amusement park Efteling in the Netherlands.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "6063299",
"score": 0.6190164089202881,
"text": "Bandit (バンデット , Bandetto ) is a steel roller coaster located at Yomiuriland in the city of Inagi, near Tokyo, Japan. Built in 1988 by the TOGO company, it was the fastest roller coaster in the world when it was built (taking the record from American Eagle at Six Flags Great America). It lost the record to Magnum XL-200 at Cedar Point one year later.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "7450800",
"score": 0.6190068125724792,
"text": "Olympia Looping, also known as Munich Looping, is a portable steel roller coaster designed by Anton Schwarzkopf and built by BHS. It is the largest portable roller coaster in the world, and the only one with five inversions. It appears at many carnivals in Germany, most notably Oktoberfest, where it made its debut in 1989. It is named for its five vertical loops, which resemble the Olympic rings. Although they are clothoid-shaped, their shape is closer to circular than the ones on most other roller coasters, so they exert unusually high \"g\"-forces on the passengers (up to 5.2 g). The entire structure weighs 900 tons and requires a space 85 m wide by 36 m deep. The ride usually runs with five cars per train, though at events such as Oktoberfest and Winter Wonderland in Hyde Park, London, it runs with seven to increase throughput in busy periods.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "99184",
"score": 0.6188357472419739,
"text": "Davos (German pronunciation ] , rarely ] ,; Romansh: \"\" , archaic Italian: \"Tavate\") is a Alpine town, and a municipality in the Prättigau/Davos Region in the canton of Graubünden, Switzerland. It has a permanent population of (2016 ). Davos is located on the river Landwasser, in the Rhaetian Alps, between the Plessur and Albula Range. At 1560 m , it is the highest \"town\" in Europe.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "3025463",
"score": 0.6182183027267456,
"text": "Raptor is a steel inverted roller coaster designed by Bolliger & Mabillard at Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio, United States. When built in 1994, it broke many records and held many firsts when it opened. Instead of having a short layout designed to fit into a compact area like , Raptor was designed with a larger, 3,790-foot (1,160 m) layout, making it the tallest, fastest and longest inverted roller coaster in the world when it opened. It features six inversions, including a cobra roll, a first for inverted roller coasters. At its opening, it was the largest investment in Cedar Point history. The ride is themed as a bird of prey.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "1203925",
"score": 0.6170446276664734,
"text": "The Matterhorn Bobsleds are a pair of intertwined steel roller coasters at Disneyland in Anaheim, California. It is modelled after the Matterhorn, a mountain in the Alps on the border with Switzerland and Italy. It is the first known tubular steel continuous track roller coaster. Located on the border between Tomorrowland and Fantasyland, it employs forced perspective to seem more impressively large.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "41017560",
"score": 0.6147335767745972,
"text": "Marcel Langenegger (April 2, 1967 – September 10, 2015) was a Swiss film director, film producer and screenwriter from Rebstein, Switzerland. His 2008 debut feature film, \"Deception\", starred Hugh Jackman, Ewan McGregor, and Michelle Williams.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "1882946",
"score": 0.6138184666633606,
"text": "Magnum XL-200, colloquially known as simply Magnum, is a steel roller coaster built by Arrow Dynamics at Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio. When built in 1989, it was the tallest, fastest, and steepest complete-circuit roller coaster in the world as well as the first hypercoaster – a roller coaster that exceeds 200 ft in height. Some have credited Magnum with starting a period in the industry known as the \"roller coaster wars\", in which amusement parks competed with one another at a rapid pace to build the next tallest and fastest roller coaster. More than 40 million people had ridden Magnum as of 2009.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "34830376",
"score": 0.6132078766822815,
"text": "Shambhala: Expedición al Himalaya (simply known as Shambhala) is a steel Hyper Coaster roller coaster located at PortAventura in Salou, Spain. Manufactured by Bolliger & Mabillard, it is one of the tallest (78 m ) and fastest hypercoasters (134 km/h ) in Europe. It also has the longest drop of any roller coaster in the continent (78 m ). The height record was beaten in April 2017 by \"Red Force\" which was also opened in PortAventura's new theme park \"Ferrari Land\", this coaster reaches a height of 367 feet (112m). \"Shambhala\" is named and themed after the inaccessible land in the Himalayas; Shambhala. It was announced to the public on October 24, 2011, and opened to the public on May 12, 2012.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "28332429",
"score": 0.6119741201400757,
"text": "Booster Bike is a steel roller coaster located at Toverland in the Netherlands. It is the prototype of a motorbike rollercoaster, built by the Dutch manufacturer Vekoma.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5adde7b05542997dc79070a1 | The 2012 Washington State Cougars football team coached by Michael Charles Leach finished last place in what division? | [
{
"id": "34764501",
"score": 0.785068154335022,
"text": "The 2012 Washington State Cougars football team represented Washington State University during the 2012 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by first-year head coach Mike Leach and played their home games at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Washington. They were members of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 3–9, 1–8 in Pac-12 play to finish in last place in the North Division."
},
{
"id": "2967156",
"score": 0.7494651079177856,
"text": "Michael Charles Leach (born March 9, 1961) is an American college football coach. He is the head coach of the Washington State Cougars football team. Previously, he was head coach of the Texas Tech Red Raiders football team, leading the Red Raiders to winning seasons in every year of his tenure."
}
] | [
{
"id": "7773465",
"score": 0.7554954290390015,
"text": "The Washington State Cougars football program is the intercollegiate American football team for Washington State University, located in the U.S. state of Washington. The team competes at the NCAA Division I level in the FBS and is a member of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference (Pac-12). Known as the Cougars, the first football team was fielded in 1894.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "53941728",
"score": 0.7373650670051575,
"text": "The 2017 Washington State Cougars football team represents Washington State University during the 2017 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team is coached by sixth-year head coach Mike Leach and plays their home games at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Washington. They compete as members of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "38190154",
"score": 0.7180463671684265,
"text": "The 2013 Washington State Cougars football team represented Washington State University during the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by second-year head coach Mike Leach and played their home games at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Washington. They were members of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 6–7, 4–5 in Pac-12 play to finish in a tie for fourth place in the North Division.",
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},
{
"id": "41400515",
"score": 0.7064353227615356,
"text": "The 2014 Washington State Cougars football team represented Washington State University during the 2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by third-year head coach Mike Leach and played their home games at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Washington. They were members of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season with a 3–9 overall record and a 2–7 mark in conference play to finish in a tie for fifth place in the North Division.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "29804783",
"score": 0.695817232131958,
"text": "The Houston Cougars football program is an NCAA Division I FBS football team that represents the University of Houston. The team is commonly referred to as \"Houston\" or \"UH\" (spoken as \"U of H\"). Houston has been a member of the American Athletic Conference since 2013. Beginning with the 2015 season, the Cougars have been coached by Tom Herman, the program's 13th head coach. The team played its first season in 1946 and has since won or tied for 11 conference championships and five division championships. The Cougars have played in 24 post-season bowl games with a record of 11–12–1 .",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "37163787",
"score": 0.6954256296157837,
"text": "The Washington Huskies college football team represents the University of Washington in the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference (Pac-12). The Huskies compete as part of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision. The program has had 28 head coaches since it began play during the 1889 season. Hired in December 2013, Chris Petersen is Washington's current head coach.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "48917578",
"score": 0.6938498616218567,
"text": "The 2016 Washington State Cougars football team represented Washington State University during the 2016 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by fifth-year head coach Mike Leach and played their home games at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Washington. They were members of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 8–5, 7–2 in Pac-12 play to finish in second place in the North Division. They were invited to the Holiday Bowl where they were defeated by Minnesota.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "5954250",
"score": 0.6901500821113586,
"text": "The Washington Huskies football team represents the University of Washington in college football. Washington competes in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) as a member of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. The team is currently led by head coach Chris Petersen. Husky Stadium, located on campus, has served as the home field for Washington since 1920.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "44943403",
"score": 0.6832946538925171,
"text": "The 2015 Washington State Cougars football team represented Washington State University during the 2015 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by fourth-year head coach Mike Leach and played their home games at Martin Stadium in Pullman, Washington. They were members of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 9–4, 6–3 in Pac-12 play to finish in third place in the North Division. They were invited to the Sun Bowl where they defeated the Miami Hurricanes.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "34117250",
"score": 0.6782709956169128,
"text": "The Washington State Cougars college football team competes as part of the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), representing Washington State University in the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference (Pac-12). Since the establishment of the team in 1888, Washington State has appeared in 12 bowl games. Included in these games are four appearances in the Rose Bowl Game and one Bowl Championship Series (BCS) game appearances, in the 2003 Rose Bowl. The latest bowl occurred on December 26, 2015, when Washington State defeated Miami, Florida 20-14 in the 2015 Sun Bowl.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "28307967",
"score": 0.6751571893692017,
"text": "The 2012 Washington Huskies football team represented the University of Washington in the 2012 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team, coached by fourth-year head coach Steve Sarkisian, was a member of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. The Huskies played their home games at CenturyLink Field in Seattle due to renovations at their normal on-campus home of Husky Stadium, also in Seattle. They finished the season 7–6, 5–4 in Pac-12 play to finish in fourth place in the North Division. They were invited to the Maaco Bowl Las Vegas where they were defeated by Boise State.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "37982210",
"score": 0.672914445400238,
"text": "The Washington Redskins season was the franchise's 81st season in the National Football League. The Redskins failed to improve on their 10–6 regular season record from 2012, and suffered through a 3–13 season, which was the worst record that the team had posted since 1994, resulting in the firing of head coach Mike Shanahan and most of his staff after four seasons.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "9570822",
"score": 0.6711204648017883,
"text": "The Houston Cougars football program is an NCAA Division I FBS football team that represents the University of Houston. The team is commonly referred to as \"Houston\" or \"UH\" (spoken as \"U of H\"). The UH football program is a member of the American Athletic Conference West Division. Since the 2014 season, the Cougars have played their home games on campus at TDECU Stadium, which was built on the site formerly occupied by Robertson Stadium, where they played home games from 1941 to 1950 and from 1997 to 2012. Over the history of the program, the Cougars have won eleven conference championships and have had several players elected to the College Football Hall of Fame, including a Heisman Trophy winner.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "51541722",
"score": 0.6669397950172424,
"text": "The 1996 Washington State Cougars football team was an American football team that represented Washington State University in the Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10) during the 1996 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their eighth season under head coach Mike Price, the Cougars compiled a 5–6 record (3–5 against Pac-10 opponents), finished in a tie for fifth place in the Pac-10, and were outscored by their opponents by a combined total of 317 to 314.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "34507615",
"score": 0.6658899784088135,
"text": "The 2012 Conference USA football season is an NCAA football season that will be played from August 2012 through January 2013. Conference USA consists of 12 football members separated into 2 divisions: East Carolina, Marshall, Memphis, Southern Miss, UAB, UCF make up the eastern division, while Houston, Rice, SMU, Tulane, Tulsa, and UTEP comprise the western division.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "28307989",
"score": 0.6650100946426392,
"text": "The 2017 Washington Huskies football team represents the University of Washington in the 2017 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Chris Petersen returns for his fourth season as head coach of the Huskies. Washington is a member of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference and play their home games on campus at Husky Stadium in Seattle.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "27850363",
"score": 0.6620699763298035,
"text": "The Washington Huskies football team competes in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, representing the University of Washington. Since 1959, the Huskies have competed as a charter member of the Pac-12 Conference, formerly known as the Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU), Pacific-8 Conference (Pac-8), and Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10). From 1916 to 1958, the Huskies were members of the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC).",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "34058560",
"score": 0.6617418527603149,
"text": "The 2012 Florida State Seminoles football team, variously Florida State or FSU, represented Florida State University in the sport of American football during the 2012 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Seminoles were led by third-year head coach Jimbo Fisher, and played their home games at Bobby Bowden Field at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida. They were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference, playing in the Atlantic Division. 2012 marked the Seminoles' 21st season as a member of the ACC and their eighth in the ACC's Atlantic Division.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "28307960",
"score": 0.6610957980155945,
"text": "The 2011 Washington Huskies football team represented the University of Washington in the 2011 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by third year head coach Steve Sarkisian. They played six of their home games at Husky Stadium and their final home game at CenturyLink Field due to a planned renovation of Husky Stadium; both stadiums are in Seattle, Washington. They are a member of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 7–6, 5–4 in Pac-12 play to finish in third place in the North division. They were invited to the Alamo Bowl where they were defeated by Baylor 56–67.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "3475181",
"score": 0.6562720537185669,
"text": "The Washington State Cougars are the athletic teams that represent Washington State University. The school is a member of the Pac-12 Conference, which participates in the NCAA Division I, and is located in Pullman, Washington. The athletic program comprises Ten women's sports: basketball, cross country, golf, rowing, soccer, swimming, tennis, track and field, volleyball; and six men's sports: baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, track and field. The school also offers various intramural sports.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5abc08425542993f40c73c55 | Eduard Artemyev was known for a soundtrack to the film by which Russian director? | [
{
"id": "3875474",
"score": 0.8007876873016357,
"text": "Eduard Nikolaevich Artemyev PAR (Russian: Эдуа́рд Никола́евич Арте́мьев ; ] ; born 30 November 1937) is a Russian composer of electronic music and film scores. Outside of Russia he is mostly known for his soundtracks for films such as \"Solaris\", \"Siberiade\", \"Stalker\" and \"Burnt by the Sun\". He was awarded the title People's Artist of Russia in 1999."
},
{
"id": "3132962",
"score": 0.5784465670585632,
"text": "Burnt by the Sun (Russian: Утомлённые солнцем , translit. \"Utomlyonnye solntsem\", literally \"wearied by the sun\") is a 1994 film by Russian director and screenwriter Nikita Mikhalkov and Azerbaijani screenwriter Rustam Ibragimbekov. The film depicts the story of a senior Red Army officer, played by Mikhalkov, and his family during the Great Purge of the late 1930s in the Stalinist Soviet Union. It also stars Oleg Menshikov, Ingeborga Dapkūnaitė and Mikhalkov's daughter Nadezhda Mikhalkova."
}
] | [
{
"id": "48192097",
"score": 0.7525725364685059,
"text": "Artemiy Artemiev (born January 13, 1966) is a Russian composer of electronic and experimental music. Since 1988, he has composed music for more than fifty Russian feature films, and has contributed to several documentary films and television programs. He is the son of renowned composer Edward Artemiev, who is most recognized for his collaborations with film director Andrei Tarkovsky.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "15125675",
"score": 0.6494150161743164,
"text": "The soundtrack for the 1997 film \"Anna Karenina\", directed by Bernard Rose, was conformed of several Russian classical and traditional musical pieces. The music was performed by the St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, under the baton of Sir Georg Solti.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "28380",
"score": 0.6472107768058777,
"text": "Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein (Russian: Сергей Михайлович Эйзенштейн ; ] ; 22 January [O.S. 10 January] 1898 11 February 1948) was a Soviet film director and film theorist, a pioneer in the theory and practice of montage. He is noted in particular for his silent films \"Strike\" (1925), \"Battleship Potemkin\" (1925) and \"\" (1928), as well as the historical epics \"Alexander Nevsky\" (1938) and \"Ivan the Terrible\" (1944, 1958).",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "3899153",
"score": 0.6412128210067749,
"text": "The Steamroller and the Violin (Russian: Каток и скрипка , translit. \"Katok i skripka\"), is a 1961 featurette directed by Andrei Tarkovsky and from a screenplay written by Andrei Konchalovsky and Andrei Tarkovsky. The film tells the story of the unlikely friendship of Sasha (Igor Fomchenko), a little boy, and Sergey (Vladimir Zamansky), the operator of a steamroller. The film was Tarkovsky's diploma film at the State Institute of Cinematography (VGIK), but was made at the Mosfilm studio.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "12152200",
"score": 0.640717089176178,
"text": "The Nutcracker (Russian: Щелкунчик , transcribed as \"Schelkunchik\") is a 1973 Soviet/Russian animated film from the Soyuzmultfilm studio directed by Boris Stepantsev and based partly on Pyotr Tchaikovsky's ballet \"The Nutcracker\", but more closely on E.T.A. Hoffmann's novelette \"The Nutcracker and the Mouse King\", the story which inspired the ballet.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "22399894",
"score": 0.6347435116767883,
"text": "Agony (Russian: Агония , \"Agoniya \" ; U.S. theatrical/DVD title \"Rasputin\") is a film by Elem Klimov, made c.1973-75 and released in Western and Central Europe in 1982 (USA and Soviet Union 1985), after protracted resistance from Soviet authorities. The film is notable for its rich, sometimes baroque style, its sumptuous recreation of episodes from the final year of Imperial Russia and the psychological portraits of Grigori Rasputin and the Imperial family.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "2867491",
"score": 0.6347194910049438,
"text": "Isaak Osipovich Dunayevsky (Russian: \"Исаак Осипович Дунаевский\" ; also transliterated as Dunaevski or Dunaevsky; 30 January [O.S. 18 January] 1900 25 July 1955) was a Soviet film composer and conductor of the 1930s and 1940s, who achieved huge success in music for operetta and film comedies, frequently working with the film director Grigori Aleksandrov. He is considered one of the greatest Soviet composers of all time. Many of his songs are very well known and held in high regard in Russia and the former Soviet Union.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "29062573",
"score": 0.6333711743354797,
"text": "The Fall of Berlin (Russian: \"Падение Берлина\" ; translit. Padeniye Berlina) is a 1950 Soviet war film and an example of Soviet realism, in two parts separated in the manner of a serial, directed by Mikheil Chiaureli, released by the Mosfilm Studio. The script was written by Pyotr Pavlenko, and the musical score composed by Dmitri Shostakovich. It starred Mikheil Gelovani as Joseph Stalin.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "52520348",
"score": 0.6324121356010437,
"text": "Farewell to St. Petersburg Russian: Прощание с Петербургом , \"Proshchaniye s Peterburgom \" is a 1972 Soviet biopic film directed by Yan Frid. The film is about the Austrian composer Johann Strauss's stay in Russia, his concerts in Pavlovsk in the summer of 1857, and his love towards the Russian aristocrat Olga Smirnitskiy, to whom he dedicated several works.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "2560314",
"score": 0.628890872001648,
"text": "Mirror (Russian: Зеркало , \"Zerkalo \" ; known in the United States as \"The Mirror\") is a 1975 Russian art film directed by Andrei Tarkovsky. It is loosely autobiographical, unconventionally structured, and incorporates poems composed and read by the director's father, Arseny Tarkovsky. The film features Margarita Terekhova, Ignat Daniltsev, Alla Demidova, Anatoli Solonitsyn, Tarkovsky's wife Larisa Tarkovskaya and his mother Maria Vishnyakova, with a soundtrack by Eduard Artemyev.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "4844315",
"score": 0.6277608871459961,
"text": "Vladimir Andreyevich Artemyev (Russian: Владимир Андреевич Артемьев ) (July 6 [O.S. June 24] 1885 in Saint Petersburg - September 11, 1962 in Moscow) was a Soviet Russian rocket scientist at the Gas Dynamics Laboratory. He was one of the inventors of the Katyusha. The first rocket propelled by smokeless trotyl-pyroxylin powder was launched under his direction in 1928.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "451326",
"score": 0.6260308027267456,
"text": "Mosfilm (Russian: Мосфильм , \"Mosfil’m\" ] ) is a film studio that is among the largest and oldest in the Russian Federation and in Europe. Its output includes most of the more widely acclaimed Soviet-era films, ranging from works by Andrei Tarkovsky and Sergei Eisenstein (commonly considered the greatest Soviet directors), to Red Westerns, to the Akira Kurosawa co-production \"Dersu Uzala\" (\"Дерсу Узала \") and the epic \"War and Peace\" (\"Война и Мир \").",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "52877762",
"score": 0.625350296497345,
"text": "Loveless (Russian: Нелюбовь ) is a 2017 Russian drama film directed by Andrey Zvyagintsev. The story concerns two separated parents living apart whose affections are long forgotten and whose relationship has become loveless. They are temporarily brought together after their only young child becomes a missing person and they attempt to find him. It was shot in Moscow, with international support after the Russian government disapproved of Zvyagintsev's 2014 film \"Leviathan\". \"Loveless\" opened to critical acclaim and it won the Jury Prize at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival. It was selected as the Russian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "3513428",
"score": 0.6251818537712097,
"text": "House of Fools (Russian: Дом дураков , \"Dom durakov\") is a 2002 Russian film by Andrei Konchalovsky about psychiatric patients and combatants during the First Chechen War. It stars Julia Vysotskaya and Sultan Islamov and features a number of cameo appearances by Bryan Adams, with the music composed by Eduard Artemyev.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "286266",
"score": 0.6225478053092957,
"text": "Stalker (Russian: Сталкер ; ] ) is a 1979 Soviet science fiction art film directed by Andrei Tarkovsky with a screenplay written by Boris and Arkady Strugatsky, loosely based on their novel \"Roadside Picnic\" (1972). The film combines elements of science fiction with dramatic philosophical and psychological themes.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "1139321",
"score": 0.6222989559173584,
"text": "Timur Nuruakhitovich Bekmambetov (Russian: Тиму́р Нуруахи́тович Бекмамбе́тов , ] ; Kazakh: Темір Нұрбақытұлы Бекмамбетoв , Temir Nurbaqıtulı Bekmambetov; born June 25, 1961) is a Russian-Kazakh director, producer and screenwriter who has worked on films, music videos and commercials. He is best known for the film \"Night Watch\" (2004) and its sequel \"Day Watch\" (2006), and the American films \"Wanted\" (2008) and \"\" (2012).",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "37246417",
"score": 0.621432363986969,
"text": "The Three Musketeers (Russian: «Три мушкетёра» , \"tri mushketera\") is a Russian historical adventure film based on the novel \"The Three Musketeers\" by Alexandre Dumas, père. It was produced by The Production Center of Sergei Zhigunov.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "36806835",
"score": 0.6196565628051758,
"text": "Aleksandr Ivanovich Medvedkin (Russian: Александр Иванович Медведкин ; 24 February 1900 – 20 February 1989), was a Soviet Russian film director, best known for his 1934 film \"Happiness\". His life and art are the subject of Chris Marker's film \"The Last Bolshevik\" (1992).",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "27681",
"score": 0.6167749762535095,
"text": "Sergei Sergeyevich Prokofiev ( ; Russian: Сергей Сергеевич Прокофьев , \"Sergej Sergejevič Prokofjev\" ; 27 April 1891 – 5 March 1953) was a Soviet composer, pianist and conductor. As the creator of acknowledged masterpieces across numerous musical genres, he is regarded as one of the major composers of the 20th century. His works include such widely heard works as the March from \"The Love for Three Oranges,\" the suite \"Lieutenant Kijé\", the ballet \"Romeo and Juliet\" – from which \"Dance of the Knights\" is taken – and \"Peter and the Wolf.\" Of the established forms and genres in which he worked, he created – excluding juvenilia – seven completed operas, seven symphonies, eight ballets, five piano concertos, two violin concertos, a cello concerto, a Symphony-Concerto for cello and orchestra, and nine completed piano sonatas.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "20936194",
"score": 0.6162154674530029,
"text": "The Great Glinka (Russian: Глинка , \"Glinka \" ) is a 1946 Soviet biopic film directed by Lev Arnshtam. The film is about Mikhail Glinka, a Russian composer of the 19th century. The film was awarded the Stalin Prize of II degree (1947) and it was entered into the 1946 Cannes Film Festival.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5adeb8e45542992fa25da823 | Bram Stoker's Dracula was directed by the creator of what Gothic soap opera? | [
{
"id": "8695709",
"score": 0.6560243368148804,
"text": "Dracula is a 1973 British television movie adaptation of Bram Stoker's 1897 novel \"Dracula\" written by Richard Matheson and directed by \"Dark Shadows\" creator Dan Curtis, with Jack Palance in the title role. It was the second collaboration for Curtis and Palance after the 1968 TV film \"The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde\"."
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{
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"text": "Dark Shadows is an American Gothic soap opera that originally aired weekdays on the ABC television network, from June 27, 1966, to April 2, 1971. The show depicted the lives, loves, trials and tribulations of the wealthy Collins family of Collinsport, Maine, where a number of supernatural occurrences take place."
}
] | [
{
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"text": "Dracula is a British-American horror drama television series. The series, a reimagining of Bram Stoker's novel \"Dracula\", was produced by London-based Carnival Films; it aired in the United States on NBC and in the United Kingdom on Sky Living. It was created by Cole Haddon, while Daniel Knauf served as showrunner and head writer.",
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{
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"text": "Abraham \"Bram\" Stoker (8 November 1847 – 20 April 1912) was an Irish author, best known today for his 1897 Gothic novel \"Dracula\". During his lifetime, he was better known as the personal assistant of actor Henry Irving and business manager of the Lyceum Theatre in London, which Irving owned.",
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{
"id": "8704400",
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"text": "Dracula is a television adaptation of Bram Stoker's 1897 novel, \"Dracula\", produced by Granada Television for WGBH Boston and BBC Wales in 2006. It was written by Stewart Harcourt and directed by Bill Eagles.",
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{
"id": "8668124",
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"text": "Count Dracula is a British television adaptation of the novel \"Dracula\" by Bram Stoker. Produced by the BBC (in the then standard video/film hybrid format), it first aired on BBC 2 on 22 December 1977. It is among the more faithful of the many adaptations of the original book. Directed by Philip Saville, it stars Louis Jourdan as Count Dracula and Frank Finlay as Van Helsing.",
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{
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"text": "Dracula is an 1897 Gothic horror novel by Irish author Bram Stoker. It introduced Count Dracula, and established many conventions of subsequent vampire fantasy. The novel tells the story of Dracula's attempt to move from Transylvania to England so that he may find new blood and spread the undead curse, and of the battle between Dracula and a small group of men and a woman led by Professor Abraham Van Helsing.",
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"text": "Count Dracula is the title character of Bram Stoker's 1897 gothic horror novel \"Dracula\". He is considered to be both the prototypical and the archetypal vampire in subsequent works of fiction. He is also depicted in the novel to be the origin of werewolf legends. Some aspects of the character are believed to have been inspired by the 15th-century Wallachian Prince Vlad III the Impaler, who was also known as Dracula. Other character aspects have been added or altered in subsequent popular fictional works. The character has subsequently appeared frequently in popular culture, from films to animated media to breakfast cereals.",
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{
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"text": "Bram Stoker's Dracula is a 1992 American romantic horror film directed and produced by Francis Ford Coppola, based on the novel \"Dracula\" by Bram Stoker. It stars Gary Oldman as Count Dracula, Winona Ryder as Mina Harker, Anthony Hopkins as Professor Abraham Van Helsing, and Keanu Reeves as Jonathan Harker.",
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{
"id": "651538",
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"text": "Dracula is a 1958 Technicolor British horror film directed by Terence Fisher and written by Jimmy Sangster based on Bram Stoker's novel of the same name. The first in the series of Hammer Horror films inspired by \"Dracula\", the film stars Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Michael Gough, and Melissa Stribling. In the United States, the film was retitled Horror of Dracula to avoid confusion with the earlier \"Dracula\" (1931) starring Bela Lugosi, and the film was released in the U.S. in 1958 on a double bill with the Universal film \"The Thing That Couldn't Die\".",
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{
"id": "8788175",
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"text": "Dracula, also known as Dracula's Curse, is a 2002 Italian 2 part TV-miniseries written and directed by Roger Young and starring Patrick Bergin, Giancarlo Giannini and Stefania Rocca. It is based on the 1897 novel of the same name by Bram Stoker, though it updates the events of the novel to the present day.",
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{
"id": "3509741",
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"text": "Count Dracula (German: \"Nachts, wenn Dracula erwacht\", lit. \"At Night, When Dracula Awakes\"), released in Italy as \"Il conte Dracula\", in Spain as \"El Conde Drácula\" and in France as \"Les Nuits de Dracula\", is a 1969 Spanish-Italian-German-British horror film (released in 1970), directed by Jesús Franco and starring Christopher Lee, Herbert Lom and Klaus Kinski. It was based on the novel \"Dracula\" by Bram Stoker.",
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{
"id": "4118334",
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"text": "Countess Dracula is a 1971 British horror film based on the legends surrounding the \"Blood Countess\" Elizabeth Báthory. It is in many ways atypical of Hammer's canon, an attempt to diversify the studio's output from \"Dracula\" and \"Frankenstein\" sequels.",
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{
"id": "17279224",
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"text": "Dracula is a 1995 stage adaptation co-authored and by John Godber and Jane Thornton from Bram Stoker's novel of the same title. Its world premier was at the Spring Street Theatre, home of Hull Truck Theatre at Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire.",
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{
"id": "1046559",
"score": 0.6140989065170288,
"text": "Dracula is a 1931 American pre-Code vampire-horror film directed by Tod Browning and starring Bela Lugosi as Count Dracula. The film was produced by Universal and is based on the 1924 stage play \"Dracula\" by Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston, which in turn is loosely based on the novel \"Dracula\" by Bram Stoker.",
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},
{
"id": "22495137",
"score": 0.6138786673545837,
"text": "The Vampyr: A Soap Opera is a miniseries based on Heinrich Marschner's opera \"Der Vampyr\". It first aired on BBC 2 on December 2, 1992. The new English libretto was written by Charles Hart, based on a story by Janet Street-Porter and Nigel Finch, which was based on the original libretto by Wilhelm August Wohlbrück, which was based on John Polidori's short story \"The Vampyre.\" It was conducted by David Parry and directed by Nigel Finch.",
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{
"id": "15737655",
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"text": "William Hughes is Professor of Medical Humanities and Gothic Literature at Bath Spa University, England: he has specialised in the study of Bram Stoker. He was educated at the Liverpool Collegiate School and the University of East Anglia, and also holds a PGCE from Christ Church, Canterbury. He has presented radio programmes for the BBC World Service and BBC Radio 4, and has also appeared on live television through Living TV's Most Haunted Live!, most recently during the 2009 broadcast from St George's Hall, Liverpool. In 2015, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.",
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{
"id": "3498603",
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"text": "Jonathan Harker is a fictional character and one of the main protagonists of Bram Stoker's 1897 Gothic horror novel \"Dracula\". His journey to Transylvania and encounter with the vampire Count Dracula and his Brides at Castle Dracula constitutes the dramatic opening scenes in the novel and most of the film adaptations. Stoker appropriated the surname from his friend Joseph Cunningham Harker (1855-1920), a set designer at the Lyceum Theatre and father of actor William Gordon Harker (1885-1967) as well as great-grandfather of actress Polly Adams, whose actress-daughters Susannah Harker and Caroline Harker adopted the Harker surname for their stage names.",
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{
"id": "8620027",
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"text": "Dracula: The Series is a syndicated series about Count Dracula (using the alias of \"Alexander Lucard,\" a wealthy tycoon — the name itself 'A. Lucard' being 'Dracula' backwards.) and his struggles with Gustav Van Helsing, as well as Gustav's young nephews — Maximilian and Christopher Townsend. They were also aided by a schoolgirl, Sophie Metternich. Romantic tensions developed between Chris and Sophie. The series was filmed in Luxembourg, and produced by Phil Bedard and Larry Lalonde, best known for their work on \"John Woo's Once a Thief\" and \"\".",
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{
"id": "5034",
"score": 0.6118065714836121,
"text": "Béla Ferenc Dezső Blaskó (] ; 20 October 1882 – 16 August 1956), better known as Bela Lugosi ( ; ] ), was a Hungarian-American actor, famous for portraying Count Dracula in the 1931 film and for his roles in various other horror films.",
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{
"id": "2091800",
"score": 0.6109287738800049,
"text": "Dracula: Prince of Darkness is a 1966 British horror film directed by Terence Fisher. The film was photographed in Techniscope by Michael Reed, designed by Bernard Robinson and scored by James Bernard.",
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{
"id": "6207934",
"score": 0.6107437014579773,
"text": "Dracula is an 1897 novel by Bram Stoker.",
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}
] |
5ae5cc195542993aec5ec1d4 | Samuel C. Morrison, Jr interviewed which Running back born in 1985 ? | [
{
"id": "39923266",
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"text": "Samuel C. Morrison, Jr. (born April 19, 1982) is a Liberian-born producer, screenwriter and journalist. His professional writing career began as a contributing writer for The Source Magazine, interviewing celebrities by the likes of Meagan Good, Matt Kemp, Adrian Peterson, and more, before making the transition into the film and television industry."
},
{
"id": "19156186",
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"text": "Adrian Lewis Peterson (born March 21, 1985) is an American football running back for the New Orleans Saints of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Oklahoma and was drafted by the Minnesota Vikings seventh overall in the 2007 NFL Draft. Peterson set the NCAA freshman rushing record with 1,925 yards as a true freshman during the 2004 season. As a unanimous first-team All-American, he became the first freshman to finish as the runner-up in the Heisman Trophy balloting. Peterson finished his college football career as the Sooners' third all-time leading rusher."
}
] | [
{
"id": "14897425",
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"text": "Christopher Duan Johnson (born September 23, 1985) is an American football running back for the Arizona Cardinals of the National Football League (NFL). Born in Orlando, Florida, Johnson emerged as a senior for East Carolina University where he broke out for 2,960 all-purpose yards and 24 touchdowns. He was drafted by the Tennessee Titans in the first round of the 2008 NFL Draft, after running a then-record breaking 4.24 seconds in the 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine. In 2009, he won the NFL rushing title with 2,006 yards (the sixth of only seven players ever to gain over 2,000 in a season), and broke Marshall Faulk's record of total yards from scrimmage with 2,509. This earned him the nickname CJ2K. He has been to three Pro Bowls and was the NFL's Offensive Player of the Year in 2009. Johnson has also played for the New York Jets.",
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{
"id": "51520839",
"score": 0.6437014937400818,
"text": "Damien Harris (born February 11, 1997) is an American football running back for the Alabama Crimson Tide.",
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{
"id": "30464067",
"score": 0.6420282125473022,
"text": "Stevan Todd Ridley (born January 27, 1989) is an American football running back who is currently a free agent. He played college football at LSU and was drafted by the New England Patriots in the third round of the 2011 NFL draft. Ridley has played for the New York Jets, Detroit Lions, Indianapolis Colts, Atlanta Falcons, and Denver Broncos.",
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{
"id": "50375154",
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"text": "Antonio Morrison (born December 6, 1994) is an American football inside linebacker for the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for Florida, and was drafted by the Colts in the fourth round (125th overall) of the 2016 NFL draft.",
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{
"id": "36747724",
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"text": "Le'Veon Andrew Bell ( ; born February 18, 1992) is an American football running back for the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Michigan State, and was drafted by the Steelers in the second round of the 2013 NFL Draft.",
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},
{
"id": "37333944",
"score": 0.635374903678894,
"text": "Timothy Antonio \"T. J.\" Yeldon Jr. (born October 2, 1993) is an American football running back for the Jacksonville Jaguars of the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the Jaguars in the second round of the 2015 NFL draft. He played college football at Alabama.",
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{
"id": "29508316",
"score": 0.632299542427063,
"text": "Lavale Thomas is a former running back in the National Football League.",
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{
"id": "23898008",
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"text": "Trenton Jamond Richardson (born July 10, 1990) is an American professional Canadian football running back for the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League (CFL). He played college football for the University of Alabama, was recognized as an All-American, and was a member of two BCS National Championship teams. Considered the top running back prospect for the 2012 NFL Draft, Richardson was considered by some as the best running back prospect since Adrian Peterson, and was selected third overall by the Cleveland Browns. After being traded away from the Browns after just two seasons with the team, and out of the NFL in just five, he is often considered one of the biggest draft busts in league history.",
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{
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"text": "Mark Ingram Jr. (born December 21, 1989) is an American football running back for the New Orleans Saints of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the University of Alabama, won the Heisman Trophy, and was a member of a national championship team. The New Orleans Saints chose him in the first round of the 2011 NFL Draft.",
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"text": "Devontae Booker (born May 27, 1992) is an American football running back for the Denver Broncos of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at the University of Utah. He was drafted by the Broncos in the fourth round of the 2016 NFL Draft.",
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{
"id": "32578052",
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"text": "DuJuan LaTroy Harris (born September 3, 1988) is an American football running back who is currently a free agent. He played college football at Troy, and was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Jaguars in 2011.",
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{
"id": "24407877",
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"text": "Stephfon P. Green (born May 28, 1989) is an American football running back who is currently a free agent.",
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{
"id": "11308887",
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"text": "Curtis Brown (born March 3, 1984) is an American former football running back. He briefly played for the Cincinnati Bengals as an undrafted free agent in 2007. Brown played college football at BYU, where he set the school record for rushing yards.",
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"id": "50377237",
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"text": "Dwayne Washington (born April 24, 1994) is an American football running back for the Detroit Lions of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Washington. He was drafted by the Detroit Lions in the seventh round (236th overall) of the 2016 NFL Draft.",
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{
"id": "1249829",
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"text": "LaDainian Tramayne Tomlinson (born June 23, 1979) is a former professional American football player who was a running back in the National Football League (NFL) for eleven seasons. He played the majority of his career with the San Diego Chargers, who selected him with the fifth overall pick in the 2001 NFL Draft. Tomlinson was invited to five Pro Bowls, was an All-Pro six times, and won consecutive rushing titles in 2006 and 2007. At the time of his retirement, he ranked fifth in career rushing yards (13,684), seventh in all-purpose yards (18,456), second in career rushing touchdowns (145), and third in touchdowns from scrimmage (162). He currently serves as an analyst on NFL Network. After being elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 2014, Tomlinson was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in August 2017, his first year of eligibility.",
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"text": "Dwayne Lenard Harris (born September 16, 1987) is an American football wide receiver and return specialist for the New York Giants of the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the Dallas Cowboys in the sixth round of the 2011 NFL Draft. He played college football at East Carolina.",
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"id": "14959340",
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"text": "Peyton Derek Hillis (born January 21, 1986) is a former American football running back who played in the National Football League (NFL). Hillis attended Conway High School in Conway, Arkansas and was a highly touted recruit. Hillis attended the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, Arkansas where he was primarily used as a fullback. After being drafted in the 7th round of the 2008 NFL Draft, Hillis rose to the top of the depth chart as the starting fullback for the Denver Broncos. Due to injuries to the running back corps, he became the starting running back. After spending two years in Denver, Hillis was traded to the Cleveland Browns in 2010. In 2011, Hillis won a nationwide vote which put him on the cover of EA Sports' \"Madden NFL 12\" video game.",
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{
"id": "3177403",
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"text": "Samuel Morris III (born March 23, 1977) is a former American football running back in the National Football League. He was drafted by the Buffalo Bills in the fifth round of the 2000 NFL Draft. He played college football at Texas Tech.",
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{
"id": "44511278",
"score": 0.6222438812255859,
"text": "Reece Earsal Morrison (born October 21, 1945) is a former American football running back who played six seasons in the National Football League with the Cleveland Browns and Cincinnati Bengals. He was drafted by the Cleveland Browns in the third round of the 1968 NFL Draft. He played college football at Texas State University and attended San Marcos High School in San Marcos, Texas.",
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"text": "Todd Gurley lI (born August 3, 1994) is an American football running back for the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Georgia where he earned All-SEC honors in 2012 and 2013. Gurley was drafted by the Rams with the tenth overall pick in the 2015 NFL Draft. Despite missing three games due to a torn ACL suffered during his junior year at Georgia, Gurley rushed for 1,106 yards in his rookie season and was voted Offensive Rookie of the Year by the Associated Press.",
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5abdca7255429965af743e4b | Rousey vs. Carmouche was a mixed martial arts event held by which American mixed martial arts organization based in Las Vegas, Nevada, that is owned and operated by parent company WME–IMG? | [
{
"id": "50416431",
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"text": "UFC 157: Rousey vs. Carmouche was a mixed martial arts event held by the Ultimate Fighting Championship on February 23, 2013, at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California."
},
{
"id": "169660",
"score": 0.7578318119049072,
"text": "The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) is an American mixed martial arts organization based in Las Vegas, Nevada, that is owned and operated by parent company WME–IMG. It is the largest MMA promotion in the world and features the top-ranked fighters of the sport. Based in the United States, the UFC produces events worldwide that showcase eleven weight divisions and abide by the Unified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts. As of 2017, the UFC has held over 400 events. Dana White serves as the president of the UFC. He has held that position since 2001; while under the leadership of Dana White the UFC has grown into a globally popular multibillion-dollar enterprise."
}
] | [
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"id": "16692635",
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"text": "William Morris Endeavor Entertainment, LLC, also known as William Morris Endeavor, WME or WME-IMG, is an American talent agency with offices in Beverly Hills, California, United States. The company was founded in April 2009, after the merger of the William Morris Agency and the Endeavor Agency. WME represents artists across all media platforms, specifically movies, television, music, theatre, digital and publishing. It also represents the NFL and NHL. WME also owns the Ultimate Fighting Championship and Miss Universe. The company is run by Co-CEOs Ari Emanuel and Patrick Whitesell.",
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"id": "6104770",
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"text": "Zuffa, LLC ( ) is an American sports promotion company specializing in mixed martial arts. It was founded in January 2001 in Las Vegas, Nevada, by Station Casinos executives Frank Fertitta III and Lorenzo Fertitta to be the parent entity of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) after they purchased it from the Semaphore Entertainment Group. The word \"Zuffa\" is an Italian word (] ), meaning \"fight\". On July 11, 2016, Zuffa announced that it would be purchased by WME-IMG for the price of $4 billion.",
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"id": "29487240",
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"text": "The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) is a mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion, founded in 1993 by Art Davie and Rorion Gracie. The organization was purchased from its parent company SEG in 2001 by Zuffa LLC, a promotional company owned by Las Vegas casino magnates, Lorenzo Fertitta and Frank Fertitta and managed by Dana White (current president of operations). In 2016, it was sold to Christoffer Ahl (WME-IMG) for $4 billion. Since its inception, and through its Zuffa management, the UFC has remained one of the more dominant MMA promotions in the world, playing host to a wide field of MMA fighters.",
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"id": "47165944",
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"text": "The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) is a mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion, founded in 1993 by Art Davie and Rorion Gracie. The organization was purchased from its parent company SEG in 2001 by Zuffa LLC, a promotional company owned by Las Vegas casino magnates, Lorenzo and Frank Fertitta and managed by Dana White (current president of operations). Since its inception, and through its current Zuffa management, the UFC has remained one of the more dominant MMA promotions in the world, playing host to a wide field of MMA fighters.",
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{
"id": "36129357",
"score": 0.6573734879493713,
"text": "Invicta Fighting Championships, also known as Invicta FC, is an American professional mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion for female fighters based in the United States. It was founded in 2012 by Janet Martin a former VP with MMA organization Blackeye Promotions and Shannon Knapp, who held positions at various levels, including executive positions with King of the Cage, World Fighting Alliance, International Fight League, Affliction Entertainment, UFC, and Strikeforce. It has a strategic partnership with fellow Japanese MMA promotion Jewels.",
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{
"id": "51887080",
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"text": "UFC 207: Nunes vs. Rousey was a mixed martial arts event produced by the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) held on December 30, 2016, at the T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nevada, part of the Las Vegas metropolitan area.",
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"id": "13464492",
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"text": "Xtreme Couture Mixed Martial Arts is an American mixed martial arts training organization headed by former UFC Champion and former co-founder of Team Quest, Randy Couture. Xtreme Couture was founded with the flagship gym in Las Vegas. Since then, the franchise has spread to other cities in the United States and Canada. Xtreme Couture Las Vegas is one of the largest gyms (over 24000 sqft ), most recognized brands and MMA gyms in the world where many past and current top MMA fighters train.",
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"id": "46541756",
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"text": "The Invicta Fighting Championship also known as Invicta FC, is an American mixed martial arts (MMA) organization for female fighters. It was founded in 2012 by Janet Martin and Shannon Knapp.",
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{
"id": "6250151",
"score": 0.6464188098907471,
"text": "World Extreme Cagefighting (WEC) was an American mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion founded in 2001. It was purchased by Zuffa, LLC, the parent company of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), in 2006. In its final incarnation, it was made up of 3 weight classes: 135 lb , 145 lb and 155 lb . To accommodate the smaller fighters, WEC's cage was 25 feet in diameter—5 feet smaller than the standard UFC cage.",
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{
"id": "5689576",
"score": 0.646273136138916,
"text": "The World Fighting Alliance was a mixed martial arts organization based in the United States.",
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{
"id": "54954929",
"score": 0.6433442831039429,
"text": "Alaska Fighting Championship, also known as AFC, is an American professional mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion based in the United States.",
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{
"id": "39888651",
"score": 0.6412780284881592,
"text": "UFC 170: Rousey vs. McMann was a mixed martial arts held on February 22, 2014, at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.",
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"id": "51005135",
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"text": "World Series of Fighting-Global, also known as WSOF-Global, is an American mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion that was started in 2012 and based in Las Vegas, Nevada. WSOF has divided into two branches after WSOF signed Aggression (run by Darren Ownen) which became WSOF-Canada, 2 of the 8 WSOF owners gained International Branding Rights, WSOF Global. The 6 other owners didn't like it and tried to sue. The 2 WSOF Global owners retained their rights. Owen now works for WSOF Global. The two companies now work amicably separate branches of the same brand. WSOF does not affiliate or own any companies outside of themselves. They focus on US shows. WSOF-Global affiliates with 13 current partner promotions.",
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{
"id": "44666594",
"score": 0.635455846786499,
"text": "Hard Knocks Fighting is a mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion in North America. Hard Knocks Fighting was founded in 2009 by Canadian Olympic wrestler Ari Taub. Hard Knocks Fighting is known for its local fighter support and ongoing charity efforts and where Ronda Rousey secured her second career MMA victory.",
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{
"id": "39886837",
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"text": "Alliance MMA, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMMA) is a mixed martial arts organization offering premier promotional opportunities for aspiring mixed martial arts (MMA) fighters to showcase their talent and advance to the sport's highest level of professional competition. Alliance MMA's mission is to identify and develop the next generation of Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) and other leading MMA promotion champions including The World Series of Fighting and Bellator.",
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{
"id": "15686572",
"score": 0.6349794268608093,
"text": "Adrenaline MMA is a mixed martial arts organization operating primarily in North America. It was formerly part of M-1 Global but became independent on October 2007 with Monte Cox as its head.",
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{
"id": "8810073",
"score": 0.6317457556724548,
"text": "Elite Xtreme Combat, also known as EliteXC, was a United States-based mixed martial arts (MMA) organization owned and operated by ProElite. It was founded as a partnership between Showtime Networks and ProElite and officially announced on December 14, 2006. It was headquartered in Los Angeles.",
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{
"id": "30988188",
"score": 0.6298031806945801,
"text": "Liz Carmouche (born February 19, 1984) is an American mixed martial arts fighter. Carmouche currently competes for UFC in the women's bantamweight division.",
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{
"id": "1490395",
"score": 0.6224634051322937,
"text": "IMG, originally known as the International Management Group, is a global sports, other events and talent management company headquartered in New York City. It has been owned by William Morris Endeavor and Silver Lake Partners since 2013. Trans World International (TWI) is the event company of IMG.",
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{
"id": "21164944",
"score": 0.6218621730804443,
"text": "Bellator MMA (formerly known as Bellator Fighting Championships) is an American mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion company. Bellator was founded in 2008 by Chairman and CEO Bjorn Rebney. Bellator features \"The Toughest Tournament in Sports\", which has a single-elimination format that awards the winner of each eight-person or four-person tournament a check for $100,000 and a guaranteed world-title fight against the current Bellator world champion in the applicable weight class.",
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] |
5a8f161e55429918e830d183 | What actor starred in a 20 episode television series with Kim Sun-a and was a model in the 1990s? | [
{
"id": "24651125",
"score": 0.630693256855011,
"text": "The City Hall (; lit. \"City Hall\") is a 2009 South Korean television series starring Kim Sun-a and Cha Seung-won. It aired on SBS from April 29 to July 2, 2009 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 for 20 episodes."
},
{
"id": "7353142",
"score": 0.6281647682189941,
"text": "Cha Seung-won (born 7 June 1970) is a South Korean actor who his career as an in-demand fashion model in the 1990s. Cha achieved stardom through the hit comedy films \"Kick the Moon\" (2001); \"Jail Breakers\" (2002); \"My Teacher, Mr. Kim\" (2003); and \"Ghost House\" (2004). After proving his versatility in other genres, notably in the period thriller \"Blood Rain\" (2005) and the melodrama \"My Son\" (2007), Cha's popularity continued with the television series \"Bodyguard\" (2003), \"City Hall\" (2009), and \"The Greatest Love\" (2011)."
}
] | [
{
"id": "39902146",
"score": 0.680461049079895,
"text": "Model () is a 1997 South Korean television series starring Kim Nam-joo, Han Jae-suk, Jang Dong-gun and Yum Jung-ah. It aired on SBS from April 9 to August 7, 1997 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:45 for 36 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "6154142",
"score": 0.6489400863647461,
"text": "Kim Sun-a (born October 1, 1973) is a South Korean actress. She is best known for her titular role as Kim Sam-soon in the popular television series \"My Lovely Sam Soon\" (2005). Other notable series include \"City Hall\" (2009) and \"Scent of a Woman\" (2011).",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "32624702",
"score": 0.6433045864105225,
"text": "Scent of a Woman () is a 2011 South Korean television drama series starring Kim Sun-a, Lee Dong-wook, Um Ki-joon and Seo Hyo-rim. It aired on SBS from July 23 to September 11, 2011 on Saturdays and Sundays at 21:55 for 16 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "4817205",
"score": 0.6245254278182983,
"text": "Kim Hee-sun (born June 11, 1977) is a South Korean actress. She rose to fame in the 1990s with leading roles in television series such as \"Men of the Bath House\" (1995), \"Propose\" (1997), \"Wedding Dress\" (1997), \"Forever Yours\" (1998), \"Mister Q\" (1998), \"Sunflower\" (1998), and \"Tomato\" (1999). Kim also starred in the martial arts films \"Bichunmoo\" (2000) and \"The Myth\" (2005), historical media drama \"Faith\" (2012) and the teen drama \"Angry Mom\" (2015).",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "8700850",
"score": 0.6239392757415771,
"text": "Sweet Spy () is a South Korean television series starring Nam Sang-mi, Lee Joo-hyun, Yoo Sun, and Korean-American model-turned-actor Dennis Oh. It aired on MBC from November 7, 2005 to January 10, 2006 on Mondays and Tuesdays at 21:55 for 20 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "46645758",
"score": 0.6193867325782776,
"text": "Masked Prosecutor () is a 2015 South Korean television drama series starring Joo Sang-wook and Kim Sun-a. It aired on KBS2 from May 20 to July 9, 2015 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 for 16 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "41360930",
"score": 0.616165816783905,
"text": "Miss Korea () is a South Korean television series starring Lee Sun-kyun, Lee Yeon-hee, Lee Mi-sook, Lee Sung-min, Song Seon-mi, and Lee Ki-woo. It aired on MBC from December 18, 2013 to February 26, 2014 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 for 20 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "8729289",
"score": 0.613699197769165,
"text": "My Lovely Sam-soon (; lit. My Name Is Kim Sam-soon) is a South Korean television series based on the internet novel of the same title by Ji Soo-hyun, which was published on March 9, 2004. Touted as the Korean version of \"Bridget Jones's Diary\", it starred Kim Sun-a (who gained 15 pounds for the role), Hyun Bin, Jung Ryeo-won and Daniel Henney. The series aired on MBC from June 1 to July 21, 2005 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 for 16 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "36312633",
"score": 0.6135616302490234,
"text": "Tamra, the Island () is a 2009 South Korean television series starring Seo Woo, Im Joo-hwan and Pierre Deporte. It aired on MBC from August 8 to September 27, 2009 on Saturdays and Sundays at 19:55 for 20 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "44250708",
"score": 0.610789954662323,
"text": "Birth of a Beauty () is a 2014 South Korean television series starring Joo Sang-wook, Han Ye-seul, Jung Gyu-woon and Wang Ji-hye. It aired on SBS from November 1, 2014 to January 11, 2015 for 21 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "51405841",
"score": 0.6067253351211548,
"text": "Kim Min-jae (; born March 20, 1979) is a South Korean actor. He starred in TV series such as \"Reset\" (2014), \"Spy\" (2015), \"\" (2015).",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "40841648",
"score": 0.6054871678352356,
"text": "Crazy Love () is a 2013 South Korean melodrama television series starring Park Sun-young, Go Se-won, Heo Tae-hee, Kim Yeon-joo, Kim Hae-in and Choi Dae-hoon. It aired on tvN from April 8 to September 17, 2013 on Mondays to Fridays at 9:45 a.m. for 100 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "41721241",
"score": 0.6048356890678406,
"text": "You're Only Mine () is a 2014 South Korean morning soap opera broadcast by SBS starring Lee Min-young, Jung Sung-hwan, Song Jae-hee and Han Da-min. It aired from January 20 to July 19, 2014 on Mondays to Fridays at 8:30 a.m. for 121 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "25156699",
"score": 0.6038894653320312,
"text": "Style () is a 2009 South Korean television series starring Kim Hye-soo, Lee Ji-ah, Ryu Si-won, and Lee Yong-woo. It aired on SBS from August 1 to September 20, 2009 on Saturdays and Sundays at 21:45 for 16 episodes. Based on the popular 2008 chick lit novel of the same title by former fashion reporter Baek Young-ok, \"Style\" depicts the inner workings of a fictional fashion magazine.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "42154307",
"score": 0.6018949151039124,
"text": "Angel Eyes () is a 2014 South Korean television series starring Lee Sang-yoon, Ku Hye-sun, Kim Ji-seok and Seungri. It aired on SBS from April 5 to June 15, 2014 for 20 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "38854623",
"score": 0.6017571091651917,
"text": "Ahn Jae-hyun (; born 1 July 1987) is a South Korean model and actor. He is best known for his roles in television dramas such as \"My Love from the Star\" (2013), \"You're All Surrounded\" (2014), \"Blood\" (2015), \"Cinderella and Four Knights\" (2016) and \"Reunited Worlds\" (2017).",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "44107764",
"score": 0.6015573740005493,
"text": "Kim Kwang-kyu (born December 8, 1967) is a South Korean actor. He made his acting debut in 1999 in \"Dr. K\", and its director fellow Busan native Kwak Kyung-taek later cast him in a small but memorable role as a physically abusive teacher in the 2001 box-office hit \"Friend\". Kim continued acting in both television and film as a supporting actor, notably in \"Couple or Trouble\" (2006), \"The Secret of Coocoo Island\" (2008), \"Scent of a Woman\" (2011), and \"I Can Hear Your Voice\" (2013). He also appears on the reality shows \"I Live Alone\" (since 2013) and \"Three Meals a Day\" (2015).",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "3861940",
"score": 0.6002388596534729,
"text": "Shin Min-a (born Yang Min-a on April 5, 1984) is a South Korean model and actress. She is best known for starring in television dramas \"A Love to Kill\" (2005), \"My Girlfriend Is a Nine-Tailed Fox\" (2010), \"Arang and the Magistrate\" (2012), \"Oh My Venus\" (2015), and \"Tomorrow With You\" (2017).",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "53828660",
"score": 0.598838210105896,
"text": "Park Sun-ho (born May 9, 1993) is a South Korean actor and model. Park made his acting debut in the television series \"Golden Rainbow\" (2013). A rising new actor, he has since been cast as one of the lead in \"Love Cells\" (2014), \"Start Again\" (2016) and \"I'm Sorry, But I Love You\" (2016).",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "40194057",
"score": 0.5984508991241455,
"text": "Who Are You? () is a 2013 South Korean television series starring So Yi-hyun, Ok Taecyeon and Kim Jae-wook. It aired on tvN from July 29 to September 17, 2013 on Mondays and Tuesdays at 23:00 (and simultaneously broadcast on OnStyle) for 16 episodes.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5abe880f5542993f32c2a157 | The naval creft of the USS Wichita incorporates elements of a flag desgined by who? | [
{
"id": "46957769",
"score": 0.6746736764907837,
"text": "USS \"Wichita\" (LCS-13) will be a \"Freedom\"-class littoral combat ship of the United States Navy. It will be the third ship named after Wichita, the largest city in Kansas. The ceremonial “laying of the keel” was on 9 February 2015, at Marinette, Wisconsin. Sponsored by Kate Lehrer, wife of Wichita native Jim Lehrer, the ship was christened and launched on 17 September 2016. The naval crest of the ship incorporates elements of the Wichita flag, along with a buffalo skull and feathers representing the Native American heritage and wheat to reflect the state of Kansas's main crop."
},
{
"id": "53127013",
"score": 0.6967642903327942,
"text": "Wichita’s official city flag was adopted in 1937. Designed by a local artist from South Wichita Cecil McAlister, it represents freedom, happiness, contentment and home."
}
] | [
{
"id": "11424",
"score": 0.6674875617027283,
"text": "A flag is a piece of fabric (most often rectangular or quadrilateral) with a distinctive design that is used as a symbol, as a signaling device, or as decoration. The term \"flag\" is also used to refer to the graphic design employed, and flags have since evolved into a general tool for rudimentary signalling and identification, especially in environments where communication is similarly challenging (such as the maritime environment where semaphore is used). National flags are patriotic symbols with varied wide-ranging interpretations, often including strong military associations due to their original and ongoing military uses. Flags are also used in messaging, advertising, or for other decorative purposes. The study of flags is known as vexillology, from the Latin word \"vexillum\", meaning flag or banner.",
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{
"id": "679148",
"score": 0.6672412753105164,
"text": "Three ships of the United States Navy have been named USS \"Wichita\", after the city of Wichita, Kansas.",
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{
"id": "556470",
"score": 0.6668636798858643,
"text": "USS \"Wichita\" (CA-45) was a unique heavy cruiser of the United States Navy built in the 1930s. The last American cruiser designed to meet the limits of London Naval Treaty, she was originally intended to be a \"New Orleans\"-class heavy cruiser, accordingly with the maximum main armament of three triple 8 in gun turrets. These were instead placed on an improved hull derived from the \"Brooklyn\"-class light cruisers, with increased armoring. This design would go on to form the basis for the later World War II-era heavy cruisers such as the \"Baltimore\"-class cruiser s. The ship was authorized by the 1929 Cruiser Act, laid down at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in October 1935, launched in November 1937, and commissioned into the US Navy in February 1939.",
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{
"id": "2417649",
"score": 0.6659914255142212,
"text": "The flag of the United States Navy consists of the seal of the U.S. Department of the Navy in the center, above a yellow scroll inscribed \"United States Navy\" in dark blue letters, against a dark blue background.",
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},
{
"id": "36059737",
"score": 0.6601408123970032,
"text": "The American Flag is the flag of the United States of America.",
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},
{
"id": "11447",
"score": 0.660122811794281,
"text": "The flag of the United States of America, often referred to as the American flag, is the national flag of the United States. It consists of thirteen equal horizontal stripes of red (top and bottom) alternating with white, with a blue rectangle in the canton (referred to specifically as the \"union\") bearing fifty small, white, five-pointed stars arranged in nine offset horizontal rows, where rows of six stars (top and bottom) alternate with rows of five stars. The 50 stars on the flag represent the 50 states of the United States of America, and the 13 stripes represent the thirteen British colonies that declared independence from the Kingdom of Great Britain, and became the first states in the U.S. Nicknames for the flag include The Stars and Stripes, Old Glory, and The Star-Spangled Banner.",
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{
"id": "22609",
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"text": "Old Glory is a nickname for the flag of the United States. The original \"Old Glory\" was a flag owned by the 19th-century American sea captain William Driver (March 17, 1803 – March 3, 1886), who flew the flag during his career at sea and later brought it to Nashville, Tennessee, where he settled. Driver greatly prized the flag and ensured its safety from the Confederates, who attempted to seize the flag during the American Civil War. After the war, Driver's daughter and niece feuded over which of them owned the original Old Glory. In 1922, both flags claimed to be the original \"Old Glory\" became part of the collection of the Smithsonian Institution, where they remain at the National Museum of American History.",
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},
{
"id": "3432697",
"score": 0.6523708701133728,
"text": "The Fort Sumter Flag is a historic United States flag with a distinctive, diamond-shaped pattern of 33 stars. When the main flagpole was felled by shot during the bombardment of Fort Sumter by confederate forces, Second Lieutenant Norman Hall rushed to retrieve the flag and remount it on a makeshift pole. The flag was lowered by Major Robert Anderson on April 14, 1861 when he surrendered Fort Sumter, in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina, at the outset of the American Civil War.",
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},
{
"id": "495797",
"score": 0.6499177813529968,
"text": "The flag of Arkansas, also known as the Arkansas flag, consists of a red field charged with a large blue-bordered white lozenge (or diamond). Twenty-nine five-pointed stars appear on the flag: twenty-five small white stars within the blue border, and four larger blue stars in the white diamond. The inscription \"ARKANSAS\" appears in blue within the white lozenge, with one star above and three stars below. The star above and the two outer stars below point upwards; the inner star below points downwards. The flag was designed by Willie Hocker of Jefferson County, a member of the Pine Bluff Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution.",
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},
{
"id": "3191371",
"score": 0.6463703513145447,
"text": "The flag of Des Moines, Iowa, was designed by Walter T. Proctor. Set on a blue background is a red vertical stripe along the hoist with the right side of the stripe angling inward toward the hoist and a white balance of three horizontal \"bridges.\"",
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},
{
"id": "1278471",
"score": 0.6449435949325562,
"text": "A war flag, also known as a military flag, battle flag, or standard, is a variant of a national flag for use by a country's military forces when on land. The nautical equivalent is a naval ensign. Under the strictest sense of the term, few countries today currently have proper war flags, most preferring to use instead their state flag or standard national flag for this purpose.",
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{
"id": "417861",
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"text": "The flag of American Samoa is a flag consisting of a red-edged white triangle pointing towards the hoist charged with a bald eagle clutching a war club and fly-whisk, with dark blue upper and lower triangles. Adopted in April 1960 to replace the \"Stars and Stripes\" as the official flag of the territory, it has been the flag of the Territory of American Samoa since that year. The colors used epitomize the traditional colors of the United States and Samoa.",
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},
{
"id": "316351",
"score": 0.6419132947921753,
"text": "The flag of the state of Kansas was adopted in 1927. The elements of the state flag include the state seal and a sunflower. This original design was modified in 1961 to add the name of the state at the bottom of the flag.",
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},
{
"id": "767773",
"score": 0.6409136652946472,
"text": "The flag of Great Britain, commonly known as the Union Jack or Union Flag, is a maritime flag of Great Britain that was used from 1606 to 1801. The design was ordered by King James VI and I to be used on ships on the high seas, and it subsequently came into use as a national flag following the Treaty of Union and Acts of Union 1707, gaining the status of \"the Ensign armorial of the Kingdom of Great Britain\", the newly created state. It was later adopted by land forces, although the blue field used on land-based versions more closely resembled that of the blue of the flag of Scotland.",
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},
{
"id": "32022725",
"score": 0.6403332352638245,
"text": "The American Flag: Two Centuries of Concord & Conflict",
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},
{
"id": "145567",
"score": 0.6401349902153015,
"text": "An ensign is the national flag flown on a vessel to indicate nationality. The ensign is the largest flag, generally flown at the stern (rear) of the ship. The naval ensign (also known as war ensign), used on warships, may be different from the civil ensign (merchant ships) or the yacht ensign (recreational boats). Large versions of naval ensigns called battle ensigns are used when a warship goes into battle. The ensign differs from the jack which is flown from a jackstaff at the bow of a vessel.",
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{
"id": "1981057",
"score": 0.6386183500289917,
"text": "The jack of the United States of America is a maritime flag representing United States nationality flown on the jackstaff in the bow of American vessels that are moored or anchored. The U.S. Navy is a prime user of jacks for its warships and auxiliaries, but they are also used by ships of the U.S. Coast Guard, the predominantly civilian-manned replenishment and support ships of the U.S. Navy's Military Sealift Command, the ships of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and other U.S. governmental entities. \"The jack is flown on the bow (front) of a ship and the ensign is flown on the stern (rear) of a ship when anchored or moored. Once under way, the ensign is flown from the main mast.\"",
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},
{
"id": "50840840",
"score": 0.6370753049850464,
"text": "The Flag of the United States of the Ionian Islands was used between 1815 and 1864. The flag consisted of a British blue ensign with the coat of arms of the predecessor state, the Septinsular Republic on it with a red border.",
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},
{
"id": "2988312",
"score": 0.6353256106376648,
"text": "A flag patch is a piece of fabric displaying the national flag of a country. The image of the flag is usually produced by embroidery, using different colored threads. It can also be produced by printing directly on the fabric, although this is less common. Many countries have patches made to resemble their flag for use in their militaries, although it is not uncommon for them to also be used for personnel in civil jobs (police officers, civilian pilots, bus drivers, etc.), as well as sports teams who include the flag patch of the country they represent in their uniform. Some countries, for instance the United States, have versions of their flag patch made in different color schemes in order to better blend in with their military camouflage. The three most common alternate color schemes are urban (black/silver, pictured), desert (tan/brown), and woodland (black/olive drab).",
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},
{
"id": "265679",
"score": 0.6349957585334778,
"text": "The flag of New Zealand is a defaced Blue Ensign with the Union Flag in the canton, and four red stars with white borders to the right. The stars' pattern represents the asterism within the constellation of Crux, the Southern Cross.",
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}
] |
5ab9c5b1554299131ca423fe | The Battle of Cedar Mountain, also known as Slaughter's Mountain or Cedar Run, took place on August 9, 1862, in Culpeper County, Virginia, as part of the American Civil War, Union forces under which Maj. Gen., that was an American politician from Massachusetts and a Union general during the Civil War, attacked Confederate forces under Maj. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson near Cedar Mountain? | [
{
"id": "1351994",
"score": 0.8270856142044067,
"text": "The Battle of Cedar Mountain, also known as Slaughter's Mountain or Cedar Run, took place on August 9, 1862, in Culpeper County, Virginia, as part of the American Civil War. Union forces under Maj. Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks attacked Confederate forces under Maj. Gen. Thomas J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson near Cedar Mountain as the Confederates marched on Culpeper Court House to forestall a Union advance into central Virginia. After nearly being driven from the field in the early part of the battle, a Confederate counterattack broke the Union lines resulting in a Confederate victory. The battle was the first combat of the Northern Virginia Campaign."
},
{
"id": "149932",
"score": 0.5842893123626709,
"text": "Nathaniel Prentice (or Prentiss) Banks (January 30, 1816 – September 1, 1894) was an American politician from Massachusetts and a Union general during the Civil War."
}
] | [
{
"id": "3975157",
"score": 0.7228026390075684,
"text": "Cedar Mountain, also known as Slaughter Mountain, is a piedmont monadnock in Culpeper County, Virginia. The 800 ft ridge is 7 mi south of the town of Culpeper and just to the northwest of the northern tip of the Southwest Mountains at Clark Mountain. The mountain was the site of the Battle of Cedar Mountain in 1862 during the Northern Virginia Campaign of the American Civil War.",
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{
"id": "31485",
"score": 0.7092309594154358,
"text": "Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson (January 21, 1824 – May 10, 1863) was a Confederate general during the American Civil War, and the best-known Confederate commander after General Robert E. Lee. Jackson played a prominent role in nearly all military engagements in the Eastern Theater of the war until his death, and played an important part in winning many significant battles.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "2588219",
"score": 0.6824625134468079,
"text": "Manassas National Battlefield Park, located north of Manassas, in Prince William County, Virginia, preserves the site of two major American Civil War battles: the First Battle of Bull Run on July 21, 1861, and the Second Battle of Bull Run which was fought between August 28 and August 30, 1862 (also known as the \"First Battle of Manassas\" and the \"Second Battle of Manassas\", respectively). The peaceful Virginia countryside bore witness to clashes between the armies of the North (Union) and the South (Confederacy), and it was there that Confederate General Thomas J. Jackson acquired his nickname \"Stonewall.\"",
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},
{
"id": "1351347",
"score": 0.680882453918457,
"text": "The Battle of Front Royal, also known as Guard Hill or Cedarville, was fought May 23, 1862, in Warren County, Virginia, as part of Confederate Army Maj. Gen. Thomas J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson's Campaign through the Shenandoah Valley during the American Civil War. Front Royal demonstrated Jackson's use of Valley topography and mobility to unite his own forces while dividing those of his enemies. At a minimal cost, he forced the withdrawal of a large Union army by striking at its flank and threatening its rear.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "16134",
"score": 0.6667211055755615,
"text": "Jefferson Davis (born Jefferson Finis Davis; June 3, 1808 – December 6, 1889) was an American politician who served as the President of the Confederate States from 1861 to 1865. He was a member of the Democratic Party who represented Mississippi in the United States Senate and the House of Representatives prior to becoming president of the Confederacy. He was the 23rd United States Secretary of War, serving under U.S. President Franklin Pierce from 1853 to 1857.",
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},
{
"id": "5248560",
"score": 0.6625340580940247,
"text": "Albert Gallatin Jenkins (November 10, 1830 – May 21, 1864) was an attorney, planter, representative to the United States Congress and First Confederate Congress, and a Confederate brigadier general during the American Civil War. The commander of a brigade of cavalry from what would become West Virginia, he was mortally wounded at the Battle of Cloyd's Mountain near Dublin, Virginia.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "4637538",
"score": 0.6616436243057251,
"text": "Stonewall Jackson (Thomas J. Jackson, 1824–1863) was a general in the Confederate States Army general.",
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{
"id": "3102653",
"score": 0.6582945585250854,
"text": "Isaac Peace Rodman (August 18, 1822 – September 30, 1862) was a Rhode Island banker and politician, and a Union Army brigadier general in the American Civil War, mortally wounded at the Battle of Antietam.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "36593117",
"score": 0.6547178030014038,
"text": "James Harvey Carson (February 11, 1808 – January 13, 1884) was a brigadier general in the Virginia militia, who served along with the Confederate States Army in northwestern Virginia at various times during 1861 and early 1862 in the American Civil War (Civil War). Carson's men were part of Stonewall Jackson's force that moved to take the town of Bath, later Berkeley Springs, now in West Virginia, on January 3, 1862.",
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{
"id": "1351334",
"score": 0.6545553803443909,
"text": "The First Battle of Kernstown was fought on March 23, 1862, in Frederick County and Winchester, Virginia, the opening battle of Confederate Maj. Gen. Thomas J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson's campaign through the Shenandoah Valley during the American Civil War.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "600340",
"score": 0.6539642214775085,
"text": "Chancellorsville is a historic site and unincorporated community in Spotsylvania County, Virginia, about ten miles west of Fredericksburg. The name of the locale derives from the mid-19th century inn operated by the family of George Chancellor at the intersection of the Orange Turnpike and Orange Plank Road. The American Civil War Battle of Chancellorsville occurred there in May 1863, and the Battle of the Wilderness was fought nearby in May 1864. During the 1863 battle, Lt. Gen. Thomas J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson was wounded by friendly fire, dying eight days later on May 10, 1863, from pneumonia.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "5052047",
"score": 0.6507703065872192,
"text": "The Stonewall Jackson House, located at 8 East Washington Street in the Historic District of Lexington, Virginia, was the residence of Confederate general Thomas \"Stonewall\" Jackson from 1858 to 1861.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "48780",
"score": 0.6494837999343872,
"text": "The Battle of Chancellorsville was a major battle of the American Civil War (1861–1865), and the principal engagement of the Chancellorsville Campaign. It was fought from April 30 to May 6, 1863, in Spotsylvania County, Virginia, near the village of Chancellorsville. Two related battles were fought nearby on May 3 in the vicinity of Fredericksburg. The campaign pitted Union Army Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker's Army of the Potomac against an army less than half its size, General Robert E. Lee's Confederate Army of Northern Virginia. Chancellorsville is known as Lee's \"perfect battle\" because his risky decision to divide his army in the presence of a much larger enemy force resulted in a significant Confederate victory. The victory, a product of Lee's audacity and Hooker's timid decision making, was tempered by heavy casualties, including Lt. Gen. Thomas J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson. Jackson was hit by friendly fire, requiring his left arm to be amputated; he died of pneumonia eight days later, a loss that Lee likened to losing his right arm.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "3442482",
"score": 0.6492434740066528,
"text": "Thomas Turpin Crittenden (October 16, 1825 – September 5, 1905) was a Union general in the American Civil War.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "273845",
"score": 0.6488491892814636,
"text": "Charles Sumner (January 6, 1811 – March 11, 1874) was an American politician and United States Senator from Massachusetts. As an academic lawyer and a powerful orator, Sumner was the leader of the anti-slavery forces in Massachusetts and a leader of the Radical Republicans in the U.S. Senate during the American Civil War working to destroy the Confederacy, free all the slaves, and keep on good terms with Europe. During Reconstruction, he fought to minimize the power of the ex-Confederates and guarantee equal rights to the freedmen.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "1700962",
"score": 0.6483602523803711,
"text": "The Stonewall Brigade of the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, was a famous combat unit in United States military history. It was trained and first led by General Thomas J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson, a professor from Virginia Military Institute (VMI). His severe training program and ascetic standards of military discipline turned enthusiastic but raw recruits into an effective military organization, which distinguished itself from the First Battle of Bull Run (First Manassas) in 1861 to Spotsylvania Court House in 1864.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "1621819",
"score": 0.6480819582939148,
"text": "Thomas Leonidas Crittenden (May 15, 1819 – October 23, 1893) was a lawyer, politician, and Union general during the American Civil War.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "579066",
"score": 0.645611584186554,
"text": "Thomas Sumter (August 14, 1734 – June 1, 1832) was a soldier in the Colony of Virginia militia; a brigadier general in the South Carolina militia during the American War of Independence, a planter, and a politician. After the United States gained independence, he was elected to the United States House of Representatives and to the United States Senate, where he served from 1801 to 1810, when he retired. Sumter was nicknamed the \"Carolina Gamecock,\" for his fierce fighting style against British soldiers after they burned down his house during the Revolution.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "1351339",
"score": 0.6454430222511292,
"text": "The Battle of McDowell, also known as Sitlington's Hill, was fought May 8, 1862, in Highland County, Virginia, as part of Confederate Army Maj. Gen. Stonewall Jackson's Campaign through the Shenandoah Valley during the American Civil War. It followed Jackson's tactical defeat, but strategic victory, at the First Battle of Kernstown.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "453343",
"score": 0.6449219584465027,
"text": "The Battle of Chantilly (or Ox Hill, the Confederate name) took place on September 1, 1862, in Fairfax County, Virginia, as the concluding battle of the Northern Virginia Campaign of the American Civil War. Thomas J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson's corps of the Army of Northern Virginia attempted to cut off the line of retreat of the Union Army of Virginia following the Second Battle of Bull Run but was attacked by two Union divisions. During the ensuing battle, Union division commanders Isaac Stevens and Philip Kearny were both killed but the Union attack halted Jackson's advance.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5a8c6af5554299653c1aa05c | 4 Star Records was a record label that was home to what American country music singer-songwriter who was a member of the Grand Ole Opry for nearly 50 years? | [
{
"id": "10803804",
"score": 0.7278472185134888,
"text": "4 Star Records was a record label that recorded many well-known country music acts in the 1950s. The label, founded after World War II, was home to singers such as Hank Locklin, Maddox Brothers and Rose, Rose Maddox, Webb Pierce, Cousin Ford Lewis and T. Texas Tyler, who all regularly issued records on the label, mostly as 78rpm singles."
},
{
"id": "1595240",
"score": 0.6131940484046936,
"text": "Lawrence Hankins 'Hank' Locklin (February 15, 1918 – March 8, 2009) was an American country music singer-songwriter. A member of the Grand Ole Opry for nearly 50 years, Locklin had a long recording career with RCA Victor, and scored big hits with \"Please Help Me, I'm Falling\", \"Send Me the Pillow You Dream On\" and \"Geisha Girl\" from 1957-1960. His singles charted from 1949-1971."
}
] | [
{
"id": "1226826",
"score": 0.6450766921043396,
"text": "George Thomas Morgan (June 28, 1924 – July 7, 1975) was a mid-20th-century American country music singer. He is a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame and a former member of the Grand Ole Opry.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "6865774",
"score": 0.6434670090675354,
"text": "Marion Worth (born Mary Ann Ward; July 4, 1930 – December 19, 1999) was an American country music singer. She was a popular performer on the \"Grand Ole Opry\" in Nashville, Tennessee. She also had several hits in the early 1960s.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "10535008",
"score": 0.6212901473045349,
"text": "Grand Ole Opry's New Star is the 1956 country music debut album released by George Jones on October 1, 1956. with Starday Records. Produced by Jones' manager Pappy Daily, the album was recorded during early sessions in 1954, throughout 1955, and other sessions in 1956. It is also the first album to be released on the Starday label, a label only four years old.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "3336003",
"score": 0.6164399981498718,
"text": "Dale Troy Cooper (October 16, 1918–March 22, 1977), known professionally as Stoney Cooper, was an American country star and member of the Grand Ole Opry. He was a master of the fiddle and the guitar.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "7073706",
"score": 0.6140562891960144,
"text": "Jimmy Yves Newman (August 29, 1927 – June 21, 2014), better known as Jimmy C. Newman (the C stands for Cajun), was an American country music and cajun singer-songwriter and long-time star of the Grand Ole Opry.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "1346433",
"score": 0.6139034032821655,
"text": "James Cecil Dickens (December 19, 1920 – January 2, 2015), better known by his stage name, Little Jimmy Dickens, was an American country music singer and songwriter famous for his humorous novelty songs, his small size (4'11\" [150 cm]), and his rhinestone-studded outfits (which he is given credit for introducing into country music live performances). He started as a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 1948 and was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1983. Before his death he was the oldest living member of the Grand Ole Opry.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "1044945",
"score": 0.6136084198951721,
"text": "Richard Edward \"Eddy\" Arnold (May 15, 1918 – May 8, 2008) was an American country music singer who performed for six decades. He was a Nashville sound (country/popular music) innovator of the late 1950s, and scored 147 songs on the \"Billboard\" country music charts, second only to George Jones. He sold more than 85 million records. A member of the Grand Ole Opry (beginning 1943) and the Country Music Hall of Fame (beginning 1966), Arnold ranked 22nd on Country Music Television's 2003 list of \"The 40 Greatest Men of Country Music.\"",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "1425846",
"score": 0.6113995909690857,
"text": "Charles Elzer Loudermilk (July 7, 1927 – January 26, 2011), known professionally as Charlie Louvin, was an American country music singer and songwriter. He is best known as one of the Louvin Brothers, and was a member of the Grand Ole Opry since 1955.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "5989807",
"score": 0.6094502210617065,
"text": "Ollie Imogene \"Jean\" Shepard (November 21, 1933 – September 25, 2016) was an American honky tonk singer-songwriter who pioneered for women in country music. Shepard released a total of 73 singles to the Hot Country Songs chart, one of which reached the No. 1 spot. She recorded a total of 24 studio albums between 1956–81, and became a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 1955.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "12464029",
"score": 0.6083385944366455,
"text": "Norris \"Norro\" Wilson (April 4, 1938 – June 8, 2017) was an American country music singer-songwriter, producer, and member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "17276536",
"score": 0.5997492671012878,
"text": "Robert Lee \"Bob\" McDill (born April 4, 1944 in Walden (near Beaumont), Texas) is an American retired songwriter. Active from the 1960s until 2000, he has written songs for many country music artists, including 31 number one hits, as well as songs for Ray Charles, Joe Cocker, Anne Murray, Juice Newton, and other popular artists. In addition to four Grammy nominations, McDill has received Songwriter of the Year awards from Broadcast Music Incorporated, the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, and the Nashville Songwriters Association International. In October, 2012, he was awarded ASCAP's Golden Note Award in recognition of his \"extraordinary place in American popular music.\"",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "7073764",
"score": 0.5993098020553589,
"text": "Ernest Bert Ashworth (December 15, 1928 – March 2, 2009) was an American country music singer, broadcaster, and longtime Grand Ole Opry star. Signed to the Hickory label, he recorded two studio albums in his career and charted several singles on \"Billboard\" Hot Country Songs, including the number one \"Talk Back Trembling Lips\" and seven other top ten hits.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "13154585",
"score": 0.5977982878684998,
"text": "\"Big Star\" is a song written by Stephony Smith, and recorded by American country music singer Kenny Chesney. It was released in January 2003 as the fourth single from the album \"No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems\". It peaked at number 2 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in 2003.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "1875304",
"score": 0.5968278050422668,
"text": "Don Williams (born Donald Ray Williams; May 27, 1939 – September 8, 2017) was an American country singer, songwriter, and 2010 inductee to the Country Music Hall of Fame. He began his solo career in 1971, singing popular ballads and amassing 17 number one country hits. His straightforward yet smooth bass-baritone voice, soft tones, and imposing build earned him the nickname: \"Gentle Giant\" of country music.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "1067275",
"score": 0.593903124332428,
"text": "Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind is the fourth studio album by American country music artist George Strait, released on September 26, 1984 by MCA Records. It is certified platinum by the RIAA for sales of one million copies in the U.S. The title track, \"The Cowboy Rides Away\", and \"The Fireman\" were all released as singles from this album.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "6289620",
"score": 0.593703031539917,
"text": "Goldie Hill (January 11, 1933 – February 24, 2005), born Argolda Voncile Hill, was an American country music singer. She was one of the first women in country music, and became one of the first women to reach the top of the country music charts with her No. 1 1953 hit, \"I Let the Stars Get In My Eyes\". Along with Kitty Wells, she helped set the standard for later women in country music.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "4142353",
"score": 0.5916426181793213,
"text": "50 Years of Hits is a country album by George Jones who was signed to Starday Records in 1953, released his first singles in 1954, and had his first hit with \"Why Baby Why'\" in 1955.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "1344590",
"score": 0.591301679611206,
"text": "Roy Orbison's Greatest Hits is a Roy Orbison 33⁄ record album from Monument Records recorded at their studio in Hendersonville, Tennessee and released in 1962. \"Love Star\" was a previously unreleased track, as was the #4 chart hit \"Dream Baby\".",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "13270063",
"score": 0.5904611349105835,
"text": "Owens \"Boomer\" Castleman (July 18, 1945 – September 1, 2015) was an American singer-songwriter and guitarist. He was from Farmers Branch, Texas.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "23722369",
"score": 0.5888856649398804,
"text": "Linda Martell (born Thelma Bynem, June 4, 1941), is an American rhythm and blues and country music singer. In August 1969, she became the first African-American woman to perform at the Grand Ole Opry.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5ab95c9b554299131ca42302 | The 1906 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1906 college football season, in which year, under head coach Chester Brewer, an American football, basketball, baseball, and track and field coach and athletic director? | [
{
"id": "47279940",
"score": 0.7901593446731567,
"text": "The 1906 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1906 college football season. In their fourth year under head coach Chester Brewer, the Aggies compiled a 7–2–2 record and outscored their opponents 195 to 28."
},
{
"id": "8585626",
"score": 0.8040971755981445,
"text": "Chester Leland Brewer (November 26, 1875 – April 16, 1953) was an American football, basketball, baseball, and track and field coach and athletic director. He served as the head football coach at Albion College (1899–1902), Michigan Agricultural College, now Michigan State University, (1903–1910, 1917, 1919), the University of Missouri (1911–1913), and the University Farm, now the University of California, Davis, (1922), compiling a career record of 97–51–4. Brewer was also the head basketball coach at Michigan Agricultural (1903–1910), Missouri (1910–1911) and the University Farm (1922–1923), tallying a mark of 84–36, and the head baseball coach at Michigan Agricultural (1904–1910, 1918–1920) and Missouri (1911, 1914–1917, 1933–1934), amassing a record of 148–93–4."
}
] | [
{
"id": "47279975",
"score": 0.7364901900291443,
"text": "The 1908 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1908 college football season. In their fifth year under head coach Chester Brewer, the Aggies compiled a 6–0–2 record and outscored their opponents 205 to 22.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "47280428",
"score": 0.7137839794158936,
"text": "The 1919 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1919 college football season. In their tenth non-consecutive year under head coach Chester Brewer (Brewer previously coached the Aggies from 1903 to 1910 and in 1917), the Aggies compiled a 4–4–1 record and outscored their opponents 132 to 99.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "47279879",
"score": 0.7001945376396179,
"text": "The 1903 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1903 college football season. In their first year under head coach Chester Brewer, the Aggies compiled a 6–1–1 record and outscored their opponents 178 to 24.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "47279991",
"score": 0.6973827481269836,
"text": "The 1909 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1909 college football season. In their seventh year under head coach Chester Brewer, the Aggies compiled a 9–1 record and outscored their opponents 291 to 17.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "47280026",
"score": 0.6813604235649109,
"text": "The 1910 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1910 college football season. In their eighth year under head coach Chester Brewer, the Aggies compiled a 6–1 record and outscored their opponents 168 to 8.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "47280384",
"score": 0.6792938113212585,
"text": "The 1917 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1917 college football season. In their ninth non-consecutive year under head coach Chester Brewer (Brewer previously coached the Aggies from 1903 to 1910), the Aggies compiled a 0–9 record and were outscored by their opponents 179 to 23.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "47279896",
"score": 0.6789500117301941,
"text": "The 1904 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1904 college football season. In their second year under head coach Chester Brewer, the Aggies compiled a 8–1 record and outscored their opponents 380 to 16, including a 104 to 0 victory over Hillsdale College.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "47279915",
"score": 0.6649835705757141,
"text": "The 1905 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1905 college football season. In their third year under head coach Chester Brewer, the Aggies compiled a 10–2 record and outscored their opponents 349 to 75.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "15874249",
"score": 0.6320207118988037,
"text": "Pierce Oliver \"Kidd\" Brewer (May 5, 1908 – November 22, 1991) was an American football player, coach, and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach and athletic director at Appalachian State Teachers College—now known as Appalachian State University—from 1935 to 1938. Brewer's 1937 football squad went unbeaten and unscored upon during the regular season, outscoring their opponents 206–0. Brewer was an All-American at Duke University before coaching at Appalachian. After leaving the Mountaineers, Brewer started a sales career before enlisting in the United States Navy during World War II. After the war Brewer served as secretary and administrative assistant to United States Senators Josiah Bailey and William B. Umstead, respectively. He gained significant wealth by purchasing land that was used later for roads. In 1963, Brewer was sentenced to 18 months in state prison for bid rigging. Kidd Brewer Stadium, Appalachian State's home football venue, was named in his honor on September 3, 1988.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "34645177",
"score": 0.6285504698753357,
"text": "The 1906 Mississippi A&M Aggies football team represented the Mississippi A&M Aggies of Agricultural and Mechanical College of the State of Mississippi during the 1906 college football season.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "48543478",
"score": 0.6253531575202942,
"text": "The 1906 Maryland Aggies football team represented Maryland Agricultural College (later part of the University of Maryland) in the 1906 college football season. In their second and final season under head coach Fred K. Nielsen, the Aggies compiled a 5–3 record and were outscored by all opponents, 98 to 73. Coach Nielsen had a full-time job with the State Department while coaching football.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "47450933",
"score": 0.6233067512512207,
"text": "The 1906 Kansas State Aggies football team represented Kansas State Agricultural College during the 1906 college football season.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "47740226",
"score": 0.6220882534980774,
"text": "The 1906 Connecticut Aggies football team represented Connecticut Agricultural College, now the University of Connecticut, in the 1906 college football season. The Aggies were led by first year head coach George H. Lamson, and completed the season with a record of 2–4.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "47280042",
"score": 0.6220124959945679,
"text": "The 1911 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1911 college football season. In their first year under head coach John Macklin, the Aggies compiled a 5–1 record and outscored their opponents 93 to 30.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "16753744",
"score": 0.6178170442581177,
"text": "John Farrell \"Big John\" Macklin (c. 1884 – October 10, 1949) was an American football player, coach of football, basketball, baseball and track and field, and a college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at Michigan Agricultural College, now Michigan State University from 1911 to 1915. With a five-year record of 29–5, he has the highest winning percentage of any football coach in Michigan State history. Macklin coached the Michigan State Spartans football team to its first ever victories over Ohio State, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Penn State. He was also the athletic director at Michigan Agricultural and coached the school's basketball, baseball, and track and field teams. Macklin tallied marks of 48–38 as head basketball coach (1910–1916) and 52–27 as head baseball coach (1911–1915).",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "47280104",
"score": 0.6134645342826843,
"text": "The 1915 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) in the 1915 college football season. In their fifth and final year under head coach John Macklin, the Aggies compiled a 5–1 record and outscored their opponents 258 to 38.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "14631667",
"score": 0.6105120182037354,
"text": "Claude James Rothgeb (January 1, 1880 – July 5, 1944) was an American football, basketball, and baseball player and coach. He served as the head football coach at the Agricultural College of Colorado, now Colorado State University, from 1906 to 1909, at Colorado College from 1910 to 1918, and at Rice University in 1928, compiling a career college football record of 47–36–3. Rothgeb played football and basketball and ran track at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, from which he graduated in 1905. He played for Major League Baseball's Washington Senators in 1905.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "37330886",
"score": 0.6093685030937195,
"text": "The 1906 Massachusetts Aggies football team represented Massachusetts Agricultural College in the 1906 college football season. The team was coached by George E. O'Hearn and played its home games at Alumni Field in Amherst, Massachusetts. The 1906 season was O'Hearn's only as head coach of the Aggies. Massachusetts finished the season with a record of 1–7–1.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "15131980",
"score": 0.6007915735244751,
"text": "George Frederick Veenker (April 17, 1894 – September 8, 1959) was an American football and basketball coach. He was the head basketball coach at the University of Michigan from 1928 to 1931 and also served as an assistant football coach at Michigan from 1926 to 1929. From 1931 to 1936, he was the head football coach at Iowa State College (now known as Iowa State University). He was also the athletic director at Iowa State from 1933 to 1945.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "45484117",
"score": 0.5989671349525452,
"text": "Albert Hobson \"Silent Al\" Clemens (November 1, 1898 – May 19, 1993) was a college football, basketball, and baseball player and coach as well as an athletic director.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5abac47c55429901930fa8af | Between Pyramid and XLR8R, which medium covers broader topics? | [
{
"id": "712259",
"score": 0.5987190008163452,
"text": "Pyramid is a gaming magazine, publishing articles primarily on role-playing games, but including board games, card games, and other sorts of games. It began life in 1993 as a print publication of Steve Jackson Games for its first 30 issues, though it has been published on the Internet since March 1998. Print issues were bimonthly; the first online version published new articles each week; the second online version is monthly. \"Pyramid\" is headquartered in Austin, Texas. It replaced Steve Jackson Games' previous magazine \"Roleplayer\"."
},
{
"id": "2015341",
"score": 0.7447397708892822,
"text": "XLR8R (pronounced \"accelerator\") is a magazine and website that covers music, culture, style, and technology."
}
] | [
{
"id": "1411960",
"score": 0.643161952495575,
"text": "Pyramid (stylized as Pyr△mid) is the third album by progressive rock band The Alan Parsons Project, released in 1978. It is a concept album centred on the pyramids of Giza. At the time the album was conceived, interest in pyramid power and Tutankhamun was widespread in the US and the UK. \"Pyramid\" was nominated for the 1978 Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical. Liner notes read \"From the rise and fall of an ancient dynasty, to the quest for a key to unlock the secrets of the universe, this album seeks to amplify the haunting echoes of the past and explore the unsolved mysteries of the present. Pyramid...the last remaining wonder of the ancient world.\"",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "27950056",
"score": 0.6157337427139282,
"text": "Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye: A Tribute to Roky Erickson",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "10551079",
"score": 0.6105554699897766,
"text": "This article details a comparison of audio recording mediums.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "50660811",
"score": 0.6007084846496582,
"text": "Panoply Media is a podcast network",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "4682267",
"score": 0.5989747047424316,
"text": "Skyscraper was an independent music magazine dedicated to coverage of a wide range of progressive and underground music. It was founded by Peter Bottomley and Andrew Bottomley in 1997 and published its first issue in 1998. Its headquarters was in Boulder, Colorado. The magazine covers various genres of music and is often likened to an American version of \"Mojo\". Its format includes in-depth interviews, music reviews, and articles covering books, film, comics, and social and political issues. The quarterly print edition of \"Skyscraper\" discontinued after the Spring 2009 issue. The founders started an online magazine in 2010.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "23730023",
"score": 0.5937288403511047,
"text": "Ripped: How the Wired Generation Revolutionized Music",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "9642904",
"score": 0.5911856293678284,
"text": "The Loft is a music channel on Sirius XM Radio, broadcasting on channel 30 and Dish Network channel 6030. It features a format of eclectic adult album alternative music, occasionally branching off into more freeform music and talk programming.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "2482391",
"score": 0.5894590020179749,
"text": "Stereophile is a monthly magazine that focuses on high-end home audio equipment, such as loudspeakers and amplifiers, and audio-related news, such as online audio streaming.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "10398974",
"score": 0.5891863107681274,
"text": "Live At The Pyramid N.Y.C. 11-3-88 is a live double cassette album by Psychic TV, although on this release the band is credited to \"Psychick-TV\". The release was limited to an edition of 100 numbered copies.",
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{
"id": "15966023",
"score": 0.5887326002120972,
"text": "Pyramid, or pyramid representation, is a type of multi-scale signal representation developed by the computer vision, image processing and signal processing communities, in which a signal or an image is subject to repeated smoothing and subsampling. Pyramid representation is a predecessor to scale-space representation and multiresolution analysis.",
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},
{
"id": "1127557",
"score": 0.5885130167007446,
"text": "Album-oriented rock (abbreviated AOR) is an American FM radio format focusing on album tracks by rock artists. AOR evolved from progressive rock radio in the mid-1970s, using research and formal programming to create an album rock format with greater commercial appeal.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "7553239",
"score": 0.5869030952453613,
"text": "Pyramidion is a 5 track EP by British band Ozric Tentacles. It was released in 2001 on Snapper Music. Only the title track on this EP is a new song; the rest are older tunes recorded live at the Boardwalk in Sheffield, UK.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "46912044",
"score": 0.5861462950706482,
"text": "The Tower Magazine is a monthly magazine devoted to long form journalism about the Middle East. In addition to the monthly magazine, the website hosts a constantly updated news feed.",
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{
"id": "37609836",
"score": 0.585910975933075,
"text": "Pyramidi is the debut studio album by Radioinactive. It was released on Mush Records in 2001.",
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{
"id": "52301536",
"score": 0.5849924087524414,
"text": "808 (originally Planet Rock & Other Tales of the 808) is a 2015 American documentary film directed, co-produced and co-written by Alexander Dunn, co-produced by Arthur Baker, Craig Kallman and Alex Noyer and co-written by Luke Bainbridge. It is narrated by Zane Lowe and documents the history and culture of the Roland TR-808, one of the first programmable drum machines that had a significant effect on 1980s hip hop and pop music.",
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{
"id": "42991815",
"score": 0.5846549272537231,
"text": "Mixlr is an audio streaming platform that allows users to broadcast audio from their computers or mobile devices. It was founded in 2010 as a desktop application and in 2012 released an iOS app.",
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},
{
"id": "18449111",
"score": 0.5842732787132263,
"text": "Vectors: Journal of Culture and Technology in a Dynamic Vernacular",
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{
"id": "21831057",
"score": 0.5836739540100098,
"text": "Pyramid is an American experimental, indie-rock band from North Carolina. Music from their self-released album, \"The First American\", was used in two David Gordon Green films, \"All the Real Girls\" and \"Undertow\". Pyramid also composed the music for Jody Hill's \"The Foot Fist Way\", co-composed \"Shotgun Stories\" for Jeff Nichols, and added additional score to Craig Zobel’s \"Great World of Sound\".",
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{
"id": "15857738",
"score": 0.5831043720245361,
"text": "Beat Pyramid is the debut studio album by British art rock band These New Puritans. It was released on 28 January 2008 in the United Kingdom by Angular Recording Corporation and on 18 March 2008 in the United States through Domino Records. The album was recorded in London and Paris during 2007 and was produced by Gareth Jones in London. The double A-side \"Numbers/Colours\", \"Elvis\" and \"Swords of Truth\" were released as singles.",
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{
"id": "5838588",
"score": 0.5825313925743103,
"text": "South Africa has a long history of alternative media. During the 1980s there was a host of community and grassroots newspapers that supplied content that ran counter to the prevailing attitudes of the times. In addition, a thriving small press and underground press carried voices that would not have been heard in the mainstream, corporate media. Pirate radio projects operated by Caset were the forerunners of the country's community radio and small pamphlets and samizdat were included in the mix.",
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}
] |
5adbd1a755429944faac236b | Who was replaced by Jamelle Holieway on the Oklahoma Sooners and later played for the Dallas Cowboys? | [
{
"id": "9486214",
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"text": "The 1985 Oklahoma Sooners football team represented the University of Oklahoma in the college football season of 1985–1986. This year was Barry Switzer's 13th season as head coach. The Sooners ended this season with 11 wins and a sole loss coming to the Miami Hurricanes in Norman, in a game in which the Sooners lost starting quarterback Troy Aikman for the season. The Sooners were forced to place their trust in lightning-quick true freshman quarterback Jamelle Holieway and a physical defense featuring three All-Americans, who led them to a Big 8 Conference title and a national championship. This was Oklahoma's sixth national championship and 34th conference championship in school history."
},
{
"id": "5531401",
"score": 0.6220033764839172,
"text": "Troy Kenneth Aikman (born November 21, 1966) is a former American football quarterback who played for the Dallas Cowboys in the National Football League (NFL). The number one overall draft pick in 1989, Aikman played twelve consecutive seasons as quarterback with the Cowboys. During his career he was a six-time Pro Bowl selection, led the team to three Super Bowl victories, and was the Super Bowl XXVII MVP. Aikman was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2006 and to the College Football Hall of Fame on December 9, 2008 in New York City."
}
] | [
{
"id": "8710790",
"score": 0.7931005358695984,
"text": "Jamelle Holieway (born June 25, 1967) is a former American college and professional football player who was an award winning quarterback for the University of Oklahoma. He led the Oklahoma Sooners to a national championship in 1985.",
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{
"id": "29430686",
"score": 0.6463213562965393,
"text": "Kerry Cooks (born March 28, 1974) is the Assistant Defensive Coordinator and defensive backs coach for the Oklahoma Sooners.",
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{
"id": "44350169",
"score": 0.644159734249115,
"text": "Ezekiel Elliott (born July 22, 1995) is an American football running back for the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Ohio State, where he earned second-team All-America honors in 2015. He was drafted by the Cowboys fourth overall in the 2016 NFL Draft. In his first NFL season, he led the league in rushing yards and was invited to the Pro Bowl.",
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{
"id": "19165783",
"score": 0.6427797675132751,
"text": "The Oklahoma Thunder are an American football team based in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Starting with the 2011 season, the team competes in the Gridiron Developmental Football League, playing in the Midwest-North Division in the GDFL's Impact Conference. Players have included Bacone College alumni, former major college standouts, and former NFL players including Willie Ponder. The team was founded by Bruce Madden, Daniel Cornelison, and Gary Joice in 2007. James Ashford later bought a piece of the team. The team originally competed in the World Football League. The league was formed as a minor league for players to work on their skills in hopes of making a professional team. During the team's time in the WFL the Thunder had players signed by several professional teams including the New Orleans Voo-Doo and the Colorado Crush of the AFL The team's name pre-dates the relocation of the Seattle SuperSonics to Oklahoma City to become the Oklahoma City Thunder. The team's official colors are silver and blue. The team's cheerleaders are known as the Thunder Girls.",
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{
"id": "20966045",
"score": 0.6406444311141968,
"text": "Jay Boulware (born November 26, 1972 in Irving, Texas) is an American college football assistant coach, currently serving as special teams coordinator and running backs coach at the University of Oklahoma.",
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{
"id": "3640587",
"score": 0.6392736434936523,
"text": "Roy Lee Williams (born August 14, 1980), is a former American college and professional football player who was a safety in the National Football League (NFL) for nine seasons. He played college football for the University of Oklahoma, and was recognized as a unanimous All-American. He was drafted by the Dallas Cowboys eighth overall in the 2002 NFL Draft, and played professionally for the Cowboys and Cincinnati Bengals. He earned five straight Pro Bowl selections from 2003 to 2007. Williams is currently a sideline reporter for Oklahoma football games.",
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{
"id": "37826383",
"score": 0.6363211274147034,
"text": "Jaylon Smith (born June 14, 1995) is an American football linebacker for the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Notre Dame and was drafted 34th overall by the Cowboys in the second round of the 2016 NFL Draft.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "22612634",
"score": 0.6351920962333679,
"text": "Jamar Hunt (born December 4, 1982) is a former American football tight end for the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League. He was signed as an undrafted rookie free agent out of UTEP. However, he was waived by the Cowboys on July 2, 2009",
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},
{
"id": "11283348",
"score": 0.6293524503707886,
"text": "The Dallas Cowboys season was the final year for Cowboys head coach Tom Landry. After the season, the team underwent drastic changes including a new head coach, and change of ownership from Bum Bright to current owner Jerry Jones. Notable additions to the team in 1988 included wide receiver Michael Irvin, linebacker Ken Norton Jr. and defensive tackle Chad Hennings. It was the first time since 1976 that future hall-of-fame running back Tony Dorsett was not on the Dallas roster. Dorsett had been relegated to a backup role to Herschel Walker for most of 1987 and was traded to the Denver Broncos during the offseason.",
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{
"id": "40879747",
"score": 0.6277973055839539,
"text": "Lanear Sampson (born July 17, 1990) is a Canadian football wide receiver for the Ottawa Redblacks of the Canadian Football League. He played college football for the Baylor Bears. He has also played on the practice squads of Indianapolis Colts, Dallas Cowboys, and Pittsburgh Steelers.",
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{
"id": "4595504",
"score": 0.6272071599960327,
"text": "Clinton Jacob Stoerner (born December 29, 1977) is a former American football quarterback, who played in the National Football League for the Dallas Cowboys and the Miami Dolphins. He also played in the Arena Football League and NFL Europe. He played college football for the University of Arkansas.",
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{
"id": "24367126",
"score": 0.6264932155609131,
"text": "The University of Oklahoma Sooners football team has had 377 players drafted into the National Football League (NFL) since the league began holding drafts in 1936. This includes 43 players taken in the first round and three number one overall picks: Lee Roy Selmon in 1976, Billy Sims in 1980, and Sam Bradford in 2010. In the 2010 NFL Draft, Oklahoma became the only school in history to have three players selected in the first four picks of the draft.",
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{
"id": "7302520",
"score": 0.6255951523780823,
"text": "Ennis Haywood (December 5, 1979 – May 11, 2003) is a former American football running back in the National Football League for the Dallas Cowboys.",
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{
"id": "1526181",
"score": 0.625514566898346,
"text": "Julius Andre Maurice Jones (born August 14, 1981) is a former American football running back in the National Football League for the Dallas Cowboys, Seattle Seahawks and New Orleans Saints. He played college football at the University of Notre Dame.",
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},
{
"id": "47502823",
"score": 0.6252074837684631,
"text": "Jameill Showers (born September 6, 1991) is an American football safety for the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football as a quarterback at UTEP.",
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{
"id": "19498188",
"score": 0.6251323223114014,
"text": "The Dallas Cowboys are professional American football team based in Dallas, Texas. The Cowboys team is a franchise of the National Football League (NFL) and plays in the East Division of the National Football Conference. The first draft in which the Cowboys participated was the 1961 NFL Draft. Before their initial NFL Draft, the Cowboys franchise participated in the 1960 NFL Expansion Draft. In the NFL Draft, each NFL franchise annually adds new players to its roster. Teams are ranked in reverse order based on their records during the previous season, therefore the team with the worst record selects first. There are two exceptions to this order: the Super Bowl champion from the previous season selects last, and the Super Bowl runner-up selects second to last. Teams have the option of trading away their selections to other teams for different selections, players, cash, or any combination thereof. It is common, therefore, for the actual draft selection of a team to differ from their initial assigned draft selection or for a team to have either extra selections or no selections in any round because of such trades.",
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{
"id": "1374651",
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"text": "Gaylord Family - Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, also known as Owen Field or The Palace on the Prairie, is the on-campus football facility on the campus of the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Oklahoma, United States, that serves as the home of the Oklahoma Sooners football team. The official seating capacity of the stadium, following renovations in 2015, is 86,112, making it the 23rd largest stadium in the world, the 15th largest college stadium in the United States and the second largest in the Big 12 Conference, behind Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium at the University of Texas at Austin.",
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{
"id": "10568716",
"score": 0.6238690614700317,
"text": "Jamel Richardson (born January 22, 1982 in Syracuse, New York) is a professional Canadian football slotback who is currently a free agent. He recently played for the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League. He is most well known for his time with the Montreal Alouettes where he won two Grey Cup championships, including the 98th Grey Cup MVP award. Richardson attended Corcoran High School before he was a two-year All-Foothill Conference in Basketball and All-American in Football at Victor Valley College where he led the state in receptions and yardage.",
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{
"id": "27091569",
"score": 0.6226597428321838,
"text": "Jamar Wall (born January 10, 1988) is a gridiron football safety for the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League (CFL). He played college football at Texas Tech. Wall has also played for the Houston Texans and the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League.",
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},
{
"id": "40430353",
"score": 0.6215847134590149,
"text": "Baker Reagan Mayfield (born April 14, 1995) is a college American football quarterback for the Oklahoma Sooners. Mayfield began his college football career as a walk-on player for the Texas Tech Red Raiders. He is notable for being the first walk-on true freshman quarterback to start a season opener at a BCS school. Mayfield transferred from Texas Tech to Oklahoma following alleged scholarship issues and a lack of communication with coaches. After sitting out the 2014 season due to NCAA transfer rules, Mayfield won the starting quarterback job in 2015 over Cody Thomas and incumbent starter Trevor Knight.",
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}
] |
5ae782ee5542994a481bbd25 | What Jamaican boxer won against the author of "Rocky Ros Muc: Seán Ó Mainnín"? | [
{
"id": "35831068",
"score": 0.7266057729721069,
"text": "Sean Mannion (born October 6, 1956 in Rosmuc, Ireland) is a former boxer in the light middleweight division. He boxed out of Massachusetts in the United States. His most notable bout was against Mike McCallum for the vacant WBA title, which he lost over a fifteen round unanimous decision. Newline Films reportedly plans to make a film about his life story. In January 2014, \"Rocky Ros Muc: Seán Ó Mainnín\", a biography about Mannion's life and career was released. The book is written in Irish but there are plans afoot to release an English version."
},
{
"id": "1992036",
"score": 0.5816292762756348,
"text": "Mike McCallum (born 7 December 1956) is a Jamaican former professional boxer who competed from 1981 to 1997. He is a three-weight world champion, having held the WBA super welterweight title from 1984 to 1988; the WBA middleweight title from 1989 to 1991; and the WBC light heavyweight title from 1994 to 1995."
}
] | [
{
"id": "2056301",
"score": 0.6377977132797241,
"text": "Glengoffe Donovan \"Glen\" Johnson (born 2 January 1969) is a Jamaican professional boxer. A veteran of the sport for more than twenty years, he held the IBF light heavyweight title in 2004; and the IBO and \"Ring\" magazine light heavyweight titles from 2004 to 2005. Johnson is best known for his upset knockout victory over Roy Jones Jr. in 2004, as well as his iron chin and relentless pressure fighting style.",
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{
"id": "437554",
"score": 0.6240002512931824,
"text": "Trevor Berbick (August 1, 1954 – October 28, 2006) was a Jamaican Canadian professional boxer who competed from 1976 to 2000. He won the WBC heavyweight title in 1986 by defeating Pinklon Thomas, but lost it in his first defence later that year to Mike Tyson, who was then undefeated at 20 years old. Berbick was also the last boxer to fight Muhammad Ali, defeating him in 1981.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "16887398",
"score": 0.6228664517402649,
"text": "Martin Rogan (born 1 May 1971) is an Irish heavyweight boxer and a former Commonwealth heavyweight title holder.",
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},
{
"id": "190809",
"score": 0.6146389245986938,
"text": "Roy Levesta Jones Jr. (born January 16, 1969) is an American professional boxer, boxing commentator, boxing trainer, rapper, and actor who holds dual American and Russian citizenship. He is a six-time former world champion in four weight classes, having held titles at middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight, and heavyweight; and is the only boxer in history to start his professional career at light middleweight and go on to win a heavyweight title. As an amateur he represented the United States at the 1988 Summer Olympics, winning a silver medal in the light middleweight division.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "39362130",
"score": 0.6092447638511658,
"text": "Rocky Johnson (born July 24, 1971) is an American mixed martial artist. He is most notable for his win by submission over future UFC Lightweight Champion Benson Henderson.",
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{
"id": "37247516",
"score": 0.6084830164909363,
"text": "Rocky Fielding (born 5 August 1987) is a British professional boxer. He is the current British and commonwealth champion and former WBA Inter-Continental super middleweight champion, as well as a former Commonwealth and English super middleweight champion.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "154971",
"score": 0.604746401309967,
"text": "Rocco Francis Marchegiano (September 1, 1923 – August 31, 1969), best known as Rocky Marciano, was an American professional boxer who competed from 1947 to 1955, and held the world heavyweight title from 1952 to 1956. He went undefeated in his career and defended the title six times, against Jersey Joe Walcott, Roland La Starza, Ezzard Charles (twice), Don Cockell and Archie Moore.",
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{
"id": "11751632",
"score": 0.6011457443237305,
"text": "John Carlin (born 12 May 1956) is a journalist and author, who deals with both sports and politics. His book \"Playing the Enemy: Nelson Mandela and the Game that Made a Nation\", about former South African president Nelson Mandela, is the basis for the 2009 film \"Invictus\".",
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{
"id": "19193363",
"score": 0.59923255443573,
"text": "Breidis Enrique Prescott Consuegra (born May 3, 1983), best known as Breidis Prescott, is a Colombian professional boxer. In his early career he had a reputation as a fearsome puncher, winning 18 of his first 20 fights by knockout. In 2008, Prescott first became known on the world stage when he upset heavily favoured and then-undefeated Olympian Amir Khan, which gave rise to Prescott's nickname of \"The Khanqueror\".",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "31649244",
"score": 0.5992273092269897,
"text": "Bunny Johnson (born 10 May 1947 in Jamaica) is a retired boxer who was British heavyweight Champion in 1975 beating Danny McAlinden by a knockout, becoming in the process Britain's first Black Heavyweight Boxing Champion. He also enjoyed success in the light-heavyweight division and won a Lonsdale belt outright.",
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},
{
"id": "16202907",
"score": 0.5988681316375732,
"text": "Jim Rock (born 12 March 1972) is an Irish former professional boxer who competed from 1995 to 2009. He is the only boxer to have held the Irish title at four different weights divisions: light-middleweight, middleweight, super-middleweight and light-heavyweight.",
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},
{
"id": "81736",
"score": 0.5975391864776611,
"text": "Wilfredo Gómez Rivera (] ; born October 29, 1956), sometimes referred to as Bazooka Gómez, is a Puerto Rican former professional boxer and three-time world champion. He is frequently mentioned among the best Puerto Rican boxers of all time by sports journalists and analysts, along with Félix Trinidad, Miguel Cotto, Wilfred Benítez, Esteban De Jesús, Edwin Rosario, and Carlos Ortíz. His seventeen consecutive knockouts in championship defenses is a record for all boxing divisions.",
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{
"id": "6512693",
"score": 0.597502589225769,
"text": "Owen LeFranc Beck (born 31 May 1976), nicknamed \"What the Heck\", is a Jamaican professional boxer who challenged for the WBA heavyweight title in 2006. He had an amateur record of 73 wins and 5 losses.",
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},
{
"id": "36704826",
"score": 0.596572756767273,
"text": "Sean Murphy (born 1 December 1964) is an English boxing trainer and former professional fighter.",
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},
{
"id": "21168061",
"score": 0.5951657295227051,
"text": "Román \"Rocky\" Martínez (born January 31, 1983) is a Puerto Rican professional boxer. He is a former WBO junior lightweight champion, having held the title three times between 2009 and 2016.",
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},
{
"id": "38434429",
"score": 0.5932731032371521,
"text": "Uriah Alexander Hall (born July 31, 1984) is a Jamaican mixed martial artist and former kickboxer who competes in the Ultimate Fighting Championship, in its middleweight division. He was the runner up on \"\". Prior to his appearance on \"TUF\", Hall competed in Bellator MMA and Ring of Combat, where he saw success in winning the ROC Championship.",
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{
"id": "1021894",
"score": 0.5930684208869934,
"text": "Antonio Deon Tarver (born November 21, 1968) is an American professional boxer and boxing commentator. He is a multiple-time light heavyweight world champion, having held the WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, and \"The Ring\" magazine titles, as well the IBO light heavyweight and cruiserweight titles.",
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{
"id": "43969905",
"score": 0.5924747586250305,
"text": "Trevor \"Hughroy Currie\" Curry (born 9 February 1959) is a Jamaican-born British former heavyweight boxer who was British champion between 1985 and 1986.",
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{
"id": "2137425",
"score": 0.590134859085083,
"text": "Stephen Collins (born 21 July 1964) is an Irish former professional boxer who competed from 1986 to 1997. Known as \"The Celtic Warrior\", Collins is the most successful Irish boxer in professional boxing history, having held the WBO middleweight and super-middleweight titles.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "55964",
"score": 0.5888785123825073,
"text": "Lennox Claudius Lewis, {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} , {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (born 2 September 1965) is a former professional boxer who competed from 1989 to 2003. He is a three-time world heavyweight champion, a two-time lineal champion, and remains the last heavyweight to hold the undisputed title. Lewis holds dual British and Canadian citizenship; as an amateur he represented Canada at the 1988 Summer Olympics, winning a gold medal in the super-heavyweight division after defeating future world champion Riddick Bowe in the final.",
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}
] |
5a83585f5542996488c2e41e | The Melbourne-based criminal family which has been involved in drug trafficking, arms dealing and armed robberies has a matriarch born in what year? | [
{
"id": "17292443",
"score": 0.7912769913673401,
"text": "The Pettingill family is a Melbourne-based criminal family, headed by matriarch Kath Pettingill. Family members have many convictions for criminal offences including drug trafficking, arms dealing and armed robberies."
},
{
"id": "2968340",
"score": 0.7245769500732422,
"text": "Kathleen Pettingill (born 1935) is the matriarch of the Melbourne based criminal family, the Pettingill family."
}
] | [
{
"id": "17304829",
"score": 0.7482470870018005,
"text": "Judy Moran (born 18 December 1944) is the matriarch of the infamous Moran criminal family of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, involved in the Melbourne gangland killings.",
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{
"id": "3033161",
"score": 0.7144023776054382,
"text": "The Moran family is an infamous Melbourne-based criminal family of Irish ancestry, notable for their involvement in the Melbourne gangland killings. Family matriarch Judy Moran lost two sons, Jason and Mark, estranged husband Lewis, and brother-in-law Des to an underworld feud that resulted in the deaths of over 30 criminals.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "12062879",
"score": 0.6764284372329712,
"text": "Mark Anthony John Moran (4 July 1964 – 15 June 2000) was an Australian organized crime figure of the infamous Moran family from Melbourne, Victoria, notable for its involvement in the illegal drug trade and the Melbourne gangland killings. Moran, aged 35, was shot dead outside his Aberfeldie home, allegedly by Carl Williams, just after 8 pm on 15 June 2000.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "42349653",
"score": 0.6415314674377441,
"text": "Danielle McGuire (born 1973) is a member of the Melbourne criminal underworld best known as the former girlfriend of Australian drug lord Tony Mokbel. Before her relationship with Mokbel, McGuire had an affair with drug dealer Mark Moran.",
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},
{
"id": "17587371",
"score": 0.6379337310791016,
"text": "The Carlton Crew is a criminal organization based in Melbourne, Victoria.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "2083811",
"score": 0.6329271197319031,
"text": "Lewis Moran (7 July 1941 – 31 March 2004) was an Australian organized crime figure and patriarch of the infamous Moran family of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Notable for his involvement in the Melbourne gangland killings, Moran was shot dead in a Melbourne hotel The Brunswick Club in 2004. His murder occurred one week after the funeral of fellow Melbourne underworld criminal and suspected hitman Andrew Veniamin.",
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},
{
"id": "569097",
"score": 0.6294914484024048,
"text": "The Melbourne gangland killings were the murders in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia of 36 criminal figures or partners between 16 January 1998 and 13 August 2010. The murders were in a series of retributional murders involving various underworld groups. The deaths caused a sustained power vacuum within Melbourne's criminal community, as various factions fought for control and influence. The majority of the murders are still unsolved, although police from the Purana Taskforce believe that Carl Williams was responsible for ten of them. The period culminated in the arrest of Carl Williams, who pleaded guilty on 28 February 2007 to three of the murders.",
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{
"id": "6108615",
"score": 0.6285334229469299,
"text": "Dennis Bruce Allen (7 November 1951 – 13 April 1987) was a Melbourne based Australian criminal and drug dealer who was reported to have murdered many victims. He was the oldest son of criminal matriarch Kath Pettingill. Allen avoided capture for drug dealing by acting as an informant throughout his career. He died of heart disease in 1987 in prison custody awaiting trial for murder.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "2968273",
"score": 0.625078558921814,
"text": "Victor George Peirce (11 November 1958 – 1 May 2002) was an Australian criminal from Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Peirce was a member of the Pettingill family, headed by matriarch and former Richmond brothel owner Kath Pettingill.",
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{
"id": "2938643",
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"text": "Carl Anthony Williams (13 October 1970 – 19 April 2010) was an Australian convicted murderer and drug trafficker from the state of Victoria. He was the central figure in the Melbourne gangland killings.",
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{
"id": "18486972",
"score": 0.6169888973236084,
"text": "Lewis Caine (22 April 1965 – 8 May 2004) (also known by the aliases Sean Vincent and Adrian Bligh ) was an Australian organised crime figure who was murdered on 8 May 2004 during the Melbourne gangland killings.",
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{
"id": "2083743",
"score": 0.6147218346595764,
"text": "Jason Matthew Patrick Moran (22 September 1967 – 21 June 2003) was an Australian criminal from Melbourne, and one of the leaders of the Moran family, notable for its involvement in the Melbourne gangland killings. He sported a 12 cm scar on the side of his face.",
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{
"id": "27812594",
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"text": "Australian Families of Crime is an Australian documentary television series that is shown on the Nine Network and hosted by actor Vince Colosimo. Families of Crime gives an insight into some of Australia's most infamous 'Crime Families' who wielded power, fear and destruction through the community.",
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{
"id": "17684519",
"score": 0.6097853779792786,
"text": "Evangelos \"Ange\" Goussis (born 14 September 1967) is an Australian former boxer and kickboxer from Geelong, Victoria, and is a multiple murderer, guilty of the murders of two victims of the Melbourne gangland killings.",
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{
"id": "17588523",
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"text": "Organised crime in Australia refers to the activities of various groups of crime families and/or organised crime syndicates in Australia.",
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{
"id": "2098348",
"score": 0.6015605926513672,
"text": "Arthur Stanley Smith (born 27 November 1944), known also as Neddy Smith, is an Australian criminal and crime writer who has been convicted of drug trafficking, theft, rape, armed robbery and murder.",
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{
"id": "7705317",
"score": 0.5986559391021729,
"text": "Mario Condello (12 April 1952 – 6 February 2006) was an Italian-Australian organised crime figure. Condello, once a lawyer, was a member of the Carlton Crew, and is believed to have been a money launderer for Melbourne's Calabrian mafia, the Ndrangheta. He was a key figure in the Melbourne gangland killings.",
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{
"id": "2886791",
"score": 0.5963377356529236,
"text": "The Dawson family, a family of seven (parents Carnell and Angela, and five children), were all murdered in Baltimore, Maryland, USA, on October 16, 2002. After Angela had repeatedly alerted police to drug dealing, assault, and other crime in her East Baltimore neighborhood of Oliver, the entire family died after their home was firebombed. A neighbor, Darrell L. Brooks — once a page in the Baltimore City Council chamber — pleaded guilty to the crimes and was given a life sentence without the possibility of parole. At the time of the attack, Brooks was on probation but had been left unsupervised.",
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{
"id": "15747141",
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"text": "\"Underbelly\" is a thirteen-part Australian television mini-series based on the real events of the 1995–2004 gangland war in Melbourne, as depicted in the book \"Leadbelly: Inside Australia's Underworld\" by \"Age\" journalists John Silvester and Andrew Rule. \"Underbelly\" began screening on 13 February 2008 on the Nine Network (and affiliates) in all states and territories except Victoria, due to a court injunction. The series depicts the key players in Melbourne's criminal underworld, including the Moran family and their rival, Carl Williams. It is produced by the Australian Film Finance Corporation, in association with Film Victoria, and is filmed primarily in Melbourne, at locations around the city where the real-life events occurred. Following the success of \"Underbelly\", the Nine Network commissioned a second series – \"\", which was then followed by \"\", \"\", \"\" and \"\".",
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{
"id": "30208709",
"score": 0.5924861431121826,
"text": "The Lin family murders were the 18 July 2009 killings in North Epping, New South Wales, Australia, of newsagency proprietor Min Lin; his wife Yun Lin; his sister-in-law Irene Lin; and their sons Henry and Terry. The family were bludgeoned to death. Min Lin's sister Kathy discovered the bodies. Brenda Lin, 15, was the only member of the immediate family to survive as she was on a school trip in New Caledonia with Cheltenham Girls High School at the time.",
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] |
5ade04fa5542997545bbbe22 | Laurie Adams was a footballer who played for the club that is in what highest English league system? | [
{
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"text": "Laurence Edward Adams (born 14 February 1931) is an English former footballer, who played for Watford as an inside left. Born in Barnet (then part of Hertfordshire), he made his sole Football League appearance while doing his National Service. Under the management of Haydn Green, Adams played a full match on 23 February 1952, as Watford defeated Walsall 2–0 in front of a crowd of 8,909 at Vicarage Road. He turned professional upon leaving the army, but did not play another senior game, and left the club at the end of the 1952–53 season. Although at that time professional players were not normally allowed to play amateur football again, Adams subsequently played for Whipton as a permit player in 1955."
},
{
"id": "85099",
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"text": "Watford Football Club is a professional football club based in Watford, Hertfordshire, England, that plays in the Premier League, the highest level in the English football league system. Founded in 1881 as Watford Rovers, the club entered the FA Cup for the first time in 1886, and the Southern League a decade later. After finishing the 1914–15 season as Southern League champions under the management of Harry Kent, Watford joined the Football League in 1920. The club played at several grounds in its early history, before moving to a permanent location at Vicarage Road in 1922, where it remains to this day. Watford spent most of the following half century in the lower divisions of The Football League, changing colours and crest on multiple occasions."
}
] | [
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"id": "564674",
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"text": "The English football league system, also known as the football pyramid, is a series of interconnected leagues for men's association football clubs in England, with six teams from Wales and one from Guernsey also competing. The system has a hierarchical format with promotion and relegation between leagues at different levels, allowing even the smallest club the theoretical possibility of ultimately rising to the very top of the system, although in practice it would take a team at the bottom levels at least two decades of consistently finishing at or near the top of each successive league to reach the top level, and even then additional restrictions, particularly in regard to stadium facilities, would then come into effect at the highest levels that could prevent a club from being allowed access to the top levels. There are more than 140 individual leagues, containing more than 480 divisions.",
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{
"id": "451167",
"score": 0.7021965980529785,
"text": "Scunthorpe United Football Club is a professional association football club based in the town of Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, England. The team play in League One, the third tier of the English football league system.",
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{
"id": "451132",
"score": 0.6882437467575073,
"text": "Peterborough United Football Club is a professional football club based in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, England. The team compete in League One, the third tier in the English football league system.",
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{
"id": "65431",
"score": 0.6837241053581238,
"text": "Accrington Stanley Football Club is an association football club based in Accrington, Lancashire. The team play in League Two, the fourth tier of the English football league system.",
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{
"id": "24710753",
"score": 0.6816868782043457,
"text": "Watford Football Club are an English association football club, based in Watford, Hertfordshire. As of 2016, the team competes in the Premier League, the highest level of the English football league system.",
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"id": "243970",
"score": 0.6773585081100464,
"text": "Cambridge United Football Club is a professional association football club based in the city of Cambridge, Cambridgeshire. The club currently plays in League Two, the fourth tier of the English league system.",
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{
"id": "715008",
"score": 0.6758902668952942,
"text": "The English Football League Championship (often referred to as the Championship for short or the Sky Bet Championship for sponsorship reasons) is the highest division of the English Football League and second-highest overall in the English football league system, after the Premier League. Each year, the top finishing teams in the Championship are promoted to the Premier League, and the lowest finishing teams are relegated to League One.",
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{
"id": "8386748",
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"text": "Neil James Adams (born 23 November 1965) is an English former professional footballer and former manager of Norwich City. He played as a midfielder for Stoke City, Everton, Oldham Athletic and Norwich City.",
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{
"id": "40917855",
"score": 0.6743927597999573,
"text": "Stephen Adams (7 September 1959 - 3 March 2017) was an English former professional footballer who played in the Football League, as a forward.",
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{
"id": "451131",
"score": 0.6723824739456177,
"text": "Oldham Athletic Association Football Club (nicknamed Latics) is a professional association football club based in the town of Oldham, Greater Manchester, England. The team compete in League One, the third tier of English football, and play home matches at Boundary Park.",
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{
"id": "7609513",
"score": 0.6719962358474731,
"text": "Leeds United Football Club is a professional association football club in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. The club was formed in 1919 following the disbanding of Leeds City F.C. by the Football League and took over their Elland Road stadium. They play in the Championship, the second tier of the English football league system.",
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"id": "451157",
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"text": "Carlisle United Football Club ( or ) is a professional association football club based in Carlisle, Cumbria, where they play at Brunton Park. The team play in League Two, the fourth tier of the English football league system.",
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{
"id": "46428071",
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"text": "Laurence \"Laurie\" Bell (born 1 September 1992) is an English professional footballer who plays as a Midfielder for Karlslunds IF HFK after joining from English side Hyde United Bell has also spent time with English Conference side Macclesfield Town.",
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{
"id": "49976169",
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"text": "Accrington Stanley Football Club is an English football club based in Accrington, Lancashire. The club participates in Football League Two, the fourth tier of the English football league system.",
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{
"id": "11250",
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"text": "The Premier League is an English professional league for men's association football clubs. At the top of the English football league system, it is the country's primary football competition. Contested by 20 clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the English Football League (EFL; known as \"The Football League\" before 2016–17). Welsh clubs that compete in the English football league system can also qualify.",
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{
"id": "715036",
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"text": "The English Football League One (often referred to as League One for short or Sky Bet League One for sponsorship reasons) is the second-highest division of the English Football League and the third tier in the English football league system.",
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{
"id": "23765254",
"score": 0.6686227321624756,
"text": "The Premier League is a professional football league in England which is at the top of the English football league system. The league was formed in 1992 as a replacement for the original First Division.",
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{
"id": "298601",
"score": 0.6685552597045898,
"text": "Bolton Wanderers Football Club ( ) is a professional association football club based in Bolton, Greater Manchester. The club currently competes in the Championship, the second tier of the English football league system.",
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{
"id": "81576",
"score": 0.6672214269638062,
"text": "Southampton Football Club is a professional association football club based in Southampton, Hampshire, England, which plays in the Premier League, the top tier of English football.",
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{
"id": "347780",
"score": 0.6669490933418274,
"text": "Exeter City Football Club is a professional association football club based in Exeter, Devon, England. The team play in League Two, the fourth tier of the English football league system. The club is owned by the club's supporters through the Exeter City Supporters' Trust.",
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] |
5addf8435542995b365faba5 | What song sung by Rihanna was written and produced by the Jugganauts? | [
{
"id": "41450203",
"score": 0.6464225649833679,
"text": "Maurice \"Verse\" Simmonds is a Puerto Rican American singer, songwriter, and record producer. Based in Los Angeles California bit raised in the Virgin Islands, he moved to the United States after high school and he formed the production duo the Jugganauts in the 1990s. The duo has since co-written and produced tracks such as \"Man Down\" by Rihanna and \"Who Gon Stop Me\" by Kanye West and Jay-Z, both of which charted prominently on \"Billboard\"."
},
{
"id": "31643353",
"score": 0.6452463865280151,
"text": "\"Man Down\" is a song by Barbadian singer Rihanna from her fifth studio album, \"Loud\" (2010). Singer Shontelle and production duo Rock City wrote the song with its main producer, Sham. They wrote it during a writing camp, in Los Angeles of March 2010, held by Rihanna's record label to gather compositions for possible inclusion on the then-untitled album. Rock City were inspired by Bob Marley's 1973 song \"I Shot the Sheriff\" and set out to create a song which embodied the same feel, but from a female perspective. \"Man Down\" is a reggae murder ballad which incorporates elements of ragga and electronic music. Lyrically, Rihanna is a fugitive after she shoots a man, an action she later regrets. Several critics singled out \"Man Down\" as \"Loud\"' s highlight, while others commented on her prominent West Indian accent and vocal agility."
}
] | [
{
"id": "42099904",
"score": 0.7022917866706848,
"text": "\"Rihanna\" is a song by Nigerian recording artist Orezi, released on February 18, 2013. The song was produced by Kiddominant. It peaked at number 1 on Pulse's music video charts. Orezi recorded \"Rihanna\" while signed to Culbeed Music label. Orezi shot the video after signing a record deal with \"Sprisal Entertainment\", which is owned by Jibola Fatgbems of Fatgbems Oil.",
"topk_rank": 0
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{
"id": "46227895",
"score": 0.688812255859375,
"text": "\"Bitch Better Have My Money\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna. It was written by Jamille Pierre, Bibi Bourelly, Rihanna, Travis Scott, Kanye West and WondaGurl and produced by Deputy, co-produced by West, together with additional production by Scott and WondaGurl. The song was digitally released on March 26, 2015, through the iTunes Store. \"Bitch Better Have My Money\" is a trap song and represents a notable musical departure from the previous single, \"FourFiveSeconds\".",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "49250018",
"score": 0.6800397634506226,
"text": "\"Desperado\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her eighth studio album, \"Anti\" (2016). It was written and produced by Mick Schultz with an additional writing by Krystin \"Rook Monroe\" Watkins, Rihanna, James Fauntleroy and Derrus Rachel.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "37088480",
"score": 0.6783897876739502,
"text": "\"Diamonds\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her seventh studio album, \"Unapologetic\" (2012). It was written by Sia Furler together with its producers, Benny Blanco and StarGate. The song premiered on September 26, 2012, during the \"Elvis Duran and the Morning Show\" and was digitally released the following day as the lead single from \"Unapologetic\". Def Jam Recordings serviced the single to contemporary hit radio in the United States on October 2. \"Diamonds\" is a mid-tempo pop, electronic and R&B ballad that features heavy synthesizers, orchestral sounds and electronic rhythms. The song's lyrics serve as a departure from the themes of unhealthy relationships that were on Rihanna's previous singles and contain a prominent concept of love.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "33657545",
"score": 0.67751544713974,
"text": "\"Cockiness (Love It)\" is a song by Barbadian recording artist Rihanna, from her sixth studio album \"Talk That Talk\" (2011). The song was written by Rihanna, Candice Pillay, D. Abernathy and Shondrae Crawford, with production helmed by Mr. Bangladesh. Conceptualized by Mr. Bangladesh, the producer revealed in an interview with MTV that the song had undergone many different versions before the final cut was included on the album. He stated that while he was writing and developing the song, Rihanna was the principal artist whom he wanted to record it.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "37535309",
"score": 0.675381600856781,
"text": "\"Jump\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her seventh studio album, \"Unapologetic\" (2012). It was written by Kevin Cossom, M. B. Williams, StarGate and Chase & Status, with production done by the latter two and Kuk Harrell. It samples the lyrics of the 1996 single \"Pony\", performed by Ginuwine. Its composition and structure received comparisons to not only Justin Timberlake's song \"Cry Me a River\" and Magnetic Man's \"I Need Air\", but also to some of Rihanna's previous songs, including \"Rude Boy\" and \"Red Lipstick\". A remix of the song called \"Jump (Club Cheval Rap Remix)\" by rapper Theophilus London was leaked onto the internet. \"Jump\" was serviced to Australian radio on January 24, 2014 as the album's fifth Australian single and seventh overall.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "49250021",
"score": 0.6732207536697388,
"text": "\"Needed Me\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer and songwriter Rihanna from her eighth studio album, \"Anti\" (2016). It was written by Rihanna, Brittany Hazard, Charles Hinshaw and Derrus Rachel together with its producer DJ Mustard and its co-producers Twice as Nice and Frank Dukes. The song was serviced to the urban radio stations on March 30, 2016, as a follow up single from \"Anti\" together with \"Kiss It Better\". Afterwards, Def Jam released \"Needed Me\" to mainstream radio. \"Needed Me\" is a \"mellow\" dubstep-flavored electro-R&B song, that contains a downtempo and loose production with synthetic sounds. The song's lyrics discuss romantic rejection.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "10123838",
"score": 0.671633243560791,
"text": "\"Umbrella\" is a song by Barbadian singer Rihanna from her third studio album \"Good Girl Gone Bad\" (2007). It features American rapper Jay-Z, who co-wrote the song with its producers Tricky Stewart and Kuk Harrell, with additional writing from The-Dream. The song was originally written with Britney Spears in mind, but her label rejected it. \"Umbrella\" is a pop, hip hop and R&B song referring to a romantic and platonic relationship and the strength of that relationship.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "37535303",
"score": 0.6714348196983337,
"text": "\"Pour It Up\" is a song by Barbadian recording artist Rihanna from her seventh studio album, \"Unapologetic\" (2012). It was serviced to urban radio stations in the United States on January 8, 2013, as the second US single, and third overall single from the album. It was later also sent to contemporary hit radio radios in the country. \"Pour It Up\" was co-written by Rock City and co-written and produced by Michael Williams and co-produced by J-Bo. It is a club and trap song with a minimal hip hop beat. Rihanna brags about her wealth, which serves as both a strip club anthem and a declaration of independence.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "37563434",
"score": 0.6705007553100586,
"text": "\"Phresh Out the Runway\" (also known as \"Fresh Off the Runway\") is a song recorded by Barbadian recording artist Rihanna for her seventh studio album \"Unapologetic\" (2012). It was co-written by Rihanna with French disc-jockey David Guetta, Giorgio Tuinfort and Terius Nash. It is the first time that Rihanna and Guetta had collaborated since \"Who's That Chick?\", released in November 2010. \"Phresh Out the Runway\" is a hip hop and rave song that contains heavy synthesizers and bass. Lyrically, Rihanna explains how if any of her crew does not respect her, they should no longer remain with her.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "32565903",
"score": 0.6684610843658447,
"text": "\"Cheers (Drink to That)\" is a song recorded by Barbadian recording artist Rihanna, from her fifth studio album, \"Loud\" (2010). The song impacted US mainstream and rhythmic radio on August 2, 2011, as the seventh and final single released from \"Loud\". The song was written by Andrew Harr, Jermaine Jackson, Stacy Barthe, LP, Corey Gibson, Chris Ivery, Lauren Christy, Graham Edwards, Avril Lavigne and Scott Spock, while production of the song was completed by Harr and Jackson under their stage name, The Runners. The song also contains samples from Lavigne's song \"I'm with You\", which is featured on her debut album \"Let Go\" (2002). Lyrically, \"Cheers (Drink to That)\" is a party-drinking song, with multiple references to drinking alcohol, including Jameson Irish Whiskey.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "37026799",
"score": 0.6675038933753967,
"text": "Unapologetic is the seventh studio album by Barbadian singer Rihanna. It was released on November 19, 2012, by Def Jam Recordings and SRP Records. It was recorded between June and November 2012, during promotion of her sixth album, \"Talk That Talk\" (2011). As executive producer, Rihanna enlisted previous collaborators The-Dream, David Guetta, Chase & Status, and StarGate to work alongside new collaborators such as Parker Ighile, Mike Will Made-It, and Labrinth. \"Unapologetic\" is mainly a pop, dubstep and R&B album that incorporates elements of hip hop, EDM and reggae in its production, similar to the sound of her previous albums \"Talk That Talk\" and \"Rated R\" (2009).",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "33660144",
"score": 0.6658209562301636,
"text": "\"Watch n' Learn\" is a song recorded by Barbadian recording artist Rihanna, for her sixth studio album \"Talk That Talk\" (2011). It was written by Chauncey Hollis and Rihanna. The production was done by Hollis under his stage-name Hit-Boy. When Renea came with an idea and concept for the song, Hollis had already started working on the composition, without having in mind any particular artist. With the work on the track being finished, it was forwarded to Rihanna and her label, which eagerly accepted it.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "12368553",
"score": 0.662852942943573,
"text": "\"Don't Stop the Music\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna, released worldwide on September 7, 2007 as the fourth single from her third studio album, \"Good Girl Gone Bad\" (2007). The song was written by Tawanna Dabney and its producers StarGate, and Michael Jackson received a songwriting credit for the sampling of the line \"Mama-say, mama-sa, ma-ma-ko-ssa\" from Jackson's 1983 single \"Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'\". Both Rihanna and Jackson were sued by Cameroonian musician Manu Dibango, who asserted that the hook originated in his 1972 song \"Soul Makossa\". \"Don't Stop the Music\" is a dance track that features rhythmic devices used primarily in hip hop music.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "29783146",
"score": 0.6619111895561218,
"text": "\"Fading\" is a song by Barbadian recording artist Rihanna from her fifth studio album, \"Loud\" (2010). The song was written by Jamal Jones and Ester Dean, whilst production of the song was completed by Jones under his production name, Polow da Don. Musically, the song samples Irish instrumentalist and singer-songwriter Enya' s \"One by One\", whilst lyrically, the song is about leaving a man in a relationship. After \"Loud\" had strong digital download sales in the United Kingdom, \"Fading\" charted at number 187 on that country's singles chart in November 2010. The song received generally positive reviews from music critics, who praised da Don's production, but one critic criticized Rihanna for copying herself and failing to create something different. Some critics also compared it to one of Rihanna's previous singles, \"Take A Bow\". The song has also been performed on select dates of the Loud Tour (2011).",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "29783143",
"score": 0.6617928147315979,
"text": "\"Skin\" is a song by Barbadian recording artist Rihanna from her fifth studio album, \"Loud\" (2010). The song was written by Kenneth Coby and Ursula Yancy, with production helmed by Soundz. Musically, \"Skin\" is a R&B song that contains influences from pop, dance-pop and dubstep genres, whilst lyrically, the song is about being in a relationship with someone and only wanting to feel their skin close to the protagonists. \"Skin\" received generally positive reviews from critics, as part of their overall review of \"Loud\", praising \"Skins compositions as well as Rihanna's sensual vocal performance. The song was included on the set list of the Loud Tour (2011), where Rihanna retrieves a man or woman from the audience near the end of the song, and performs a lap-dance whilst on an elevated platform. \"Skin\" was also used in Rihanna's advertisement campaign for Armani Jeans.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "43082067",
"score": 0.6609686017036438,
"text": "Rihanna is a Barbadian singer.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "49250002",
"score": 0.6598266363143921,
"text": "\"Consideration\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna from her eighth studio album \"Anti\" (2016). It was co-written by featured artist SZA, with Rihanna and its producer Tyran Donaldson. \"Consideration\" is a dub-inspired hip hop and R&B song, with \"stuttering, distorted beat,\" \"pounding percussion\", \"a crunchy groove,\" and a \"throbbing bass line\" in its instrumentation. Lyrically, the song is a declaration of independence, where she is seeking peace of mind.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "39665967",
"score": 0.659731388092041,
"text": "\"Cold Case Love\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her fourth studio album, \"Rated R\" (2009). It was written and produced by The Y's (Justin Timberlake, Robin Tadross and James Fauntleroy II). Following Chris Brown's assault on Rihanna, she started working on the sound of her new album. Timberlake who co-wrote \"Cold Case Love\" labeled the sound of Rihanna's new project as a step forward for the singer. In February 2010, Rihanna admitted that the song's lyrics are about her complicated relationship with Brown.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "48210092",
"score": 0.6590560674667358,
"text": "\"Love on the Brain\" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her eighth studio album, \"Anti\" (2016). It was written and produced by Fred Ball, with additional writing by Joseph Angel and Rihanna, and Kuk Harrell serving as the vocal producer. The song was provided to US rhythmic contemporary and urban contemporary radio stations on September 27, 2016, as the album's fourth single. \"Love on the Brain\" is a doo-wop, R&B and soul ballad inspired by 1950s and 1960s music. Its instrumentation consists of a guitar arpeggio, swirling organ, a simple chord progression, syncopated strings, and orchestra. Lyrically, the song has themes of swinging back and forth between the highs and lows of a toxic love.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5abbb2905542992ccd8e7f74 | "Let Love Lead the Way" is a song by an English girl group formed in what year? | [
{
"id": "1897001",
"score": 0.8189194202423096,
"text": "\"Let Love Lead the Way\" is a song by English girl group the Spice Girls, released as one of the two songs picked as the lead single from their third studio album, \"Forever\" (2000). The single was released internationally as a double A-side single with \"Holler\". It peaked at number one on the UK Singles Chart, becoming the group's ninth number-one single."
},
{
"id": "28480",
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"text": "The Spice Girls were an English pop girl group formed in 1994. The group originally consisted of Melanie Brown (\"Scary Spice\"), Melanie Chisholm (\"Sporty Spice\"), Emma Bunton (\"Baby Spice\"), Geri Halliwell (\"Ginger Spice\"), and Victoria Beckham, née Adams (\"Posh Spice\"). They were signed to Virgin Records and released their debut single \"Wannabe\" in 1996, which hit number one in 37 countries and established them as a global phenomenon. Their debut album \"Spice\" sold more than 31 million copies worldwide, becoming the best-selling album by a female group in history. Their follow-up album \"Spiceworld\" sold over 20 million copies worldwide. The Spice Girls have sold 85 million records worldwide, making them the best-selling female group of all time, one of the best-selling pop groups of all time, and the biggest British pop phenomenon since Beatlemania. Among the highest profile acts in 1990s British popular culture, \"Time\" called them \"arguably the most recognisable face\" of Cool Britannia, the mid-1990s celebration of youth culture in the UK."
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"text": "Forever is the third and final studio album by English girl group the Spice Girls. It was released on 1 November 2000 by Virgin Records. It is their only album without Geri Halliwell, who later rejoined the group for their \"Greatest Hits\" album in 2007. Despite not selling as well as their previous two albums, it has sold four million copies worldwide, peaking at number two in the United Kingdom and later certified Platinum there for shipping over 300,000 copies. A double A-side single was released of \"Holler\" and \"Let Love Lead the Way\" as the album's lead single, which peaked at number one in the UK Singles Chart.",
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"text": "\"Holler\" is a song by English girl group the Spice Girls, released as one of the two songs picked as the lead single from their third studio album, \"Forever\" (2000). The song was written by the Spice Girls, Rodney Jerkins, LaShawn Daniels and Fred Jerkins III, with Jerkins also producing it. The single was released as a double A-side single along with \"Let Love Lead the Way\" internationally, on 23 October 2000, except within the United States and Canada.",
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"text": "Belle Amie were an English pop girl group based in London, consisting of members Esther Campbell, Jessica Batist, Clarissa White, and Sophia Wardman. They were formed during the seventh series of \"The X Factor\" in 2010. The band originally consisted of Campbell, Wardman, Rebecca Creighton and Geneva Lane. Their debut single, \"Girls Up\", was released in August 2011. Lane had left the group in early January 2011 and Creighton left in April 2012 in order to pursue a solo career. In mid-2013 Jessica Batist and Clarissa White joined the group, and now a four-piece once again the group are working on their debut studio album, due to be released in 2014.",
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"text": "The Sugababes are an English girl group formed in 1998 by Siobhán Donaghy, Mutya Buena and Keisha Buchanan. Their debut album, \"One Touch\", was released in the UK through London Records on 27 November 2000. The album achieved moderate success, peaking at number 26 in April 2001 and eventually being certified Gold. In 2001, Donaghy departed the group amid rumours of a rift with Buchanan and the group were dropped by their record label. With the introduction of Heidi Range, former member of fellow English girl group Atomic Kitten, the group began to experience a higher level of commercial success whilst keeping the critical acclaim they had achieved with their debut album. They released three studio albums before Buena announced her departure in December 2005, leading to Amelle Berrabah being brought in to replace her. Following the release of their first greatest hits album, the new line-up released two studio albums. In September 2009, after 11 years in the Sugababes, Buchanan, the final original member, was replaced by former UK Eurovision entry Jade Ewen. Range, Berrabah and Ewen released the group's seventh studio album, \"Sweet 7\", in 2010, after which they signed to RCA Records, before announcing an indefinite hiatus in 2011. In 2013, Ewen confessed that the Sugababes had split two years earlier. The original line-up of the band reformed in 2011, under the new name Mutya Keisha Siobhan.",
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{
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"text": "Neon Jungle were a British four-piece girl group consisting of Shereen Cutkelvin, Amira McCarthy, Jessica Plummer, and Asami Zdrenka. They were best known for their second single \"Braveheart\", which peaked at number four on the UK Singles Chart. Their 2014 debut and only album, \"Welcome to the Jungle\", features \"Braveheart\" alongside fellow top 10 single \"Welcome to the Jungle\", as well as the top 20 entries \"Trouble\" and \"Louder\". The group separated in 2015.",
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"text": "Girls Aloud are an English-Irish pop girl group, which was created through the ITV talent show \"\" in 2002. The group comprised singers Cheryl Cole, Nadine Coyle, Sarah Harding, Nicola Roberts and Kimberley Walsh. The group achieved a string of twenty consecutive top ten singles in the United Kingdom, including four number ones. They also achieved seven certified albums, of which two reached number one. They have been nominated for five Brit Awards, winning the 2009 Best Single for \"The Promise\".",
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"text": "Love Will Lead the Way is the seventh album (including \"Christmas with The Jets\") by The Jets. The album is the sixth studio album from the group. By this point, not all of the original band members remained in the group. It includes all brand new songs written by The Jets.",
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{
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"text": "The Spice Girls were an English girl group that consisted of Mel B, Emma Bunton, Geri Halliwell, Victoria Beckham and Melanie C.",
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{
"id": "36489746",
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"text": "Mutya Keisha Siobhan (often shortened to MKS) are an English girl group based in London. Formed in 2011, the group consists of Siobhán Donaghy, Mutya Buena, and Keisha Buchanan. The trio comprises the founding members of the Sugababes, although each of them individually departed the group in 2001, 2005, and 2009, respectively. As the Sugababes, the group released their first album, \"One Touch\" in 2000.",
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"text": "Bananarama are a British female pop music vocal group formed in London in 1981 by friends Sara Dallin, Siobhan Fahey and Keren Woodward. Their success on both pop and dance charts have earned them a listing in \"The Guinness Book of Records\" as the all-female group with the most chart entries in the world. In addition to their chart success, they are also known for their vocal style, generally singing in unison rather than in harmony like most vocal groups.",
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"text": "S Club 7 are an English pop group from London created by former Spice Girls manager Simon Fuller consisting of members Tina Barrett, Paul Cattermole, Rachel Stevens, Jo O'Meara, Hannah Spearritt, Bradley McIntosh, and Jon Lee. The group was formed in 1998 and quickly rose to fame by starring in their own BBC television series, \"Miami 7\". In their five years together, S Club 7 had four UK number-one singles, one UK number-one album, and a string of hits throughout Europe, including a top-ten single in the United States, Asia, Latin America and Africa. They recorded four studio albums, released 11 singles and went on to sell over 10 million albums worldwide.",
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{
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"text": "Little Mix are a British girl group formed in 2011 during the eighth series of the UK version of \"The X Factor\". They are the first and, so far, only group to win the competition. Following their victory, they signed with Simon Cowell's record label Syco Music and released a cover of Damien Rice's \"Cannonball\" as their winner's single. The members are Jade Thirlwall, Perrie Edwards, Leigh-Anne Pinnock, and Jesy Nelson.",
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{
"id": "25555420",
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"text": "A girl group is a music act featuring several female singers who generally harmonize together. The term \"girl group\" is also used in a narrower sense in the United States to denote the wave of American female pop music singing groups, many of whom were influenced by doo-wop, and which flourished in the late 1950s and early 1960s between the decline of early rock and roll and start of the British Invasion.",
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{
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"text": "The Spice Girls were an English pop girl group that first came to international prominence with the release of their chart-topping debut single \"Wannabe\" in 1996. In 1997, the band became involved in an unprecedented marketing phenomenon, leading to a prolific number of Spice Girls merchandise and sponsorship deals. With the official Spice Girls branding on hundreds of different products, they became the most merchandised group in music history. The Spice Girls brand reportedly produced over £300 million worldwide through merchandise in 1997. Globally, the group's total grosses were estimated to have been $500–800 million by May 1998.",
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"text": "No Secrets was an American-British girl group formed in 2000. The group consisted of five members: Angel Faith (Angel Marie Faith), Carly Lewis (Carly Sarah Lewis), Erin Tanner (Erin Elizabeth Kaulani Tanner), Jessica Fried (Jessica Allison Megan Fried) and Jade Ryusaki (Jade Alexis Kapololu Ryusaki-Gasper). The group debuted in the United States in 2002 with their debut single, \"Kids in America\".",
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{
"id": "31670695",
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"text": "\"Love Love\" is a single by British pop group Take That from the band's first EP, \"Progressed\". The song features Gary Barlow and Mark Owen on lead vocals. It was released in the United Kingdom as a digital download on 11 May 2011.",
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{
"id": "3450034",
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"text": "English girl group Spice Girls has released three studio albums, one compilation album, 11 singles and 18 music videos. Formed in 1994, the group was made up of singers Victoria Beckham (\"Posh Spice\"), Geri Halliwell (\"Ginger Spice\"), Emma Bunton (\"Baby Spice\"), Melanie Brown (\"Scary Spice\") and Melanie Chisholm (\"Sporty Spice\").",
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{
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"text": "The Hollies are an English pop/rock group, best known for their pioneering and distinctive three-part vocal harmony style. The Hollies became one of the leading British groups of the 1960s (231 weeks on the UK singles charts during the 1960s; the 9th highest of any artist of the decade) and into the mid 1970s. It was formed by Allan Clarke and Graham Nash in 1962 as a Merseybeat type music group in Manchester, although some of the band members came from towns north of there. Graham Nash left the group in 1968 to form the supergroup Crosby, Stills & Nash.",
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{
"id": "2143130",
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"text": "Precious were a British girl group, comprising Louise Rose, Anya Lahiri, Sophie McDonnell, Kalli Clark-Sternberg and Jenny Frost. They first achieved fame as the UK's entry for the Eurovision Song Contest and went on to become a moderately popular act until the group disbanded in 2000.",
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{
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"text": "\"Love Comes\" is a song recorded by British girl group Bananarama. It was released on 6 September 2009 as the lead single from their tenth studio album \"Viva\".",
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] |
5ade17b455429975fa854e35 | The romantic comedy film Hairshirt, starring Katie Wright, was released in what year? | [
{
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"text": "Hairshirt (released to home video as Too Smooth) is a 1998 romantic comedy film starring Dean Paras, Neve Campbell, Katie Wright, Rebecca Gayheart and Stefan Brogren."
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{
"id": "2161170",
"score": 0.6278046369552612,
"text": "Kathryn \"Katie\" Wright (born December 25, 1971) is a former American actress."
}
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"text": "Sex and the City (advertised as Sex and the City: The Movie) is a 2008 American romantic comedy film written and directed by Michael Patrick King in his feature film directorial debut, and a sequel to the 1998-2004 HBO comedy series of the same name (itself based on the book of the same name by Candace Bushnell) about four female friends: Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker), Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall), Charlotte York Goldenblatt (Kristin Davis), and Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon), dealing with their lives as single women in New York City. The series often portrayed frank discussions about romance and sexuality.",
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"text": "Just Wright is a 2010 American romantic comedy film starring Queen Latifah and Common that tells the story of a physical therapist who falls in love with a professional basketball player.",
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{
"id": "41890130",
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"text": "Pitch Perfect 2 is a 2015 American musical comedy film directed and co-produced by Elizabeth Banks and written by Kay Cannon. It is a sequel to the 2012 film \"Pitch Perfect\" and the second installment in the \"Pitch Perfect\" series. The film centers on the fictional Barden University and The Bellas, an all-female a cappella singing group. The film features an ensemble cast, including Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson, Hailee Steinfeld, Brittany Snow, Alexis Knapp, Hana Mae Lee, Ester Dean, Chrissie Fit, Kelley Jakle and Shelley Regner as The Bellas. It was released on May 15, 2015 by Universal Pictures.",
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{
"id": "34086866",
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"text": "Pitch Perfect is a 2012 American musical comedy film written by Kay Cannon and directed by Jason Moore. It features an ensemble cast, including Anna Kendrick, Skylar Astin, Rebel Wilson, Anna Camp, Brittany Snow, Ester Dean, Alexis Knapp, Hana Mae Lee, Adam DeVine, Ben Platt, John Michael Higgins, and Elizabeth Banks. The plot follows Barden University's all-girl a cappella group, The Barden Bellas, as they compete against another a cappella group from their college to win Nationals. The film is loosely adapted from Mickey Rapkin's non-fiction book, titled \"Pitch Perfect: The Quest for Collegiate a Cappella Glory\". Filming concluded in December 2011, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.",
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"text": "The Cabin in the Woods is a 2012 American horror comedy film directed by Drew Goddard in his directorial debut, produced by Joss Whedon, and written by Whedon and Goddard. The film stars Kristen Connolly, Chris Hemsworth, Anna Hutchison, Fran Kranz, Jesse Williams, Richard Jenkins, and Bradley Whitford. The plot follows a group of college students who retreat to a remote forest cabin where they fall victim to backwoods zombies and the two technicians who manipulate the ongoing events from an underground facility.",
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"id": "51633159",
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"text": "The Polka King is an American comedy film directed and written by Maya Forbes and Wallace Wolodarsky. The film stars Jack Black, Jenny Slate, Jason Schwartzman, and Jacki Weaver. It premiered at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2017.",
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{
"id": "36902824",
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"text": "The To Do List is a 2013 American romantic comedy film released on July 26, 2013. Written and directed by Maggie Carey in her feature film directorial debut, the film stars Aubrey Plaza, Johnny Simmons, Bill Hader, Scott Porter, Alia Shawkat, Sarah Steele and Rachel Bilson. The film is about a recent high school graduate (Plaza), who feels she needs to have more sexual experiences before she starts college.",
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{
"id": "42579581",
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"text": "Trainwreck is a 2015 American romantic comedy film directed by Judd Apatow and written by Amy Schumer. The film stars Schumer and Bill Hader along with an ensemble cast that includes Brie Larson, Colin Quinn, John Cena, Tilda Swinton, Ezra Miller and LeBron James. The film is about a hard-drinking, promiscuous young magazine writer named Amy (Schumer) who has her first serious relationship with a sports doctor named Aaron (Hader).",
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"text": "Blow Dry is a 2001 British comedy film directed by Paddy Breathnach, written by Simon Beaufoy and starring Alan Rickman, Natasha Richardson, Rachel Griffiths, and Josh Hartnett. The plot focuses on the takeover of a small English town by the British Hairdressing Championship who is holding their annual competition there.",
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"text": "Get Over It is a 2001 American teen comedy film loosely based on William Shakespeare's \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\" about a high school senior who desperately tries to win back his ex-girlfriend by joining the school play she and her new boyfriend are performing in, against the advice of friends. The film was directed by Tommy O'Haver for Miramax Films and written by R. Lee Fleming, Jr.. The film was released on March 9, 2001 and stars Ben Foster, Kirsten Dunst, Melissa Sagemiller, Sisqó, Shane West, Colin Hanks, Zoe Saldana, Mila Kunis, Swoosie Kurtz, Ed Begley, Jr., Carmen Electra and Martin Short. The film grossed $19 million against a budget of $22 million.",
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"id": "27585518",
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"text": "Liam Andrew Wright (born 19 October 1985) is a British film director, screenwriter and producer. He directed his first feature film, \"Ex Cathedra\", at the age of only 23.",
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{
"id": "29181369",
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"text": "Prom is a 2011 American teen romance comedy-drama film directed by Joe Nussbaum written by Katie Wech and produced by Ted Griffin and Justin Springer. It was released on April 29, 2011, by Walt Disney Pictures. The film was the first major production shot with Arriflex's Alexa HD cameras to be released in theatres.",
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"text": "Knocked Up is a 2007 American romantic comedy film written, directed, and co-produced by Judd Apatow, and starring Seth Rogen, Katherine Heigl, Paul Rudd, and Leslie Mann. It follows the repercussions of a drunken one-night stand between a slacker and a just-promoted media personality that results in an unintended pregnancy.",
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"id": "951798",
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"text": "Sarah Wright Olsen (born September 28, 1983) is an American actress and former fashion model who has appeared in several films and TV series. Wright most recently co-starred in the NBC sitcom \"Marry Me\".",
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{
"id": "466340",
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"text": "A Cinderella Story is a 2004 American romantic comedy film directed by Mark Rosman, written by Leigh Dunlap and stars Hilary Duff, Chad Michael Murray, Jennifer Coolidge and Regina King. A modernization of the classic Cinderella folklore, the film's plot revolves around two Internet pen pals who plan to meet in person at their high school's Halloween dance.",
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{
"id": "5798540",
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"text": "The Hottie and The Nottie (stylized as The Hottie & The Nottie) is a 2008 American romantic comedy film starring Paris Hilton, Joel David Moore, and Christine Lakin. Written by Heidi Ferrer and directed by Tom Putnam, the film began shooting in January 2007 and was released theatrically on February 8, 2008.",
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{
"id": "37769725",
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"text": "Whatcha Wearin'? (; lit. My P.S. Partner) is a 2012 South Korean romantic comedy film, starring Ji Sung and Kim Ah-joong. It is about a woman who in an attempt to spice up her five-year relationship, tries to have phone sex with her boyfriend but accidentally gets another man on the line instead.",
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{
"id": "29171676",
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"text": "No Strings Attached is a 2011 American romantic comedy film directed by Ivan Reitman and written by Elizabeth Meriwether. Starring Natalie Portman and Ashton Kutcher, the film is about two friends who decide to make a pact to have \"no strings attached\" casual sex without falling in love with each other. The film was released in the United States on January 21, 2011.",
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"text": "Monte Carlo is a 2011 American romantic comedy film based on \"Headhunters\" by Jules Bass. It was directed by Thomas Bezucha. Denise Di Novi, Alison Greenspan, Nicole Kidman, and Arnon Milchan produced the film for Fox 2000 Pictures and Regency Enterprises. It began production in Harghita, Romania on May 5, 2010. \"Monte Carlo\" stars Selena Gomez, Leighton Meester and Katie Cassidy as three friends posing as wealthy socialites in Monte Carlo, Monaco. The film was released on July 1, 2011. It features the song \"Who Says\" by Selena Gomez & the Scene and numerous songs by British singer Mika. \"Monte Carlo\" received mixed to negative reviews from critics, but earned over $39 million on a $20 million budget. Fox Home Entertainment released \"Monte Carlo\" on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on October 18, 2011.",
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{
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"text": "Spanglish is a 2004 American romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by James L. Brooks and starring Adam Sandler, Téa Leoni, Paz Vega, and Cloris Leachman. It was released in the United States on December 17, 2004 by Columbia Pictures. The film grossed $55 million worldwide on an $80 million production budget, and received mixed reviews from critics.",
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5a87b0c75542994846c1cdc9 | What is the occupation of the first wife of Robert Kardashian? | [
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"text": "Robert George Kardashian (February 22, 1944 – September 30, 2003) was an American attorney and businessman. He gained national recognition as O. J. Simpson's friend and defense attorney during Simpson's 1995 murder trial. He had four children with his first wife, Kris Kardashian (née Houghton, later Jenner): Kourtney, Kim, Khloé, and Rob, who appear on their family reality television series, \"Keeping Up with the Kardashians\", and its spinoffs."
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"id": "17329265",
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"text": "Kristen Mary Jenner (\"née\" Houghton, , formerly Kardashian; born November 5, 1955) is an American television personality who rose to fame for starring in the reality television series \"Keeping Up with the Kardashians\", together with her family."
}
] | [
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"id": "17325260",
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"text": "Robert Arthur Kardashian (born March 17, 1987) is an American television personality and businessman. He is known for appearing on \"Keeping Up with the Kardashians\", a reality television series that centers upon his family, as well as its spin-offs. In 2011, Kardashian also competed in the thirteenth season of ABC's \"Dancing with the Stars\", during which he placed second.",
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"text": "Melania Trump ( ; born Melanija Knavs; ] , Germanized to Melania Knauss; April 26, 1970) is the current First Lady of the United States. Before marrying future President Donald Trump in 2005, she worked as a fashion model; by 2016 she considered herself a \"full-time mom.\"",
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"text": "Khloé Alexandra Kardashian (born June 27, 1984) is an American television personality, socialite, model, businesswoman, and",
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"id": "14254953",
"score": 0.6449477672576904,
"text": "Kourtney Mary Kardashian (born April 18, 1979) is an American television personality, socialite, businesswoman and model. In 2007, she and her family were picked to star in the reality television series \"Keeping Up with the Kardashians\". Its success led to the creation of spin-offs including \"Kourtney and Khloé Take Miami\" and \"Kourtney and Kim Take New York\".",
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"text": "Michelle LaVaughn Robinson Obama (born January 17, 1964) is an American lawyer and writer who was First Lady of the United States from 2009 to 2017. She is married to the 44th President of the United States, Barack Obama, and is the first African-American First Lady. Raised on the South Side of Chicago, Illinois, Obama is a graduate of Princeton University and Harvard Law School, and spent her early legal career working at the law firm Sidley Austin, where she met her husband. She subsequently worked as the Associate Dean of Student Services at the University of Chicago and the Vice President for Community and External Affairs of the University of Chicago Medical Center. Barack and Michelle married in 1992 and have two daughters.",
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"id": "1057887",
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"text": "Ivana Marie Trump (née Zelníčková , ] ; February 20, 1949) is a Czech-American businesswoman and former fashion model. She was the first wife of Donald Trump from 1977 until 1992.",
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{
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"text": "Justine Musk (born Jennifer Justine Wilson; born September 2, 1972) is a Canadian author. She was the first wife to billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk.",
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"text": "Dr. Zeenat Quraishi Karzai is the wife of former Afghan President Hamid Karzai and was the First Lady of Afghanistan from 2001 to 2014. Originally from the city of Kandahar, she moved to Kabul where she lives at the Presidential Palace with her husband and their four children.",
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"text": "Jill Tracy Biden (née Jacobs , previously Stevenson; born June 3, 1951) is an American educator who is married to the 47th Vice President of the United States, Joe Biden. She was the Second Lady of the United States from 2009 to 2017.",
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"text": "Camille Grammer (née Donatacci) is an American television personality, most known for starring in \"The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills\". She started her career as a dancer, model, and actress, and worked as a producer and writer for Grammnet Productions. She was married to Kelsey Grammer from 1997 to 2011.",
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"text": "Laura Lane Welch Bush (born November 4, 1946) is the wife of the 43rd President of the United States, George W. Bush, and was the First Lady from 2001 to 2009.",
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"text": "Bobi Ladawa Mobutu (born 2 September 1945) is the former second wife of Mobutu Sese Seko, who ruled Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) as president and dictator between 1965 and 1997.",
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"text": "Kevin Earl Federline (born March 21, 1978) is an American former dancer, rapper, and fashion model. His career began as a backup dancer; he later became known for a high-profile two-year marriage to American singer Britney Spears and the child custody battle that followed.",
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"text": "Kardashian (Armenian: Քարտաշեան ) is an Armenian surname (from the Armenian քարտաշ meaning \"stone carver\").",
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"text": "Diana Spencer (1961–1997) was the first wife of Charles, Prince of Wales.",
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"text": "Khadijah Farrakhan, or Mother Khadijah, birth name Betsy Ross, is the wife of Louis Farrakhan, the Supreme Leader of the Nation of Islam. She is also known as the First Lady of the Nation of Islam.",
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"text": "Maria Kaczyńska (] ; born Maria Helena Mackiewicz; 21 August 1942 – 10 April 2010) was the First Lady of Poland from 2005-10 as the wife of President Lech Kaczyński.",
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"score": 0.5952104330062866,
"text": "Marla Ann Maples (born October 27, 1963) is an American actress and television personality. She was also the second wife to Donald Trump from 1993 to 1999.",
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"text": "Francesca Maria Barbara Donner (Korean: 프란체스카 도너 ; \"Peurancheseuka Doneo\"; June 15, 1900March 19, 1992) was the second wife of Syngman Rhee, and was the inaugural First Lady of South Korea, from 1948 to 1960.",
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"text": "Ivanka Trump ( born Ivana Marie Trump; October 30, 1981) is an American television personality, fashion designer, author and businesswoman who is an advisor to the President of the United States, Donald Trump. She is the daughter of the president and his first wife, former model Ivana Trump.",
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5ae380c25542992f92d822ee | An award-winning Australian feature film and documentary director, who specializes in period drama, directed Death Defeying Acts staring whom? | [
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"text": "Death Defying Acts is a 2007 British-Australian supernatural romance film, directed by Gillian Armstrong, and starring Guy Pearce and Catherine Zeta-Jones. It concerns an episode in the life of Hungarian-American escapologist Harry Houdini at the height of his career in the 1920s. It was screened in a special presentation at the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival."
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"text": "Gillian May Armstrong (born 18 December 1950) is an award-winning Australian feature film and documentary director, who specializes in period drama. Her films often feature female perspectives and protagonists."
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"text": "The Killing Season is a 2015 Australian television three-part documentary series which analyses the events of the Rudd–Gillard Government of 2007–2013, a turbulent period of Australian political history. Journalist Sarah Ferguson interviewed the Australian Labor Party decision-makers and strategists who engaged in internal conflict that brought down a government which had successfully countered the Global Financial Crisis.",
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"text": "Deadly Virtues: Love.Honour.Obey. is a 2014 horror thriller film directed by Ate de Jong. The film had its world premiere on 11 April 2014 at the Imagine Film Festival and stars Matt Barber and Megan Maczko as a husband and wife that find themselves at the mercy of a sadistic intruder.",
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"text": "Brentwood Strangler is a 2015 award-winning holiday-themed horror short film. It was written and directed by John Fitzpatrick following the success of his first short \"Skypemare\", and stars 'scream queen' Jordan Ladd and Australian actor Adam J. Yeend in the title role. The film premiered December 2015 at the A Night of Horror Film Festival in Sydney, Australia, and had its U.S. premiere in early 2016 at the Hollywood Reel Independent Film Festival in Los Angeles where it won the jury award for Best Genre Short. The film has received critical acclaim from the independent horror community with multiple online reviews citing Fitzpatrick's writing, and the chemistry between the two leads. The film has screened at multiple festivals and horror conventions around the world including Shriekfest, Horrible Imaginings Film Festival, FilmQuest, and at Phoenix Comicon where it won the audience award for 'Best Horror'. The producing team went on to make the popular online series \"Scary Endings\" which is currently in its second season.",
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"id": "55156357",
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"text": "The Killing Ground is a 2017 Australian horror film.",
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"id": "45247581",
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"text": "Charlie's Farm is a 2014 Australian horror film written and directed by Chris Sun about the violent history of Charlie’s Farm brutally brought to life when four horror seeking youths stumble across a legend that refuses to die. The film stars Tara Reid, Nathan Jones, Allira Jaques, Bill Moseley, Kane Hodder, Dean Kirkright and Sam Coward.",
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"id": "53091384",
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"text": "Frederick Henry Parslow {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (14 August 1932 – 26 January 2017) was an Australian actor of theatre, television and film",
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"text": "The Society Murders is the name given to the 4 April 2002 murders of husband and wife millionaire socialites Margaret Mary Wales-King, 69, and husband, Paul Aloysius King, 75, in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, by Margaret's son, Matthew Wales. News media throughout Australia covered the crime and subsequent trial, which later became the subject of a book and a television film.",
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"text": "Scare Campaign is a 2016 Australian horror film written and directed by Colin and Cameron Cairnes, and starring Meegan Warner, Ian Meadows, Olivia DeJonge and Josh Quong Tart.",
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"text": "The Killing of Angel Street is a 1981 Australian thriller film loosely based on the BLF (Builders Labourers Federation) green bans against development in inner Sydney city waterside suburbs. It briefly touches on the real life disappearance of Juanita Nielsen, an activist against mass development in Sydney in the late 1970s.",
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"text": "Macbeth is a 2006 Australian adaptation of William Shakespeare's \"Macbeth\". It was directed by Geoffrey Wright and features an ensemble cast led by Sam Worthington in the title role. \"Macbeth\", filmed in Melbourne and Victoria, was released in Australia on 21 September 2006.",
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"id": "3644955",
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"text": "The Last Wave is a 1977 Australian mystery drama film directed by Peter Weir. It is about a white solicitor in Sydney whose seemingly normal life is disrupted after he takes on a murder case and discovers that he shares a strange, mystical connection with the small group of local Australian Aborigines accused of the crime.",
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"text": "The Nightingale is an upcoming Australian period thriller film written and directed by Jennifer Kent. Set in 1825 in the British penal colony of Van Diemen's Land (now the Australian state of Tasmania), the film follows a young convict woman seeking revenge on a soldier who murdered her family. It began filming in March 2017.",
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"text": "Adam J. Yeend is an Australian actor/producer best known for his roles in \"Offing David\", \"Liz & Dick\" and \"Holding the Man\", and producer of the 2014 feature film \"Lust for Love\" as well as the horror series \"Scary Endings\". He was born in The Blue Mountains, Australia and resides in Los Angeles.",
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"id": "31539054",
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"text": "Snowtown, also known as The Snowtown Murders, is a 2011 Australian biographical crime drama horror film directed by Justin Kurzel in his directorial debut and written by Shaun Grant based on the true story of the Snowtown murders.",
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"text": "Benedict Samuel (born 15 April 1988) is an Australian actor, writer and director.",
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"text": "Keith Joseph Michell (1 December 1926 – 20 November 2015) was an Australian actor who worked primarily in the United Kingdom, and was best known for his television and film portrayals of King Henry VIII of England. He appeared extensively in Shakespeare and other classics and musicals in Britain, and was also in several Broadway productions. He was an artistic director of the Chichester Festival Theatre in the 1970s and later had a recurring role on \"Murder, She Wrote\".",
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"text": "Tim Conigrave (19 November 1959 – 18 October 1994) was an Australian actor, writer, and activist.",
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"id": "844558",
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"text": "Esther \"Essie\" Davis (born January 7, 1970) is an Australian actress. She is best known for her roles as Phryne Fisher in \"Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries\" and Amelia Vanek in \"The Babadook\". Other major work has included a recurring role in season six of the TV series \"Game of Thrones\", and a role as Elizabeth Woodville in the TV series \"The White Princess\", an adaptation of Philippa Gregory's historical novel.",
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"id": "5580618",
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"text": "Mark Priestley (9 August 1976 – 27 August 2008) was an Australian actor. Born in Perth, Western Australia, he graduated from the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA) with a degree in Performing Arts (acting) in 1999. His first big TV break was when he appeared in \"The Farm\" in 2000 and met director Kate Woods. She gave him a role in her mini-series \"Changi\" in 2001.",
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"text": "Three Acts of Murder is a 2009 Australian TV movie. It is based on the true life story of how author Arthur Upfield inadvertently inspired The Murchison Murders.",
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5a80d24e554299260e20a17a | In which state is Gold Mountain Casino and WinStar World Casino both located? | [
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"text": "Gold Mountain Casino is a Native American casino in Ardmore, Oklahoma, owned and operated by the Chickasaw Nation. Originally opened in 2002 as Ardmore Gaming, the facility has grown steadily and today features more than 300 gaming machines. The casino is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The 8620 sqft casino is located on the corner of P Street N.E. and Sam Noble Parkway, and can be accessed via Interstate 35, exit 33. It is a short distance from the Ardmore Convention Center and the Hardy Murphy Coliseum. Gold Mountain is about 34 miles north of WinStar World Casino in Thackerville, Oklahoma, and 77 miles south of Riverwind Casino in Norman, Oklahoma, which are also Chickasaw-owned gaming facilities."
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"text": "WinStar World Casino and Resort is a hotel and casino located near the Oklahoma–Texas state line, 1 mi north of the Red River, at Exit 1 off Interstate 35 and Winstar Boulevard in Thackerville, Oklahoma. The casino opened as the WinStar Casino in 2004, and was expanded (with a 395-room hotel tower) and renamed the WinStar World Casino in 2009, with its 519000 sqft of casino floor making it the largest casino in the state of Oklahoma. In August 2013, WinStar Resorts completed a major expansion project, which added a new 1000-room second hotel tower that was divided into two phases; this also added a new casino that is attached to the tower. As a result of the completion of this expansion, the casino overtook Foxwoods Resort Casino to become the largest casino in the United States based on gaming floor space. WinStar has over 7,400 electronic games, 46 table poker rooms, 99 total table games, Racer's off-track betting, High Limit Room, keno, and bingo."
}
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"text": "Battle Mountain is a census-designated place (CDP) in Lander County, Nevada, United States. The population was 3,635 at the 2010 census. Though it has no legal status as a municipality, it still functions as the county seat of Lander County. Its primary economic base is gold mining and to a lesser extent, legalized gaming.",
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"id": "1273745",
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"text": "The Golden Nugget Las Vegas is a luxury hotel and casino located in Las Vegas, Nevada on the Fremont Street Experience. The property is owned and operated by Landry's, Inc.",
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"text": "The Gold Coast Hotel & Casino is a hotel and casino located in Paradise, Nevada. This locals' casino is owned and operated by Boyd Gaming. The Gold Coast is located one mile (1.6 km) west of the Las Vegas Strip on West Flamingo Road. It is located across the street from the Palms Casino Resort and the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino.",
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"id": "1889176",
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"text": "Ameristar Casinos, Inc. was a casino operator based in Paradise, Nevada. It was acquired by Pinnacle Entertainment in 2013. The company had eight properties in seven markets.",
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"id": "3342938",
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"text": "Gold Strike Casino Resort (formerly Circus Circus Tunica) in Tunica Resorts, Mississippi is an MGM Resorts International resort located 20 minutes south of Memphis, Tennessee.",
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"id": "2903375",
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"text": "Laughlin River Lodge (formerly Sam's Town Gold River, Gold River and River Palms) is a hotel and casino located on the banks of the Colorado River in Laughlin, Nevada. It is owned and operated by Nevada Restaurant Services. The property includes a 41000 sqft casino and 1,000 hotel rooms in a 25-story tower. The resort has approximately 1,100 slot machines, a poker room and a bingo club.",
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"id": "6514616",
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"text": "Golden Entertainment is a gaming company based in Enterprise, Nevada that operates casinos, taverns, and slot routes. It was formed in 2015 by the merger of Golden Gaming (founded in 2001 by Blake Sartini) and Lakes Entertainment. It is the largest tavern operator and largest slot route operator in Nevada.",
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"id": "1273749",
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"text": "Golden Nugget Laughlin (formerly Bobcat Club and Nevada Club) is a hotel and casino located on the banks of the Colorado River in Laughlin, Nevada. It is owned and operated by Landry's, Inc. It offers a number of restaurants, 300 guest rooms and suites, an expansive casino floor and dedicated meeting space. Golden Nugget offers water taxi service from Bullhead City, Arizona, on the opposite side of the river.",
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"id": "23745842",
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"text": "Montego Bay Resort is a hotel and casino located in West Wendover, Nevada. In addition to the Wendover Nugget, it is located right on the border line between Nevada and Utah just south of Interstate 80. This casino as well as Rainbow and the Peppermill are owned and operated by Peppermill Casinos, Inc.",
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"id": "28754776",
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"text": "Gold Dust West Carson (formerly Pinon Plaza) is a hotel and casino located in Carson City, Nevada. It contains 17600 sqft of gaming space. It is owned and operated by Jacobs Entertainment.",
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"id": "1606566",
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"text": "Planet Hollywood Las Vegas (formerly Tally-Ho, King's Crown and Aladdin) is a hotel and casino located on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada. It is owned and operated by Caesars Entertainment Corporation.",
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"id": "42325656",
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"text": "Golden Nugget Lake Charles is a 242-acre waterfront casino resort in Lake Charles, Louisiana, U.S.A., owned and operated by Houston-based Landry's, Inc. The resort features 740 guest rooms and suites housed in a 25-story tower, an 18-hole golf course, 30,000-square-feet of meeting space, more than a dozen dining and bar options, a private beach, marina, spa & salon, retail corridor and expansive 24-hour casino floor.",
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{
"id": "18839078",
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"text": "The Gold Mountain Range is a mountain range in Esmeralda County, Nevada.",
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"id": "21374268",
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"text": "Ameristar Kansas City (formerly Station Casino Kansas City) is a hotel and casino located on the Missouri River in Kansas City, Missouri. It is owned by Gaming and Leisure Properties and operated by Pinnacle Entertainment.",
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{
"id": "23664637",
"score": 0.613503098487854,
"text": "Wendover Nugget is a hotel and casino located in West Wendover, Nevada. In addition to the Montego Bay Resort, it is located right on the border line between Utah and Nevada. There is a connecting skyway between the Nugget and the Montego Bay.",
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"id": "5901942",
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"text": "Spirit Mountain Casino is a Native American casino located in Grand Ronde, Oregon, United States on Oregon Route 18. It is operated by the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon, and was created to \"enhance economic self-sufficiency opportunities for the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, its members and surrounding communities; to promote economic diversification by the Tribes: to support a variety of housing, educational and cultural programs under the direction of Tribal Council\". It is the state's busiest , drawing three million visitors a year.",
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"text": "The 2011 WinStar World Casino 350K was a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event held on November 4, 2011 at the Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas. Contested over 148",
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"id": "693711",
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"text": "The Stratosphere Las Vegas (formerly Vegas World) is a hotel, casino, and tower located on Las Vegas Boulevard just north of the Las Vegas Strip in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States.",
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"text": "Spirit Mountain Casino is a name used by several casinos including:",
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"id": "1880388",
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"text": "Boomtown Reno is a hotel and casino located in Verdi, Nevada, just west of the Reno–Sparks metropolitan area. It is owned and operated by M1 Gaming. The hotel has 318 guest rooms and suites and the casino has a 39630 sqft gaming area. The property originally began as a truck stop in the mid-1960s serving travelers on Interstate 80 and gradually expanded into a full hotel-casino resort. Boomtown is well known for its Famous Lobster Buffet.",
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5ae8067d5542994a481bbe8d | What actress was featured in Dreamer, and was nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award at age eight? | [
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"text": "Dreamer is a 2005 American sports drama film written and directed by John Gatins in his directorial debut. The film stars Kurt Russell, Kris Kristofferson, Elisabeth Shue and Dakota Fanning. It is inspired by the true story of an injured Thoroughbred racehorse named Mariah's Storm. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 10, 2005 and was theatrically released on October 21, 2005 by DreamWorks Pictures. The film received mixed to positive reviews from critics, and earned $38 million on a $32 million budget. It also received a Critics Choice Award nomination for Best Family Film."
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"id": "6162301",
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"text": "Hannah Dakota Fanning (born February 23, 1994) is an American actress and model. She rose to prominence at age seven for her performance as Lucy Dawson in the drama film \"I Am Sam\" (2001), for which she was nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award at age eight, making her the youngest nominee in history. Thereafter, Fanning received additional recognition for appearances in the films \"Uptown Girls\" (2003), \"The Cat in the Hat\" (2003), \"Man on Fire\" (2004), \"War of the Worlds\" (2005), \"Dreamer\" (2005), and \"Charlotte's Web\" (2006)."
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"text": "The 8th Screen Actors Guild Awards, honoring the best achievements in film and television performances for the year 2001, took place on March 10, 2002. The ceremony was held at the Shrine Exposition Center in Los Angeles, and was televised live by TNT.",
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"text": "Mary Megan \"Mare\" Winningham ( ; born May 16, 1959) is an American actress and singer-songwriter. An eight-time Emmy Award nominee, she won Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or Movie for \"Amber Waves\" in 1980 and \"George Wallace\" in 1998. She was also nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for the 1995 film \"Georgia\".",
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"id": "508014",
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"text": "Elisabeth Judson Shue (born October 6, 1963) is an American actress, known for her roles in the films \"The Karate Kid\" (1984), \"Adventures in Babysitting\" (1987), \"Cocktail\" (1988), \"Back to the Future Part II\" (1989), \"Back to the Future Part III\" (1990), \"Soapdish\" (1991), \"Leaving Las Vegas\" (1995), \"The Saint\" (1997), and \"Hollow Man\" (2000). She has won several acting awards and has been nominated for an Academy Award, a Golden Globe and a BAFTA. She starred as Julie Finlay in the CBS police drama \"\" from 2012 to 2015.",
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"id": "235312",
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"text": "Anjelica Huston ( ; born July 8, 1951) is an American actress, director and former fashion model. Huston became the third generation of her family to win an Academy Award, when she won Best Supporting Actress for her performance in 1985's \"Prizzi's Honor\", joining her father, director John Huston, and grandfather, actor Walter Huston. She also received Academy Award nominations for \"Enemies, A Love Story\" (1989) and \"The Grifters\" (1990).",
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"id": "3627401",
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"text": "Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role",
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"id": "2397060",
"score": 0.5831384658813477,
"text": "Andrea Elson (born March 6, 1969) is an American former actress. Beginning her professional career as a child actress and model, Elson is perhaps best known for her television roles; as Alice Tyler on the CBS science-fiction adventure series \"Whiz Kids\" and as Lynn Tanner on the NBC comedy series \"ALF\", which garnered the teenage actress two Youth in Film Award nominations in 1986 and 1989.",
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"id": "1653786",
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"text": "Mary Elle Fanning (born April 9, 1998) is an American actress. In 2011, Fanning starred in her breakout role as Alice Dainard in J. J. Abrams' sci-fi-drama, \"Super 8\", for which she received positive reviews and a Spotlight Award at the Hollywood Film Festival. She is also known for her starring roles in \"Phoebe in Wonderland\", \"Somewhere\", \"We Bought a Zoo\", \"Ginger and Rosa\", \"Maleficent\", and \"The Neon Demon\". She is the younger sister of actress Dakota Fanning.",
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"id": "182870",
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"text": "Marlee Beth Matlin (born August 24, 1965) is an American actress. She won the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role for \"Children of a Lesser God\" (1986) and to date is the only deaf performer to have won the award. Her work in film and television has resulted in a Golden Globe award, with two additional nominations, and four Emmy nominations. Deaf since she was 18 months old, due to illness and high fevers, she is also a prominent member of the National Association of the Deaf. Her longtime interpreter is Jack Jason.",
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"id": "77390",
"score": 0.5772724747657776,
"text": "Natalie Wood (born Natalia Nikolaevna Zakharenko; July 20, 1938 – November 29, 1981) was an American film and television actress. She was known for her screen roles in \"Miracle on 34th Street\", \"Splendor in the Grass\", \"Rebel Without a Cause\", \"The Searchers\", and \"West Side Story\". She first worked in films as a child, then became a successful Hollywood star as a young adult, when she received three Academy Award nominations before she was 25 years old.",
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"id": "37889621",
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"text": "Quvenzhané Wallis ( ; born August 28, 2003) is an American child actress. She is known for her role as Hushpuppy in the drama film \"Beasts of the Southern Wild\" (2012), for which she became the youngest actress ever to receive a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress, and the first person born in the 21st century nominated for an acting Oscar.",
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"id": "217724",
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"text": "Joan Cusack ( , born October 11, 1962) is an American actress. She received Academy Award nominations for Best Supporting Actress for her roles in the romantic comedy-drama \"Working Girl\" (1988) and the romantic comedy \"In & Out\" (1997), as well as one Golden Globe nomination for her performance in the latter. She is also known as the voice of Jessie in the \"Toy Story\" franchise.",
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"id": "4581008",
"score": 0.5752815008163452,
"text": "Dreamer is a film that was released theatrically on April 27, 1979. It was directed by Noel Nosseck, written by Larry Bischof and James Proctor, and starring Tim Matheson, Susan Blakely and Jack Warden. \"Dreamer\" was released by 20th Century Fox through Magnetic Video on home video.",
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"text": "Anna Marie \"Patty\" Duke (December 14, 1946March 29, 2016) was an American actress, appearing on stage, film, and television. She first became known as a teen star, winning an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress at age 16 for her role as Helen Keller in \"The Miracle Worker\" (1962), a role which she had originated on Broadway. The following year she was given her own show, \"The Patty Duke Show,\" in which she portrayed \"identical cousins\". She later progressed to more mature roles such as that of Neely O'Hara in the film \"Valley of the Dolls\" (1967). Over the course of her career, she received ten Emmy Award nominations and three Emmy Awards, and two Golden Globe Awards. Duke also served as president of the Screen Actors Guild from 1985 to 1988.",
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"text": "Mary Elizabeth \"Sissy\" Spacek ( ; born December 25, 1949) is an American actress and singer. She began her career in the early 1970s and first gained attention for her role in the film \"Badlands\" (1973). Her major breakthrough came in 1976 when she played the title character of Carrie White in Brian De Palma's horror film \"Carrie\", based on the first novel by Stephen King, for which she earned an Oscar nomination (a rare feat for an actor or actress in a horror movie). She won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Loretta Lynn in the 1980 film \"Coal Miner's Daughter,\" and also earned a Grammy nomination for the song \"Coal Miner's Daughter\" from the film's soundtrack. She went on to receive further Oscar nominations for her roles in \"Missing\" (1982), \"The River\" (1984) and \"Crimes of the Heart\" (1986). \"Coal Miner's Daughter\" and \"Crimes of the Heart\" also won her the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Musical or Comedy.",
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{
"id": "27611",
"score": 0.5745279788970947,
"text": "Sarah Michelle Gellar ( ; born April 14, 1977) is an American actress, producer, and entrepreneur. After being spotted by an agent at the age of four in New York City, she made her acting debut in the made-for-TV movie \"An Invasion of Privacy\" (1983). Gellar went on to appear in numerous television series and commercials. Her first leading part was in the 1992 miniseries \"Swans Crossing\", for which she was nominated for two Young Artist Awards, and her television breakthrough came in 1993, when she originated the role of Kendall Hart on the ABC daytime soap opera \"All My Children\", winning the 1995 Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series.",
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{
"id": "206713",
"score": 0.5735936760902405,
"text": "Piper Laurie (born Rosetta Jacobs; January 22, 1932) is an American stage and screen actress known for her roles in the films \"The Hustler\" (1961), \"Carrie\" (1976) and \"Children of a Lesser God\" (1986), all of which brought her Academy Award nominations. She is also known for her performance as Catherine Martell in the cult television series \"Twin Peaks\", for which she won a Golden Globe Award in 1991. She is set to star in the 2018 film \"White Boy Rick\".",
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{
"id": "378093",
"score": 0.5721372961997986,
"text": "Kimberly Alexis Bledel ( ; ] ; born September 16, 1981) is an American actress and model. She is known for her role as Rory Gilmore on the television series \"Gilmore Girls\" (2000–07), for which she received nominations for Satellite, Teen Choice and Young Artist Awards. Bledel made her feature film debut as Winnie Foster in \"Tuck Everlasting\" (2002), and has since appeared in \"Sin City\" (2005), \"Post Grad\" (2009), and as Lena Kaligaris in \"The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants\" film series. Bledel reprised her role as Rory Gilmore in the Netflix reunion miniseries \"\" (2016). She won a Primetime Emmy Award for her work on the Hulu drama series \"The Handmaid's Tale\".",
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{
"id": "1027643",
"score": 0.569557249546051,
"text": "born February 7, 1985) is an American film and television actress. She started her career as a child actor, starring in films such as \"Andre\"; \"When a Man Loves a Woman\"; \"Corrina, Corrina\"; and \"Waterworld\".",
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},
{
"id": "206714",
"score": 0.5695083737373352,
"text": "Geraldine Sue Page (November 22, 1924 – June 13, 1987) was an American film, television and stage actress. An eight-time Academy Award nominee, she was nominated for \"Hondo\" (1953), \"Summer and Smoke\" (1961), \"Sweet Bird of Youth\" (1962), \"You're a Big Boy Now\" (1966), \"Pete 'n' Tillie\" (1972), \"Interiors\" (1978) and \"The Pope of Greenwich Village\" (1984), before winning the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance as Carrie Watts in \"The Trip to Bountiful\" (1985).",
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{
"id": "13395562",
"score": 0.5692757368087769,
"text": "Abigail Kathleen Breslin (born April 14, 1996) is an American actress and singer. She appeared in her first commercial when she was three years old, and in her first film, \"\"Signs\"\" (2002), at the age of five. Her other film roles include \"Raising Helen\" (2004), \"Little Miss Sunshine\" (2006), for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, \"No Reservations\" (2007), \"Nim's Island\" (2008), \"Definitely, Maybe\" (2008), \"My Sister's Keeper\" (2009), \"Zombieland\" (2009), \"Rango\" (2011), and \"\" (2013). In September 2015, she began acting in the horror-comedy \"Scream Queens\" on Fox, in which she has her first regular role on a television series.",
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}
] |
5ae161565542997b2ef7d1ba | In what year was the aunt of Andrea Begley who is an Irish country music singer born? | [
{
"id": "39685535",
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"text": "Andrea Begley is a singer from Pomeroy, Northern Ireland, who is most notable for winning the second series of the BBC talent search \"The Voice UK\", beating the favourite to win, Leah McFall. She is the niece of Irish country music singer Philomena Begley."
},
{
"id": "11867839",
"score": 0.8071426153182983,
"text": "Philomena Begley (born October 20, 1942) is an Irish country music singer."
}
] | [
{
"id": "654353",
"score": 0.6873330473899841,
"text": "Andrea Jane Corr MBE (born 17 May 1974) is an Irish musician, songwriter, and actress. Corr debuted in 1990 as the lead singer of the Celtic folk rock and pop rock group The Corrs along with her three elder siblings Caroline, Sharon, and Jim. Aside from singing lead vocals Corr plays the tin whistle, the ukulele, and the piano.",
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{
"id": "40896004",
"score": 0.6708598732948303,
"text": "The Message is the debut studio album by British singer Andrea Begley. The album was released in the United Kingdom on 21 October 2013 by Capitol Records. The album has peaked to number 7 on the UK Albums Chart and number 61 on the Irish Albums Chart.",
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},
{
"id": "53685203",
"score": 0.6637210249900818,
"text": "Maria Patricia Kelly (born 25 November March 1969) is an Irish-American singer and songwriter. Born in Gamonal, Spain, she came to prominence with her musical family The Kelly Family, a multi-generational pop group that achieved success in Europe in the 1990s. During their hiatus, Kelly released several solo albums.",
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},
{
"id": "42532689",
"score": 0.6509749889373779,
"text": "Country Flavour was an Irish country band best known as the band which include country singer Philomena Begley. Formed in 1970 in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland.",
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},
{
"id": "2156844",
"score": 0.6438736915588379,
"text": "Kathleen Alice \"Kathy\" Mattea (born June 21, 1959) is an American country music and bluegrass performer who often brings folk, Celtic, and traditional country sounds to her music. Active since 1984 as a recording artist, she has charted more than thirty singles on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Songs charts, including four that reached No. 1: \"Goin' Gone\", \"Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses\", \"Come from the Heart\", and \"Burnin' Old Memories\", plus twelve more that charted within the top ten. Mattea released ten studio albums, a Christmas album, and a greatest hits package for Mercury Nashville between 1984 and 2000, and four more albums on independent labels after that. She has collaborated with Dolly Parton, Michael McDonald, Tim O'Brien, and her longtime husband, Jon Vezner. Mattea is also a two-time Grammy Award winner: in 1990 for \"Where've You Been\", and in 1993 for her Christmas album \"Good News\".",
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{
"id": "6401858",
"score": 0.6337770223617554,
"text": "Sarah Makem (18 October 1900 – 20 April 1983) a native of Keady, County Armagh, Northern Ireland, was a traditional Irish singer. She was the wife of fiddler Peter Makem, mother of musicians Tommy Makem and Jack Makem, and grandmother of musicians Shane Makem, Conor Makem and Rory Makem. Sarah Makem and her cousin, Annie Jane Kelly, were members of the Singing Greenes of Keady.",
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{
"id": "654359",
"score": 0.6320527195930481,
"text": "Sharon Helga Corr MBE (born 24 March 1970) is an Irish singer-songwriter, musician and television personality. She is best known as a member of the pop-rock band The Corrs, which she co-founded in 1990 with her elder brother Jim and younger sisters Caroline and Andrea. She plays the violin, piano and guitar, and sings backing vocals. She began learning the violin when she was six years old. She has played in national youth orchestras and is qualified to teach the violin.",
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{
"id": "6652805",
"score": 0.6318464279174805,
"text": "Colm Begley (born 31 August 1986) is an Irish Gaelic football player. He has also played Australian rules football for the St Kilda Football Club and the Brisbane Lions of the Australian Football League (AFL).",
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},
{
"id": "29765627",
"score": 0.6317387819290161,
"text": "Paul Begley is a Gaelic footballer from County Laois.",
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},
{
"id": "205892",
"score": 0.6262038946151733,
"text": "Tammy Wynette (born Virginia Wynette Pugh; May 5, 1942 – April 6, 1998) was an American country music singer-songwriter and one of country music's best-known artists and biggest-selling female singers.",
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},
{
"id": "654360",
"score": 0.6246019005775452,
"text": "James Steven Ignatius Corr MBE (born 31 July 1964) is an Irish musician, singer and songwriter. He is a member of the Irish folk/rock band \"The Corrs\", the other members being his three younger sisters Andrea, Sharon and Caroline. He is also a DJ.",
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},
{
"id": "47712384",
"score": 0.6238523721694946,
"text": "Lisa McHugh (born August 16, 1988) is a pop Country and Irish singer. She was born in Glasgow, Scotland to Irish parents. Her father is from Castlederg in County Tyrone and her mother is from Falcarragh, County Donegal. In June 2010 she moved to Ireland, put together her band and toured. She has won \"Female Vocalist of the Year\" five times as well as \"Outstanding Achievement on the World Stage\" in 2012 when she appeared on the Grand Ole Opry. She also ran her own television show titled \"On the Road with Lisa\".",
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},
{
"id": "31579712",
"score": 0.6238096356391907,
"text": "Laura Sheeran, (born 19 April 1987) is an Irish singer and musician, composer and artist and who is also the cousin of Ed Sheeran.",
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},
{
"id": "589960",
"score": 0.6215693354606628,
"text": "Crystal Gayle (born Brenda Gail Webb; January 9, 1951) is an American country music singer. Best known for her 1977 country-pop crossover hit song, \"Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue\", she had twenty #1 country hits during the 1970s and 1980s (18 on \"Billboard\" and 2 on \"Cashbox\") and six albums certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America. Gayle became the first female artist in country music history to reach platinum sales, with her 1977 album \"We Must Believe in Magic\". Also noted for her nearly floor-length hair, she was voted one of the 50 most beautiful people in the world by \"People\" magazine in 1983. She is the younger sister of the country singer-songwriter Loretta Lynn and the singer Peggy Sue and a distant cousin of singer Patty Loveless. Gayle is a member of the Grand Ole Opry and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, near Lynn's star.",
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},
{
"id": "53763214",
"score": 0.6212620735168457,
"text": "Michael English (born in Castledermot, County Kildare, Ireland on 23 April 1979) is an Irish country singer. He was born in a musical family as his father played button accordion with a traditional Irish band, his mother was an Irish dancer, and his two sisters played fiddle and piano.",
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},
{
"id": "4061657",
"score": 0.6204927563667297,
"text": "Michael Begley (22 August 1932 – 26 March 2012) was an Irish Fine Gael politician. He was elected as a Fine Gael Teachta Dála (TD) for the Kerry South constituency between 1969 and 1989. He also served as a Minister of State in a number of government departments.",
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{
"id": "202553",
"score": 0.6202986836433411,
"text": "Moya Brennan, born Máire Ní Bhraonáin (] ), also known as Máire Brennan (born 4 August 1952), is an Irish folk singer, songwriter, harpist, and philanthropist. She is the older sister of Enya and Brídín Brennan. She began performing professionally in 1970 when her family formed the band Clannad, and is considered as the \"First Lady of Celtic Music\". Moya released her first solo album in 1992 called \"Máire\", a successful venture. She has been nominated for two Grammys and has won an Emmy Award. She has recorded music for several soundtracks, including \"Titanic\", \"To End All Wars\" and \"King Arthur\".",
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{
"id": "41518485",
"score": 0.6197993755340576,
"text": "Andrew Hozier-Byrne (born 17 March 1990), known professionally by the mononym Hozier, is an Irish musician, singer and songwriter from County Wicklow. He released his debut EP, featuring the hit single \"Take Me to Church\", in 2013 and his second EP, \"From Eden\", in 2014. His debut studio album, \"Hozier\", was released in Ireland in September 2014 and globally in October 2014.",
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{
"id": "23746560",
"score": 0.6193566918373108,
"text": "Rita Keane (born 31 December 1922, Caherlistrane, near Tuam, County Galway, Ireland - died 28 June 2009, Galway City) was an Irish traditional singer and accordionist. She was a member of a well known Irish musical family, and had a lifelong musical partnership with her older sister, Sarah. She was a paternal aunt of singers Dolores, Seán and Matt Keane.",
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},
{
"id": "12740479",
"score": 0.6177043318748474,
"text": "Brian Begley (born 20 October 1979) is an Irish sportsperson. He plays hurling and Gaelic football with his local club Mungret and was a member of the Limerick senior inter-county team in both codes from 2001 until 2007.",
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] |
5ae130515542997b2ef7d121 | These happy Golden Years was written by what American writer known for her series of children's books that were released from 1932 to 1943? | [
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"id": "12861063",
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"text": "These Happy Golden Years is an autobiographical children's novel written by Laura Ingalls Wilder and published in 1943, the eighth of nine books in her \"Little House\" series – although it originally ended it. It is based on her later adolescence near De Smet, South Dakota, featuring her short time as a teacher, beginning at age 15, and her courtship with Almanzo Wilder. It spans the time period from 1882 to 1885, when they marry."
},
{
"id": "195722",
"score": 0.6561850309371948,
"text": "Laura Ingalls Wilder ( ; February 7, 1867 – February 10, 1957) was an American writer known for the \"Little House on the Prairie\" series of children's books released from 1932 to 1943 which were based on her childhood in a settler and pioneer family."
}
] | [
{
"id": "6817404",
"score": 0.6544191837310791,
"text": "The original Little House books were a series of eight autobiographical children's novels written by Laura Ingalls Wilder and published by Harper & Brothers from 1932 to 1943. The eighth book, \"These Happy Golden Years\", featured Laura Ingalls at ages 15 to 18 and was originally published with one page at the end containing the note, \"The end of the Little House books.\" The ninth and last novel written by Ingalls Wilder, \"The First Four Years\" was published posthumously and unfinished in 1971. Although her intentions are unknown, it is commonly considered part of the Little House series and is included in the 9-volume paperback box set \"Little House, Big Adventure\" (Harper Trophy, May 1994).",
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{
"id": "3744040",
"score": 0.621319591999054,
"text": "Mary Poppins is a series of eight children's books written by P. L. Travers and published over the period 1934 to 1988. Mary Shepard was the illustrator throughout the series.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "36546511",
"score": 0.6022189259529114,
"text": "is an American writer and illustrator of children's books.",
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},
{
"id": "11843946",
"score": 0.6006526350975037,
"text": "Phyllis Crawford (February 8, 1899 – July 1980) was, during the 1930s and 1940s, a celebrated author of books for children in their early teens.",
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{
"id": "6340441",
"score": 0.5992194414138794,
"text": "Catherine Cate Coblentz (June 5, 1897 – May 30, 1951) was an American writer, best known for her children's books in the 1930s and 1940s.",
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{
"id": "50072159",
"score": 0.5977932810783386,
"text": "The Country Bunny and the Little Gold Shoes is a 1939 children's picture book written by DuBose Heyward and illustrated by Marjorie Flack.",
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{
"id": "411384",
"score": 0.5957462787628174,
"text": "Ruth Plumly Thompson (27 July 1891 – 6 April 1976) was an American writer of children's stories, best known for writing many novels placed in Oz, the fictional land of L. Frank Baum's classic children's novel \"The Wonderful Wizard of Oz\" and its sequels.",
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{
"id": "22334068",
"score": 0.5956025123596191,
"text": "Rita Golden Gelman (born July 2, 1937, Bridgeport, CT) is an American writer of children's literature and travel literature for adults.",
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{
"id": "181227",
"score": 0.5946325659751892,
"text": "Beverly Atlee Cleary (née Bunn; born April 12, 1916) is an American writer of children's and young adult fiction. One of America's most successful living authors, 91 million copies of her books have been sold worldwide since her first book was published in 1950. Some of Cleary's best known characters are Henry Huggins and his dog Ribsy, Ramona Quimby and Beezus Quimby, and Ralph S. Mouse.",
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{
"id": "864295",
"score": 0.5935022234916687,
"text": "Ruth Krauss (July 25, 1901 – July 10, 1993) was an American writer of children's books, including \"The Carrot Seed\", and of theatrical poems for adult readers. Many of her books are still in print.",
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{
"id": "5807882",
"score": 0.5927265882492065,
"text": "Cornelia Lynde Meigs (1884–1973) was an American writer of fiction and biography for children, teacher of English and writing, historian and critic of children's literature. She won the Newbery Medal for her 1933 biography of Louisa May Alcott, entitled \"Invincible Louisa\". She also wrote three Newbery Honor Books.",
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{
"id": "215141",
"score": 0.5917955040931702,
"text": "Pamela Lyndon Travers, OBE ( ; born Helen Lyndon Goff; 9 August 1899 – 23 April 1996) was an Australian-born writer who spent most of her career in England. She is best known for the \"Mary Poppins\" series of children's books, which feature the magical nanny Mary Poppins.",
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{
"id": "10258",
"score": 0.5908858776092529,
"text": "Enid Mary Blyton (11 August 1897 – 28 November 1968) was an English children's writer whose books have been among the world's best-sellers since the 1930s, selling more than 600 million copies. Blyton's books are still enormously popular, and have been translated into 90 languages; her first book, \"Child Whispers\", a 24-page collection of poems, was published in 1922. She wrote on a wide range of topics including education, natural history, fantasy, mystery, and biblical narratives and is best remembered today for her Noddy, Famous Five, and Secret Seven series.",
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{
"id": "27328884",
"score": 0.5902175307273865,
"text": "Happy Families is a series of children's books written by Allan Ahlberg, . Ahlberg worked with a number of illustrators and the books were published by Puffin Books. The series form a transition for children between picture books and chapter books. It is a popular series, having sold in excess of 2.6 million copies since its launch in 1980.",
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{
"id": "8855",
"score": 0.5883643627166748,
"text": "Theodor Seuss Geisel ( ; March 2, 1904 – September 24, 1991) was an American author, political cartoonist, poet, animator, book publisher, and artist, best known for authoring children's books under the pen name Dr. Seuss ( ). His work includes several of the most popular children's books of all time, selling over 600 million copies and being translated into more than 20 languages by the time of his death.",
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{
"id": "5910435",
"score": 0.5864365696907043,
"text": "The Camp Fire Girls books is a series of fiction novels written for children by various authors from 1912 into the 1930s.",
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{
"id": "11998043",
"score": 0.5843769907951355,
"text": "Helen Marion Palmer Geisel (September 23, 1898 – October 23, 1967), known professionally as Helen Palmer, was an American children's author, editor, and philanthropist. She was married to fellow author Theodor Seuss Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, from 1927 until her death. Her best-known books include \"Do You Know What I'm Going to Do Next Saturday?\", \"I Was Kissed by a Seal at the Zoo\", \"Why I Built the Boogle House\", and \"A Fish Out Of Water\".",
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{
"id": "27021439",
"score": 0.5838255286216736,
"text": "Ethel Franklin Betts Bains (September 6, 1877 – October 9, 1959) was an American illustrator primarily of children's books during the golden age of American illustration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.",
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{
"id": "195705",
"score": 0.5835381150245667,
"text": "Little House on the Prairie is a series of American children's novels written by Laura Ingalls Wilder based on her childhood in the northern Midwestern United States during the 1870s and 1880s. Eight were completed by Wilder, and published by Harper & Brothers from 1932 and 1943, of which the last covers her courtship with Almanzo Wilder and one covers his childhood. The first draft of a ninth novel was published posthumously in 1971 and is commonly included in the Little House series.",
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{
"id": "25640383",
"score": 0.5829939842224121,
"text": "Wonderful Year is a children's novel by Nancy Barnes (Helen Simmons Adams) with illustrations by Kate Seredy. \"Wonderful Year\" was published in 1946 by publisher Julian Messner. It describes a year in the life of the Martin family, including 11-year-old Ellen, who moved from Kansas to a fruit ranch in Colorado. This work of children's literature was a Newbery Honor recipient in 1947.",
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}
] |
5ae4cd385542990ba0bbb146 | Would Aaron Barrett or Axl Rose be better known for working with Guns N' Roses and AC/DC? | [
{
"id": "150056",
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"text": "W. Axl Rose (born William Bruce Rose Jr.; raised as William Bruce Bailey; February 6, 1962) is an American singer, songwriter, record producer and musician. He is the lead vocalist of the hard rock band Guns N' Roses, and has also been the band's sole constant member since its inception in 1985. In addition to Guns N' Roses, he has been the lead singer of AC/DC since 2016. Due to his powerful and wide vocal range and energetic live performances, Rose has been named one of the greatest singers of all time by various media outlets, including \"Rolling Stone\" and \"NME\"."
},
{
"id": "1987889",
"score": 0.6096342206001282,
"text": "Aaron Asher Barrett (born August 30, 1974) is the lead singer, lead guitarist, and primary songwriter of the American ska-punk band Reel Big Fish. Prior to forming Reel Big Fish, Barrett played trombone in another ska-punk act, The Scholars, along with future Reel Big Fish bandmates Scott Klopfenstein and Grant Barry."
}
] | [
{
"id": "11160195",
"score": 0.6533783674240112,
"text": "Aaron West Arkeen (June 18, 1960 – May 30, 1997), was an American musician best known for co-writing several Guns N' Roses songs. He died in Los Angeles as a result of a drug overdose.",
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{
"id": "11059521",
"score": 0.6491495966911316,
"text": "Guns N' Roses is an American hard rock band from Los Angeles, California. Formed in 1985, the group originally featured vocalist Axl Rose, guitarists Tracii Guns and Izzy Stradlin, bassist Ole Beich and drummer Rob Gardner, although Guns, Beich and Gardner were quickly replaced by Slash, Duff McKagan and Steven Adler, respectively. This lineup released the band's most critically and commercially successful album, \"Appetite for Destruction\", in 1987, followed by the acoustic album \"G N' R Lies\" in 1988. On July 11, 1990, Adler was fired due to drug addiction.",
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"id": "2773076",
"score": 0.6473175287246704,
"text": "Guns N' Roses, often abbreviated as GNR, is an American hard rock band from Los Angeles and formed in 1985. The lineup, when first signed to Geffen Records in 1986, consisted of vocalist Axl Rose, lead guitarist Slash, rhythm guitarist Izzy Stradlin, bassist Duff McKagan, and drummer Steven Adler. Guns N' Roses have released six studio albums, accumulating sales of more than 100 million records worldwide, including 45 million records in the United States, making them one of the world's best-selling artists of all time.",
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{
"id": "42196437",
"score": 0.6327505111694336,
"text": "Guns N' Roses is an American hard rock band originally formed in 1985 by members of Hollywood Rose and L.A. Guns. After signing with Geffen Records in 1986, the band released its debut album \"Appetite for Destruction\" in 1987. All songs on the album were credited as written by the full band, composed of vocalist Axl Rose, guitarists Slash and Izzy Stradlin, bassist Duff McKagan and drummer Steven Adler, while \"It's So Easy\" was co-written by West Arkeen and \"Anything Goes\" was co-written by Chris Weber, formerly of Hollywood Rose. The following year saw the release of the band's second album \"G N' R Lies\", made up of all four tracks from 1986's \"Live ?!*@ Like a Suicide\" EP and four acoustic-based tracks.",
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{
"id": "2327526",
"score": 0.632516622543335,
"text": "\"The Garden\" is a song by the hard rock band Guns N' Roses released in 1991. It appears on the album \"Use Your Illusion I\" and features alternating lead vocals between Axl Rose and Alice Cooper.",
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{
"id": "894763",
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"text": "Hollywood Rose was an American hard rock group formed in 1983 and is best known as the precursor group for what would eventually become Guns N' Roses. The group was founded by Axl Rose, Izzy Stradlin and Chris Weber while they were aided during live shows by Rick Mars, Johnny Kreis, Steve Darrow and Andre Troxx. Rose, Stradlin and Weber, along with Kreis, recorded a five-song demo in 1984. However, after a number of lineup changes, which includes Weber and Kreis being replaced by Slash and Steven Adler (both then of Road Crew) respectively as well the departure of Stradlin, the group disbanded the same year.",
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"id": "7253190",
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"text": "Guns N' Roses is an American hard rock band formed in Los Angeles, California in 1985 by members of Hollywood Rose and L.A. Guns. The band has released six studio albums, two live albums, two compilation albums, two extended plays, seven video albums, eighteen singles, twenty four music videos and one video single. Guns N' Roses signed a deal with Geffen Records in 1986, after the independently released EP \"Live ?!*@ Like a Suicide\" a year before. Its debut studio album \"Appetite for Destruction\" was released in 1987, reached the top of the \"Billboard\" 200 and sold 18 million units in the United States and approximately 33 million units worldwide.",
"topk_rank": 6
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{
"id": "3209723",
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"text": "Rapidfire was a Los Angeles based band that featured Guns N' Roses singer Axl Rose (under his real name Bill Bailey) in his first ever studio recording just before he co-founded Hollywood Rose.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "609879",
"score": 0.59937584400177,
"text": "Rose Tattoo is an Australian rock and roll band, now led by Angry Anderson, that was formed in Sydney in 1976. Their sound is hard rock mixed with blues rock influences, with songs including \"Bad Boy for Love\", \"Rock 'n' Roll Outlaw\", \"Nice Boys\", \"We Can't Be Beaten\" and \"Scarred for Life\". Their first four albums were produced by Harry Vanda and George Young who also worked with AC/DC. They disbanded in 1987, subsequently reforming briefly in 1993 to support Guns N' Roses on an Australian tour. They reassembled again from 1998 and have since released two more studio albums.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "25910017",
"score": 0.5988069176673889,
"text": "Rob Gardner is an American musician best known as the drummer for the original lineups of L.A. Guns and Guns N' Roses, and was also briefly the drummer for Hollywood Rose.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "889720",
"score": 0.5943600535392761,
"text": "Steven Adler (born Michael Coletti; January 22, 1965) is an American musician. He is best known as the former drummer and co-songwriter of the hard rock band Guns N' Roses, with whom he achieved worldwide success in the late 1980s. Adler was fired from Guns N' Roses over his heroin addiction in 1990, following which he reformed his old band Road Crew and briefly joined BulletBoys, which both proved unsuccessful. During the 2000s, Adler was the drummer of the band Adler's Appetite, and from 2012, he had held the same position in the band Adler. In early 2017, Steven Adler declared that he has no intention to continue with the band, and that the band has now dissolved, and the reason is his lack of interest in performing during poorly attended concerts. He appeared on the second and fifth seasons of the reality TV show \"Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew\", as well as on the first season of its spin-off \"Sober House\". He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2012 as a member of Guns N' Roses.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "50015289",
"score": 0.593845784664154,
"text": "The Not in This Lifetime... tour is an ongoing series of concerts by hard rock band Guns N' Roses, featuring classic lineup members Axl Rose, Slash and Duff McKagan, marking the first time since the Use Your Illusion Tour in 1993 that the three performed together.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "9421924",
"score": 0.5938245058059692,
"text": "Rob Barrett III (born January 29, 1969) is the rhythm guitarist for the death metal band Cannibal Corpse. He played with the band from 1993 to 1997 and rejoined in 2005. He has cited Gary Moore, Malcolm Young, Randy Rhoads, Eddie Van Halen, Tony Iommi and Steve Vai, among others, as his influences. He currently resides in Tampa, Florida.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "396547",
"score": 0.5916903018951416,
"text": "Jeffrey Dean Isbell (born April 8, 1962), best known as Izzy Stradlin, is an American guitarist, singer and songwriter. He is best known as the co-founder and former rhythm guitarist of the hard rock band Guns N' Roses, which he left at the height of their fame in 1991, and with whom he recorded three studio albums.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "14152330",
"score": 0.5893294215202332,
"text": "Ed Rose is an American sound engineer and record producer. He has worked extensively with groups in the modern emo and pop punk scenes. He also co-owns Black Lodge Recording with Rob Pope and his brother Ryan Pope, members of the emo band The Get Up Kids.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "41458442",
"score": 0.5892528891563416,
"text": "Adler was an American rock band from Los Angeles, California, formed in 2011 by original/former Guns N' Roses drummer Steven Adler. The band was formed following the dissolution of Adler's previous band, Adler's Appetite, and consisted of Adler along with current Lynam and former Mars Electric vocalist/guitarist Jacob Bunton, guitarist Lonny Paul (now also of Lynam), and L.A. Guns bassist Johnny Martin.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "1999794",
"score": 0.5891364216804504,
"text": "Ole Beich (January 1, 1955 – October 16, 1991) was a Danish musician best known as the bass guitarist for the original lineups of L.A. Guns and Guns N' Roses.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "6287102",
"score": 0.5888403654098511,
"text": "\"Dead Horse\" is a song by American rock band Guns N' Roses. It appears on their 1991 release, \"Use Your Illusion I\". The composition starts out with an acoustic section, which features a guitar riff written by lead vocalist Axl Rose. Following the sound of a nutcracker, the electric guitars soon come in for the heavier section which dominates the song. After the final climactic chorus, the opening section is reprised for another bar. The song ends with an audio effect featuring the song being fast-forwarded.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "8906234",
"score": 0.5879704356193542,
"text": "\"Chinese Democracy\" is a song by the American rock band Guns N' Roses, and the title track from their sixth studio album of the same name. The song was released as the band's twenty-first radio single on October 22, 2008 and was released on the iTunes Store on November 9, 2008. It was primarily written by Axl Rose and Josh Freese. It was the band's first single of original material released since \"Estranged (1994)\".",
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},
{
"id": "19651480",
"score": 0.5872960686683655,
"text": "AC/DC are a hard rock band formed in Sydney, Australia in 1973 by brothers Angus and Malcolm Young. Although the band are considered pioneers of heavy metal, its members have always classified their music as \"rock 'n' roll\". AC/DC underwent several line-up changes before releasing their first album, \"High Voltage\", in 1975. Membership remained stable until bassist Cliff Williams replaced Mark Evans in 1977. In 1979, the band recorded their highly successful album \"Highway to Hell\". Lead singer and co-songwriter Bon Scott died on 19 February 1980, after a night of heavy alcohol consumption. The group briefly considered disbanding, but soon ex-Geordie singer Brian Johnson was selected as Scott's replacement. Later that year, the band released their best-selling album, \"Back in Black\". The band's next album, \"For Those About to Rock We Salute You\", was also highly successful and was their first album to reach number one in the United States. AC/DC declined in popularity soon after the departure of drummer Phil Rudd in 1983. Poor record sales continued until the release of \"The Razors Edge\" in 1990. Phil Rudd returned in 1994 and contributed to the band's 1995 album \"Ballbreaker\". \"Stiff Upper Lip\" was released in 2000 and was well received by critics. The band's new album \"Black Ice\" was announced in June 2008 and was released on October 20, 2008. The album's first single, \"Rock 'N Roll Train\", earned AC/DC a Grammy nomination for Best Rock Group or Duo with Vocals. Another \"Black Ice\" track, \"War Machine,\" gained AC/DC their first Grammy Award win, for Best Hard Rock Performance.",
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}
] |
5ab709b15542992aa3b8c78e | The writers of the "Assassins" screenplay made their directing debut in which year? | [
{
"id": "3300211",
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"text": "Assassins is a 1995 American action thriller film directed by Richard Donner. The screenplay was by Andy and Larry Wachowski and Brian Helgeland. The film stars Sylvester Stallone, Antonio Banderas and Julianne Moore. The Wachowskis stated that their script was \"totally rewritten\" by Helgeland, and that they tried to remove their names from the film but failed."
},
{
"id": "33126",
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"text": "Lana Wachowski (formerly Laurence \"Larry\" Wachowski, born June 21, 1965) and Lilly Wachowski (formerly Andrew Paul \"Andy\" Wachowski, born December 29, 1967) are American film directors, screenwriters, and producers. They are siblings, and are both trans women. Collectively known as The Wachowskis ( ) and formerly as The Wachowski Brothers, the pair made their directing debut in 1996 with \"Bound\", and achieved fame with their second film \"The Matrix\" (1999), a major box office success for which they won the Saturn Award for Best Director. They wrote and directed its two sequels: \"The Matrix Reloaded\" and \"The Matrix Revolutions\" (both in 2003), and were deeply involved in the writing and production of other works in that franchise."
}
] | [
{
"id": "39484831",
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"text": "American Assassin is a 2017 American action thriller film directed by Michael Cuesta and written by Stephen Schiff, Michael Finch, Edward Zwick and Marshall Herskovitz, based on Vince Flynn's 2010 novel of the same name. The film stars Dylan O'Brien, Michael Keaton, Sanaa Lathan, Shiva Negar and Taylor Kitsch, and follows young CIA black ops recruit Mitch Rapp, who helps a Cold War veteran try to stop the detonation of a rogue nuclear weapon.",
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{
"id": "41652308",
"score": 0.6624020338058472,
"text": "The Assassin (; or: \"The Assassin Niè Yǐnniáng\") is a 2015 wuxia film directed by Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-hsien. A Taiwan/China/Hong Kong co-production, it was an official selection in the main competition section at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival. At Cannes, Hou won the award for Best Director. It was released in China and Hong Kong on 27 August, and a day later in Taiwan on 28 August 2015. It was selected as the Taiwanese entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards but it was not nominated.",
"topk_rank": 1
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{
"id": "17527920",
"score": 0.6573942303657532,
"text": "Ninja Assassin is a 2009 German-American neo-noir martial arts thriller film directed by James McTeigue. The story was written by Matthew Sand, with a screenplay by J. Michael Straczynski. The film stars South Korean pop musician Rain as a disillusioned assassin looking for retribution against his former mentor, played by ninja film legend Sho Kosugi. \"Ninja Assassin\" explores political corruption, child endangerment and the impact of violence. Known for their previous work on the \"Matrix Trilogy\" and \"V for Vendetta\", Lana and Lilly Wachowski, Joel Silver, and Grant Hill produced the film. A collective effort to commit to the film's production was made by Legendary Pictures, Dark Castle Entertainment and Silver Pictures. It was distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures.",
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},
{
"id": "43867112",
"score": 0.6517202258110046,
"text": "Assassin's Creed is a 2016 American science fiction action adventure film based on the video game franchise of the same name. The film is directed by Justin Kurzel, written by Michael Lesslie, Adam Cooper and Bill Collage, and stars Michael Fassbender (who also produced), Marion Cotillard, Jeremy Irons, Brendan Gleeson, Charlotte Rampling and Michael K. Williams. The film is set in the same universe as the video games but features an original story that expands the series' mythology, taking place during the Spanish Inquisition. Filming began in late August 2015 and concluded in January 2016. \"Assassin's Creed\" was released on December 21, 2016, in the United States and France. It received negative reviews from critics and grossed over $240 million worldwide against its $125 million budget.",
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{
"id": "2254524",
"score": 0.6500959396362305,
"text": "The Assassins: A Radical Sect in Islam is a book, first published in 1967, written by Middle-East historian Bernard Lewis, and published by Weidenfeld & Nicolson. An updated edition was published by Oxford University Press in 1987, and another in 2002 by Basic Books.",
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{
"id": "16354419",
"score": 0.6452039480209351,
"text": "Hossein Amini (Persian: حسین امینی ; born January 18, 1966) is an Iranian screenwriter and film director. Amini has worked as a screenwriter since the early 1990s. He was nominated for numerous awards for the 1997 film \"The Wings of the Dove\", including an Academy Award for Best Writing – Adapted Screenplay. He also won a \"Best Adapted Screenplay\" award from the Austin Film Critics Association for his screenplay adaptation of Nicolas Winding Refn's \"Drive\" (2011), based on the novel by James Sallis. For his directorial debut, he both wrote and directed \"The Two Faces of January\", an adaptation of the Patricia Highsmith novel.",
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{
"id": "18395289",
"score": 0.6416436433792114,
"text": "Niels Mueller (born 1961) is an American film director, screenwriter, and film producer. His directorial debut film, \"The Assassination of Richard Nixon\", screened at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival.",
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{
"id": "21486951",
"score": 0.6399720311164856,
"text": "William Oliver Stone (born September 15, 1946) is an American screenwriter, film producer, and director of motion pictures and documentaries. Stone won an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay as writer of \"Midnight Express\" (1978). He also wrote the acclaimed gangster movie \"Scarface\" (1983). As a director, Stone achieved prominence as director/writer of the war drama \"Platoon\" (1986), for which Stone won the Academy Award for Best Director; the film was awarded Best Picture. \"Platoon\" was the first in a trilogy of films based on the Vietnam War, in which Stone served as an infantry soldier. He continued the series with \"Born on the Fourth of July\" (1989)—for which Stone won his second Best Director Oscar—and \"Heaven & Earth\" (1993). Stone's other notable works include the Salvadoran Civil War-based drama \"Salvador\" (1986); the financial drama \"Wall Street\" (1987) and its 2010 sequel \"\"; the Jim Morrison biopic \"The Doors\" (1991); and a trilogy of films based on the American Presidency—\"JFK\" (1991), \"Nixon\" (1995) and \"W.\" (2008). His latest film is \"Snowden\" (2016).",
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{
"id": "5483227",
"score": 0.6333081126213074,
"text": "The Ladykillers is a 2004 American black comedy thriller film directed by Joel and Ethan Coen. The Coens' screenplay was based on the 1955 British Ealing comedy film of the same name, written by William Rose. The Coens produced the remake (their first), together with Tom Jacobson, Barry Sonnenfeld and Barry Josephson. It stars Tom Hanks, Irma P. Hall, Marlon Wayans, J. K. Simmons, Tzi Ma and Ryan Hurst, and marks the first time that the Coens have worked with Tom Hanks. This was the first film in which Joel and Ethan Coen share both producing and directing credits; previously Joel had always been credited as director and Ethan as producer.",
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{
"id": "24412976",
"score": 0.6327067613601685,
"text": "Assassin(s) is a 1997 French drama film directed, co-written, co-edited by and starring Mathieu Kassovitz. It was entered into the 1997 Cannes Film Festival.",
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{
"id": "44093377",
"score": 0.6304870247840881,
"text": "Season for Assassins (Italian: \"Il tempo degli assassini\" , also known as \"The Time of the Assassin\" and \"Mad Men\") is a 1975 Italian poliziottesco-drama film written and directed by Marcello Andrei.",
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{
"id": "2825163",
"score": 0.6288681626319885,
"text": "Zachary Edward Snyder (born March 1, 1966) is an American filmmaker, best known for his action, superhero, and science fiction films. Snyder made his feature film debut with the 2004 remake of the horror film \"Dawn of the Dead\". Since then, he has done a number of comic book and superhero films, including \"300\" (2007) and \"Watchmen\" (2009), as well as the Superman film that started the DC Extended Universe, \"Man of Steel\" (2013) and its follow-ups, \"\" (2016) and \"Justice League\" (2017). He also co-wrote the screenplays for \"300\", \"Sucker Punch\" and \"\".",
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{
"id": "18949253",
"score": 0.6284542083740234,
"text": "Ang Lee (; born October 23, 1954) is a Taiwanese film director, screenwriter and producer.",
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{
"id": "250571",
"score": 0.626579761505127,
"text": "Duel is a 1971 television (and later full-length theatrical) thriller film written by Richard Matheson, which is based on his own short story. The film is the full-length film directing debut of American director, producer, and screenwriter Steven Spielberg.",
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{
"id": "21901518",
"score": 0.6233550310134888,
"text": "Anthony Stark (born August 12, 1961 in New York City, Died October 19, 2011) is an American film director and screenwriter. He co-wrote and directed the 1998 film \"Into My Heart\" with Sean Smith.",
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},
{
"id": "4082366",
"score": 0.6216382384300232,
"text": "David Ayer (born January 18, 1968) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. He is best known for being the writer of \"Training Day\" (2001), and the director and writer of \"Harsh Times\" (2005), \"Street Kings\" (2008), \"End of Watch\" (2012), \"Sabotage\" (2014), \"Fury\" (2014), and \"Suicide Squad\" (2016).",
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},
{
"id": "35249448",
"score": 0.620042622089386,
"text": "The Assassins, previously known as Bronze Sparrow Terrace or Bronze Sparrow Platform, is a Chinese historical drama film directed by Zhao Linshan, starring Chow Yun-fat as Cao Cao, a prominent warlord who became the \"de facto\" head of the central government in China towards the end of the Han dynasty. The film, released in October 2012, focuses on Cao Cao's life in his later years and depicts two assassination attempts on the warlord. The supporting cast includes Liu Yifei, Hiroshi Tamaki, Alec Su, Annie Yi, Qiu Xinzhi, Yao Lu and Ni Dahong. The film's Chinese title is a reference to the Bronze Sparrow Platform (铜雀台), a terrace constructed in 210 by Cao Cao in the ancient city of Ye (in present-day Handan, Hebei).",
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{
"id": "958026",
"score": 0.6197044253349304,
"text": "Shaun Terence Young (20 June 1915 – 7 September 1994) was a British film director and screenwriter best known for directing three James Bond films, including the first two films in the series, \"Dr. No\" (1962) and \"From Russia with Love\" (1963), as well as \"Thunderball\" (1965). All three films starred Sean Connery as James Bond, also known as Agent 007.",
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{
"id": "314444",
"score": 0.618546724319458,
"text": "Alexander \"Alex\" Proyas ( ; born 23 September 1963) is an Australian film director, screenwriter, and producer. Proyas is best known for directing the films \"The Crow\" (1994), \"Dark City\" (1998), \"I, Robot\" (2004), \"Knowing\" (2009), and \"Gods of Egypt\" (2016).",
"topk_rank": 18
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{
"id": "41862814",
"score": 0.6183030605316162,
"text": "Hitman: Agent 47 is a 2015 American action thriller film directed by Aleksander Bach in his directorial debut and co-written by Skip Woods (who also wrote the original \"Hitman\" film) and Michael Finch. It is based on the \"Hitman\" video game series, developed by IO Interactive, and its main character, a mysterious assassin known only as Agent 47.",
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}
] |
5a8114d655429926c1cdacec | The composer of The Enchanted Wanderer is also a citizen of what other countries? | [
{
"id": "48608809",
"score": 0.6870509386062622,
"text": "The Enchanted Wanderer (Очарованный странник) is a 2002 Russian-language 'concert opera' by Rodion Shchedrin based on the novel \"The Enchanted Wanderer\" by Nikolai Leskov. It was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic for Lorin Maazel and first performed on 19 December 2002 in New York by the New York Philharmonic, New York Choral Artists, and Lorin Maazel."
},
{
"id": "728429",
"score": 0.5801011919975281,
"text": "Rodion Konstantinovich Shchedrin (Russian: Родио́н Константи́нович Щедри́н , \"Rodion Konstantinovič Ščedrin\", ] ; born 16 December 1932) is a Russian composer and pianist, winner of the Lenin Prize (1984), USSR State Prize (1972), and the State Prize of the Russian Federation (1992), and is a former member of the Interregional Deputy Group (1989–1991). He is also a citizen of Lithuania and Spain."
}
] | [
{
"id": "4954602",
"score": 0.6796662211418152,
"text": "Alexander Aronovich Knaifel (Russian: Алекса́ндр Аро́нович Кна́йфель ; also \"Knayfel\", \"Knayfel\", or \"Kneifel\"; born 28 November 1943 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan) is a Russian composer known for his operas \"The Ghost of Canterville\" and \"Alice in Wonderland\" as well as for his music for cinema.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "76572",
"score": 0.6773551106452942,
"text": "Antonín Leopold Dvořák ( ; ] ; 8 September 1841 – 1 May 1904) was a Czech composer. After Bedřich Smetana, he was the second Czech composer to achieve worldwide recognition. Following Smetana's nationalist example, Dvořák frequently employed aspects, specifically rhythms, of the folk music of Moravia and his native Bohemia. Dvořák's own style has been described as \"the fullest recreation of a national idiom with that of the symphonic tradition, absorbing folk influences and finding effective ways of using them.\"",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "67379",
"score": 0.6675736904144287,
"text": "Franz Liszt (] ; Hungarian: \"Liszt Ferencz\" , in modern usage \"Liszt Ferenc\", ] ; October 22, 1811July 31, 1886) was a prolific 19th-century Hungarian composer, virtuoso pianist, conductor, music teacher, arranger, organist, philanthropist, author, nationalist and a Franciscan tertiary.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "140422",
"score": 0.6649575233459473,
"text": "Bedřich Smetana (] ; 2 March 1824 – 12 May 1884) was a Czech composer who pioneered the development of a musical style which became closely identified with his country's aspirations to independent statehood. He is thus widely regarded in his homeland as the father of Czech music. Internationally he is best known for his opera \"The Bartered Bride\" and for the symphonic cycle \"Má vlast\" (\"My Homeland\"), which portrays the history, legends and landscape of the composer's native land.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "49644",
"score": 0.6616854071617126,
"text": "Jean Sibelius ( ; ), born Johan Julius Christian Sibelius (8 December 186520 September 1957), was a Finnish composer and violinist of the late Romantic and early-modern periods. He is widely recognized as his country's greatest composer and, through his music, is often credited with having helped Finland to develop a national identity during its struggle for independence from Russia.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "9514",
"score": 0.6605162620544434,
"text": "Edvard Hagerup Grieg (] ; 15 June 18434 September 1907) was a Norwegian composer and pianist. He is widely considered one of the leading Romantic era composers, and his music is part of the standard classical repertoire worldwide. His use and development of Norwegian folk music in his own compositions put the music of Norway in the international spectrum, as well as helping to develop a national identity, much as Jean Sibelius and Antonín Dvořák did in Finland and Bohemia, respectively.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "8710804",
"score": 0.6566669940948486,
"text": "Nicolas Nabokov (Николай Дмитриевич Набоков; 17 April [O.S. 4 April] 1903 – 6 April 1978) was a Russian-born composer, writer, and cultural figure. He became a U.S. citizen in 1939.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "24503",
"score": 0.6491202712059021,
"text": "Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky ( ; Russian: Пётр Ильи́ч Чайко́вский ; 25 April/7 May 1840 – 25 October/6 November 1893), often anglicized as Peter Ilich Tchaikovsky, was a Russian composer of the romantic period, some of whose works are among the most popular music in the classical repertoire. He was the first Russian composer whose music made a lasting impression internationally, bolstered by his appearances as a guest conductor in Europe and the United States. Tchaikovsky was honored in 1884, by Emperor Alexander III, and awarded a lifetime pension.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "145255",
"score": 0.6488508582115173,
"text": "György Sándor Ligeti ( ; Hungarian: \"Ligeti György Sándor\" , ] ; 28 May 1923 – 12 June 2006) was a Hungarian composer of contemporary classical music. He has been described as \"one of the most important avant-garde composers in the latter half of the twentieth century\" and \"one of the most innovative and influential among progressive figures of his time\".",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "1512721",
"score": 0.6469136476516724,
"text": "Mátyás György Seiber (] ; 4 May 190524 September 1960) was a Hungarian-born composer who lived and worked in the United Kingdom from 1935 onwards. His work linked many diverse musical influences, from the Hungarian tradition of Bartók and Kodály, to Schoenberg and serial music, to jazz, folk song, film and lighter music.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "9956",
"score": 0.6455010771751404,
"text": "Éric Alfred Leslie Satie (] ; 17 May 18661 July 1925), who signed his name Erik Satie after 1884, was a French composer and pianist. Satie was a colourful figure in the early 20th-century Parisian avant-garde. His work was a precursor to later artistic movements such as minimalism, Surrealism, repetitive music, and the Theatre of the Absurd.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "93783",
"score": 0.6446727514266968,
"text": "Arvo Pärt (] ; born 11 September 1935) is an Estonian composer of classical and religious music. Since the late 1970s, Pärt has worked in a minimalist style that employs his self-invented compositional technique, tintinnabuli. Pärt's music is in part inspired by Gregorian chant. His most performed works include \"Fratres\" (1977), \"Spiegel im Spiegel\" (1978), and \"Für Alina\" (1976). Pärt has been the most performed living composer in the world for five consecutive years.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "49446160",
"score": 0.6445826292037964,
"text": "Gian Carlo Menotti (] ; July 7, 1911 – February 1, 2007) was an Italian-American composer and librettist. Although he often referred to himself as an American composer, he kept his Italian citizenship. He wrote the classic Christmas opera \"Amahl and the Night Visitors\", along with over two dozen other operas intended to appeal to popular taste.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "4009888",
"score": 0.644001841545105,
"text": "Gandalf (born Heinz Strobl, born 1952) is the name used by a new-age composer from Austria. He plays a wide variety of instruments including guitars, keyboards, synthesizers and sitars. He includes electronic sounds in his music. His music includes influences from music around the world. He released his first album \"Journey to an Imaginary Land\" on March 17, 1981, and his second \"Visions\" almost one year later on March 16, 1982. He has become one of Austria's most accomplished international musicians.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "155753",
"score": 0.6433789134025574,
"text": "Vladimir Davidovich Ashkenazy (Russian: Влади́мир Дави́дович Ашкена́зи , \"Vladimir Davidovich Ashkenazi\"; born 6 July 1937) is an internationally recognized solo pianist, chamber music performer, and conductor. He is originally from Russia and has held Icelandic citizenship since 1972. He has lived in Switzerland since 1978. Ashkenazy has collaborated with well-known orchestras and soloists. In addition, he has recorded a large storehouse of classical and romantic works. His recordings have earned him five Grammy awards plus Iceland's Order of the Falcon.",
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{
"id": "65174",
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"text": "Gustav Mahler (] ; 7 July 1860, Kaliště, Bohemia, now Czech Republic – 18 May 1911, Vienna, Austria-Hungary) was an Austrian late-Romantic composer, and one of the leading conductors of his generation. As a composer he acted as a bridge between the 19th century Austro-German tradition and the modernism of the early 20th century. While in his lifetime his status as a conductor was established beyond question, his own music gained wide popularity only after periods of relative neglect which included a ban on its performance in much of Europe during the Nazi era. After 1945 his compositions were rediscovered and championed by a new generation of listeners; Mahler then became one of the most frequently performed and recorded of all composers, a position he has sustained into the 21st century.",
"topk_rank": 15
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{
"id": "177304",
"score": 0.6426116824150085,
"text": "Heitor Villa-Lobos (] ; March 5, 1887November 17, 1959) was a Brazilian composer, described as \"the single most significant creative figure in 20th-century Brazilian art music\". Villa-Lobos has become the best-known South American composer of all time. A prolific composer, he wrote numerous orchestral, chamber, instrumental and vocal works, totaling over 2000 works by his death in 1959. His music was influenced by both Brazilian folk music and by stylistic elements from the European classical tradition, as exemplified by his \"Bachianas Brasileiras\" (Brazilian Bachian-pieces). His Etudes for guitar (1929) were dedicated to Andrés Segovia while his 5 Preludes (1940) were dedicated to Arminda Neves d’Almeida, a.k.a. \"Mindinha\", both are important works in the guitar repertory.",
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{
"id": "36632841",
"score": 0.6387636661529541,
"text": "György Orbán (born 12 July 1947 in Târgu Mureș, Romania) is a Romanian-born Hungarian composer.",
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{
"id": "618269",
"score": 0.6384381055831909,
"text": "Ernst Krenek (] , August 23, 1900December 22, 1991) was an Austrian, later American, composer of Czech origin. He explored atonality and other modern styles and wrote a number of books, including \"Music Here and Now\" (1939), a study of Johannes Ockeghem (1953), and \"Horizons Circled: Reflections on my Music\" (1974). Krenek wrote two pieces using the pseudonym Thornton Winsloe.",
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{
"id": "609081",
"score": 0.6375360488891602,
"text": "Miklós Rózsa (] ; 18 April 1907 – 27 July 1995) was a Hungarian-American composer trained in Germany (1925–1931), and active in France (1931–1935), England (1935–1940), and the United States (1940–1995), with extensive sojourns in Italy from 1953. Best known for his nearly one hundred film scores, he nevertheless maintained a steadfast allegiance to absolute concert music throughout what he called his \"double life.\"",
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] |
5a7bc5b3554299294a54aac4 | Which American sportscaster was produced by WAER, and now is employed by ESPN? | [
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"text": "WAER (88.3 FM) is a radio station in Syracuse, New York. It is located on the campus of Syracuse University, and is an auxiliary service of the school. The station features a jazz music and National Public Radio format, with a news and music staff providing programming around the clock. It is best known, however, for its sports staff, which has produced the likes of Bob Costas, Marv Albert, Dick Stockton, Mike Tirico, Sean McDonough, Bill Roth, Ian Eagle, Brian Higgins, Adam Schein, Hank Greenwald, Dave O'Brien (sportscaster), Andy Musser, Beth Mowins, Andrew Catalon, Carter Blackburn, Dave Pasch, Cory Provus, Jason Benetti, Todd Kalas and many others. Lou Reed also hosted a free-format show on WAER during his time at Syracuse University; this free-format radio tradition at Syracuse is carried on by WERW. Other alums include Ted Koppel, Jerry Stiller and Dick Clark."
},
{
"id": "1556402",
"score": 0.6451994776725769,
"text": "Sean McDonough (born May 13, 1962) is an American sportscaster, currently employed by ESPN."
}
] | [
{
"id": "5494580",
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"text": "Brett Haber is an American [[sportscaster]]. He is a [[play-by-play]] commentator and host for the [[Tennis Channel]] and several other national and regional sports outlets. Haber is also editor-at-large/sports editor for \"[[Washingtonian (magazine)|Washingtonian]]\" magazine.",
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{
"id": "7212864",
"score": 0.6377953886985779,
"text": "Matthew Ward Winer (born January 10, 1969) is an American television personality who is currently working for Turner Sports. Winer also was known for working eight years at ESPN.",
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{
"id": "7141794",
"score": 0.6374882459640503,
"text": "Ed Werder (born May 3, 1960 in Longmont, Colorado) is an American sports reporter. He was the Dallas-based bureau reporter for ESPN, primarily reporting on stories about the NFL before being laid off on April 26, 2017. From 1998 to 2017, Werder was a staple of the network's NFL coverage, as he contributed to shows such as \"SportsCenter\", \"NFL Live\", \"Sunday NFL Countdown\" (from a game site) and \"Monday Night Countdown\" (from the \"Monday Night Football\" site). Werder primarily reported on NFL news concerning the Dallas Cowboys.",
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"id": "18687960",
"score": 0.6352170705795288,
"text": "Bob Wischusen is an American sports commentator who is currently a college football and basketball voice for ESPN and ESPN International, the radio voice for the New York Jets on 98.7 ESPN and the MSG Radio Network respectively.",
"topk_rank": 3
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{
"id": "49740327",
"score": 0.6344510316848755,
"text": "Ed Berliner is an American news and sports anchor, businessman, journalist and Screen Actors Guild actor. He has been nominated for numerous National and Local Emmy Awards during a career that has included on-air and management roles at ESPN, Fox, CBS, NBC and other television, cable and radio stations and network.",
"topk_rank": 4
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{
"id": "2623828",
"score": 0.6332605481147766,
"text": "Michael Todd Tirico ( ; born December 13, 1966) is an American sportscaster. He is perhaps best known for his 10-year run as an NFL play-by-play announcer on ESPN's \"Monday Night Football\" from 2006 to 2015. Tirico called a multitude of programming for ESPN/ABC, including NBA basketball, golf, and tennis. He was one of the anchors of ESPN's coverage of the FIFA World Cup along with Bob Ley.",
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{
"id": "383267",
"score": 0.6323791742324829,
"text": "Michael Ray Wilbon ( ; born November 19, 1958) is an ESPN commentator and former sportswriter and columnist for \"The Washington Post\". He is an analyst for ESPN and has co-hosted \"Pardon the Interruption\" on ESPN with former \"Post\" writer Tony Kornheiser since 2001.",
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"id": "1397275",
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"text": "Brent Woody Musburger ( ; born May 26, 1939) is an American sportscaster, lead broadcaster and managing editor at Vegas Stats and Information Network (VSiN). He retired in January 2017 from the ESPN and ABC television networks. Formerly with CBS Sports and one of the original members of their program \"The NFL Today\", Musburger has also covered the NBA, MLB, NCAA football and basketball, and NASCAR and served as a studio host for games, a play-by-play man, and halftime host. He has also performed postgame wrap-up segments and covered championship trophy presentations. He is a member of the Montana Broadcaster's Association Hall of Fame.",
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{
"id": "12185947",
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"text": "Bill \"Rock\" Schroeder (born Alfred William Schroeder on September 7, 1958) is a former Major League Baseball player and a current television sports broadcaster. He currently provides color commentary for the Milwaukee Brewers, for whom he played six of his eight Major League seasons.",
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{
"id": "1273767",
"score": 0.6239849328994751,
"text": "Antwaan Randle El ( ; born August 17, 1979) is a former American football player who was a wide receiver in the National Football League (NFL) for nine seasons. He attended Indiana University where he played college football for the Indiana Hoosiers, and also played basketball and baseball as well. He is currently the sideline reporter for the Big Ten Network for interconference games that the Indiana football team plays.",
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"id": "964570",
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"text": "Robert A. Ley ( ; born March 16, 1955) is an American sports anchor and reporter for ESPN. A multiple Emmy Award-winner, he is the longest tenured on-air employee of the network, having joined ESPN just three days after the network's 1979 launch.",
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{
"id": "27431017",
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"text": "Sara Elizabeth Walsh (born April 12, 1978) is an American sportscaster who joined ESPN in May 2010. Walsh came to ESPN from WUSA-TV in Washington, D.C., where she served as the station’s weekend sports anchor and Redskins beat reporter from 2006 to 2010. Prior to WUSA, Walsh worked at WKRN in Nashville from 2003 to 2006, winning four regional Emmys in three years. She co-hosted the weekly “Monday Night Live” with Titans Coach Jeff Fisher, and hosted a weekly radio show with then Titans defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth. Walsh also served as Sports Director at WPGA in Macon, Georgia from 2001 to 2003, and began her career as a sports writer for the \"Beaches Leader\" newspaper in Jacksonville Beach. She was most recently an anchor on ESPN's \"SportsCenter\" until May 4, 2017, when she was let go by the network.",
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"id": "2468868",
"score": 0.62289959192276,
"text": "Colin Murray Cowherd (born January 6, 1964) is an American sports media personality. Cowherd began his broadcasting career as sports director of Las Vegas television station KVBC, and as a sports anchor on several other stations before joining ESPN in 2003, where he hosted a radio show on the ESPN Radio network, and also became one of the original hosts of ESPN's television program \"SportsNation\", as well as \"Colin's New Football Show\". Cowherd is the host of \"The Herd with Colin Cowherd\" on Fox Sports Radio and Fox Sports 1. The Herd is FS1's top rated program. He is also a host of Speak For Yourself - also on FS1.",
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{
"id": "14708899",
"score": 0.6215149760246277,
"text": "Wendi Nix (born September 17, 1974) is an American anchor and sports reporter for ESPN.",
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"id": "20578250",
"score": 0.6178022027015686,
"text": "Adrian Wojnarowski ( ), nicknamed Woj, (born 1969) is an American sports columnist, reporter and author. Of Polish descent, he is currently employed with ESPN, having previously covered the NBA for Yahoo! Sports.",
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"id": "5937935",
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"text": "Tom McCarthy (born July 5, 1968 in Jersey City, New Jersey) is an American sports broadcaster. He is the play-by-play announcer for Philadelphia Phillies television broadcasts and also calls National Football League games for Westwood One and called select NFL games for CBS beginning in 2014 after filling for Sam Rosen in week 6 in 2013. McCarthy has also been the play-by-play voice of Saint Joseph's University men's and women's basketball teams.",
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"id": "3716227",
"score": 0.6166708469390869,
"text": "Michelle Bonner is a former ESPN news anchor who joined the network in March 2005 as an ESPNEWS anchor and occasionally anchored \"SportsCenter\", ESPN’s flagship sports news program. Bonner came to ESPN from CNN in Atlanta, Georgia, where she was a sports anchor from 2003–2005.",
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"id": "1592766",
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"text": "GameNight is a weekend sports talk radio show hosted by John Seibel. \"GameNight\" is regarded as being the flagship series of ESPN Radio, being the network's first longform program and airing every night since the network's 1992 debut until July 21, 2008. On that day the weeknight run was replaced by Football Tonight and SportsCenter Nightly. Now the show airs Saturdays from 8pm ET to 12am and Sunday's from 10pm to 1am ET. The program features in-game updates, guests ranging from superstars to experts, and in-depth analysis on the day's sports stories. It is broadcast from ESPN Headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut.",
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{
"id": "6801612",
"score": 0.6154382824897766,
"text": "Adam Schefter (born December 21, 1966) is an American sports writer, television analyst and NFL insider for ESPN.",
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{
"id": "27756939",
"score": 0.6151989102363586,
"text": "Steve Weissman is an American sportscaster who joined ESPN in January 2010. He came to ESPN from Comcast Sportsnet in California, where he served as the network's lead anchor. Prior to CSN, he worked at WNEM in Saginaw, Michigan, winning multiple Michigan Association of Broadcasters Awards.",
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] |
5ae5579755429960a22e02c0 | What If... is a 2010 drama film that stars an actork best known as Cliff Clavin in what? | [
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"id": "25405543",
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"text": "What If... is a 2010 drama film directed by Dallas Jenkins. It stars Kevin Sorbo, John Ratzenberger, Kristy Swanson and Debby Ryan. The film was released in theaters on August 20, 2010. It is the first film in a two-movie partnership between Jenkins Entertainment and Pure Flix Entertainment."
},
{
"id": "98713",
"score": 0.5708778500556946,
"text": "John Dezso Ratzenberger (born April 6, 1947) is an American actor, voice actor, and entrepreneur. He is best known as Cliff Clavin in \"Cheers\". He is also known for his extensive vocal work in Pixar Animation Studios' films, notably Hamm in the \"Toy Story\" franchise and Mack in the \"Cars\" franchise."
}
] | [
{
"id": "26981928",
"score": 0.6183300614356995,
"text": "Samuel George Claflin (born 27 June 1986) is an English actor. He is known for portraying Finnick Odair in \"The Hunger Games\" film series, Philip Swift in \"\", and Will Traynor in \"Me Before You\".",
"topk_rank": 0
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{
"id": "40667409",
"score": 0.608549952507019,
"text": "What If... is a 2012 Greek drama film directed by Christoforos Papakaliatis. The film won the Best Sound award in Hellenic Film Academy Awards.",
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{
"id": "515650",
"score": 0.6009304523468018,
"text": "Clifford C. \"Cliff\" Clavin, Jr. (born 1947 or 1949), is a fictional character on the American television show \"Cheers\" co-created (and played) by John Ratzenberger. A postal worker, he is the bar's know-it-all and was a contestant on the game show \"Jeopardy!\" Cliff was not originally scripted in the series' pilot episode, \"Give Me a Ring Sometime\", but the producers decided to add a know-it-all character and Ratzenberger helped flesh it out. The actor made guest appearances as Cliff on \"St. Elsewhere\", \"Wings\" and \"Frasier\".",
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{
"id": "1134660",
"score": 0.5859785676002502,
"text": "Clifford Vivian Devon \"Cliff\" Curtis (born 27 July 1968) is a New Zealand actor whose film credits include \"The Dark Horse\" (2014), \"Whale Rider\" (2002), \"Blow\" (2001), and \"Once Were Warriors\" (1994). He's also had television series roles on NBC's \"Trauma\" and \"Body of Proof\", and ABC's \"Missing\". He played Travis, a lead character on the AMC horror-drama series \"Fear the Walking Dead\", a companion series of \"The Walking Dead\" from 2015 to 2017. Ethnically Māori, his many character roles have included a range of ethnicities, such as Latin American and Arab. Curtis is co-owner of the independent New Zealand production company Whenua Films.",
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{
"id": "1342890",
"score": 0.5791181325912476,
"text": "Idris Akuna Elba {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} ( , born 6 September 1972) is an English actor, producer, musician, and DJ. He is known for playing the narcotrafficker Stringer Bell in the HBO series \"The Wire\", DCI John Luther on the BBC One series \"Luther\", and Nelson Mandela in the biographical film \"\" (2013). He has been nominated four times for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Miniseries or Television Film, winning one, and was nominated five times for a Primetime Emmy Award.",
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{
"id": "23734853",
"score": 0.5790096521377563,
"text": "Somewhere is a 2010 American drama film written and directed by Sofia Coppola. The film follows Johnny Marco (played by Stephen Dorff), a newly famous actor, as he recuperates from a minor injury at the Chateau Marmont, a well-known Hollywood retreat. Despite money, fame and professional success, Marco is trapped in an existential crisis and has an emotionally empty daily life. When his ex-wife suffers an unexplained breakdown and goes away, she leaves Cleo (Elle Fanning), their 11-year-old daughter, in his care. They spend time together and her presence helps Marco mature and accept adult responsibility. The film explores ennui among Hollywood stars, the father–daughter relationship and offers an oblique comedy of show business, particularly Hollywood film-making and the life of a \"star\".",
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{
"id": "40032707",
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"text": "The F Word (released in some countries as What If?) is a 2013 Canadian romantic comedy film directed by Michael Dowse and written by Elan Mastai, based on TJ Dawe and Michael Rinaldi's play \"Toothpaste and Cigars\". The film stars Daniel Radcliffe, Zoe Kazan, Megan Park, Adam Driver, Mackenzie Davis and Rafe Spall and follows a pair of best friends who begin to have feelings for each other.",
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{
"id": "39679268",
"score": 0.5780506134033203,
"text": "What If... is an American web series that acts as a crossover among three ABC soap operas, \"General Hospital\", \"All My Children\" and \"One Life to Live\". The ten-part series was originally streamed on ABC.com from July 12 to August 30, 2010. It won a Daytime Emmy Award for New Approaches - Daytime Entertainment.",
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{
"id": "4323261",
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"text": "\"What Is... Cliff Clavin?\" is an eighth season episode of the American television series \"Cheers\". It was directed by Andy Ackerman rather than James Burrowswho directed 243 out of 273 episodes of the showand originally aired January 18, 1990 on NBC. In this episode, Cliff Clavin (John Ratzenberger) appears on the game show \"Jeopardy!\" and game show host Alex Trebek guest stars as himself. Cliff racks up US$ during the game but loses it all in the final round, and he unsuccessfully demands that his answer be accepted. Back at Cheers, Trebek encounters Cliff and announces his resignation from the game show, prompting Cliff to reconsider. Unbeknownst to Cliff, Trebek did that mainly to avoid him. Meanwhile, Sam retrieves his address book from a teenage boy Timmy, who repeatedly calls Sam's past dates, and ironically encourages Timmy to stick to girls around his age. The episode received praise from critics for its concept and its guest star.",
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{
"id": "1061583",
"score": 0.5715996026992798,
"text": "David Clennon (born May 10, 1943) is an American actor. He is known for his Emmy-nominated portrayal of Miles Drentell in the ABC series \"thirtysomething\" and \"Once and Again\", as well as his role as Palmer in the John Carpenter's cult classic film \"The Thing\". He has been frequently cast in films directed by Hal Ashby and Costa-Gavras.",
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{
"id": "1290456",
"score": 0.5695931911468506,
"text": "If... is a series of BBC drama-documentaries broadcast on BBC Two from March to April 2004 and December 2004 to January 2005, each of which considers the potentially catastrophic political or social consequences that might arise from current trends in the United Kingdom. Using a drama with interviews from experts, then a discussion of the programme with a panel of experts from both sides of an argument. During the show a televote of opinion is cast.",
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{
"id": "158889",
"score": 0.5674493908882141,
"text": "George Timothy Clooney (born May 6, 1961) is an American actor, director, producer, screenwriter, activist, businessman, and philanthropist. He has received three Golden Globe Awards for his work as an actor and two Academy Awards, one for acting in \"Syriana\" (2006) and the other for co-producing \"Argo\" (2012).",
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{
"id": "24914067",
"score": 0.5669859647750854,
"text": "Tim Flavin (born January 13, 1959) is an American actor. He is the first American actor to receive the Laurence Olivier Award in 1984 for his performance in the musical On Your Toes.",
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{
"id": "966711",
"score": 0.5635300874710083,
"text": "Clive Owen (born 3 October 1964) is an English actor who first gained recognition in the United Kingdom for playing the lead role in the ITV series \"Chancer\" from 1990 to 1991. He then received critical acclaim for his work in the film \"Close My Eyes\" (1991) before earning international attention for his performance as a struggling writer in \"Croupier\" (1998). In 2005, he won a Golden Globe and a BAFTA Award and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in the drama \"Closer\" (2004).",
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{
"id": "1995821",
"score": 0.5634494423866272,
"text": "Rafe Joseph Spall (born 10 March 1983) is an English actor. He is best known for his roles in \"The Shadow Line\", \"Pete versus Life\", \"One Day\", \"Anonymous\", \"Prometheus\", \"Life of Pi\" and \"The Big Short\".",
"topk_rank": 14
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{
"id": "13391046",
"score": 0.5612611174583435,
"text": "Tobias Alistair Patrick \"Toby\" Kebbell (born 9 July 1982) is an English stage and film actor. He is known for his roles in films such as \"Dead Man's Shoes\" (2004), \"RocknRolla\" (2008), \"\" (2010), \"War Horse\" (2011), \"Wrath of the Titans\" (2012), \"Dawn of the Planet of the Apes\" (2014), \"Fantastic Four\" (2015), \"Warcraft\" (2016), \"A Monster Calls\" (2016), and \"Gold\" (2016). He is also known for his work in the \"Black Mirror\" episode, \"The Entire History of You\".",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "4411449",
"score": 0.561251163482666,
"text": "James Anthony Sturgess (born 16 May 1981) is an English actor and singer-songwriter. His breakthrough role was appearing as Jude in the musical romance drama film \"Across the Universe\" (2007). In 2008, he played the male lead role of Ben Campbell in \"21\". In 2009, he played Gavin Kossef in the crime drama \"Crossing Over\", appearing with Harrison Ford, Ray Liotta and Ashley Judd. In 2010, Sturgess starred in the film, \"The Way Back\", directed by Peter Weir. Sturgess co-starred in the epic science fiction film \"Cloud Atlas\", which began filming in September 2011 and was released in October 2012.",
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"id": "17923997",
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"text": "All Good Things is a 2010 American mystery/crime romantic drama film directed by Andrew Jarecki starring Ryan Gosling and Kirsten Dunst. Inspired by the life of accused murderer Robert Durst, the film chronicles the life of the wealthy son of a New York real estate tycoon, and a series of murders linked to him, as well as his volatile relationship with his wife and her subsequent unsolved disappearance.",
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{
"id": "223253",
"score": 0.5594387054443359,
"text": "John Paul Cusack ( ; born June 28, 1966) is an American actor, producer and screenwriter. He began acting on films during the 1980s. Cusack was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for his performance in \"High Fidelity\" (2000). Other films including \"Grosse Pointe Blank\" (1997), \"Being John Malkovich\" (1999), \"1408\" (2007), \"2012\" (2009), \"Hot Tub Time Machine\" (2010), and \"The Raven\" (2012).",
"topk_rank": 18
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{
"id": "2134246",
"score": 0.5591578483581543,
"text": "Patrick George Considine (born 5 September 1973) is an English actor, filmmaker, and musician. He has played a number of dark, troubled, and morally or mentally ambiguous characters. Considine frequently collaborates with director Shane Meadows. He has starred in supporting roles in films such as \"24 Hour Party People\" (2002), \"In America\" (2003), \"My Summer of Love\" (2004), \"Cinderella Man\" (2005), \"Hot Fuzz\" (2007), \"The Bourne Ultimatum\" (2007), \"The World's End\" (2013) and \"Macbeth\" (2015), and leading roles in \"A Room for Romeo Brass\" (1999), \"Dead Man's Shoes\" (2004), \"The Cry of the Owl\" (2009), \"Blitz\" (2011), \"Honour\" (2014) and \"The Girl With All The Gifts\" (2016).",
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}
] |
5a792421554299148911fa09 | Who performs lead vocals along with John Nolan, in the band produced by Mike Sapone ? | [
{
"id": "4022358",
"score": 0.7058348655700684,
"text": "Mike Sapone is an American record producer, composer, audio engineer, and mixer whose credits include producing records for bands such as Brand New, Taking Back Sunday, Mayday Parade, Sorority Noise, O'Brother, Cymbals Eat Guitars, and Public Enemy."
},
{
"id": "304558",
"score": 0.5654390454292297,
"text": "Taking Back Sunday is an American rock band from Long Island, New York. The band was formed by guitarist Eddie Reyes in 1999. The band's members are Adam Lazzara (lead vocals), John Nolan (lead guitar, keyboards, vocals), Eddie Reyes (rhythm guitar), Shaun Cooper (bass guitar) and Mark O'Connell (drums)."
}
] | [
{
"id": "2533900",
"score": 0.7077111005783081,
"text": "John Thomas Nolan (born February 24, 1978) is an American musician from Long Island, New York. He is the current guitarist and co-lead vocalist of Taking Back Sunday, and the former lead singer, pianist, and guitarist of Straylight Run.",
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"id": "3452196",
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"text": "Mike Nolan (born Michael Nolan, 7 December 1954) is a singer who is best known as one of the four original members of the British pop group, Bucks Fizz. He was born in Dublin, Republic of Ireland, but brought up in the UK, where he still resides. As a member of Bucks Fizz, he won the 1981 Eurovision Song Contest and achieved 20 UK top 60 singles between 1981 and 1988, including three number one hits. He was a member of the group until 1996. Since 2004, he has been a member of the group The Original Bucks Fizz or OBF, along with other former Bucks Fizz members Cheryl Baker, Shelley Preston (from 2004–2009) and Jay Aston (since 2009).",
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"id": "53207207",
"score": 0.6052206754684448,
"text": "Taking Back Sunday is an American rock band from Long Island, New York, formed in 1999 and featuring the current line-up of Adam Lazzara (lead vocals), John Nolan (lead guitar, keyboards, vocals), Eddie Reyes (rhythm guitar), Shaun Cooper (bass guitar), and Mark O'Connell (drums, percussion), accompanied on tour by Nathan Cogan (guitars, keyboards). The group was originally formed by Antonio Longo, John Nolan, Eddie Reyes, Jesse Lacey, and Steven DeJoseph. The band has gone through multiple line-up changes in their career spanning seven studio albums. There have been eleven official members of Taking Back Sunday, four touring members, and twenty-three session members.",
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"text": "Gabriel Eduardo \"Gabe\" Saporta (born October 11, 1979) is an Uruguayan-American musician and entrepreneur. Through late 2015, he was a singer and the primary creative force behind the electronic pop group Cobra Starship. On November 10, 2015, after nearly ten years and two Billboard Hot 100 top 10 hits, Saporta announced that the band would stop its work, and that he would be focusing on helping other musicians through his new venture, The Artist Group. Prior to Cobra Starship, Saporta had been the lead singer, bassist, and lyricist for the punk band Midtown.",
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{
"id": "5135221",
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"text": "Shannon Leto ( ; born March 9, 1970) is an American musician and songwriter best known as the drummer of rock band Thirty Seconds to Mars. He co-founded the group in 1998 in Los Angeles, California, with his younger brother Jared. Their debut album, \"30 Seconds to Mars\" (2002), was released to positive reviews but only to limited success. The band achieved worldwide fame with the release of their second album \"A Beautiful Lie\" (2005). Their following releases, \"This Is War\" (2009) and \"Love, Lust, Faith and Dreams\" (2013), received further critical and commercial success. As of September 2014, the band has sold over 15 million albums worldwide.",
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{
"id": "2004820",
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"text": "John McCrea (born June 25, 1964) is an American singer and musician. He is a founding member of the band Cake. He is the vocalist and primary lyricist for the band, in addition to playing rhythm acoustic guitar, vibraslap, and piano. He also programs drums and does mixing work while he and the rest of the band have produced all of their albums.",
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{
"id": "37746013",
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"text": "Nolan Lambroza, better known as Sir Nolan, is a songwriter and record producer based in Los Angeles. He has worked with notable artists such as Nick Jonas, Selena Gomez, Demi Lovato, Justin Bieber, Lil Wayne, Jason Derulo, Enrique Iglesias, Kelly Clarkson, Pitbull, Chris Brown, Poppy, Christina Aguilera, Magic, The Wanted, Rita Ora, Dan + Shay, Lady Antebellum, The Band Perry and many more.",
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{
"id": "41642771",
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"text": "Happiness Is is the sixth studio album by American rock band Taking Back Sunday, released on March 18, 2014 through Hopeless Records. The album, produced by Marc Jacob Hudson and Mike Sapone, is the second consecutive album to feature the band's revived lineup of vocalist Adam Lazzara, guitarist/vocalist John Nolan, guitarist Eddie Reyes, bassist Shaun Cooper and drummer Mark O'Connell.",
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{
"id": "2010284",
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"text": "Johnette Napolitano (born September 22, 1957, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California) is an American singer, songwriter and bassist best known as the lead vocalist/songwriter and bassist for the alternative rock group Concrete Blonde.",
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{
"id": "39087518",
"score": 0.5980889201164246,
"text": "Nolan Sipe is an American record producer and songwriter.",
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{
"id": "632980",
"score": 0.5978314280509949,
"text": "Nick Steven Oliveri (born October 21, 1971) is an American multi-instrumentalist, singer and songwriter from Palm Desert, California. Oliveri is perhaps best known as a member of Queens of the Stone Age from 1998 to 2004. Oliveri is also a solo artist and frequent contributor to his friends' albums and tours, including Winnebago Deal, Mark Lanegan Band, Masters of Reality, Turbonegro and Moistboyz, among many others. Oliveri is currently the frontman of his project, Mondo Generator, a punk and metal hybrid that he formed in 1997.",
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{
"id": "27413424",
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"text": "The Collaboration Experiment is a 2009 downloadable album by John Nolan.",
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{
"id": "3284023",
"score": 0.5955100059509277,
"text": "John William Feldmann (born June 29, 1967) is an American musician and producer. He has produced and co-written songs accounting for sales of more than 34 million albums worldwide—6 million alone from 2011 to 2015—and is also the lead singer/guitarist of the band Goldfinger. He is an animal rights advocate.",
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{
"id": "2033381",
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"text": "Bradley Arnold (born September 27, 1978) is an American musician, best known as the lead singer of the band 3 Doors Down.",
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{
"id": "20086219",
"score": 0.5931205749511719,
"text": "John Kurzweg (born September 5, 1960) is an American record producer and musician who first became known for his work with successful post-grunge bands Creed and Puddle of Mudd in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Other artists he has worked with include Godsmack, Eagle Eye Cherry, Jewel, Big Head Todd & the Monsters, Social Burn, No Address, Hurt, DoubleDrive, Chelsea Bain as well as the Athens southern rock band Tishamingo.",
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{
"id": "636083",
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"text": "Joshua Michael Homme ( ; born May 17, 1973) is an American singer, songwriter, musician, record producer, and actor. He is the founder and only continuous member of the rock band Queens of the Stone Age, in which he sings and plays guitar, as well as occasionally playing piano, drums, and bass. He also serves as the band's primary songwriter.",
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{
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"text": "Loon Lake was an indie rock band based in Melbourne, consisting of brothers Sam Nolan (lead vocals, guitar), Simon Nolan (guitar, vocals), and Nick Nolan (guitars, production), as well as Tim Lowe (bass), and Ricky (drums).",
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"text": "Michael John \"Mick\" Harvey (born 29 August 1958) is an Australian musician, singer-songwriter, composer, arranger and record producer. A multi-instrumentalist, he is best known for his long-term collaborations with Nick Cave, with whom he formed the Boys Next Door, the Birthday Party and Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.",
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"text": "Gary Francis Caine Cherone ( ; born July 26, 1961) is an American rock singer and songwriter. He is best known for his work as the lead vocalist of the Boston rock group Extreme, as well as his short stint as the lead vocalist for Van Halen on their 11th album \"Van Halen III\" and subsequent tour. In recent years he has released solo recordings. In 2007, he reunited with Extreme.",
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"text": "John Goodmanson (born 1968) is an American recording engineer and indie rock record producer. He is best known for producing multiple albums by Bikini Kill, Blonde Redhead, Death Cab for Cutie, Los Campesinos!, and Sleater-Kinney.",
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] |
5a72eedb5542994cef4bc411 | What is the name of the English football club that had played in Runcorn, Widnes, and Prescot during its existence and who footballer Danny Byrne had previously played for? | [
{
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"text": "Daniel \"Danny\" Byrne (born 30 November 1984) is an English footballer who most recently played for Ashton United. He was born in Frimley, Surrey, and plays as a forward. He has previously played for Manchester United, Hartlepool United, Reading, Southport, Chester City, Droylsden, Runcorn FC Halton, Leigh RMI, Witton Albion, Newcastle Town, Mossley and Flixton. He signed for Ashton United in September 2009."
},
{
"id": "1615857",
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"text": "Runcorn F.C. Halton was an English football club that played in Runcorn, Widnes and Prescot at various points during its existence."
}
] | [
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"text": "Rochdale Association Football Club is a professional football club based in the town of Rochdale, Greater Manchester, England, that competes in League One, the third-highest division overall in the English football league system. Nicknamed \"the Dale\", the club was founded in 1907, moved to its current stadium, Spotland Stadium, in 1920 and were accepted into the Football League in 1921. Since then, the club has remained in the bottom two professional divisions of English Football.",
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"text": "Bradford City Association Football Club—also known informally as Bradford City—are an English football club founded in Bradford in 1903 to introduce the sport to the West Riding of Yorkshire, which until then had been almost entirely inclined towards rugby league. Before they had even played their first game, City were elected to the Football League to replace Doncaster Rovers in Division Two, and took over the Valley Parade stadium, which has been their permanent home ground ever since. The club won the Division Two title in 1908 and the FA Cup in 1911, both under the management of Peter O'Rourke, before they were relegated from Division One in 1921–22.",
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"text": "Widnes Football Club are an English association football club, based in Widnes, Cheshire. They are currently members of the North West Counties League Premier Division , playing their home matches at Halton Stadium, Widnes. They are affiliated to the Liverpool County FA.",
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{
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"text": "Widnes Vikings are an English rugby league club based in Widnes, Cheshire.",
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"id": "7890613",
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"text": "Bradford City A.F.C. is an English professional association football club based in Bradford, West Yorkshire. Bradford City been a member of the Football League since its formation in 1903. The following contains two lists; a list of all current players who have made at least one appearance in the Football League, and a list of former players who have made 50 or more appearances in the Football League for Bradford City.",
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"id": "431144",
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"text": "Bradford City Association Football Club is a professional association football club based in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England. The team play in League One, the third tier of English football.",
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"text": "Liverpool Football Club is an English association football club based in Liverpool, Merseyside, which competes in the top tier of English football, for the 2015–16 season. The club was formed in 1892 following a disagreement between the board of Everton and club president John Houlding, who owned the club's ground, Anfield. The dispute over rent resulted in Everton leaving Anfield for Goodison Park, which left Houlding with an empty stadium. Not content for his ground to lay idle, he created his own club: Liverpool. Liverpool joined the Lancashire League on their foundation before the 1892–93 season. They ended their inaugural season as league champions, and were elected to The Football League soon afterwards. The club remained in The Football League until 1992, when its First Division was superseded as English football's top level by the newly formed Premier League.",
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"text": "Curzon Ashton Football Club is a semi-professional football club based in the market town of Ashton-under-Lyne, Greater Manchester, England, that competes in the National League North, the sixth-highest division overall in the English football league system, and are members of the Manchester County Football Association. Nicknamed \"the Nash\", the club was founded in 1963 and moved to its current stadium, Tameside Stadium, in 2005.",
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"text": "Tranmere Rovers Football Club is an English association football club based in Birkenhead, Wirral. Founded in 1884, they played their first games under the name Belmont F.C.; in 1885, before the start of their second season, they adopted the name Tranmere Rovers. In 1889, Tranmere entered the West Lancashire League, and progressed through the Combination, the Lancashire Combination and the Central League. On 27 August 1921, as founder members of Division Three North, they won their first Football League match 4–1 against Crewe Alexandra at Prenton Park. Tranmere played in the Football League ever since then, with the exception of the war years 1939-1946, and right up until 2015 at which time they were relegated from the Football League down to the National League. Their highest league finish was fourth in the First Division which, at the time, was the second tier of the league pyramid, in the 1992–93 season.",
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"id": "245357",
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"text": "Blackpool Football Club is a professional association football club based in the seaside town of Blackpool, Lancashire, England. For the 2017–18 season, they are competing in League One, the third tier of English football. Founded in 1887, Blackpool's home ground has been Bloomfield Road since 1901. Their main nickname is \"the Seasiders\", but they are also called \"the 'Pool\" and \"the Tangerines\", the last in reference to the colour of their home kit, which is often referred to as orange (but really tangerine).",
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{
"id": "49887453",
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"text": "Tranmere Rovers Football Club is an English professional association football club founded in 1884, and based in Birkenhead, Wirral. Originally known as Belmont Football Club, they adopted their current name in 1885. They were a founder member of Division Three North in 1921, and were a member of The Football League until 2015, when they were relegated to the National League, the fifth tier of English football.",
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{
"id": "16368418",
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"text": "A.F.C. Liverpool is a semi-professional football club based in Liverpool, England. The club were formed in 2008 by 1,000 supporters of Liverpool Football Club; a not-for-profit organisation, it is run on a one-member, one-vote system. They are currently members of the North West Counties League Premier Division and play at Marine's Rossett Park.",
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"id": "3659081",
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"text": "Wembley Football Club is an English semi-professional football club based in Wembley, in the London Borough of Brent, London, England. They currently play in the Spartan South Midlands League Premier Division . They play in red and white and are nicknamed \"The Lions\". This is due to the lion in the centre of the coat of arms for the old Borough of Wembley.",
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"text": "Plymouth Argyle Football Club are an English professional association football club based in Plymouth, Devon. They compete in Football League Two as of the 2015–16 season, the fourth division of the English football league system. The club was formed in 1886 as Argyle Football Club, a name which was retained until 1903 when the club became professional and were elected to the Southern Football League. The club also entered English football's premier knockout competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup, for the first time that same year. The club joined the Football League in 1920, and have competed there since then, achieving multiple league titles, promotions and relegations.",
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{
"id": "3893633",
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"text": "Bradford Town Football Club is a football club based in Bradford on Avon in Wiltshire, England. They are currently members of the Western League Premier Division and play at the Bradford on Avon Sports and Social Club.",
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"id": "37570206",
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"text": "Tranmere Rovers Football Club is an English association football club based in Birkenhead, Wirral. Founded in 1884, they played their first games under the name Belmont F.C.; in 1885, before the start of their second season, they adopted the name Tranmere Rovers. In 1889, Tranmere entered the West Lancashire League, and progressed through the Combination, the Lancashire Combination and the Central League. On 27 August 1921, as founder members of Division Three North, they won their first Football League match 4–1 against Crewe Alexandra at Prenton Park. Tranmere have played in the Football League ever since, with the exception of 1939–1946, when competitive football was suspended due to the Second World War. Their highest league finish was fourth in the First Division which, at the time, was the second tier of the league pyramid, in the 1992–93 season.",
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{
"id": "37030065",
"score": 0.654175341129303,
"text": "Tranmere Rovers Football Club is an English association football club based in Birkenhead, Wirral. Founded in 1884, they played their first games under the name Belmont F.C.; in 1885, before the start of their second season, they adopted the name Tranmere Rovers. In 1889, Tranmere entered the West Lancashire League, and progressed through the Combination, the Lancashire Combination and the Central League. On 27 August 1921, as founder members of Division Three North, they won their first Football League match 4–1 against Crewe Alexandra at Prenton Park. Tranmere have played in the Football League ever since, with the exception of 1939–1946, when competitive football was suspended due to the Second World War. Their highest league finish was fourth in the First Division which, at the time, was the second tier of the league pyramid, in the 1992–93 season.",
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{
"id": "376725",
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"text": "Burnley F.C. ( ) is a professional association football club based in Burnley, Lancashire. The team have played in the Premier League, the highest level of English football, since winning England's second tier league (the Football League Championship) in the 2015–16 season. Nicknamed \"The Clarets\", due to the dominant colour of their home shirts, they were one of the founder members of the Football League in 1888.",
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{
"id": "13356621",
"score": 0.6522818803787231,
"text": "Wolverhampton United Football Club is a football club based in Wolverhampton, England. They are based at Prestwood Road in the Wednesfield area of the city. They play in the West Midlands (Regional) League Division Two . In early July 2017 Wolverhampton United invited Danny Carter and Andrew Carrier with their management team to take the reins.",
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{
"id": "69219",
"score": 0.6520440578460693,
"text": "Tranmere Rovers Football Club is a professional association football club based in Birkenhead, Merseyside, England. Founded in 1884 as Belmont Football Club, they adopted their current name in 1885. They were a founder member of Division Three North in 1921, and were a member of The Football League until 2015, when they were relegated to the National League, the fifth tier of English football.",
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] |
5ade0ee65542997545bbbe36 | According to the 2010 census, what was the population of the city in which Vince Genna Stadium is located? | [
{
"id": "6788170",
"score": 0.7474210262298584,
"text": "Vince Genna Stadium is a baseball park in the northwest United States, located in Bend, Oregon. Opened in 1964, it currently hosts college summer baseball league and area American Legion games."
},
{
"id": "130730",
"score": 0.8,
"text": "Bend is a city in, and the county seat of, Deschutes County, Oregon, United States. It is the principal city of the Bend, Oregon Metropolitan Statistical Area. Bend is Central Oregon's largest city, and despite its modest size, is the \"de facto\" metropolis of the region, owing to the low population density of that area. Bend recorded a population of 76,693 at the time of the 2010 U.S. Census, up from 52,029 at the 2000 census. The estimated population of the city as of 2013 is 81,236. Bend's metro population was estimated at 165,954 as of July 1, 2013. The Bend MSA is the fifth largest metropolitan area in Oregon."
}
] | [
{
"id": "110149",
"score": 0.6687609553337097,
"text": "Suwanee is a city in Gwinnett County in the U.S. state of Georgia. As of the 2010 census, the population was 15,355; this had grown to an estimated 18,694 as of 2015. Suwanee was the practicing home of the Atlanta Falcons football team from 1979 to 2001 and was voted among the Top 10 Best Places to Live by \"Money\" in 2007. In 2012, Suwanee was rated by \"Kiplinger\" as the third best place in America for raising families, and in 2013, Suwanee was identified as one of the nation's 10 Best Towns for Families by \"Family Circle\" magazine.",
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"id": "130563",
"score": 0.6496890783309937,
"text": "Claremore is a city and the county seat of Rogers County, Oklahoma, United States. The population was 18,581 at the 2010 census, a 17.1 percent increase from 15,873 at the 2000 census. It is part of the Tulsa Metropolitan Area and home to Rogers State University. It is best known as the home of entertainer Will Rogers.",
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{
"id": "109028",
"score": 0.6495574712753296,
"text": "Fort Lauderdale ( ; frequently abbreviated as Ft. Lauderdale) is a city in the U.S. state of Florida, 28 mi north of Miami. It is the county seat of Broward County. As of the 2010 census, the city had a population of 165,521 in 2010.",
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{
"id": "11232",
"score": 0.6471834778785706,
"text": "Fort Wayne is a city in the U.S. state of Indiana and the seat of Allen County. Located in northeastern Indiana, the city is 18 mi west of the Ohio border and 50 mi south of the Michigan border. With an estimated population of 264,488 in 2016, Fort Wayne is the 77th most populous city in the United States and the second largest in Indiana, after Indianapolis. It is the principal city of the Fort Wayne metropolitan area, consisting of Allen, Wells, and Whitley counties, a combined population of 419,453 as of 2011. In addition to the three core counties, the combined statistical area (CSA) includes Adams, DeKalb, Huntington, Noble, and Steuben counties, with an estimated population of 615,077.",
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{
"id": "124531",
"score": 0.6453613638877869,
"text": "Genola is a city in Morrison County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 75 at the 2010 census.",
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{
"id": "112300",
"score": 0.6449300050735474,
"text": "Noblesville is a city in, and the county seat of, Hamilton County, Indiana, United States, located just north of Indianapolis. The population was 51,969 at the 2010 census making it the 14th largest city/town in the state, up from 19th in 2007. As of 2016 the estimated population was 60,183. The city is part of Delaware, Fall Creek, Noblesville, and Wayne townships.",
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{
"id": "109827",
"score": 0.6433546543121338,
"text": "Deltona is a city in the U.S. state of Florida and the most populous city in Volusia County. It is located on the northern shore of Lake Monroe along the St. Johns River in central Florida. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 85,182. The city is part of the Deltona–Daytona Beach–Ormond Beach, FL Metropolitan Statistical Area and the larger Orlando–Deltona–Daytona Beach, FL Combined Statistical Area.",
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{
"id": "260415",
"score": 0.643206775188446,
"text": "Menomonie is a city in and the county seat of Dunn County in the western part of the U.S. state of Wisconsin. The city's population was 16,264 as of the 2010 census.",
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{
"id": "100584",
"score": 0.6424528360366821,
"text": "Terre Haute ( ) is a city in and the county seat of Vigo County, Indiana, United States, near the state's western border with Illinois. As of the 2010 census, the city had a total population of 60,785 and its metropolitan area had a population of 170,943.",
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{
"id": "91333",
"score": 0.6422321796417236,
"text": "Danville is an independent city in the Commonwealth of Virginia. As of the 2010 census, the population was 43,055. It is bounded by Pittsylvania County, Virginia and Caswell County, North Carolina. It hosts the Danville Braves baseball club of the Appalachian League.",
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{
"id": "125458",
"score": 0.6414191126823425,
"text": "Asbury Park is a city in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States, located on the Jersey Shore and part of the New York City Metropolitan Area. As of the 2010 United States Census, the city's population was 16,116, reflecting a decline of 814 (−4.8%) from the 16,930 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn increased by 131 (+0.8%) from the 16,799 counted in the 1990 Census.",
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{
"id": "112405",
"score": 0.641350269317627,
"text": "Winona Lake is a town in Wayne Township, Kosciusko County, in the U.S. state of Indiana, and the major suburb of Warsaw. The population was 4,908 at the 2010 census.",
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},
{
"id": "104844",
"score": 0.6390555500984192,
"text": "Auburn is a city in Lee County, Alabama, United States. It is the largest city in eastern Alabama with a 2016 population of 63,118. It is a principal city of the Auburn-Opelika Metropolitan Area. The Auburn-Opelika, AL MSA with a population of 158,991, along with the Columbus, GA-AL MSA and Tuskegee, Alabama, comprises the greater Columbus-Auburn-Opelika, GA-AL CSA, a region home to 501,649 residents.",
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{
"id": "120217",
"score": 0.6385926604270935,
"text": "Orono ( ) is a city on the northern shores of Lake Minnetonka in Hennepin County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 7,437 at the 2010 census.",
"topk_rank": 13
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{
"id": "110096",
"score": 0.6384889483451843,
"text": "Rome is the largest city in and the county seat of Floyd County, Georgia, United States. Located in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, it is the principal city of the Rome, Georgia, Metropolitan Statistical Area, which encompasses all of Floyd County. At the 2010 census, the city had a population of 36,303. It is the largest city in Northwest Georgia and the 19th largest city in the state.",
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},
{
"id": "112486",
"score": 0.6378979086875916,
"text": "Peru is a city in, and the county seat of, Miami County, Indiana, United States. The population was 11,417 at the 2010 census, making it the most populous city in Miami County. Peru is located along the Wabash River, which divides the city in two.",
"topk_rank": 15
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{
"id": "119359",
"score": 0.637114942073822,
"text": "Anoka ( ) is a city in Anoka County, Minnesota. The population was 17,142 at the 2010 census. It is the county seat. Anoka calls itself the",
"topk_rank": 16
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{
"id": "107640",
"score": 0.636924147605896,
"text": "Inglewood is a city in southwestern Los Angeles County, California, southwest of downtown Los Angeles. As of the 2010 U.S. Census, the city had a population of 109,673. It was incorporated on February 14, 1908. The city is in the South Bay region of Los Angeles County. Los Angeles Stadium at Hollywood Park is currently under construction in the city and when completed around 2020 will be the new home of both the National Football League's Los Angeles Rams and the Los Angeles Chargers. The city is also close to the Los Angeles International Airport.",
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{
"id": "112224",
"score": 0.6354360580444336,
"text": "Muncie is an incorporated city and the seat of Delaware County, Indiana. It is located in East Central Indiana, about 50 mi northeast of Indianapolis. The United States Census for 2010 reported the city's population was 70,085. It is the principal city of the Muncie metropolitan statistical area, which has a population of 117,671.",
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{
"id": "129739",
"score": 0.6348311305046082,
"text": "Ravenna is a city in Portage County, Ohio, United States. It was formed from portions of Ravenna Township in the Connecticut Western Reserve. The population was 11,724 in the 2010 Census and estimated at 11,533 in 2016. It is the county seat of Portage County. Ravenna was platted in 1808. It is named for the city of Ravenna, Italy.",
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}
] |
5addd4965542997dc7907045 | What type of plant are both Chlidanthus from tropical South America and Pleurothallis derived from a Greek word meaning 'riblike branches'? | [
{
"id": "25420036",
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"text": "Chlidanthus is a genus that consists of 10 species of tender bulbs from tropical South America, mostly natives to the Andes. The botanical name comes from the Greek, meaning \"delicate flower\". The plants have large spherical bulbs with gray-green, strap-shaped leaves 30cm long arising from the base. In late spring to early summer, clusters of 3-4 large, strong citrus-scented fragrant, funnel-shaped flowers 10-13cm long held terminally on stalks 25cm high, colored in yellow, pink or red."
},
{
"id": "216644",
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"text": "Pleurothallis, abbreviated Pths in horticultural trade, is a genus of orchids commonly named bonnet orchids. The genus name is derived from the Greek word 'pleurothallos', meaning 'riblike branches'. This refers to the rib-like stems of many species."
}
] | [
{
"id": "2926645",
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"text": "Myoxanthus (from Greek for \"dormouse\" and \"flower\") is a genus of orchids with about 50 species, widely distributed in Central and South America. This genus is a close ally of \"Pleurothallis\".",
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{
"id": "1154305",
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"text": "Pleurothallis is a large genus that previously contained about 1240 orchids from the orchid family (Orchidaceae).",
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{
"id": "2926837",
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"text": "Pleurothallopsis is a genus of orchids comprising about 18 species native to western South America and southern Central America.",
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{
"id": "23517765",
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"text": "Pleurothallis lamellaris is a species of orchid found from central Colombia to Bolivia.",
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{
"id": "44532463",
"score": 0.6931435465812683,
"text": "Pleuranthodendron is a genus of flowering plants in the willow family, Salicaceae. It consists of one species of small to medium-sized trees native to the neotropics, specifically Central America and northern South America.",
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{
"id": "217357",
"score": 0.6918224692344666,
"text": "The Pleurothallidinae are a neotropical subtribe of plants of the orchid family (Orchidaceae) including 29 genera in more than 4000 species.",
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{
"id": "23999737",
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"text": "Bulbophyllum pleurothallidanthum is a species of orchid in the genus \"Bulbophyllum\".",
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{
"id": "24746828",
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"text": "Pleuracanthus is a genus of beetles in the family Carabidae, containing the following species:",
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{
"id": "24294133",
"score": 0.6669051647186279,
"text": "The subgenus Pleuranthium of the genus \"Epidendrum\" of the Orchidaceae is distinguished from the other subgenera by having lateral inflorescences on the reed-like stems of the sympodial plant. With the exception of subgenus \"Psilanthemum\" , all of the remaining subgenera produce terminal inflorescences.",
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{
"id": "3857539",
"score": 0.6658783555030823,
"text": "Acanthella is a genus of two species of flowering plants in the family Melastomataceae. This genus is native to tropical South America.",
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{
"id": "1000681",
"score": 0.658486545085907,
"text": "Strobilanthes is a genus of about 350 species of flowering plants in the family Acanthaceae, mostly native to tropical Asia and Madagascar, but with a few species extending north into temperate regions of Asia. Many species are cultivated for their 2-lipped, hooded flowers in shades of blue, pink, white and purple. Most are frost-tender and require protection in frost-prone areas.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "24729138",
"score": 0.6563263535499573,
"text": "Chrysanthellum is a genus of flowering plants in the chrysanthemum family.",
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{
"id": "5828163",
"score": 0.6553077101707458,
"text": "Colobanthus is a large genus of small, cushion-like herbaceous plants, sometimes known as \"pearlworts\", a name they share with plants of the related genus \"Sagina\". \"C. quitensis\" is the world's southernmost dicot, and one of only two original flowering plants of Antarctica.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "14505991",
"score": 0.6549500226974487,
"text": "Cyclanthus a genus of plants in the family Cyclanthaceae, first described as a genus in 1824. It is native to tropical Latin America and the West Indies. It consists of large, palm-like monocots.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "23517169",
"score": 0.654925525188446,
"text": "Pleurothallis cordata is a species of orchid occurring from western South America to Venezuela.",
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},
{
"id": "23517541",
"score": 0.6518268585205078,
"text": "Pleurothallis gracilis is a species of orchid endemic to Brazil (Minas Gerais).",
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{
"id": "15903464",
"score": 0.6514341235160828,
"text": "Scleranthus, the knawels, are a genus of herbaceous plants in the carnation family.",
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},
{
"id": "23999739",
"score": 0.6504613757133484,
"text": "Bulbophyllum pleurothallopsis is a species of orchid in the genus \"Bulbophyllum\".",
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{
"id": "42813264",
"score": 0.6486997008323669,
"text": "Ellipanthus is a genus of plants in the family Connaraceae. The generic name is from the Greek meaning \"defective flower\", referring to the incomplete development of some of the stamens.",
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},
{
"id": "5938478",
"score": 0.6459466814994812,
"text": "Cryptanthus is a genus in the botanical family Bromeliaceae, subfamily Bromelioideae. The genus name is from the Greek “cryptos” (hidden) and “anthos” (flower). This genus has two recognized subgenera: the type subgenus and \"Hoplocryptanthus\" . All species of this genus are endemic to Brazil. The common name for any \"Cryptanthus\" is \"Earth Star\".",
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}
] |
5ae78a2f5542994a481bbd83 | What state are the lakes in that is adjacent to the Deer Mountain Campground? | [
{
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"text": "Deer Mountain Campground is located on U.S. Route 3 in 1648 acre Connecticut Lakes State Forest in Pittsburg, New Hampshire. Activities include camping, picnicking, canoeing and fishing. The campground is adjacent to the Connecticut River between Second and Third Connecticut Lakes and is just five minutes south of the Canadian border. There are 25 primitive sites. The area is known for moose watching."
},
{
"id": "786975",
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"text": "The Connecticut Lakes are a group of lakes in Coos County, northern New Hampshire, United States, situated along the headwaters of the Connecticut River. They are accessed via the northernmost segment of U.S. Route 3, between the village of Pittsburg and the Canada port of entry south of Chartierville, Quebec. The lakes are located within the boundaries of Pittsburg, but are far from the town center. Connecticut Lakes State Forest adjoins them."
}
] | [
{
"id": "29327075",
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"text": "Deer Mountain is the name of several landforms in the United States:",
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{
"id": "1073099",
"score": 0.6821362376213074,
"text": "There are several places named Deer Lake in Canada and the United States:",
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{
"id": "1372282",
"score": 0.6813378930091858,
"text": "Deer Lake State Park is a Florida State Park located in Santa Rosa Beach, on CR 30A, in northwestern Florida. Its sister park is Grayton Beach State Recreation Area.",
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{
"id": "17997272",
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"text": "Deer Creek State Park a state park of Utah, USA, featuring large Deer Creek Dam and Reservoir. The park is located near Midway, Utah, in the southeast corner of Heber Valley.",
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{
"id": "38079538",
"score": 0.6707774996757507,
"text": "Lower Deer Lake is an alpine lake in Custer County, Idaho, United States, located in the Boulder Mountains in Sawtooth National Recreation Area. While no trails lead to the lake, it is most easily accessed from trails 111 or 215. It is located just north and downstream of Upper Deer Lake.",
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{
"id": "9679268",
"score": 0.6625930070877075,
"text": "Raquette Lake Camps is a group of summer camps located in the center of the Adirondack Mountains in upstate New York, west of Lake George and south of Lake Placid. Campers can canoe for a radius of 100 mi in all directions. The majority of the adjacent land is owned by the state and is utilized as a state park.",
"topk_rank": 5
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{
"id": "30946841",
"score": 0.661135196685791,
"text": "Lincoln Lake is located in Glacier National Park, in the U. S. state of Montana. Lincoln Lake is .25 mi downstream from Lake Ellen Wilson but sits more than 1300 ft lower in elevation. A series of cascades including Beaver Chief Falls can be found between the two lakes.",
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{
"id": "46311913",
"score": 0.6574080586433411,
"text": "Deer Lake is a lake in the U.S. state of Michigan, located north of the city of Ishpeming. In the 1980, the lake was identified by the US and Canadian governments as one of 43 Areas of Concern (AOC) in the Great Lakes region. High levels of mercury had been detected in the lake and efforts have been made to reduce the amount of mercury going into the lake. As a result of contamination, Deer Lake was designated as a catch and release site, as fish caught in the lake were unsafe for consumption.",
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{
"id": "5620039",
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"text": "Deer Island Lake is a lake located in Gogebic County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The Lake is one of about 24 clear, clean lakes located in a special wilderness area known as the Sylvania Wilderness, which in turn is located within the Ottawa National Forest a few miles (6 to 8 km) to the west of the town of Watersmeet. The shoreline is completely undeveloped, and surrounded by virgin forest consisting mainly of hemlock and pine. This crystal-clear spring-fed lake is one of the most remote in the Sylvania Tract, but is well worth the journey for those intrepid enough to make it. The total surface area of the lake is 346 acre , with maximum depths of 55 ft (17 m). The lake is named for the very large island in the center of the lake, which deer inhabit by crossing back and forth on the ice in winter. Several smaller islands and numerous rocky shoals add to the overall beauty of this fine body of water.",
"topk_rank": 8
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{
"id": "38079560",
"score": 0.657106339931488,
"text": "Upper Deer Lake is an alpine lake in Custer County, Idaho, United States, located in the Boulder Mountains in Sawtooth National Recreation Area. While no trails lead to the lake, it is most easily accessed from trails 111 or 215. It is located just south and upstream of Lower Deer Lake.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "30001872",
"score": 0.6567965745925903,
"text": "Deer Creek Trail lies along the Continental Divide of the Americas, part of the Rocky Mountains in the U.S. state of Colorado. It is located in the White River National Forest, Summit County. Deer Creek Trail is south of Colorado Highway 6, east of Keystone Resort and near Montezuma.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "31419656",
"score": 0.65675950050354,
"text": "Mountain Lakes is a census-designated place in the towns of Haverhill and Bath in Grafton County, New Hampshire. It had a population of 488 at the 2010 census.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "33812606",
"score": 0.6566006541252136,
"text": "The Trailer Lakes are a series of three small alpine glacial lakes in Boise County, Idaho, United States, located in the Sawtooth Mountains in the Sawtooth National Recreation Area. The Trailer Lakes are in the Trail Creek watershed, which is a tributary of the South Fork Payette River. The lakes are most easily accessed from Sawtooth National Forest trail 453.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "30882295",
"score": 0.6537952423095703,
"text": "Deer Valley YMCA Camp is a YMCA summer camp located between Fort Hill, Pennsylvania and Meyersdale, Pennsylvania. It sits on 742 acres of mountainous lands near Mount Davis, the highest peak in Pennsylvania, and includes 125 acre \"Deer Valley Lake\". Deer Valley operates 10 months out of the year and offers summer camp experience to families and various organizations from all around the country.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "13950161",
"score": 0.6536685824394226,
"text": "The Cliffside Lake Recreation Area is located in Nantahala National Forest in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina. It offers both fishing and swimming and is less than ten miles northwest of Highlands, North Carolina on State Road 28.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "33814500",
"score": 0.653172492980957,
"text": "The Twin Lakes are two adjacent alpine glacial lakes separated by a narrow strip of land less than 100 ft wide in Blaine County, Idaho, United States, located in the Sawtooth Mountains in the Sawtooth National Recreation Area. The lakes eventually flow into the Salmon River. Sawtooth National Forest trail 092 leads to the twin lakes.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "30382096",
"score": 0.6531004905700684,
"text": "Lonely Lakes are located in Glacier National Park, in the U. S. state of Montana. The lakes are adjacent to each other and drain into Lake Creek.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "34437976",
"score": 0.6520630121231079,
"text": "The Big Boulder Lakes are a chain of thirteen small alpine and glacial Paternoster lakes in Custer County, Idaho, United States, located in the White Cloud Mountains in the Sawtooth National Recreation Area. The lakes are located in the upper portion of the Big Boulder Creek watershed east of D. O. Lee Peak. In addition to the lakes listed, the Big Boulder Lakes include the four small lakes that make up The Kettles. Sawtooth National Forest trail 601 along leads to the Big Boulder Lakes.",
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},
{
"id": "21569928",
"score": 0.6509411931037903,
"text": "Deer Lake is a lake in King County, Washington. It is an expansion of the Taylor River, located just below its true source. Located a short distance downstream is Snoqualmie Lake.",
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},
{
"id": "1438611",
"score": 0.6507693529129028,
"text": "Silver Lake , formerly known as Long Pond, is a small lake in the town of Hollis, New Hampshire, United States. The lake was formerly surrounded by summer vacation cottages and camps, but most of these buildings have now been converted for use as year-round homes. Silver Lake State Park occupies the northern end of the lakeshore.",
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}
] |
5adf606f5542992d7e9f9328 | When was the artist born who Keith Crouch produced for who became an R&B icon? | [
{
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"text": "Keith Crouch is an American songwriter and music producer. Crouch began his career as a songwriter at the age of fifteen and landed his first gig at seventeen. In 1994, Crouch produced six songs for Brandy's self-titled debut album, three of which became top ten hits. He has produced for artists such as Toni Braxton, Mary J. Blige, Boyz II Men, and Misia."
},
{
"id": "495350",
"score": 0.611843466758728,
"text": "Toni Michelle Braxton (born October 7, 1967) is an American singer, songwriter, pianist, record producer, actress, television personality, and philanthropist. Rising to fame in the early 1990s, Braxton quickly established herself as an R&B icon and became one of the best-selling artists of the 1990s decade, and being recognized as one of the most outstanding voices of her generation."
}
] | [
{
"id": "755695",
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"text": "Brandy is the self-titled debut album by American R&B singer Brandy Norwood. It was released by Atlantic Records on September 27, 1994 in North America, December 5 in the United Kingdom and on several dates in Europe and Oceania, starting on February 3, 1995. The album contains a range of contemporary genres, and the songs are a mix of soft hip hop soul, pop and contemporary mid-1990s R&B. They were chiefly produced by Keith Crouch who would contribute all four single releases from the album. Aside from Crouch, Norwood worked with a range of other writers and producers, including R&B group Somethin' for the People, Arvel McClinton, and Damon Thomas and young Robin Thicke.",
"topk_rank": 0
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{
"id": "576282",
"score": 0.6647241711616516,
"text": "Andraé Edward Crouch (July 1, 1942 – January 8, 2015) was an American gospel singer, songwriter, arranger, record producer and pastor. Referred to as \"the father of modern gospel music\" by contemporary Christian and gospel music professionals, Crouch was known for his compositions \"The Blood Will Never Lose Its Power\", \"My Tribute (To God Be the Glory)\" and \"Soon and Very Soon\". In secular music, he was known for his collaborative work during the 1980s and 1990s with Stevie Wonder, Elton John and Quincy Jones as well as conducting choirs that sang on the Michael Jackson hit \"Man in the Mirror\" and Madonna's \"Like a Prayer\". Crouch was noted for his talent of incorporating contemporary secular music styles into the gospel music he grew up with. His efforts in this area helped pave the way for early American contemporary Christian music during the 1960s and 1970s.",
"topk_rank": 1
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{
"id": "1744020",
"score": 0.6607844233512878,
"text": "Sandra Crouch (born July 1, 1942) is an American gospel music performer, drummer and songwriter.",
"topk_rank": 2
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{
"id": "7164658",
"score": 0.6531785726547241,
"text": "\"Baby\" is a song by American R&B recording artist Brandy, taken from her self-titled debut studio album (1994). It was penned by Keith Crouch, Kipper Jones, and Rahsaan Patterson and produced by the former. Released as the album's second single on December 24, 1994 in the United States, the song spent four weeks on top of the \"Billboard\" Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. It also reached number 4 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 and the New Zealand singles chart, and number 16 in Australia. The single sold 800,000 copies in 1995 in the United States.",
"topk_rank": 3
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{
"id": "8477888",
"score": 0.644602358341217,
"text": "Keith Matthew Boxley (born January 2, 1962), better known as Keith Shocklee or Wizard K-Jee, is an American hip hop producer and DJ. He was an original member of Public Enemy and The Bomb Squad. He has contributed his talent to several albums including \"It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back\" and \"Fear of a Black Planet\". Shocklee also co-produced the singles \"Bring the Noise” and \"Fight The Power,\" which were included on Rolling Stone’s list of the “500 Greatest Songs Of All Time.”",
"topk_rank": 4
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{
"id": "16941732",
"score": 0.6445672512054443,
"text": "Keith Diamond (born Keith Vincent Constantine Alexander; March 11, 1950 – January 18, 1997) was a songwriter and producer who worked with artists such as Donna Summer, Michael Bolton, Sheena Easton, Mick Jagger and Don Johnson. Diamond also produced and co-wrote Billy Ocean's \"Suddenly,\" \"Caribbean Queen (No More Love On The Run),\" \"Loverboy\" and \"Mystery Lady,\" as well as producing and managing groups such as Starpoint and Fredrick Thomas. Keith Diamond also produced and co-wrote James Ingram's album entitled \"Never Felt So Good\" in 1986, at the request of Quincy Jones who was tied up with scoring the film \"The Color Purple\".",
"topk_rank": 5
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{
"id": "147995",
"score": 0.6393175721168518,
"text": "Marvin Gaye ( ; born Marvin Pentz Gay Jr.; April 2, 1939 – April 1, 1984) was an American singer, songwriter and record producer. Gaye helped to shape the sound of Motown in the 1960s, first as an in-house session player and later as a solo artist with a string of hits, including \"Ain't That Peculiar\", \"How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)\" and \"I Heard It Through the Grapevine\", and duet recordings with Mary Wells, Kim Weston, Diana Ross and Tammi Terrell, later earning the titles \"Prince of Motown\" and \"Prince of Soul\".",
"topk_rank": 6
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{
"id": "29555057",
"score": 0.6392387747764587,
"text": "Keith Harris is an American record producer, songwriter and musician.",
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{
"id": "249167",
"score": 0.6385976672172546,
"text": "Luther Ronzoni Vandross Jr. (April 20, 1951 – July 1, 2005) was an American singer, songwriter and record producer. Throughout his career, Vandross was an in-demand background vocalist for several different artists including Judy Collins, Chaka Khan, Bette Midler, Diana Ross, David Bowie, Barbra Streisand, Ben E. King, and Donna Summer. He later became a lead singer of the group Change, which released its gold-certified debut album, \"The Glow of Love\", in 1980 on Warner Bros. Records. After Vandross left the group, he was signed to Epic Records as a solo artist and released his debut solo album, \"Never Too Much\", in 1981.",
"topk_rank": 8
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{
"id": "239435",
"score": 0.6382087469100952,
"text": "Keith Douglas Sweat (born July 22, 1961) is an American R&B and soul, singer-songwriter, record producer, actor, radio personality, and an innovator of new jack swing.",
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{
"id": "14544590",
"score": 0.6381850242614746,
"text": "Keith Washington (born November 15, 1960) is an American R&B vocalist from Detroit, Michigan best known for his 1991 hit single \"Kissing You\". The song was also used as Background music for an episode on the ABC television soap opera \"General Hospital\". \"Kissing You\" was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best R&B Vocal Performance Male and won a 1992 Soul Train Music Award for Best R&B/Soul Single – Male. The song also topped the \"Billboard\" Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart for one week.",
"topk_rank": 10
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{
"id": "21257879",
"score": 0.6360998749732971,
"text": "Harvey Jay Mason Jr. (born June 3, 1968) is an American record producer, songwriter and movie producer. He has written and produced songs for popular performers in the music industry including Aretha Franklin, Michael Jackson, Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears and Chris Brown. In addition, major motion picture and television studios have called on Harvey to produce music for blockbuster films & television including Beyoncé and Jennifer Hudson in Dreamgirls, Whitney Houston in Sparkle, Hailee Steinfeld and Anna Kendrick in Pitch Perfect, Reese Witherspoon, Scarlett Johansson and Tori Kelly in Sing, Dr. Dre and Ice Cube in Straight Outta Compton and Mary J. Blige and Neyo in The Wiz Live!.",
"topk_rank": 11
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{
"id": "495150",
"score": 0.6359265446662903,
"text": "Kenneth Brian Edmonds (born April 10, 1959), known professionally as Babyface, is an American singer, songwriter and record producer. He has written and produced over 26 number-one R&B hits throughout his career, and has won 11 Grammy Awards.",
"topk_rank": 12
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{
"id": "1471422",
"score": 0.635516881942749,
"text": "Patrice Yvonne Holloway (March 23, 1951 – October 3, 2006) was an African-American soul and pop singer.",
"topk_rank": 13
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{
"id": "17824718",
"score": 0.6347291469573975,
"text": "Keith Eric Martin (born September 22, 1966, Washington, D.C.) is an American R&B singer-songwriter and record producer, currently living in Indonesia. Martin is best known for writing and singing romantic love songs.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "7164744",
"score": 0.6340811848640442,
"text": "\"I Wanna Be Down\" is a song by American recording artist Brandy Norwood. It served as Norwood's debut single, the first from her self-titled debut album, released in 1994. Written by musicians Keith Crouch and Kipper Jones, with production helmed by the former, it was released on September 6, 1994 by the Atlantic Recording Corporation. The song is a mid–tempo track that features a thunderous beat and light synth riffs. Lyrically, \"I Wanna Be Down\" describes a flirt with a boy, who Norwood tries to convince of her charms.",
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{
"id": "18409564",
"score": 0.6329026222229004,
"text": "Daryl Simmons (born April 11, 1957) is an American R&B songwriter, musician and record producer, who worked with the production duo of L.A. Reid and Kenneth \"Babyface\" Edmonds.",
"topk_rank": 16
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{
"id": "1921494",
"score": 0.6303150057792664,
"text": "Keith Sweat is the eponymous fifth studio album by American R&B recording artist of the same name. The album was released on June 25, 1996. The single \"Twisted\" made it to #2 on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100, his biggest hit ever on that chart. \"Nobody\" peaked at #3 on the same chart. Both songs are his final two of six hits to reach number one on the R&B singles chart and gave Sweat two more Top 5 pop hits in eight years since his debut single, \"I Want Her.\"",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "517142",
"score": 0.624239981174469,
"text": "Robert Dwayne Womack ( ; March 4, 1944 – June 27, 2014) was an American singer, songwriter and record producer. Since the early 1960s, when he started his career as the lead singer of his family musical group the Valentinos and as Sam Cooke's backing guitarist, Womack's career spanned more than 60 years, during which he played in the styles of R&B, soul, rock and roll, doo-wop, gospel, and country.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "49327911",
"score": 0.6233407855033875,
"text": "Keith Carter (February 26, 1970 – February 3, 2016), also known as Big Kap and The Wardin, was an American hip-hop DJ who was born in New York City and was later based in Atlanta. In 1995, he was a member of hip hop supergroup The Flip Squad. He was well known for the 1999 album \"The Tunnel\" with Funkmaster Flex, named after the New York nightclub where he was a regular DJ. He died in Mableton, GA late on February 3, 2016 due to a heart attack. He was 45 at the time of his death. According to his road manager Ab Traxx, Keith dealt with diabetes, but he did not believe it was what caused his fatal heart attack. Keith was previously slated to work on a showcase in Atlanta on the day of his death, shortly after his passing, the event became a memorial for Keith.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5ab598685542992aa134a372 | What Canadian businessman has a net worth of over four billion dollars and chairs a company that operates Rexall pharmacies? | [
{
"id": "5621476",
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"text": "The Katz Group of Companies is one of Canada's largest privately owned enterprises, with operations in pharmacy, sports and entertainment, and real estate development. Katz Group Pharmacies Inc. employs over 8,600 people and owns and operates more than 460 Rexall and Rexall Pharma Plus locations across Central and Western Canada. Oilers Entertainment Group (OEG), a subsidiary of the Katz Group, owns the National Hockey League five-time Stanley Cup Champion Edmonton Oilers, as well as professional hockey franchises in the American Hockey League, Western Hockey League, and ECHL, and Aquila Productions, one of Canada’s leading entertainment and event companies. OEG operates Rogers Place in downtown Edmonton. Katz Group is also involved in land assembly, site, and building development in Canada and the United States, including the design and development of Ice District, an area encompasses more than 25 acres anchored by Rogers Place. Katz Group is based in Edmonton, Alberta. Its founder and chairman is Daryl Katz."
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{
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"text": "Daryl Allan Katz (born May 31, 1961) is a Canadian businessman, investor, and philanthropist. With an estimated net worth of $US 4.14 billion (as of November 2015), Katz was ranked by \"Forbes\" as the 12th wealthiest Canadian and 534th in the world. The Edmonton-based Katz is founder and chairman of the Katz Group of Companies, one of Canada’s largest privately owned enterprises, with operations in the pharmacy, sports & entertainment, and real estate development sectors. Katz Group owns the Edmonton Oilers, and is leading the development of Rogers Place arena and the Ice District. Katz is a former lawyer, and resides in Edmonton."
}
] | [
{
"id": "54840761",
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"text": "Beth Newlands Campbell is the President of Rexall Drugstore, a Canadian pharmaceutical chain owned by McKesson Canada.",
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{
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"text": "Jean Coutu, {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (born May 29, 1927) is a Canadian pharmacist and businessman. He is the founder and Chairman of the Jean Coutu Group which he started in 1969. With an estimated net worth of $US 1.6 billion (as of March 2012), Coutu was ranked by \"Forbes\" as the 22nd wealthiest Canadian and 938th wealthiest person in the world.",
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{
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"text": "Rexall is a chain of American drugstores, and the name of their store-branded products. The stores, having roots in the federation of United Drug Stores starting in 1903, licensed the Rexall brand name to as many as 12,000 drug stores across the United States from 1920 to 1977. (The \"Rex\" in the name came from the common Rx abbreviation for medical prescriptions.)",
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"text": "Leslie Lewis Dan, {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (born November 26, 1929), is a Canadian businessman. The founder of a successful generic drug company and a noted philanthropist, he has been awarded the Order of Canada and the Order of Ontario.",
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{
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"text": "Louis Kroh Liggett (April 4, 1875 – June 5, 1946) was an American drug store magnate who founded Rexall and was later chairman of United Drug Company. He was a member of the Republican National Committee for Massachusetts.",
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{
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"text": "Four Seasons Hotels Ltd., trading as Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, is a Canadian international luxury hospitality company headquartered in Toronto, Ontario. It operates more than 100 hotels worldwide. Since 2007, Bill Gates and Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal have been majority owners of the company.",
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"text": "Rexon Business Machines, later Rexon, Inc., was a manufacturer of small business computer systems founded by Ben C. Wang in 1978 in Culver City, California. It also became a major manufacturer of tape drives and related products. At its height, it played a significant role in the development and sale of magnetic tape data storage products. It traded on the NASDAQ under the symbol REXN until it filed for bankruptcy in 1995 and was acquired by Legacy Storage Systems, a Canadian company. It was last headquartered in Longmont, Colorado.",
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"text": "Warren Edward Buffett ( ; born August 30, 1930) is an American business magnate, investor, and philanthropist. Buffett serves as the Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of Berkshire Hathaway. He is considered by some to be one of the most successful investors in the world, and as of August 2017 is the second wealthiest person in the United States, and the fourth wealthiest in the world, with a total net worth of $76.9 billion.",
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"text": "Michael Bennett Medline (born July 4, 1963) is a Canadian businessman. In January 2017, Medline was named President and CEO of Empire Company Limited, a Canadian company whose core businesses includes food retailing, conducted through wholly owned Sobeys Inc., and related real estate.",
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"text": "Sir Ka-shing Li, GBM, KBE, JP (born 29 July 1928 in Chaozhou, China) is a Hong Kong business magnate, investor, and philanthropist. As of September 2017, Li is one of the wealthiest people in Asia, with an estimated net worth of US$34.4 billion. He is currently the chairman of the board for CK Hutchison Holdings; through it, he is the world's leading port investor, developer, and operator, and the largest health and beauty retailer in Asia and Europe.",
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"text": "Eugene Melnyk (born May 27, 1959) is a Ukrainian Canadian businessman who has resided in Barbados since February 1991. He is the current and sole owner, governor, and chairman of the Ottawa Senators professional ice hockey franchise of the National Hockey League (NHL). He is the founder, former chairman and CEO of Biovail Corporation which was acquired by Valeant Pharmaceuticals. Canadian Business magazine ranked Melnyk 79th with a net worth of $1.21 billion on its 2017 list of Canada's 100 wealthiest people. He is also one of the richest residents of Barbados, where he now lives.",
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"text": "James K. Irving, OC, ONB (born March 20, 1928) is a Canadian businessman, the eldest son of the industrialist K.C. Irving. With an estimated net worth of US$6.5 billion (as of March 2015), Irving was ranked by \"Forbes\" as the 4th richest person in Canada.",
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"text": "Bernard C. Sherman (born 1942), Chairman and CEO of Apotex Inc., is a Canadian businessman. With an estimated net worth of $US 3.7 billion (as of April 2013), Sherman was ranked by Forbes as the seventh wealthiest Canadian and 363rd in the world.",
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"text": "William H. Comrie (born June 29, 1950) is a Canadian businessman. He is the founder of The Brick, one of Canada's largest volume retailers of furniture, mattresses, appliances and home electronics. In 2009, Comrie's estimated personal net worth was $415 million.",
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"text": "Teva Canada is one of Canada's largest generic pharmaceutical companies. The company was founded as Novopharm by Leslie Dan in 1965. After its acquisition by pharmaceutical giant Teva Pharmaceutical Industries in 2000, it was renamed Teva Novopharm. The Novopharm name was dropped in 2010, when it became Teva Canada.",
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{
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"text": "Max Bell is a Canadian businessman.",
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"text": "Brad Maurice Kelley (born 1956) is an American businessman who is the fourth-largest landowner in the U.S., with an estimated net worth of US$2.2 billion in 2015. He founded the Commonwealth Brands tobacco company in 1991 and sold the company in 2001 to Houchens Industries for US$1 billion. As of 2014, Kelley's business interests include Calumet Farm, NC2 Media (Lonely Planet) and the Center for Innovation and Technology business park.",
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"text": "Dariusz Miłek (born 1 February 1968) is a Polish businessman and entrepreneur, ranked the fourth-wealthiest person in Poland by \"Forbes\" magazine in 2015. He is the chairman of , Poland's largest retail company.",
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"text": "Apotex is a Canadian pharmaceutical corporation. Founded in 1974 by Dr. Bernard Sherman, the company is the largest producer of generic drugs in Canada, with sales exceeding $2 billion (CAD) a year. The company produces more than 300 generic pharmaceuticals in approximately 4,000 dosages, and has 500 molecules under development. Apotex exports products to over 115 countries around the globe. There are more prescriptions filled with Apotex products in Canada than that of any other pharmaceutical company, close to 90 million per year.",
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"text": "Dennis R. Washington (born 1934) is an American, Montana-based industrialist who owns, or co-owns controlling interest in, a large consortium of privately held companies collectively known as the Washington Companies and, in Canada, another collection of companies known as the Seaspan Marine Corporation. With an estimated current net worth of around $6.1 billion, he is ranked by \"Forbes\" as the 76th-richest person in America.",
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5a839c535542992ef85e232d | Between Wes Craven and Alex Segal, which filmmaker had more diverse job experiences? | [
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"text": "Wesley Earl \"Wes\" Craven (August 2, 1939 – August 30, 2015) was an American film director, writer, producer, and actor. He was known for his pioneering work in the genre of horror films, particularly slasher films, where his impact on the genre was considered prolific and influential. Due to the success and cultural impact of his works in the horror film genre, Craven has been called the \"Master of Horror\"."
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"text": "Alex Segal (July 1, 1915 – August 22, 1977) was an American television director, television producer and film director."
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"text": "Steve Segal (born in Richmond, Virginia in 1949) is an American animator and filmmaker who collaborated with Phil Trumbo in the production of the cult classic \"Futuropolis\", an avant garde space-travel film parody which started in the mid-1970s as a nine-minute short but has been growing in size and impact ever since. He teaches animation at the California College of the Arts and has also been a professor in the animation department",
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"text": "Mikhail Yurievich Segal, (Russian: Михаил Юрьевич Сегал ; born 3 January 1974 in Oryol, USSR) is a Russian film director, writer.",
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"text": "Allan Segal (16 April 1941 – 8 February 2012) was a BAFTA-winning documentary film maker. He spent the majority of his career working for Granada Television.",
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"text": "Craven-Maddalena Films is a Hollywood movie studio, founded in 1996 by Wes Craven and Marianne Maddalena. It was best known for producing horror films, many of which are Craven's films and his remakes.",
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"text": "Swamp Thing is a 1982 American superhero science-fiction horror film written and directed by Wes Craven, based on the DC Comics (later Vertigo Comics) character of the same name created by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson. It tells the story of scientist Alec Holland (Ray Wise) who becomes transformed into the monster Swamp Thing (Dick Durock) through laboratory sabotage orchestrated by the evil Anton Arcane (Louis Jourdan). Later, he helps a woman named Alice Cable (Adrienne Barbeau) and battles the man responsible for it all, the ruthless Arcane.",
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"text": "Fred Wilder (born November 14, 1962) is an American film director, screenwriter, actor, painter, and musician. His early career was devoted to painting, and creating electronic music including soundscape. His filmography as writer director includes the films Scream Karl (2006), and Karl Bites (2006), which feature the robot Fast Karl. Zombees (2008), and Vampire Flesh a Poem (2009), both of which are experimental films driven by poetry. Wilder's films are known for surreal otherworldly and dreamlike images and he often incorporates stop motion animation with live action scenes.",
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"text": "Matthew John Crnkovich, known as Matt Craven (born November 10, 1956) is a Canadian actor.",
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"text": "Samuel \"Billy\" Wilder ( ; ] ; June 22, 1906March 27, 2002) was an Austrian-American filmmaker, screenwriter, producer, artist, and journalist whose career spanned more than five decades. He is regarded as one of the most brilliant and versatile filmmakers of Hollywood's golden age. With \"The Apartment\", Wilder became the first person to win Academy Awards as producer, director, and screenwriter for the same film.",
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"text": "Mikael Salomon (born 24 February 1955) is a Danish-born cinematographer, director and producer of film and television. After a long cinematography career in Danish cinema, he transitioned to the Hollywood film industry in the late 1980s and has remained highly prolific there, earning two Academy Award nominations. He is also an acclaimed and prolific television director whose credits include dozens of series, films and miniseries including \"Band of Brothers, Salem's Lot, Rome,\" and \"The Andromeda Strain\", for which has received numerous awards and nominations including a Primetime Emmy Award and Directors Guild of America Award.",
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"text": "George Segal Jr. (born February 13, 1934) is an American actor and musician. Segal became popular in the 1960s and 1970s for playing both dramatic and comedic roles. Some of his most acclaimed roles are in films such as \"Ship of Fools\" (1965), \"King Rat\" (1965), \"Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?\" (1966), \"Where's Poppa?\" (1970), \"The Hot Rock\" (1972), \"Blume in Love\" (1973), \"A Touch of Class\" (1973), \"California Split\" (1974), \"For the Boys\" (1991), and \"Flirting with Disaster\" (1996).",
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"text": "Erich Wolf Segal (June 16, 1937January 17, 2010) was an American author, screenwriter, and educator. He was best known for writing the novel \"Love Story\" (1970), a best-seller, and writing the motion picture of the same name, which was a major hit.",
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"text": "Allison Lyon Segan is a film producer. Her feature films have garnered eight Academy Awards out of eleven nominations. Most recently, she produced \"Shark Tale\", an animated feature for DreamWorks that features Will Smith, Renée Zellweger, Robert De Niro, and Martin Scorsese. Her thriller \"Swimfan\", starring Erika Christensen and Jesse Bradford, was released by Twentieth Century Fox in September 2002 and became her fifth #1 movie at the box office on its opening weekend. She also produced \"One Night at McCool's\" for USA Films, starring Liv Tyler, Matt Dillon, John Goodman and Michael Douglas.",
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"text": "Night Visions is a 1990 American television supernatural thriller film co-written and directed by Wes Craven.",
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"text": "Peter Segal (born 1962) is an American film director, producer, screenwriter and actor. Segal has directed the comedy films \"Tommy Boy\" (1995), \"My Fellow Americans\" (1996), \"\" (2000), \"Anger Management\" (2003), \"50 First Dates\" (2004), \"The Longest Yard\" (2005), \"Get Smart\" (2008), \" Grudge Match\" (2013).",
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"id": "18155602",
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"text": "Nicholas Vince (born May 1958) is an actor, writer, and model who was born in West Germany and lives in South London. Whilst he was at Mountview Theatre Academy, he met Clive Barker, modeling for him and later being cast as The Chatterer Cenobite in \"Hellraiser\" in 1987 and in its sequel \"\" in 1988. He also played the Chatterer II. He was injured on set during that character's death sequence, when he opened his mouth to scream and 12” rusty hook attached to a chain on the spinning pillar behind him went point first into the roof of his mouth. He subsequently played Kinski in Barker's 1990 film \"Nightbreed\".",
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"text": "The Last House on the Left is a 1972 American exploitation horror film written, edited, and directed by Wes Craven and produced by Sean S. Cunningham. The film follows two teenage girls who are taken into the woods and tortured by a gang of murderous thugs. The story is inspired by the 1960 Swedish film \"The Virgin Spring\", directed by Ingmar Bergman, which in turn is based on a Swedish ballad - \"Töres döttrar i Wänge\".",
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"text": "George A. Romero (1940–2017) was an American-Canadian film director, writer, editor and cinematographer. He contributed to many projects as either the writer, director, editor, cinematographer or a combination of the four.",
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"text": "Alexander John \"Alex\" Graves (born July 23, 1965) is an American film director, television director, television producer and screenwriter.",
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{
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"text": "Elia David Cmíral ( ; born October 1, 1950) is a Czech composer for film, television, ballet, and video games. He has worked on numerous projects across multiple genres, though he is arguably best known for his work in the thriller and horror cinema, and has collaborated with filmmakers like Wes Craven, John Frankenheimer, John Travolta, and Ernest Dickerson.",
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{
"id": "7892",
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"text": "David Paul Cronenberg, {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (born March 15, 1943) is a Canadian filmmaker, actor and author. Cronenberg is one of the principal originators of what is commonly known as the body horror or visceral horror genre. This style of filmmaking explores people's fears of bodily transformation and infection. In his films, the psychological is typically intertwined with the physical.",
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5aba59cb554299232ef4a2a1 | Are Abrus and Agrostis both types of plant? | [
{
"id": "239114",
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"text": "Abrus is a genus of flowering plants in the pea family, Fabaceae and the only genus found in the tribe Abreae. It contains, 13–18 species, but is best known for a single species, Jequirity (\"A. precatorius\"). The highly toxic seeds of that species are used to make jewellery."
},
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"text": "Agrostis (bent or bentgrass) is a large and very nearly cosmopolitan genus of plants in the grass family, found in nearly all the countries in the world. It has been bred as a GMO creeping bent grass."
}
] | [
{
"id": "10114264",
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"text": "Agrostis nebulosa (Cloud grass) is an ornamental plant native to Portugal and Spain. This plant is often cultivated for its light delicate heads that are used dried in floristry.",
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"text": "Agrius is a genus of moths in the family Sphingidae.",
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{
"id": "31318973",
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"text": "Lachnagrostis is a genus of African, Australian, Pacific Island, and South American plants in the grass family. They are often treated as members of genus \"Agrostis\".",
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{
"id": "12350677",
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"text": "Agrostis goughensis is a species of grass in the Poaceae family. It is found on Gough Island.",
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{
"id": "12350695",
"score": 0.6494136452674866,
"text": "Agrostis media is a species of grass in the Poaceae family.",
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{
"id": "41109997",
"score": 0.6452895402908325,
"text": "Agrostis tolucensis is a species of grass which is found in South America, the United States, and Mexico.",
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{
"id": "49428340",
"score": 0.6328105926513672,
"text": "Agdestis is a genus of flowering plants containing a single species Agdestis clematidia, a vine native to Florida, Texas, Mexico, and Central America. Its common name rockroot refers to the large boulder-like root.",
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{
"id": "2247377",
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"text": "Agrostology (from Greek ἄγρωστις , \"agrōstis\", \"type of grass\"; and -λογία , \"-logia\"), sometimes graminology, is the scientific study of the grasses (the family Poaceae, or Gramineae). The grasslike species of the sedge family (Cyperaceae), the rush family (Juncaceae), and the bulrush or cattail family (Typhaceae) are often included with the true grasses in the category of graminoid, although strictly speaking these are not included within the study of agrostology. In contrast to the word graminoid, the words gramineous and graminaceous are normally used to mean \"of, or relating to, the true grasses (Poaceae)\".",
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"text": "Agrotis is a genus of moths of the Noctuidae family. A number of the species of this genus are extinct.",
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{
"id": "41108933",
"score": 0.6300925612449646,
"text": "Agrostis humilis is a species of grass known by the common names of mountain bent grass and alpine bentgrass, which can be found in Western United States and Canada.",
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{
"id": "12370310",
"score": 0.6298210620880127,
"text": "Anguina agrostis (Bentgrass nematode, seed-gall nematode) is a plant pathogenic nematode.",
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{
"id": "12350686",
"score": 0.626394510269165,
"text": "Agrostis mannii is a species of grass in the Poaceae family.",
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{
"id": "41103180",
"score": 0.6251726150512695,
"text": "Agrostis vinealis () is a species of grass known by the common names brown bentgrass and brown bent, which can be found from Russia to Mongolia, into China and even Pakistan, and India. It was introduced to Greenland and Alaska.",
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{
"id": "40283745",
"score": 0.6251165866851807,
"text": "Rothia agrius is a moth of the Noctuidae family. This moth occurs in Madagascar.",
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{
"id": "1315834",
"score": 0.622140109539032,
"text": "Agrostophyllum is a genus with about ninety species from the orchid family (Orchidaceae). The genus name is derived from the Greek words \"agrostis\" (\"grass\") and \"phyllos\" (\"leaf\"), referring to the grass-like appearance of the leaves of some species.",
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{
"id": "22152903",
"score": 0.6213387846946716,
"text": "Anachrostis is a genus of moths of the Erebidae family.",
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{
"id": "2422131",
"score": 0.6210486888885498,
"text": "The Agrostistachydeae is a tribe of the subfamily Acalyphoideae, under the family Euphorbiaceae. It comprises 4 genera, which are monophyletic.",
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{
"id": "30864488",
"score": 0.6201055645942688,
"text": "Agrostis canina, commonly known as velvety bentgrass, brown bent or velvet bent, is a species of grass.",
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{
"id": "13017114",
"score": 0.6185277700424194,
"text": "Agrostis capillaris (common bent, colonial bent, browntop) is a rhizomatous and stoloniferous perennial in the grass family (Poaceae). It is native to Eurasia and has been widely introduced in many parts of the world. Colonial bent grows in moist grasslands and open meadows, and can also be found in agricultural areas, roadsides, and invading disturbed areas.",
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{
"id": "1893141",
"score": 0.6181512475013733,
"text": "A sorus (pl. sori) is a cluster of sporangia (structures producing and containing spores) in ferns and fungi. This New Latin word is from Ancient Greek σωρός (\"sōrós\" ‘stack, pile, heap’).",
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}
] |
5ae697ec55429908198fa645 | On what date was the Jay Sean studio album which had the song "So High" released? | [
{
"id": "37098087",
"score": 0.8172681331634521,
"text": "\"So High\" is a hit song by British recording singer Jay Sean. The song serves as the second single from his fourth studio album, \"Neon\". It was produced by Afrojack, who is also the uncredited performance."
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"id": "35288715",
"score": 0.682551920413971,
"text": "Neon is the fourth studio album by British R&B singer Jay Sean. The album was released on 30 July 2013, by Cash Money Records and distributed by Republic Records. The album features guest appearances from Busta Rhymes, Ace Hood and Rick Ross."
}
] | [
{
"id": "41637438",
"score": 0.8055068254470825,
"text": "So High (Japan Edition) is a studio album by British R&B singer Jay Sean. The album was released in Japan on 26 December 2012, by Cash Money Records. The album features guest appearances from Pitbull, Nicki Minaj and Birdman, Lil Wayne.",
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"id": "22469549",
"score": 0.7196483016014099,
"text": "\"Down\" is a song by British singer Jay Sean. The song was released in North America as his debut single from his first album there, \"All or Nothing\". In other markets, including the United Kingdom, the song serves as Jay Sean's lead single from his third studio album. The single features American rapper and label mate Lil Wayne and is produced by J-Remy and Bobby Bass. \"Down\" is the seventh-best selling single of 2009, and has been certified Platinum in several countries. The song went on to sell six million copies in the United States, and received a large airplay of two billion listener impressions on radio worldwide.",
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{
"id": "21593355",
"score": 0.704825222492218,
"text": "Sean Michael Leonard Anderson (born March 25, 1988), known professionally as Big Sean, is an American rapper from Detroit, Michigan. Sean signed with Kanye West's GOOD Music in 2007, Def Jam Recordings in 2008 and Roc Nation in 2014. After releasing a number of mixtapes, Sean released his debut studio album, \"Finally Famous\", in 2011. He released his second studio album, \"Hall of Fame\", in 2013. Sean's third studio album, \"Dark Sky Paradise\", was released in 2015 and earned him his first number one album in the US. In 2017, he released his fourth studio album, \"I Decided\", which debuted at number one on the US \"Billboard\" 200 chart.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "37264028",
"score": 0.688842236995697,
"text": "Hall of Fame is the second studio album by American rapper Big Sean. It was released on August 27, 2013, by GOOD Music and Def Jam Recordings. Recording sessions took place from 2011 to 2013, at the variety of the recording studios; primarily in Los Angeles, California. The album features guest appearances from Nas, 2 Chainz, Nicki Minaj and Jeezy, while the production on the album was primarily handled by No I.D., Key Wane, Da Internz, Mano, Young Chop and Hey DJ among others. The album was supported by six singles: \"Guap\", \"Switch Up\", \"Beware\", \"Fire\", \"Ashley\" and \"You Don't Know\".",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "52674388",
"score": 0.6852559447288513,
"text": "I Decided (stylized as I Decided.) is the fourth studio album by American rapper Big Sean. It was released on February 3, 2017, by GOOD Music and Def Jam Recordings. The album features guest appearances from Jeremih, Migos, The-Dream, Jhené Aiko (credited as the duo Twenty88 with himself), Flint Chozen Choir, Starrah and Eminem. The production on the album was handled by Sean's frequent collaborator Key Wane, alongside a variety of record producers such as Metro Boomin, DJ Dahi, Fuse, Tre Pounds, DJ Mustard, WondaGurl, Detail, The Track Burnaz and Amaire Johnson, among others.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "46598617",
"score": 0.6849004626274109,
"text": "The Life of Pablo is the seventh studio album by American rapper Kanye West. It was released on February 14, 2016, by GOOD Music and Def Jam Recordings. Recording sessions took place from 2013 to 2016, in Italy, Mexico, Canada and the United States. Record production on the album was handled by West alongside a variety of producers such as Mike Dean, Noah Goldstein, Metro Boomin, Rick Rubin, Hudson Mohawke, and more. He also enlisted a wide array of guest vocalists, including The Weeknd, Ty Dolla Sign, Desiigner, Kid Cudi, The-Dream, Chance the Rapper, Rihanna, and Frank Ocean.",
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},
{
"id": "39696085",
"score": 0.6847391128540039,
"text": "Magna Carta Holy Grail (alternatively written and stylized as Magna Carta... Holy Grail) is the twelfth studio album by American rapper Jay-Z. It was made available for free digital download for Samsung customers via the Jay-Z Magna Carta app on July 4, 2013. It was released for retail sale on July 8, 2013, by Roc-A-Fella, Def Jam and Roc Nation. The album features guest appearances by Justin Timberlake, Nas, Rick Ross, Frank Ocean and Beyoncé. Most of the album was produced by Timbaland and Jerome \"J-Roc\" Harmon, while other producers included Boi-1da, Mike Will Made It, Hit-Boy, Mike Dean, No I.D., The-Dream, Swizz Beatz, and Pharrell Williams among others. The album was promoted through various commercials presented by Samsung and was not preceded by any retail singles.",
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},
{
"id": "45250481",
"score": 0.6840795278549194,
"text": "The Original High is the third studio album by American singer Adam Lambert, released on June 12, 2015, by Warner Bros. Records. Its executive producers are Max Martin and Shellback, the duo responsible for co-writing and producing Lambert's early-career hits \"Whataya Want from Me\" and \"If I Had You\". The album marks Lambert's first release since leaving previous record label, RCA Records. The record's style has been described as EDM, pop-house, and synthpop.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "1775018",
"score": 0.6835711002349854,
"text": "Jay Sean (born Kamaljit Singh Jhooti; 26 March 1983) is a British singer and songwriter. He debuted in the UK's Asian Underground scene as a member of the Rishi Rich Project with \"Dance with You\", which reached No. 12 on the UK Singles Chart in 2003. This led to him being signed to Virgin Records and having two UK top 10 hits as a solo artist in 2004: \"Eyes On You\" at No. 6 and \"Stolen\" at #4. They were included in his critically acclaimed debut album \"Me Against Myself\" which, though only moderately successful in the UK, sold more than two million copies across Asia and remains his most successful album to date. Alongside the Rishi Rich Project, Sean was a pioneer of Bhangra-R&B fusion, which his debut album helped popularize among the worldwide South Asian diaspora.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "31723901",
"score": 0.6816722750663757,
"text": "Finally Famous is the debut studio album by American rapper Big Sean. It was released on June 28, 2011, by GOOD Music and Def Jam Recordings. Recording sessions took place from 2010 to 2011, with Kanye West serving as the only executive producer on the album. The record serves as Big Sean's first studio release, under the whole \"Finally Famous\" series, following these mixtapes such as \"Finally Famous Vol. 1: The Mixtape\" (2007), \"Finally Famous Vol. 2: UKNOWBIGSEAN\" (2009) and \"\" (2010).",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "152447",
"score": 0.6811800003051758,
"text": "Sean John Combs (born November 4, 1969), also known by his stage names Puff Daddy, Puffy, P. Diddy, and Diddy, is an American rapper, singer, songwriter, actor, record producer, and entrepreneur. He was born in Harlem and was raised in Mount Vernon, New York. He worked as a talent director at Uptown Records before founding his label Bad Boy Entertainment in 1993. His debut album \"No Way Out\" (1997) has been certified seven times platinum and was followed by successful albums such as \"Forever\" (1999), \"The Saga Continues...\" (2001), and \"Press Play\" (2006). In 2009 Combs formed the musical group Diddy – Dirty Money and released the critically well-reviewed and commercially successful album \"Last Train to Paris\" (2010).",
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},
{
"id": "5664913",
"score": 0.6803508400917053,
"text": "\"So High\" is the debut single from British R&B star Jamelia. It was her first single for Parlophone in 1999. The single did not chart in the UK and is rare due to the fact it did not feature on her debut album, \"Drama\". It also omitted from her greatest hits compilation, along with \"Drama\" singles \"I Do\" and \"Boy Next Door\".",
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},
{
"id": "29768247",
"score": 0.6772415041923523,
"text": "So High is a song by American rapper Slim Thug, released on September 30, 2010, as the second single from his third studio album, \"Tha Thug Show\" (2010). The song, produced by Nard & B, features vocals from fellow American rapper B.o.B.",
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},
{
"id": "28209731",
"score": 0.6769348978996277,
"text": "\"2012 (It Ain't the End)\" is a song by British recording artist, Jay Sean, taken from the compilation album, \"Hit the Lights\". It features Trinidadian rapper and labelmate Nicki Minaj, and is the album's lead single. The song was produced by OFM production team J-Remy and Bobby Bass. It was released to US radio stations and as a digital download to iTunes on 3 August 2010. The title is a reference to the 2012 phenomenon.",
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},
{
"id": "162870",
"score": 0.6766043305397034,
"text": "Shawn Corey Carter (born December 4, 1969), known professionally as JAY-Z, is an American rapper and businessman. He is one of the best-selling musicians of all time, having sold more than 100 million records, while receiving 21 Grammy Awards for his music. MTV ranked him the \"Greatest MC of all time\" in 2006. \"Rolling Stone\" ranked three of his albums—\"Reasonable Doubt\" (1996), \"The Blueprint\" (2001), and \"The Black Album\" (2003)—among The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. In 2017, \"Forbes\" estimated his net worth at $810 million, making him the second-richest hip hop artist in the U.S.",
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},
{
"id": "53711218",
"score": 0.6741490364074707,
"text": "Damn (stylized as DAMN.) is the fourth studio album by American rapper Kendrick Lamar. It was released on April 14, 2017, by Top Dawg Entertainment, Aftermath Entertainment and Interscope Records. The album features production from a variety of record producers, including executive producer from the Top Dawg Entertainment label-head Anthony \"Top Dawg\" Tiffith, Sounwave, DJ Dahi, Mike Will Made It and Ricci Riera; as well as production contributions from James Blake, Steve Lacy, BadBadNotGood, Greg Kurstin, The Alchemist and 9th Wonder, among others.",
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},
{
"id": "13681085",
"score": 0.6734747290611267,
"text": "\"So High\" is a fourth and the last single from John Legend's debut album \"Get Lifted\". The song peaked at #66 on US R&B Charts and at #105 in US and at #118 in UK. The single track was released as a \"Cloud 9 Remix\" version which features a new beat and Lauryn Hill on vocals.",
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},
{
"id": "45302241",
"score": 0.6725120544433594,
"text": "Dark Sky Paradise is the third studio album by American rapper Big Sean. It was released on February 24, 2015, by GOOD Music and Def Jam Recordings. The album features guest appearances from Kanye West, Drake, Ariana Grande, Chris Brown, Ty Dolla Sign, Jhené Aiko, PartyNextDoor, Lil Wayne, John Legend and E-40, while the production was handled by a variety of collaborators, including Key Wane, DJ Mustard, DJ Dahi and Kanye West, who also serves as the album's executive producer alongside Big Sean himself. The album was supported by five singles: \"I Don't Fuck with You\" featuring E-40, \"Paradise\", \"Blessings\" featuring Drake, \"One Man Can Change the World\" featuring Kanye West and John Legend, and \"Play No Games\" featuring Chris Brown and Ty Dolla Sign.",
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},
{
"id": "3891629",
"score": 0.6723591089248657,
"text": "So Amazin' is the third studio album by American singer Christina Milian. The album, her first studio release since 2004's \"It's About Time\", was released by Island Records on May 16, 2006 in the United States. Unlike previous records, which had contributions from many producers, Milian wrote and produced \"So Amazin\"' primarily with hip hop producers Cool & Dre. During production, Milian was mentored by L.A. Reid and executive producer Jay-Z of Def Jam Recordings.",
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},
{
"id": "50818411",
"score": 0.6703184247016907,
"text": "\"Saint Pablo\" is a song by American rapper Kanye West, featuring prominent vocals by British singer Sampha. It originally surfaced online on March 31, 2016 after it had been leaked onto Apple Music by mistake before being removed hours later. The song was later added to West's seventh studio album, \"The Life of Pablo\" (2016) on June 14, 2016.",
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}
] |
5ab92c3a554299131ca4229d | Anthony Joseph Daniher and Neale Francis Daniher both played for which Australian Football League? | [
{
"id": "11015280",
"score": 0.8089331984519958,
"text": "Anthony Joseph Daniher (born 21 January 1963) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with the South Melbourne/Sydney and Essendon Football Clubs in the Australian Football League (AFL). Anthony's brothers, Terry, Neale and Chris, also played for Essendon in the AFL. Anthony is currently the owner of Danihers Facility Management, a facility management business with offices in Melbourne, Brisbane and Sydney."
},
{
"id": "3485613",
"score": 0.7751036286354065,
"text": "Neale Francis Daniher {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (born 15 February 1961) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with the Essendon Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). He was later the coach of the Melbourne Football Club between 1998 and 2007, and also held coaching positions with Essendon, Fremantle, and West Coast. Neale's brothers, Terry, Anthony and Chris, also played for Essendon. Daniher was diagnosed with motor neuron disease in 2013, and is now known as a prominent campaigner for medical research."
}
] | [
{
"id": "12276264",
"score": 0.7288323044776917,
"text": "Christopher \"Chris\" James Daniher (born 31 March 1966) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with the Essendon Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). His brothers Terry, Neale and Anthony also played for Essendon in the AFL.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "39627658",
"score": 0.7251945734024048,
"text": "Joe Daniher (born 4 March 1994) is a professional Australian rules footballer playing for the Essendon Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL).",
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},
{
"id": "6746675",
"score": 0.7086464166641235,
"text": "Terrence \"Terry\" John Daniher (born 15 August 1957) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with the South Melbourne and Essendon Football Clubs in the Australian Football League (AFL). Terry was also an assistant coach for the Essendon, Collingwood, St Kilda and Carlton Football Clubs. Terry's brothers, Neale, Anthony and Chris, also played for Essendon in the AFL. He is a member of the Australian Football Hall of Fame and the Wagga Wagga Sporting Hall of Fame and is a Champion of Essendon. Terry is currently the owner of Terry Daniher Cleaning Services, a cleaning company based in Melbourne.",
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},
{
"id": "30013216",
"score": 0.6718012690544128,
"text": "The Ungarie Football Netball Club (nicknamed The Magpies) is an Australian rules football and netball club that plays in the Northern Riverina Football Netball League (NRFNL). Formed in 1916, the Magpies are most famous for producing the Daniher brothers (Terry, Neale, Anthony and Chris), as well as Ben Fixter.",
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},
{
"id": "14729175",
"score": 0.6702750325202942,
"text": "Darcy Daniher (born 21 September 1989) is a former Australian rules footballer drafted by the Essendon Football Club at pick 39 under the (Father-Son Rule) in the 2007 AFL Draft. Daniher was a mid-sized, mobile defender originally from TAC Cup club Calder Cannons. He retired from professional football in August 2011 due to injury.",
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},
{
"id": "54551505",
"score": 0.648567259311676,
"text": "Daniher may refer to four brothers, Australian rules footballers",
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},
{
"id": "7658918",
"score": 0.6408731341362,
"text": "Anthony \"Tony\" Francis (born 1 April 1969 in South Australia) is a former Australian rules footballer in the Australian Football League.",
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},
{
"id": "4104319",
"score": 0.6280859708786011,
"text": "Kevin \"Cowboy\" Neale (born 18 July 1945) is a former Australian rules footballer who played in the Victorian Football League (VFL).",
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},
{
"id": "10257",
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"text": "The Essendon Football Club is a professional Australian rules football club which plays in the Australian Football League (AFL), the sport's premier competition. Formed in 1871 as a junior club and playing as a senior club since 1878, Essendon is one of the oldest clubs in the AFL. It is historically associated with Essendon, a suburb in the north-west of Melbourne, Victoria. Since 2013, the club has been headquartered at the True Value Solar Centre, Melbourne Airport, and plays its home games at either Docklands Stadium or the Melbourne Cricket Ground; throughout most of its history the club's home ground and headquarters was Windy Hill, Essendon. Dyson Heppell is the current team captain.",
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},
{
"id": "3872088",
"score": 0.625496506690979,
"text": "Anthony \"Tony\" McGuinness (born 6 May 1964 in Adelaide, South Australia) is a former Australian rules football player who played for Footscray and Adelaide in the VFL/AFL. His wife is former \"Nine News\" Adelaide presenter Georgina McGuinness.",
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},
{
"id": "22809462",
"score": 0.6253818869590759,
"text": "The St Kilda Football Club, nicknamed The Saints, is an Australian rules football club, based in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The club plays in the Australian Football League (AFL), the highest league in the country.",
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},
{
"id": "30664999",
"score": 0.6224306225776672,
"text": "The Australian Football League is the top professional Australian rules football league in the world. The league consists of eighteen teams: nine based in the city of Melbourne, one from regional Victoria, and eight based on other Australian states. The reason for this unbalanced geographic distribution lies in the history of the league, which was based solely within Victoria from the time it was established in 1897, until the time the league expanded through the addition of clubs from interstate to the existing starting in the 1980s; until this expansion, the league was known as the \"Victorian Football League\". Afl is also known as \"Aussie rules\"",
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{
"id": "92922",
"score": 0.6209685802459717,
"text": "The St Kilda Football Club, nicknamed the Saints, is an Australian rules football club based in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The club plays in the Australian Football League, the sport's premier league.",
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},
{
"id": "97831",
"score": 0.6201601028442383,
"text": "The Melbourne Football Club, nicknamed the Demons, is a professional Australian rules football club, playing in the Australian Football League (AFL). It is named after and based in the city of Melbourne, Victoria, and plays its home games at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG).",
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{
"id": "6771713",
"score": 0.6168217062950134,
"text": "Tony Rice (born September 5, 1967) is a former professional American football player, playing quarterback in the Canadian Football League and World League of American Football. Rice is perhaps best remembered as the dynamic option quarterback of the University of Notre Dame's 1988 National Championship Team under coach Lou Holtz. Rice would play professional football for only three seasons for the Canadian Football League's Saskatchewan Roughriders and the Barcelona Dragons of the World League of American Football from 1990 to 1992. He also played for Munich Thunder in the FLE (Football League of Europe) in 1994.",
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{
"id": "312661",
"score": 0.6146968603134155,
"text": "The Fremantle Football Club, nicknamed the Dockers, is a professional Australian rules football team that competes in the Australian Football League (AFL). The club represents and was previously based in the port city of Fremantle at the mouth of the Swan River in Western Australia and now has their training and headquarters at Cockburn ARC in Cockburn Central. In 1995 it became the second team from Western Australia after the West Coast Eagles to be admitted to the AFL, honouring the rich footballing tradition and history associated with Fremantle.",
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},
{
"id": "34094",
"score": 0.6125338673591614,
"text": "The Western Bulldogs (formerly the Footscray Football Club ) is a professional Australian rules football club that competes in the Australian Football League (AFL), the sport's premier competition. Founded in 1877 in Footscray, an inner-western suburb of Melbourne, the club won nine premierships in the Victorian Football Association (VFA) before gaining entry to the Victorian Football League (since renamed the AFL) in 1925. The club has won two VFL/AFL premierships, in 1954 and 2016, and was runner up in 1961.",
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},
{
"id": "46215316",
"score": 0.6111344695091248,
"text": "Anthony Stevens (born 1971) is a former Australian rules footballer.",
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},
{
"id": "3101280",
"score": 0.6109944581985474,
"text": "The Essendon Football Club, nicknamed The Bombers, is an Australian rules football club in the Australian Football League (AFL). Thought to have formed in 1872, Essendon played their first Victorian Football Association (VFA) game in 1873, before participating in the inaugural season of the Victorian Football League (now AFL) in 1897. Headquartered at the Essendon Recreation Reserve, Windy Hill in the Melbourne suburb of Essendon, the club has won 16 VFL/AFL premierships, which, along with Carlton, is the most of any club.",
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},
{
"id": "3243616",
"score": 0.6109484434127808,
"text": "Tony Brown (born 28 May 1977) is a former professional Australian rules footballer who has played in the Australian Football League (AFL) and the South Australian National Football League (SANFL).",
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}
] |
5ac563755542993e66e823de | What do Grindelia and Jaborosa have in common? | [
{
"id": "2042552",
"score": 0.6794349551200867,
"text": "Grindelia (gumweed) is a genus of plants native to the Americas belonging to the sunflower family."
},
{
"id": "39876061",
"score": 0.6644318699836731,
"text": "Jaborosa is a genus of flowering plants in the family Solanaceae, the nightshades. There are about 23 species, all native to South America, where they are distributed from Peru to Patagonia. Most occur in the Andes. Most can be found in Argentina and ten are endemic to the country."
}
] | [
{
"id": "47278299",
"score": 0.6188498139381409,
"text": "Grindelia sublanuginosa is a North American species of flowering plants in the daisy family. It is native to western Mexico, found only in the State of Jalisco.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "47273857",
"score": 0.6179999709129333,
"text": "Grindelia tenella is a North American species of flowering plants in the daisy family.",
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},
{
"id": "16370573",
"score": 0.61164391040802,
"text": "Grindelia nana is a species of flowering plant in the daisy family known by the common names Idaho gumplant and Idaho gumweed. It is native to western North America, especially the western United States, where it can be found in a number of dry habitats. This is a weedlike perennial herb growing mainly erect to heights between 20 centimeters and one meter. Its stems and foliage are mostly green with some reddish coloration. Leaves are up to 9 centimeters long. The tops of the stem branches bear flower heads one or two centimeters wide, which are bell-shaped with rounded bases. The head is a cup of green clawlike, curling or erect phyllaries. The center of the head is filled with many disc florets and the circumference is lined with golden yellow ray florets.",
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},
{
"id": "47272730",
"score": 0.6058496832847595,
"text": "Grindelia subalpina, the subalpine gumweed, is a North American species of flowering plants in the Astereae tribe of the daisy family.",
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},
{
"id": "15153952",
"score": 0.6031823754310608,
"text": "Flory Jagoda (born Flora Kabilio on 21 December 1926) is a Bosnian Jewish born American guitarist, composer and singer-songwriter. She is known for her interpretation of Ladino songs and the Bosnian folk ballads, sevdalinka.",
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},
{
"id": "47711298",
"score": 0.6020155549049377,
"text": "Gnorimoschema grindeliae is a moth in the Gelechiidae family. It was described by Powell and Povolný in 2001. It is found in North America, where it has been recorded from California.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "47278164",
"score": 0.5985819697380066,
"text": "Grindelia oaxacana is a rare North American species of flowering plants in the daisy family. It is native to southwestern Mexico, found only in the State of Oaxaca.",
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},
{
"id": "29068912",
"score": 0.5958970189094543,
"text": "Williamsonia is a genus of small dragonflies in the family Corduliidae. They are commonly known as boghaunters. Unlike other genera of emerald dragonflies, they have dark eyes and nonmetallic bodies.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "40050029",
"score": 0.5955361127853394,
"text": "Grinda is a French surname. Notable people with the surname include:",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "22579013",
"score": 0.5928727984428406,
"text": "Rhagoletis grindeliae is a species of tephritid or fruit flies in the genus \"Rhagoletis\" of the family Tephritidae.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "47272636",
"score": 0.5922440886497498,
"text": "Grindelia scabra, the rough gumweed, is a rare North American species of flowering plants in the daisy family. It has been found in northern Mexico (Coahuila) and the southwestern United States (western Texas and southern New Mexico).",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "47274121",
"score": 0.5900920033454895,
"text": "Grindelia hintoniorum is a rare North American species of flowering plants in the daisy family. It is native to northeastern Mexico, found only in the State of Nuevo León.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "47272066",
"score": 0.5882578492164612,
"text": "Grindelia howellii, Howell's gumweed, is a North American species of flowering plants in the daisy family. It is native to the northwestern United States, in the States of Idaho and Montana.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "1953062",
"score": 0.5877774357795715,
"text": ", Libussa, Libushe or, historically \"Lubossa\", is a legendary ancestor of the Přemyslid dynasty and the Czech people as a whole. According to legend, she was the youngest but wisest of three sisters, who became queen after their father died; she married a ploughman, Přemysl, with whom she founded the Přemyslid dynasty, and prophesied and founded the city of Prague in the 8th century.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "16365363",
"score": 0.5865962505340576,
"text": "Grindelia camporum is a species of flowering plant in the daisy family known by the common names Great Valley gumplant and Great Valley gumweed.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "10020449",
"score": 0.5854582786560059,
"text": "Eurosia (or Orosia) is the patron saint of Jaca, a city in the province of Huesca of northeastern Spain, in the Pyrenees, the center of her cult. In Spain, the \"Fiesta de Santa Orosia\" is celebrated on 25 June. Tradition states that she was born in Bayonne (or perhaps Bohemia) and died in 714, martyred by the Moors at Jaca.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "29716772",
"score": 0.5847235918045044,
"text": "Cremastobombycia grindeliella is a moth of the Gracillariidae family. It is known from California, United States.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "47270657",
"score": 0.5844669938087463,
"text": "Grindelia adenodonta, Lonestar gumweed, is a species of flowering plants in the daisy family.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "47273759",
"score": 0.5826814770698547,
"text": "Grindelia macvaughii is a North American species of flowering plants in the daisy family. It is native to the central Mexico, in the eastern part of the State of Jalisco.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "47278406",
"score": 0.5825732946395874,
"text": "Grindelia aggregata is a rare North American species of flowering plants in the daisy family. It is native to western Canada, found only in salt marshes and tidal flats along the seacoast in the southern part of Vancouver Island in British Columbia.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5ab3248455429976abd1bc6d | In investing, value premium refers to the greater risk-adjusted return of value stocks over growth stocks, other experts, such as John Clifton "Jack" Bogle, have argued that no value premium exists, claiming that Fama and French's research is period dependent, Bogle is an investor, business magnate, and philanthropist, of which nationality? | [
{
"id": "5734752",
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"text": "In investing, value premium refers to the greater risk-adjusted return of value stocks over growth stocks. Eugene Fama and K. G. French first identified the premium in 1992, using a measure they called HML (high book-to-market ratio minus low book-to-market ratio) to measure equity returns based on valuation. Other experts, such as John C. Bogle, have argued that no value premium exists, claiming that Fama and French's research is period dependent."
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{
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"text": "John Clifton \"Jack\" Bogle (born May 8, 1929) is an American investor, business magnate, and philanthropist. He is the founder and retired chief executive of The Vanguard Group."
}
] | [
{
"id": "211518",
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"text": "Warren Edward Buffett ( ; born August 30, 1930) is an American business magnate, investor, and philanthropist. Buffett serves as the Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of Berkshire Hathaway. He is considered by some to be one of the most successful investors in the world, and as of August 2017 is the second wealthiest person in the United States, and the fourth wealthiest in the world, with a total net worth of $76.9 billion.",
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{
"id": "17064581",
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"text": "John Alfred Paulson (born December 14, 1955) is an American investor, hedge fund manager and philanthropist. He leads Paulson & Co., a New York-based investment management firm he founded in 1994. He has been called \"one of the most prominent names in high finance\" and \"a man who made one of the biggest fortunes in Wall Street history\".",
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{
"id": "2701224",
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"text": "John Burr Williams (November 27, 1900 – September 15, 1989) was a 20th-century economist, recognized as a founder and developer of fundamental analysis, and for his pioneering analysis of stock prices as reflecting their “intrinsic value.” He is best known for his 1938 text \"The Theory of Investment Value\", based on his Ph.D. thesis, which was amongst the first to articulate the theory of Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) based valuation, and in particular, dividend based valuation.",
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{
"id": "1011242",
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"text": "Value investing is an investment paradigm which generally involves buying securities that appear underpriced by some form of fundamental analysis, though it has taken many forms since its inception. It derives from the ideas on investment that Benjamin Graham and David Dodd began teaching at Columbia Business School in 1928 and subsequently developed in their 1934 text \"Security Analysis\". As examples, such securities may be stock in public companies that trade at discounts to book value or tangible book value, have high dividend yields, have low price-to-earning multiples or have low price-to-book ratios.",
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{
"id": "353206",
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"text": "Benjamin Graham ( ; born Benjamin Grossbaum; May 9, 1894 – September 21, 1976) was a British-born American investor, economist, and professor. He is widely known as the \"father of value investing,\" and wrote two of the founding texts in neoclassical investing: \"Security Analysis\" (1934) with David Dodd, and \"The Intelligent Investor\" (1949). His investment philosophy stressed investor psychology, minimal debt, buy-and-hold investing, fundamental analysis, concentrated diversification, buying within the margin of safety, activist investing, and contrarian mindsets.",
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{
"id": "536702",
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"text": "Sir John Marks Templeton (29 November 1912 – 8 July 2008) was an American-born British investor, fund manager, and philanthropist. In 1954, he entered the mutual fund market and created the Templeton Growth Fund. In 1999, \"Money\" magazine named him \"arguably the greatest global stock picker of the century.\"",
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{
"id": "186300",
"score": 0.6445882320404053,
"text": "John Davison Rockefeller Sr. (July 8, 1839 – May 23, 1937) was an American oil industry business magnate and philanthropist. Widely considered the wealthiest American of all time and the richest person in modern history, Rockefeller was born into a large family in upstate New York and was shaped by his con man father and religious mother. His family moved several times before eventually settling in Cleveland, Ohio.",
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{
"id": "3141000",
"score": 0.6376267671585083,
"text": "Bill Miller is an American investor, fund manager, and philanthropist. He served as the chairman and chief investment officer of Legg Mason Capital Management as well as the principle portfolio manager of the Legg Mason Capital Management Value Trust. He is currently the portfolio manager of the Legg Mason Opportunity Trust mutual funds.",
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},
{
"id": "699407",
"score": 0.6372774243354797,
"text": "William Barron Hilton (born October 23, 1927) is an American business magnate, socialite, and hotel heir. The son and successor of hotelier Conrad Hilton, he is the retired chairman, president and chief executive officer of Hilton Hotels Corporation and chairman emeritus of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. Hilton was also a founding partner of the American Football League and the original owner of the Los Angeles Chargers.",
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{
"id": "93759",
"score": 0.6332221627235413,
"text": "Sir Richard Charles Nicholas Branson (born 18 July 1950) is an English business magnate, investor and philanthropist. He founded the Virgin Group, which controls more than 400 companies.",
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},
{
"id": "488147",
"score": 0.6323919296264648,
"text": "George Peabody ( ; February 18, 1795 – November 4, 1869) was an American-British financier widely regarded as the \"father of modern philanthropy.\"",
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},
{
"id": "1021521",
"score": 0.6306132078170776,
"text": "The equity premium puzzle refers to the phenomenon that observed returns on stocks over the past century are much higher than returns on government bonds. It is a term coined by Rajnish Mehra and Edward C. Prescott in 1985, although in 1982 Robert J. Shiller published the first calculation that showed that either a large risk aversion coefficient or counterfactually large consumption variability was required to explain the means and variances of asset returns. Azeredo (2014) shows, however, that increasing the risk aversion level may produce a negative equity premium in an Arrow-Debreu economy constructed to mimic the persistence in U.S. consumption growth observed in the data since 1929. Economists expect arbitrage opportunities would reduce the difference in returns on these two investment opportunities to reflect the risk premium investors demand to invest in relatively more risky stocks.",
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{
"id": "1250565",
"score": 0.6300466060638428,
"text": "Howard Homan Buffett (August 13, 1903 – April 30, 1964) was an American businessman, investor, and politician. He was a four-term Republican United States Representative. He was the father of Warren Buffett, the famed American billionaire businessman and investor.",
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{
"id": "10223967",
"score": 0.6288817524909973,
"text": "The Little Book of Common Sense Investing: The Only Way to Guarantee Your Fair Share of Stock Market Returns is a 2007 book on index investing, by John C. Bogle, the founder and former CEO of the Vanguard Group. He focuses on index funds, which will give the investor the average market return, and on keeping investing costs low, so that the index fund investor will consistently do better than other investors, after costs. Trying to beat the market \"is a loser's game,\" according to Bogle and \"the more the managers and brokers take, the less investors make.\"",
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{
"id": "301227",
"score": 0.6287853121757507,
"text": "Eugene Francis \"Gene\" Fama ( ; born February 14, 1939) is an American economist, often referred to as \"The Father of Finance\", best known for his empirical work on portfolio theory, asset pricing and stock market behaviour.",
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{
"id": "1263518",
"score": 0.6283131241798401,
"text": "Shareholder value is a business term, sometimes phrased as shareholder value maximization or as the shareholder value model, which implies that the ultimate measure of a company's success is the extent to which it enriches shareholders. It became popular during the 1980s, and is particularly associated with former CEO of General Electric, Jack Welch.",
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{
"id": "31656763",
"score": 0.6280049085617065,
"text": "Bernard Rapoport (July 17, 1917 – April 5, 2012) was an American entrepreneur, philanthropist, author, and the founder of American Income Life Insurance Company. He worked for the advancement of human rights, education, and literacy.",
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{
"id": "9577026",
"score": 0.6247010231018066,
"text": "Paul Elliott Singer (born August 22, 1944) is an American hedge fund manager, activist investor, and philanthropist. His hedge fund, Elliott Management Corporation (EMC)—specializes in distressed debt acquisitions. Singer is also the founder and CEO of NML Capital Limited, a Cayman Islands-based offshore unit of Elliott Management Corporation. In 2017, \"Forbes\" rated Singer's net worth as $2.9 billion.",
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{
"id": "1599527",
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"text": "Richard Michael Schulze (born January 1941) is an American businessman. He is the founder of Best Buy and previously served as chairman and CEO. On the \"Forbes\" 2016 list of the world's billionaires, he was ranked #722 with a net worth of US$2.4 billion.",
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{
"id": "15645",
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"text": "John Jacob Astor (July 17, 1763 – March 29, 1848) (born Johann Jakob Astor) was a German–American businessman, merchant, real estate mogul and investor who mainly made his fortune in fur trade and by investing in real estate in or around New York City.",
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}
] |
5a7734f75542993735360218 | What Vancouver Kanuck player was born in 1986? | [
{
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"text": "The 2011–12 Vancouver Canucks season was the 42nd season in the modern Canucks history. The Vancouver Canucks were the defending Western Conference champions and three time defending Northwest Division champions. The Canucks opened the regular season against the Pittsburgh Penguins at home on October 6. Their final regular season game was held at Rogers Arena against the Edmonton Oilers on April 7, 2012. The Canucks entered the season expected to again contend for their first ever Stanley Cup. The Canucks struggled out of the gate, hovering around .500 until roughly the 20 game mark due to weak defensive play and a slow start from Roberto Luongo. The Canucks then rebounded, playing their best hockey of the season from the end of November until the beginning of January. The team dominated much like they did the season prior during this stretch, as goals came in bunches and the offense was backed up by strong goaltending from the tandem of Luongo and Cory Schneider. The peak of the Canucks' season came on January 7, 2012, in a game against the Boston Bruins, a 2011 Stanley Cup Final rematch. The Canucks prevailed 4–3 in a hard-fought playoff atmosphere, and they seemed to state to the hockey world that they would be heard from again come playoff time. The winning ways continued for the rest of the season, but the team did not play with the same heart they played with that January afternoon again. The Canucks often played down to their competition, barely beating some of the weakest teams in the league as the offense seemed to disappear. The Canucks pulled a shocking deal at the trade deadline, trading blue-chip prospect Cody Hodgson to the Buffalo Sabres for a skilled, but unproven prospect Zack Kassian. While Kassian should eventually emerge as a solid NHLer, this deal was probably pulled too soon as the offensive mojo disappeared but the team was lucky to have outstanding goaltending that led them to their second consecutive Presidents' Trophy on the final day of the regular season when they defeated the Edmonton Oilers. Despite entering the playoffs as the top seed, the Canucks were eliminated in the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs in five games by the Los Angeles Kings."
},
{
"id": "5877043",
"score": 0.6168620586395264,
"text": "Cory Franklin Schneider (born March 18, 1986) is an American professional ice hockey goaltender currently playing for the New Jersey Devils in the National Hockey League (NHL)."
}
] | [
{
"id": "7307815",
"score": 0.6718873381614685,
"text": "Travis Zajac ( ; ] ; born May 13, 1985) is a Canadian professional ice hockey centre and alternate captain for the New Jersey Devils of the National Hockey League (NHL). Zajac was selected 20th overall in 2004 by the Devils, the organization he has played his entire NHL career with.",
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},
{
"id": "13557799",
"score": 0.6683732867240906,
"text": "Derek Dorsett (born December 20, 1986) is a Canadian professional ice hockey right winger who currently plays for the Vancouver Canucks of the National Hockey League (NHL). He has previously played in the NHL for the Columbus Blue Jackets and the New York Rangers, the former of which drafted him in 2006 in the seventh round, 189th overall.",
"topk_rank": 1
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{
"id": "52098771",
"score": 0.6619274616241455,
"text": "Troy Stecher ( ; born April 7, 1994) is a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman for the Vancouver Canucks of the National Hockey League (NHL).",
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{
"id": "440398",
"score": 0.6561882495880127,
"text": "Roberto Luongo ( ; born April 4, 1979) is a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender for the Florida Panthers of the National Hockey League (NHL). Born in Montreal, Quebec, he is of Italian and Irish ancestry. He employs the butterfly style of goaltending and has previously played in the NHL for the New York Islanders and the Vancouver Canucks. Luongo is a two-time NHL Second All-Star (2004 and 2007) and a winner of the William M. Jennings Trophy for backstopping his team to the lowest goals-against average in the league (2011; with backup Cory Schneider). He has additionally been a finalist for the Vezina Trophy as the league's best goaltender (2004, 2007 and 2011), the Lester B. Pearson Award as the top player voted by his peers (2004 and 2007) and the Hart Memorial Trophy as the league's most valuable player (2007).",
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{
"id": "3219777",
"score": 0.6500186324119568,
"text": "Tyler John Bouck (born January 13, 1980) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey centre who played in the National Hockey League (NHL) with the Dallas Stars, Phoenix Coyotes and the Vancouver Canucks. He spent the last five seasons of his career in Germany with ERC Ingolstadt of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL).",
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{
"id": "21353932",
"score": 0.6488146781921387,
"text": "Jason John Maxwell Garrison (born November 13, 1984) is a professional ice hockey player currently playing for the Vegas Golden Knights of the National Hockey League (NHL). Garrison played two years of Junior A with the Nanaimo Clippers of the British Columbia Hockey League (BCHL), during which time he earned a scholarship to play college hockey with the University of Minnesota Duluth. Following his third NCAA year, he signed with the Florida Panthers as an undrafted free agent in 2008. Garrison spent four years with the Panthers organization, setting franchise records for single-season goals and power play goals by a defenceman in 2011–12. In July 2012, he signed a six-year deal with his hometown team, the Vancouver Canucks. After two seasons with Vancouver, he was traded to Tampa Bay, just prior to the 2014 NHL Entry Draft.",
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{
"id": "23311224",
"score": 0.6484339833259583,
"text": "Zack Adam Kassian (born January 24, 1991) is a Canadian professional ice hockey winger currently with the Edmonton Oilers of the National Hockey League (NHL). During his junior career, he won a Memorial Cup with the Windsor Spitfires in 2010. Selected 13th overall in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft, he began his career within the Buffalo Sabres organization before being traded to the Canucks in 2012. He played parts of four seasons with the Canucks before they traded him to the Montreal Canadiens in 2015. Kassian never played for the Canadiens as he was suspended for substance abuse issues, and was traded to the Oilers a few months later.",
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{
"id": "755749",
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"text": "Alexander Mikhailovich \"Alex\" Ovechkin (Александр Михайлович Овечкин ; ] ; born 17 September 1985) is a Russian professional ice hockey winger and captain of the Washington Capitals of the National Hockey League (NHL). Prior to entering the NHL, Ovechkin played for HC Dynamo Moscow of the Russian Superleague for four seasons, from 2001 until 2005, and returned to play for them briefly during the 2012–13 NHL lockout. A highly touted prospect, Ovechkin was selected by the Capitals first overall in the 2004 NHL Entry Draft. With the 2004–05 NHL lockout cancelling the season, Ovechkin remained in Russia until 2005, joining the Capitals for the 2005–06 season. He won the Calder Memorial Trophy as rookie of the year, scoring 52 goals and 54 assists to lead all rookies with 106 points and finishing third overall in league scoring.",
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{
"id": "39506535",
"score": 0.6456586122512817,
"text": "Hunter Shinkaruk (born October 13, 1994) is a Canadian professional ice hockey winger currently playing for the Stockton Heat in the American Hockey League (AHL) as a prospect within the Calgary Flames organization of the National Hockey League (NHL). Shinkaruk was originally selected by the Vancouver Canucks in the 1st round (24th overall) of the 2013 NHL Entry Draft.",
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{
"id": "29375772",
"score": 0.6451064944267273,
"text": "Tyson Barrie (born July 26, 1991) is a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman currently playing for the Colorado Avalanche of the National Hockey League (NHL). Barrie previously played for and captained the Kelowna Rockets of the Western Hockey League (WHL).",
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{
"id": "8640274",
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"text": "Brandon Sutter (born February 14, 1989) is a Canadian-American professional ice hockey player for the Vancouver Canucks of the National Hockey League (NHL). He is the son of former player Brent Sutter, and a member of the famous Sutter family.",
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{
"id": "2087733",
"score": 0.6422264575958252,
"text": "Thomas Vanek (born 19 January 1984) is an Austrian professional ice hockey left winger for the Vancouver Canucks. He has played for the Buffalo Sabres, New York Islanders, Montreal Canadiens, Minnesota Wild, Detroit Red Wings and Florida Panthers. Vanek was drafted by the Buffalo Sabres fifth overall in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft, making him the highest drafted Austrian in NHL history.",
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{
"id": "10736774",
"score": 0.642064094543457,
"text": "Milan Lucic (] ; born June 7, 1988) is a Canadian professional ice hockey left winger and an alternate captain for the Edmonton Oilers of the National Hockey League (NHL). He played major junior hockey with the Vancouver Giants in the Western Hockey League (WHL) for three seasons and captured a Memorial Cup, while being named tournament MVP in 2007. He was selected 50th overall in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft and made the Boston Bruins' roster as a 19-year-old in 2007–08. Three years later, he won a Stanley Cup with the Bruins. He spent the first eight seasons of his NHL career with Boston prior to joining Los Angeles in June 2015.",
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{
"id": "14209859",
"score": 0.641913115978241,
"text": "Jordan Rhys Hall (born August 31, 1984) is a Canadian lacrosse player from Surrey, British Columbia who plays for the Rochester Knighthawks in the National Lacrosse League and the Hamilton Nationals of Major League Lacrosse.",
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{
"id": "51338685",
"score": 0.6393176913261414,
"text": "Scott Morrison (born January 3, 1986) is a Canadian professional basketball player who plays for SAN-EN NeoPhoenix of the B.League. Morrison plays the center position.",
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{
"id": "2663591",
"score": 0.6392887234687805,
"text": "Evan Brooks Laich ( ; born June 23, 1983) is a Canadian ice hockey player currently an unrestricted free agent.",
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{
"id": "3665861",
"score": 0.6377295851707458,
"text": "Alexandre \"Alex\" Ménard-Burrows (born April 11, 1981) is a Canadian professional ice hockey left winger for the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (NHL). He is known for playing in the style of an agitator and for his ascension to the NHL from being an undrafted player in the ECHL. After a two-year career in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), he played in the minor leagues for three seasons. He was signed by the Vancouver Canucks in 2005 from their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Manitoba Moose. Burrows established himself as a checking forward with the Canucks in his first three NHL seasons before emerging as a scorer with four consecutive 25+ goal seasons from 2008–09 to 2011–12.",
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{
"id": "29721183",
"score": 0.6370304226875305,
"text": "Travis Hamonic (born August 16, 1990) is a Canadian professional ice hockey defenseman currently playing for the Calgary Flames of the National Hockey League (NHL).",
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{
"id": "29504352",
"score": 0.6367588639259338,
"text": "Alex Chiasson (] , born October 1, 1990) is a Canadian ice hockey forward who is currently an unrestricted free agent who most recently played for the Calgary Flames of the National Hockey League (NHL).",
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{
"id": "23620898",
"score": 0.635653555393219,
"text": "Guillaume Desbiens (born April 20, 1985 in Alma, Quebec) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey right winger who played in the National Hockey League (NHL) with the Vancouver Canucks and Calgary Flames. And most recently the Elite Ice Hockey League's Sheffield Steelers.",
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] |
5a8ce78a55429941ae14df38 | In which California city was the draft held in which Petter Granberg was drafted by the Toronto Maple Leafs? | [
{
"id": "27678333",
"score": 0.7634251713752747,
"text": "Petter Jonas Granberg (born 27 August 1992) is a Swedish professional ice hockey player. He is currently playing within the Nashville Predators organization of the National Hockey League (NHL). Granberg was drafted 116th overall by the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 2010 NHL Entry Draft."
},
{
"id": "18026409",
"score": 0.6498229503631592,
"text": "The 2010 NHL Entry Draft was the 48th NHL Entry Draft, held on June 25–26, 2010 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, California, home arena of the Los Angeles Kings. This was the first time Los Angeles hosted the NHL Entry Draft. An unofficial record of 11 American-trained players were selected in the first round, starting with Jack Campbell and ending with Brock Nelson. The record was set in the 2006 and 2007 drafts, where 10 U.S.-trained players were selected in the first round."
}
] | [
{
"id": "18268619",
"score": 0.6878365278244019,
"text": "The Los Angeles Kings are a professional ice hockey franchise based in Los Angeles, California. They play in the Pacific Division of the Western Conference in the National Hockey League (NHL). The franchise was founded in 1967. Since arriving in Los Angeles, the Kings have drafted 430 players. The 2014 draft was the 48th in which Los Angeles participated.",
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"id": "4390367",
"score": 0.6849756836891174,
"text": "The Toronto Maple Leafs are a National Hockey League team, based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.",
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{
"id": "18272351",
"score": 0.6712559461593628,
"text": "The California Golden Seals were a professional ice hockey franchise based in Oakland, California from 1967–76. They played their first seven seasons in the West Division and their final two seasons in the Adams Division. During their time in Oakland the Golden Seals drafted 72 players and participated in ten National Hockey League Amateur Drafts before the franchise relocated to Cleveland, Ohio on July 14, 1976.",
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"id": "695515",
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"text": "Aki-Petteri Arvid Berg (] ; born July 28, 1977) is a retired Finnish professional ice hockey defenceman. He was drafted third overall by the Los Angeles Kings in the 1995 NHL Entry Draft. He played both for the Kings and the Toronto Maple Leafs over nine seasons and has represented Team Finland twice at the Winter Olympics, winning a bronze medal at the 1998 Nagano Olympics, a silver medal at the 2004 World Cup of Hockey in which Finland lost in the finals to host Canada, and a silver medal at the 2006 Torino Olympics.",
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"id": "23037855",
"score": 0.6691948175430298,
"text": "The Los Angeles Kings are an American professional ice hockey team based in Los Angeles, California. They play in the Pacific Division of the Western Conference in the National Hockey League (NHL). The team joined the NHL in 1967 as an expansion team with five other teams, and won their first Stanley Cup in 2012. Having first played at The Forum, the Kings have played their home games at the Staples Center since 1999. The team has had nine general managers since their inception.",
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"id": "70155",
"score": 0.6632934212684631,
"text": "The Toronto Maple Leafs (officially the Toronto Maple Leaf Hockey Club) are a professional ice hockey team based in Toronto, Ontario. They are members of the Atlantic Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The club is owned by Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, Ltd. and are represented by Chairman Larry Tanenbaum. With an estimated worth of US $1.1 billion in 2016 according to \"Forbes\", the Leafs are the third most valuable franchise in the NHL, after the Montreal Canadiens and the New York Rangers. The team's broadcasting rights are split between BCE Inc. and Rogers Communication. For their first 14 seasons, the club played their home games at the Mutual Street Arena, before moving to Maple Leaf Gardens in 1931. The club moved to their present home, the Air Canada Centre in February 1999.",
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"id": "77520",
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"text": "Anaheim (pronounced ) is a city in Orange County, California, part of the Los Angeles metropolitan area. As of the 2010 United States Census, the city had a population of 336,265, making it the most populous city in Orange County and the 10th-most populous city in California. Anaheim is the second-largest city in Orange County in terms of land area (after Irvine) and is known for its theme parks, the Anaheim Convention Center, and its two major sports teams: the Anaheim Ducks ice hockey club and the Angels baseball team.",
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{
"id": "2455568",
"score": 0.6597413420677185,
"text": "The Los Angeles Kings are an American professional ice hockey team based in Los Angeles, California. They play in the Pacific Division of the Western Conference in the National Hockey League (NHL). The team joined the NHL in 1967 as an expansion team with five other teams, and won their first Stanley Cup in 2012. Having first played at The Forum, the Kings have played their home games at the Staples Center since 1999. The Kings are owned by Philip Anschutz and Edward P. Roski, Rob Blake is their general manager, and Anže Kopitar is the team captain.",
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{
"id": "27853291",
"score": 0.6565396785736084,
"text": "Beau Daniel Bennett (born November 27, 1991) is an American professional ice hockey right winger currently playing for the Chicago Wolves in the American Hockey League (AHL) while under contract to the St. Louis Blues of the National Hockey League (NHL). Bennett attended the University of Denver until 2012. He was drafted by the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round, 20th overall, in the 2010 NHL Entry Draft. Bennett is the highest-drafted Californian born-and-trained player in NHL history.",
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{
"id": "73134",
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"text": "The Anaheim Ducks are a professional ice hockey team based in Anaheim, California. They are members of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). Since their inception, the Ducks have played their home games at the Honda Center.",
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{
"id": "73133",
"score": 0.650177538394928,
"text": "The Vancouver Canucks are a professional ice hockey team based in Vancouver, :British Columbia. They are members of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Canucks play their home games at Rogers Arena, formerly known as General Motors Place, which has an official capacity of 18,910. Henrik Sedin is currently the captain of the team, Travis Green is the head coach and Jim Benning is the general manager.",
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{
"id": "23615827",
"score": 0.6480327248573303,
"text": "The Calgary Flames are a professional ice hockey team based in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. They are members of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The club is the third major-professional ice hockey team to represent the city of Calgary, following the Calgary Tigers (1921–1927) and Calgary Cowboys (1975–1977). The Flames are one of two NHL franchises in Alberta; the other is the Edmonton Oilers. The cities' proximity has led to a rivalry known as the Battle of Alberta.",
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{
"id": "36172536",
"score": 0.645483136177063,
"text": "The Los Angeles Kings are a professional ice hockey team based in Los Angeles. They are members of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference in the National Hockey League (NHL). The club was founded in 1967 as one of the League's expansion teams.",
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{
"id": "25113582",
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"text": "The Toronto Blue Jays are a Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. They play in the American League East division. Since the Blue Jays' entrance into the league in 1977, the Blue Jays have selected 70 players in the first round. Officially known as the \"First-Year Player Draft\", the Rule 4 draft is MLB's primary mechanism for assigning amateur players from high schools, colleges, and other amateur clubs to its teams. The draft order is determined based on the previous season's standings, with the team possessing the worst record receiving the first pick. In addition, teams which lost free agents in the previous off-season may be awarded compensatory or supplementary picks. The First-Year Player Draft is unrelated to the 1976 expansion draft in which the Blue Jays initially filled their roster.",
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{
"id": "10736774",
"score": 0.644519567489624,
"text": "Milan Lucic (] ; born June 7, 1988) is a Canadian professional ice hockey left winger and an alternate captain for the Edmonton Oilers of the National Hockey League (NHL). He played major junior hockey with the Vancouver Giants in the Western Hockey League (WHL) for three seasons and captured a Memorial Cup, while being named tournament MVP in 2007. He was selected 50th overall in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft and made the Boston Bruins' roster as a 19-year-old in 2007–08. Three years later, he won a Stanley Cup with the Bruins. He spent the first eight seasons of his NHL career with Boston prior to joining Los Angeles in June 2015.",
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{
"id": "2531471",
"score": 0.6439095139503479,
"text": "The Vancouver Canucks are a professional ice hockey team based in Vancouver, British Columbia. The Canucks are a member of the Pacific Division in the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Canucks currently play home games at Rogers Arena. The Canucks joined the NHL in 1970 as an expansion team, along with the Buffalo Sabres. They have advanced to the Stanley Cup finals three times but were defeated by the New York Islanders in 1982, the New York Rangers in 1994, and the Boston Bruins in 2011. The Canucks are owned by Francesco Aquilini, Jim Benning is their general manager, and Henrik Sedin is the team captain.",
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{
"id": "11233313",
"score": 0.6436012387275696,
"text": "The Toronto Maple Leafs are a professional ice hockey team based in Toronto, Ontario. They are members of the Atlantic Division in the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL) and are known as one of the Original Six teams of the league. Founded in 1917, the club had no nickname in their first season, and were known as the Toronto Arenas for their second season. From the 1919–20 season they were known as the Toronto St. Patricks, until in February 1927 when the club was purchased by Conn Smythe. Smythe changed the name of the club to the Maple Leafs and they have been known by that name ever since. The 2016–17 season is the 100th for the franchise and since their founding the Leafs have won 2794 regular season games, accumulated five division championships, led the league in points six times, appeared in the playoffs 65 times, gained eight O'Brien Cup championships, and won 13 Stanley Cup titles.",
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{
"id": "13886684",
"score": 0.6424059867858887,
"text": "The Toronto Maple Leafs are a professional ice hockey team based in Toronto, Ontario. They are members of the Atlantic Division in the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL) and are known as one of the Original Six teams of the league. Founded in 1917, the club had no nickname in their first season, and were known as the Toronto Arenas for their second season. From the 1919–20 season they were known as the Toronto St. Patricks, until in February 1927 when the club was purchased by Conn Smythe. Smythe changed the name of the club to the Maple Leafs and they have been known by that name ever since. The franchise has had sixteen general managers since their inception.",
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{
"id": "64646",
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"text": "Toronto ( , ] ) is the most populous city in Canada and the provincial capital of Ontario. With a population in 2016 of 2,731,571, it is the fourth most populous city in North America after Mexico City, New York City, and Los Angeles. Toronto is the centre of the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), the most populous metropolitan area in Canada, and anchors the Golden Horseshoe, an urbanized region that is home to 9.2 million people, or over 26% of the population of Canada. A global city, Toronto is an international centre of business, finance, arts, and culture.",
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{
"id": "11008177",
"score": 0.6416228413581848,
"text": "The Vancouver Canucks are a professional ice hockey team based in Vancouver, British Columbia. The Canucks are a member of the Pacific Division in the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Canucks currently play home games at Rogers Arena. The Canucks joined the NHL in 1970 as an expansion team, along with the Buffalo Sabres. They have advanced to the Stanley Cup finals three times but were defeated by the New York Islanders in 1982, the New York Rangers in 1994, and the Boston Bruins in 2011. The franchise has had eleven general managers since its inception.",
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] |
5ae6990f55429908198fa64a | What was the population at the 2011 census of the suburb in which Brett Roneberg was born? | [
{
"id": "8716911",
"score": 0.748079240322113,
"text": "Brett Roneberg (born 5 February 1979 in Sandringham, Victoria) is an Australian baseball player."
},
{
"id": "617293",
"score": 0.623364269733429,
"text": "Sandringham is a beachside suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, located 16 km southeast of Melbourne's central business district. Its local government area is the City of Bayside and its federal division is the Division of Goldstein. At the 2011 Census, Sandringham had a population of 9,309."
}
] | [
{
"id": "581984",
"score": 0.6891618371009827,
"text": "Hawthorn is an inner suburb of Melbourne, Australia, 6 km east of Melbourne's central business district. Its local government area is the City of Boroondara. At the 2011 Census, Hawthorn had a population of 21,177.",
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{
"id": "702656",
"score": 0.6863775253295898,
"text": "Carlton is an inner-northern suburb of Melbourne, Australia, immediately adjoining Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area is the City of Melbourne. At the 2011 Census, Carlton had a population of 13,509.",
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{
"id": "492777",
"score": 0.6830787062644958,
"text": "Maribyrnong is an inner suburb 8 km north-west of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Its local government area is the City of Maribyrnong, part of the River Ward. At the 2011 Census, Maribyrnong had a population of 10,165.",
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{
"id": "5375784",
"score": 0.68162602186203,
"text": "Burleigh Waters is a suburb in Gold Coast City in Queensland, Australia. At the 2011 Census, Burleigh Waters had a population of 13,868.",
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{
"id": "615333",
"score": 0.6767728328704834,
"text": "Footscray is an inner-western suburb (neighbourhood) of Melbourne, Australia, 5 km from Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area is the City of Maribyrnong. At the 2011 Census, Footscray had a population of 13,203.",
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{
"id": "1644297",
"score": 0.6748496294021606,
"text": "Burleigh Heads is a suburb in the City of Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia. At the 2011 Census, Burleigh Heads had a population of 9,188.",
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{
"id": "467276",
"score": 0.6655923128128052,
"text": "The City of Frankston is a local government area in Victoria, Australia in the southern suburbs of Melbourne. It has an area of 131 square kilometres, and at the 2016 Census, the City of Frankston recorded a population of 134,143.",
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{
"id": "568988",
"score": 0.6627848744392395,
"text": "Burwood is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 14 km east of Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government areas are the Cities of Monash and Whitehorse. At the 2011 Census, Burwood had a population of 13,162.",
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{
"id": "1171112",
"score": 0.6624650359153748,
"text": "Beaumaris is an affluent suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 20 km south-east of Melbourne's central business district. Its local government area is the City of Bayside. At the 2011 Census, Beaumaris had a population of 12,829. It is located on Port Phillip.",
"topk_rank": 8
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{
"id": "609357",
"score": 0.6602660417556763,
"text": "Mooroolbark is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 31 km east of Melbourne's central business district. Its local government area is the Shire of Yarra Ranges. At the 2011 census , Mooroolbark had a population of 20,689. Mooroolbark is at an altitude of approximately 93m.",
"topk_rank": 9
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{
"id": "467325",
"score": 0.6577250361442566,
"text": "The City of Maribyrnong is a local government area within the metropolitan area of Melbourne, Australia. It comprises the inner western suburbs between 5 and 10 kilometres from the Melbourne city centre. It was formed in 1994 from the merger of the City of Footscray and parts of the City of Sunshine. At the 2011 Census, Maribyrnong had a population of 71,635. The Estimated Residential Population at 30 June 2012 was 76,703.",
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{
"id": "603936",
"score": 0.656706690788269,
"text": "Mooloolaba is a suburb and tourist resort township on the Sunshine Coast of Queensland, Australia. It is located 97 km north of the state capital, Brisbane, and is part of the Maroochydore urban centre. At the 2011 Australian Census the suburb recorded a population of 7,333.",
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},
{
"id": "471657",
"score": 0.6553953886032104,
"text": "Camberwell is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 10 km east of Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area is the City of Boroondara. At the 2011 Census, Camberwell had a population of 20,029.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "8465166",
"score": 0.6547462940216064,
"text": "Verrierdale is located between Noosa and Eumundi, and resides close to the residential estate Peregian Springs. At the 2011 Australian Census the suburb had a population of 698.",
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{
"id": "613846",
"score": 0.6543862223625183,
"text": "Essendon /ˈɛsǝndǝn/, is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 12 km north-west of Melbourne's central business district. Its local government area is the City of Moonee Valley. At the 2011 Census, Essendon had a population of 18,852.",
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{
"id": "581973",
"score": 0.6526290774345398,
"text": "Bulleen is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 13 km north-east of Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area is the City of Manningham. At the 2011 Census, Bulleen had a population of 10,868.",
"topk_rank": 15
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{
"id": "1644453",
"score": 0.6523770093917847,
"text": "Mudgeeraba is a suburb in the Gold Coast Hinterland in Queensland, Australia. At the 2011 Australian Census, the suburb recorded a population of 13,204.",
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{
"id": "1380636",
"score": 0.6523111462593079,
"text": "Flemington is an inner suburb of Melbourne, Australia, 4 km north-west of Melbourne's central business district. Its local government areas are the Cities of Melbourne and Moonee Valley. At the 2011 Census, Flemington had a population of 7,528.",
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},
{
"id": "611305",
"score": 0.6512176990509033,
"text": "Langwarrin is a semi rural suburb on the urban fringe of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 42 km south-east from Melbourne's central business district. Its local government area is Frankston City. At the 2011 census , Langwarrin had a population of 21,371.",
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},
{
"id": "532196",
"score": 0.6509608626365662,
"text": "Endeavour Hills is a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 31 km south-east from Melbourne's central business district. Its local government area is the City of Casey. At the 2011 Census, Endeavour Hills had a population of 24,574.",
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}
] |
5ae6024a5542996de7b71aec | Where is the current home of the artist known for his popular remix album comprised of old and new remixes by himself, Blue Stahli, Drivepilot, Josh Money and many others? | [
{
"id": "33851365",
"score": 0.6096305847167969,
"text": "The Complete Cellout Vol. 1 is a remix album by Celldweller, which is essentially a compilation of old and new remixes by Klayton himself, Blue Stahli, Drivepilot, Josh Money and many others. It was released alongside Blue Stahli's Antisleep Vol. 02 on December 16, 2011. The instrumental version of the album, titled \"The Complete Cellout Vol. 01 Instrumentals\" was released on June 25, 2013."
},
{
"id": "3552622",
"score": 0.5518594980239868,
"text": "Klayton (born Scott Albert) is a multi-instrumentalist musician formerly of New York City and currently of Detroit, Michigan who has led several cult status underground bands and has performed under a variety of stage names since the early 1990s. He is best known for his current project, Celldweller, which has been widely successful."
}
] | [
{
"id": "41624492",
"score": 0.6615908741950989,
"text": "Blue Stahli is a Detroit, Michigan-based electronic rock project that was created by multi-instrumentalist Bret Autrey. He has released 7 studio albums, 5 of which are instrumental based, and the other two are vocal based. He has also released 5 compilation albums, 11 singles and has only released 1 music video.",
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{
"id": "14206230",
"score": 0.644547700881958,
"text": "Josh Winkler (born July 4, 1977), better known as DJ Klever is a prominent American turntablism and 2 time US Disco Mix Club champion. He has toured across the world and resides in Atlanta, Georgia. Since early 2014 he has been rapper Yelawolf's touring DJ, he later started working with the rapper and signed to his record label Slumerican. He is involved in the rapper's second studio album \"Love Story\", and has appeared to most of the single's music videos.",
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},
{
"id": "32971765",
"score": 0.6437002420425415,
"text": "Anton Zaslavski (Russian: Антон Заславский ; born 2 September 1989), better known by his stage name Zedd ( ), is a Russian-German musician, DJ, songwriter and record producer. He primarily produces and performs electro house music, but has diversified his genre and musical style, drawing influences from progressive house, dubstep, and classical music. Zedd grew up and began his career in Kaiserslautern, Germany.",
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{
"id": "24957444",
"score": 0.6343345642089844,
"text": "Blue Stahli is a Detroit, Michigan-based multi-genre (predominantly electronic rock) project that was created by multi-instrumentalist Bret Autrey. Blue Stahli has appeared in a number of movie trailers, shows, and games.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "1710418",
"score": 0.6246761679649353,
"text": "Thomas Wesley Pentz (born November 10, 1978), better known by his stage name Diplo, is an American DJ, record producer, rapper, singer, songwriter and record executive based in Los Angeles, California. He is the co-creator and lead member of the dancehall music project Major Lazer, and along with producer and DJ Skrillex, formed the electronic duo Jack Ü. He founded and manages record company Mad Decent, as well as co-founding the non-profit organization Heaps Decent. Among other jobs, he has worked as a schoolteacher in Philadelphia. His 2013 EP \"Revolution\" debuted at number 68 on the US \"Billboard\" 200. The song was later featured in a commercial for Hyundai and is featured on the \"WWE 2K16\" soundtrack.",
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},
{
"id": "29331348",
"score": 0.6201586127281189,
"text": "Tim Bergling (] ; born 8 September 1989), known professionally as Avicii ( , ; ] , stylized as ΛVICII and ◢ ◤), is a Swedish DJ, remixer, and record producer.",
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},
{
"id": "14032644",
"score": 0.6172769069671631,
"text": "Steven Hiroyuki \"Steve\" Aoki (born November 30, 1977) is an American electro house musician, record producer, DJ, and music executive. In 2012, Pollstar designated Aoki as the highest grossing dance artist in North America from tours. He has collaborated with producers and vocalists such as will.i.am, Afrojack, LMFAO, Linkin Park, Iggy Azalea, Lil Jon, Laidback Luke, Louis Tomlinson, and Fall Out Boy and is known for his remixes of artists such as Kid Cudi. Aoki has released several \"Billboard\"-charting studio albums as well, notably \"Wonderland\", which was nominated for Grammy Award for Best Dance/Electronica Album in 2013. He is the founder of the Steve Aoki Charitable Fund, which raises money for global humanitarian relief organizations.",
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},
{
"id": "30845121",
"score": 0.6162163615226746,
"text": "Blue Stahli is Blue Stahli's second album, released on March 2, 2011, however, most of the tracks have previously been released as singles. The cover artwork was created by Grant Morhman, the producer of the debut Celldweller album.",
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},
{
"id": "54029983",
"score": 0.6154536604881287,
"text": "Blue Neighbourhood (The Remixes) is the first remix album by South African-Australian singer and songwriter Troye Sivan. It contains various remixes and live recordings of tracks from Sivan's debut studio album \"Blue Neighbourhood\", including \"Youth\", ARIA Award winning song for Song of the Year at the ARIA Music Awards of 2016.",
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},
{
"id": "34016927",
"score": 0.6138445138931274,
"text": "Sonny John Moore (born January 15, 1988), known professionally as Skrillex, is an American electronic dance music producer, DJ, singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. Growing up in Northeast Los Angeles and in Northern California, Sonny Moore joined the American post-hardcore band From First to Last as the lead singer in 2004, and recorded two studio albums with the band (\"Dear Diary, My Teen Angst Has a Body Count\", 2004, and \"Heroine\", 2006) before leaving to pursue a solo career in 2007. He began his first tour as a solo artist in late 2007. After recruiting a new band lineup, Moore joined the Alternative Press Tour to support bands such as All Time Low and The Rocket Summer, and appeared on the cover of \"Alternative Press'\" annual \"100 Bands You Need to Know\" issue.",
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},
{
"id": "10470533",
"score": 0.6113105416297913,
"text": "Steven Ellison (born October 7, 1983), known by his stage name Flying Lotus or sometimes FlyLo, is an experimental multi-genre music producer, electronic musician, DJ, filmmaker, and rapper from Los Angeles, California.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "36398482",
"score": 0.6087478995323181,
"text": "Mikal Blue (born 3 March 1966) is an English music producer, songwriter, engineer and mixer best known for his work with Colbie Caillat, Jason Reeves, Jason Mraz, Five For Fighting and OneRepublic. Originally from County Durham, England, Mikal Blue is currently based in Los Angeles and works from his studio \"Revolver Recordings\" in Thousand Oaks, California. In addition to his work as a producer, songwriter, engineer, mixer and instrumentalist, Blue has worked in developing acts such as Augustana, OneRepublic, Colbie Caillat, Angel Taylor, Chandler Juliet and Kevin Hammond.",
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{
"id": "2331969",
"score": 0.6087386608123779,
"text": "Ryan Gary Raddon (born February 25, 1971), better known by his stage name Kaskade, is an American DJ, record producer and remixer. On October 20, 2011, \"DJ Mag\" announced the results of their magazine, with Ultra Music, Kaskade placed at No. 30. \"DJ Times\" voted Kaskade \"America's Best DJ 2011\" and \"America's Best DJ 2013\".",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "45533341",
"score": 0.6084719896316528,
"text": "Skrillex and Diplo Present Jack Ü is the debut studio album by American DJ duo Jack Ü, individually known as Skrillex and Diplo. It was released on February 27, 2015 by OWSLA and Mad Decent, Skrillex and Diplo's respective labels. The album features collaborations with a range of artists including Kiesza, AlunaGeorge, 2 Chainz, Missy Elliott and Justin Bieber. It also features the Trinidadian soca artist Bunji Garlin. The album produced the internationally successful single \"Where Are Ü Now\" featuring Justin Bieber.",
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},
{
"id": "1077988",
"score": 0.6083056926727295,
"text": "Eric Sheridan Prydz ( ; born July 19, 1976), also known by his aliases Pryda and Cirez D, is a Swedish DJ, record producer & musician residing in Los Angeles, California.",
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},
{
"id": "20842800",
"score": 0.607587456703186,
"text": "Cash Cash is an American electronic music group from Roseland, New Jersey. The group currently consists of three DJs: brothers Jean Paul Makhlouf and Alex Makhlouf, and Samuel Frisch. They produce, record, mix and master all their music together as a trio. They are currently signed to Big Beat Records and Atlantic Records, a subsidiary of Warner Music Group worldwide. The group's highest-charting song to date is \"Take Me Home\", which features vocals by Bebe Rexha. As of 2016, the group has released four full-length albums, an array of EPs, singles, and provided official remixes for acts such as Krewella, Capital Cities, Kelly Clarkson, Katy Perry, Bruno Mars, Showtek, and Icona Pop, along with producing and co-writing Krewella's single \"Live for the Night\".",
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{
"id": "42603753",
"score": 0.6069402098655701,
"text": "Armani Depaul (born Oakland, California, 1988), also known as Flav, is an American rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer, and director. Based in the Bay Area in Northern California, he operates the independent label Beach Boi Music.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "47777069",
"score": 0.6062793135643005,
"text": "Joshua Paul \"Josh\" Davis (born June 29, 1972), better known by his stage name DJ Shadow, is an American record producer and DJ. He first gained notice with the release of his highly acclaimed debut studio album, \"Endtroducing...\". He has a personal record collection of over 60,000 records.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "445889",
"score": 0.6057949066162109,
"text": "Ville Virtanen (born 17 July 1975), better known by his stage name Darude , is a Finnish DJ and record producer from Eura, Finland. He started making music in 1995 and released the platinum selling hit single \"Sandstorm\" in late 1999. His debut studio album, \"Before the Storm\" came out on 5 September 2000 and sold 800,000 copies worldwide, earning Darude three Finnish Grammy Awards. It peaked at number one on Finland's Official List and number 6 on the \"Billboard\" Dance/Electronic Albums chart in the United States. Darude's second studio album, \"Rush\", reached number 11 on the \"Billboard\" dance chart in 2003 and number 4 on weekly album chart in Finland.",
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},
{
"id": "47474531",
"score": 0.6039230227470398,
"text": "Brandon Paak Anderson (born February 8, 1986), better known by his stage name Anderson Paak (stylized as Anderson .Paak), is an American singer, songwriter, rapper, drummer and record producer from Oxnard, California. He released his debut album, \"O.B.E. Vol. 1\" in 2012, under the pseudonym Breezy Lovejoy. He went on to release \"Venice\" in 2014, under his current moniker. Paak followed with \"Malibu\", in 2016, which received a nomination for Best Urban Contemporary Album at the Grammy Awards. Apart from his solo career, Paak is also one-half of NxWorries, alongside record producer Knxwledge.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5ab980275542996be202052e | Did Jaret Reddick and Lou Reed have the same nationality? | [
{
"id": "8501749",
"score": 0.636516809463501,
"text": "Jaret Ray Reddick (born March 6, 1972) is an American musician, singer, songwriter, composer, podcaster, actor and voice actor, best known as the lead vocalist, rhythm guitarist, and primary songwriter for the rock band Bowling for Soup. He plays a Music Man Axis that has a flag of Texas design on it."
},
{
"id": "59533",
"score": 0.6272263526916504,
"text": "Lewis Allan Reed (March 2, 1942 – October 27, 2013) was an American musician, singer and songwriter. He was the guitarist, vocalist, and principal songwriter of the Velvet Underground, and his solo career spanned five decades. The Velvet Underground had little success during their active years, but later gained a significant cult following to become one of the most widely acclaimed and influential bands in rock history. Brian Eno famously stated that, while the Velvet Underground's debut album sold only 30,000 copies, \"everyone who bought one of those 30,000 copies started a band\"."
}
] | [
{
"id": "15618127",
"score": 0.6506748795509338,
"text": "Lou Reed (born 10 September 1987) is a Wales international rugby union footballer. He currently plays as a lock for Sale Sharks in the Premiership league.",
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{
"id": "3473928",
"score": 0.6190256476402283,
"text": "New Sensations is the thirteenth solo studio album by the American recording artist Lou Reed. It was originally released in April 1984, on the label RCA. On the US charts, the track, \"My Red Joystick\" went to number fifty-two on the dance charts.",
"topk_rank": 1
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{
"id": "40390568",
"score": 0.6041431427001953,
"text": "\"The Original Wrapper\" (sometimes written as \"The Original Rapper\") is a song by American recording artist Lou Reed from his fourteenth solo studio album, \"Mistrial\" (1986). The title refers to the practice of keeping products in their original packaging. It can also be interpreted as a pun on \"rapper,\" referring to Reed's distinctive vocal style.",
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},
{
"id": "12130032",
"score": 0.6021941304206848,
"text": "A Night with Lou Reed is a video by Lou Reed. It is drawn from the same tour as the album \"Live in Italy\", which was released the following year.",
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},
{
"id": "28446382",
"score": 0.6019590497016907,
"text": "Pentti Glan a.k.a. Whitey Glan is a Finnish drummer born on July 8, 1946 best known for his work with Alice Cooper and Lou Reed.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "4249679",
"score": 0.6003649234771729,
"text": "Songs for Drella is a 1990 album by Lou Reed and John Cale, both formerly of the Velvet Underground; it is a song cycle about Andy Warhol, their mentor, who had died following routine surgery in 1987. Drella was a nickname for Warhol coined by Warhol superstar Ondine, a contraction of Dracula and Cinderella, used by Warhol's crowd but never liked by Warhol himself. The song cycle focuses on Warhol's interpersonal relations and experiences, with songs falling roughly into three categories: Warhol's first-person perspective (which makes up the vast majority of the album), third-person narratives chronicling events and affairs, and first-person commentaries on Warhol by Reed and Cale themselves. The songs on the album are, to some extent, in chronological order.",
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},
{
"id": "32416645",
"score": 0.5999976396560669,
"text": "Lulu is a collaborative album between rock singer-songwriter Lou Reed and heavy metal band Metallica. It was released on October 31, 2011 by Warner Bros. in the U.S. and Vertigo elsewhere. The album is the final full-length studio recording project that Reed was involved in before his death in October 2013. It was recorded in San Rafael, California, during April through June 2011, after Reed had played with Metallica at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 25th Anniversary Concert which led to them wanting to collaborate. The lead single, titled \"The View\", was released on September 27, 2011.",
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{
"id": "52770",
"score": 0.599622905254364,
"text": "Leslie Edward \"Les\" Claypool (born September 29, 1963) is an American musician, singer, songwriter, composer, author and actor best known as the bassist and lead vocalist of the band Primus. Claypool's playing style on the electric bass mixes tapping, flamenco-like strumming, whammy bar bends, and slapping.",
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"text": "Legendary Hearts is the twelfth solo studio album by rock and roll musician Lou Reed. It was dedicated to Reed's then-wife, Sylvia, who is credited with the cover concept. Due to tensions with Reed, most of Robert Quine guitar parts were mixed down or entirely removed.",
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"text": "Loaded is the fourth studio album by American rock band the Velvet Underground, released in November 1970 by Atlantic Records' subsidiary label Cotillion. It was the final album recorded featuring founding member and main songwriter Lou Reed, who left shortly before its release.",
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{
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"text": "\"Rock & Roll\" (sometimes spelled Rock 'n' Roll) is a song by the Velvet Underground, originally appearing on their 1970 album \"Loaded\". The song was written by the Velvets' then-leader Lou Reed, who continued to incorporate the song into his own live performances years later as a solo artist.",
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"text": "Transformer is the second solo studio album by American recording artist Lou Reed. Produced by David Bowie and Mick Ronson, the album was released in November 1972 by RCA Records.",
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"id": "7297780",
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"text": "\"After Hours\" is a 1969 song written by Lou Reed and originally performed by The Velvet Underground. It is the tenth and final track on their self-titled third album. It is one of few songs with lead vocals by drummer Maureen Tucker, as Lou Reed stated the song was \"so innocent and pure\" that he could not possibly sing it himself. Tucker's vocals are accompanied by acoustic and bass guitar. The style of the lyrics and the music is somewhat reminiscent of Tin Pan Alley songs of the 1930s.",
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{
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"text": "Red Clay is a 1970 album by Freddie Hubbard.",
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"text": "Rock n Roll Animal is a live album by Lou Reed, released by RCA Records in 1974. In its original form, it features five songs, four of which are Velvet Underground songs. The musicians were Pentti Glan (drums) and Prakash John (bass), Ray Colcord (keyboards), and Dick Wagner and Steve Hunter on guitars. (The two guitarists would later form the basis of the second Alice Cooper band, beginning on \"Welcome to My Nightmare\", which also features Glan and John.)",
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"text": "Lou Reed is the debut solo album by musician Lou Reed, released in 1972 by RCA Records two years after he left The Velvet Underground. The album comprises eight new recordings of then-unreleased Velvet Underground songs, plus two new songs, \"Going Down\" and \"Berlin\" (the latter was re-recorded by Reed as the title track for his 1973 album \"Berlin\"). Reed was backed by London session musicians, two of whom, Rick Wakeman and Steve Howe, were from the progressive rock band Yes. Wakeman recalled that during the session at Morgan Studios, \"the lights had to be out so nobody could see.\"",
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"text": "New York is the fifteenth solo studio album by Lou Reed, released in January 1989.",
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"text": "Jerry Reed Hubbard (March 20, 1937 – September 1, 2008), known professionally as Jerry Reed, was an American country music singer, guitarist, and songwriter, as well as an actor who appeared in more than a dozen films. His signature songs included \"Guitar Man\", \"U.S. Male\", \"A Thing Called Love\", \"Alabama Wild Man\", \"Amos Moses\", \"When You're Hot, You're Hot\" (which garnered a Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance), \"Ko-Ko Joe\", \"Lord, Mr. Ford\", \"East Bound and Down\" (the theme song for the 1977 blockbuster \"Smokey and the Bandit\", in which Reed co-starred), \"The Bird\", and \"She Got the Goldmine (I Got the Shaft)\".",
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"text": "The Best of The Velvet Underground: Words and Music of Lou Reed",
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"text": "Lester William Polsfuss (June 9, 1915 – August 12, 2009), known as Les Paul, was an American jazz, country, and blues guitarist, songwriter, luthier, and inventor. He was one of the pioneers of the solid-body electric guitar. Paul taught himself how to play guitar, and while he is mainly known for jazz and popular music, he had an early career in country music. He is credited with many recording innovations. Although he was not the first to use the technique, his early experiments with overdubbing (also known as sound on sound), delay effects such as tape delay, phasing effects and multitrack recording were among the first to attract widespread attention.",
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5a7c2f8f5542996dd594b8b5 | Which artist released more singles, Magic Dirt or Ida Maria? | [
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"text": "Magic Dirt are an Australian rock band, which formed in 1991 in Geelong, Victoria, with Daniel Herring on guitar, Adam Robertson on drums, Adalita Srsen on vocals and guitar, and Dean Turner on bass guitar. Initially forming an alternative underground band called Deer Bubbles which split and formed into the much heavier, rock based group called The Jim Jims, they were renamed as Magic Dirt in 1992. Their top 40 releases on the ARIA Albums Chart are \"Friends in Danger\" (1996), \"What Are Rockstars Doing Today\" (2000), \"Tough Love\" (2003) and \"Snow White\" (2005). They have received nine ARIA Music Award nominations including four at the ARIA Music Awards of 1995 for \"Life Was Better\" – their second extended play. Turner died in August 2009 of dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (a soft tissue cancer). s of 2011 , the band is on hiatus with no immediate plans to tour or record."
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"text": "Ida Maria Børli Sivertsen ( ; born 13 July 1984), better known simply as Ida Maria, is a Norwegian musician and songwriter. Her first album, \"Fortress Round My Heart\", was released in 2008. In November 2010, she released her second album \"Katla\" in Norway; the album was released internationally on 7 June 2011. In August 2013, Maria digitally released her third album \"Love Conquers All\" in Norway."
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"text": "Magical Dirt is the fourth studio album by American psychedelic rock band Radio Moscow (or their fifth studio album, if the 2012 album 3 & 3 Quarters, which was a collection of demos recorded and produced in 2003 by frontman Parker Griggs before the formation of the band, is included).",
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"text": "Magic Dirt is an album by Australian alternative rock band Magic Dirt released in the U.S. on the Dirt label. It compiles the band's first two Australian-released EPs \"Signs of Satanic Youth\" and \"Life Was Better\" along with additional tracks.",
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{
"id": "18916313",
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"text": "\"Oh My God\" is the debut song by Norwegian rock musician Ida Maria. The song was originally released in October 2007 but was to be re-released in the UK following the success of her previous single, \"I Like You So Much Better When You're Naked\". The re-release date was pushed back several times; however, it was eventually rescheduled for 26 January 2009. In the song, the singer cries out unto God.",
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"text": "\"I Like You So Much Better When You're Naked\" (sometimes shortened to \"I Like You So Much Better\" or \"Naked\"), is a 2008 song by Norwegian rock musician Ida Maria. Ten months after the UK release of the single, it was released in the US on May 26, 2009. The song borrows from The Banana Splits Adventure Hour's opening theme, \"The Tra La La Song\", and pays homage to them in its music video.",
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"id": "29050566",
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"text": "Life Was Better was the second EP release by Australian rock band Magic Dirt. It was released in November 1994 on the Melbourne independent label Au Go Go Records. This was the band's first recording after regrouping in the wake of a split in April 1994, brought about by singer/guitarist Adalita Srsen and bass player Dean Turner ending their relationship.",
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"text": "'Girl' is the sixth album from Australian rock-grunge band Magic Dirt. Produced by Magic Dirt and Lindsay Gravina, at Birdland Studios, Melbourne.",
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{
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"text": "Adalita Srsen (pronounced \"Sers-n\") is an Australian rock musician who is a founding member of the rock band Magic Dirt and a solo artist. She released her second solo album, \"All Day Venus\", in September 2013. She is known by the mononym Adalita.",
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{
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"text": "\"Sexy Ida (Part 1)\" is a soul blues song written by Tina Turner and released as a single by Ike & Tina Turner in 1974.",
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"text": "Ida is an indie rock band from New York City. They are known for their three part harmonies, sparse, minimal, often quiet arrangements, and for their three singer-songwriters. Their music shows strong folk, pop, punk, world, R&B, and American roots music influences, but there are also \"avant garde\" and experimental aspects to their sound.",
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"text": "Ida Kristina Sand (born in Stockholm, Sweden 5 November 1977) is a Swedish jazz singer and pianist.",
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"text": "Friends In Danger is the debut album by Australian rock band, Magic Dirt. It was their major label debut outside of Australia, distributed in the USA by Warner Music. In Australia, they remained on Au Go Go Records.",
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"text": "\"Digging in the Dirt\" is a 1992 song by British musician Peter Gabriel. It was the first single taken from his sixth studio album, \"Us\". The song was only a minor hit on the U.S. \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart, but it topped both the \"Billboard\" Modern Rock and Mainstream Rock charts. The song was moderately successful on the UK Singles Chart, where it peaked at number 24.",
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"text": "'Beast' is a mini-album by from Australian rock-grunge band Magic Dirt. Produced by Magic Dirt and Lindsay Gravina, at Birdland Studios, Melbourne.",
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"text": "Ida Østergaard Madsen (born 1994) better known by her first name, Ida, is a Danish singer who won season 5 of the Danish \"X Factor\". After she won, she was signed to Sony Music and her debut single \"I Can Be\" topped the Danish Singles Chart.",
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{
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"text": "Dean Turner (6 January 1972 – 21 August 2009) was an Australian rock musician and record producer. He was best known as a founding member and bass player of Australian rock band Magic Dirt.",
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"text": "I Know About You is the second studio album by American indie rock duo Ida, released in 1996 on Simple Machines Records.",
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"text": "\"Magic Music\" is the sixth single from Japanese pop singer Kaela Kimura. Released as the first single from her third album, \"Scratch\", on June 28, 2006, it reached number seven on the Japan Oricon singles chart.",
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"text": "Katla is the second album by Norwegian singer-songwriter Ida Maria. It was released in Norway in September 2010 and internationally in June 2011.",
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"text": "Ida Kristine Nielsen (born 1975), also known as Bass Ida, Bassida, and Ida Funkhouser, is a Danish bassplayer, composer and vocalist.",
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"text": "The Dirt of Luck was the first full-length album from American indie rock band Helium. It was released in April 1995 on Matador Records and was produced by Adam Lasus (Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Versus, Madder Rose, Clem Snide).",
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5a88ca125542997e5c09a6b5 | What did Krishnan–Panju and Billy Bob Thornton have in common? | [
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"text": "R. Krishnan (1909–1997) and S. Panju (1915–1984), collectively referred to as Krishnan–Panju, were Indian filmmakers. The duo directed more than 50 films in South Indian languages and in Hindi."
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"text": "William Robert \"Billy Bob\" Thornton (born August 4, 1955) is an American actor, filmmaker, singer, songwriter, and musician."
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"text": "Tom Epperson is an American author and screenwriter, known for his collaborations with Billy Bob Thornton.",
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"text": "List of awards and nominations received by Billy Bob Thornton",
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"text": "Panchu Arunachalam (18 June 1941 – 9 August 2016) was an Indian writer, director, producer and lyricist who worked in Tamil cinema. He was mentored by poet Kannadasan who was his uncle. He also worked as a songwriter. He started producing films under his production banner named P. A. Arts. His son Subbu Panchu Arunachalam is an actor in the Tamil film industry. As a writer, he has worked in 100 films. He has also written song lyrics for more than 200 films.",
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"text": "Private Radio is the debut album by American actor and singer/songwriter Billy Bob Thornton. His first foray into recorded music following a successful movie career up to the time of the album's release, it was a traditional country music album released by Universal Records in September 2001.",
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"text": "Beautiful Door is the fourth album by American actor and singer/songwriter Billy Bob Thornton. It was released by New Door Records in 2007.",
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"text": "Nagercoil Sudalaimuthu Krishnan, popularly known as Kalaivanar and also as NSK was an leading Indian film actor comedian, theatre artist, playback singer and writer in the early stages of the Tamil film industry – in the 1940s and 1950s. He is considered as the \"Charlie Chaplin of India.\"",
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"text": "Santo Krishnan, also known as Krishnan Nair, (12 May 1920 – 6 July 2013) was an Indian athlete and stuntsman. Having appeared in more than 1000 films, he died of sickness on 6 July 2013.",
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"text": "Daddy and Them is a 2001 American film written, directed by, and starring Billy Bob Thornton. In addition to Thornton, it stars Laura Dern, Andy Griffith, Ben Affleck, Kelly Preston, Diane Ladd, Brenda Blethyn, Tuesday Knight, Jamie Lee Curtis and Jim Varney. This was Jim Varney's last live-action film; he died a year before the movie's release. It was also his penultimate movie.",
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"text": "Panchapandavar is an unreleased 1980 Malayalam-language Indian feature film directed by A. Nadarajan. This is one of the completed, but unreleased films of Malayalam action star late Jayan",
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"text": "The Edge of the World is the second album by American actor and singer/songwriter Billy Bob Thornton. It was released in 2003 on Sanctuary Records.Album cover model is Rebecca Wilson.",
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"text": "Panchagni (English: Five Fires ) (Malayalam:പഞ്ചാഗ്നി) is a 1986 Malayalam drama thriller film scripted by M.T. Vasudevan Nair and directed by Hariharan, music by Bombay Ravi and lyrics by O N V Kurup. It stars Geetha, Mohanlal, Nadia Moidu and Thilakan.",
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"text": "Robert Cochrane \"Bob\" Marley, Jr. (born April 4, 1967) is an American comedian. He has appeared on \"The David Letterman Show\", \"Late Night with Conan O'Brien\", and Comedy Central. He can be seen in the film \"The Boondock Saints\". He also goes by the name \"Billy\".",
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"text": "Karuppu Panam (தமிழ்: கருப்புப்பணம், English: Black Money) is a 1964 black-and-white film was directed by G. R. Nathan. Though the dialog and story was written by Kannadasan and the screenplay was written by \"Valampuri Somanathan\". Music by M. S. Viswanathan - T. K. Ramamoorthy assets to the movie. Starring Kannadasan , K. Balaji , K. R. Vijaya , Sheela was played to lead role in protagonist. The movie was commercially success the Box office.",
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"text": "Aabavanan is an Indian film director, sceenwriter and producer who has worked in Tamil films. Since the early 1980s, he worked in Tamil films. He spent most of his career screenwriting, lyrics writing, music composing and producing movies with different themes. He is first person in Tamil cinema, who introduced live-recording system. On June 1, 2016, Aabavanan was sentenced to 5 years imprisonment and fined Rs 2.40 crore in a check bounce case.",
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"text": "Hobo is the third album by American actor and singer/songwriter Billy Bob Thornton. It was released by Big Deal Records in 2005.",
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"text": "Chopper Chicks In Zombietown is a 1989 American comedy horror film written and directed by Dan Hoskins. It was released by Troma and features early roles by Billy Bob Thornton and Hal Sparks before they became famous. Former MTV veejay Martha Quinn also appears.",
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"text": "David Thornton (born June 12, 1953) is an American actor. He has appeared in \"John Q\", \"Home Alone 3\", \"Law & Order\", \"The Notebook\", and \"The Other Woman\", among other roles. He is the husband of Grammy Award-winning singer and songwriter Cyndi Lauper.",
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"text": "The Boxmasters is an American country rock/rockabilly band founded in Bellflower, California in 2007. It features Academy Award-winning actor Billy Bob Thornton on drums and vocals, with J.D. Andrew on rhythm guitar, Danny Baker (aka Unknown Hinson) on bass guitar, Brad Davis on vocals and lead guitar, and Michael Wayne Butler on guitars and lap steel. The group has released three albums on Vanguard Records.",
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"text": "Pannian Raveendran (born 22 December 1945) is an Indian",
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] |
5a8c5bfe554299653c1aa04c | Where is a cultural region in eastern France and is known to be the commune for Kœtzingue? | [
{
"id": "15768368",
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"text": "Kœtzingue (] ; Alemannic German: \"Ketzige\" ; German: \"Kötzingen\" ) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France."
},
{
"id": "48129",
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"text": "Alsace ( , ] ; Alsatian: \"’s Elsass\" ] ; German: \"Elsass\" ] ; Latin: \"Alsatia\" ) is a cultural and historical region in eastern France now located in the administrative region of Grand Est. Alsace is located on France's eastern border and on the west bank of the upper Rhine adjacent to Germany and Switzerland."
}
] | [
{
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"text": "Lorraine (] ; Lorrain: \"Louréne\"; Lorraine Franconian: \"Lottringe\"; German: ; Luxembourgish: \"Loutrengen\" ) is a cultural and historical region in north-eastern France, now located in the administrative region of Grand Est. Lorraine's name stems from the medieval kingdom of Lotharingia, which in turn was named for either Emperor Lothair I or King Lothair II. It later was ruled as the Duchy of Lorraine before the Kingdom of France annexed it in 1766.",
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{
"id": "15768824",
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"text": "Zaessingue (] ; Alemannic German: \"Zäsige\" ; German: \"Zässingen\" ) is a communes in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France.",
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{
"id": "2393625",
"score": 0.6862002611160278,
"text": "Lorraine is a cultural and historical region in northeastern France.",
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{
"id": "15768451",
"score": 0.6839315295219421,
"text": "Oltingue (German: \"Oltingen\" ) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France.",
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{
"id": "15768364",
"score": 0.6796607375144958,
"text": "Knœringue (Alemannic German: \"Knehrige\" ; German: \"Knöringen\" ) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France.",
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{
"id": "33964814",
"score": 0.6619665622711182,
"text": "Alsace is a cultural and historical region in eastern France and until 2016 an administrative \"région\" of France.",
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{
"id": "15768295",
"score": 0.6615872979164124,
"text": "Hirsingue (] ; German: \"Hirsingen\" ) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France.",
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{
"id": "15894089",
"score": 0.6612195372581482,
"text": "Œting (] ; German: \"Ötingen\" ) is a commune in the Moselle department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.",
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{
"id": "15313628",
"score": 0.6482320427894592,
"text": "Reiningue (German: \"Reiningen\" ) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France. It forms part of the Mulhouse Alsace Agglomération, the inter-communal local government body for the Mulhouse conurbation.",
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{
"id": "27885",
"score": 0.6472010612487793,
"text": "Savoy ( ; Arpitan: \"Savouè\" , ] ; French: \"Savoie\" ] ; Italian: \"Savoia\" ] ; German: \"Savoyen\" ] ) is a cultural region in Western Europe. It comprises roughly the territory of the Western Alps between Lake Geneva in the north and Dauphiné in the south.",
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{
"id": "214920",
"score": 0.6394155621528625,
"text": "The Estrie (] ) is an administrative region of Quebec that mostly overlaps the Eastern Townships (though not entirely). \"Estrie\", a French neologism, was coined as a derivative of \"est\", \"east\".",
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{
"id": "364964",
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"text": "Mulhouse (] ; Alsatian: \"Milhüsa\" or \"Milhüse\", ] ; German: \"Mülhausen\" ; i.e. \"mill house\") is a city and commune in eastern France, close to the Swiss and German borders.",
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{
"id": "15913817",
"score": 0.6383861303329468,
"text": "Ritzing (German: \"Ritzingen\" ) is a commune in the Moselle department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.",
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{
"id": "15889500",
"score": 0.6369428038597107,
"text": "Elzange (German: \"Elsingen\" ) is a commune in the Moselle department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.",
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{
"id": "15691226",
"score": 0.6324380040168762,
"text": "Hertzing (German: \"Herzing\" ) is a commune in the Moselle department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.",
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{
"id": "15768284",
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"text": "Hésingue \"(German: \"Häsingen\" , Alsatian: Häsige)\" is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France. It is close to both the Swiss and German borders, and is around six kilometres from the centre of Basel.",
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"text": "Casserengue is a municipality in the state of Paraíba in the Northeast Region of Brazil.",
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"text": "Wallonia (French: \"Wallonie\" ] , German: \"Wallonie(n)\" , Dutch: \"Wallonië\" ] , Walloon: \"Walonreye\" ] , Luxembourgish: \"Wallounien\" , ] ) is a region of Belgium. Wallonia is primarily French-speaking, and accounts for 55% of the territory of Belgium, and a third of its population. Unlike Flanders, the Walloon Region was not merged with the French Community of Belgium which is the political entity that is responsible for matters related mainly to culture and education. The German-speaking minority in the east forms the German-speaking Community of Belgium, which has its own government and parliament for culture-related issues.",
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"text": "Constantinois is a cultural and historical region of the Maghreb, located in northeastern Algeria.",
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"text": "Epping (German: \"Eppingen\" , Lorraine Franconian: \"Eppinge\") is a commune in the Moselle department of the Grand Est administrative region in north-eastern France.",
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5a7e7cb555429949594199d9 | Thomas Joseph Papa provided some voiceover work for a spin-off of what Pixar franchise? | [
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"text": "Thomas Joseph Papa (born November 21, 1979), best known by his stage name, Tommy Pope, is an American stand-up comedian, writer, and actor. He is known for his work in \"Funny or Die\" and \"National Lampoon\". Pope is also known for co-creating the comedy group, \"Deer Prom,\" which was previously known as \"BirdText\". He also provided some voiceover work for the 2013 Disney film, \"Planes\". Pope is also starring in the Comedy Central web series, \"Delco Proper.\""
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"text": "Planes is a 2013 American 3D computer-animated sports comedy film produced by DisneyToon Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. It is a spin-off of Pixar's \"Cars\" franchise and the first film in a planned \"Planes\" trilogy. Despite not being produced by Pixar, the film was co-written and executive produced by Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios' chief creative officer John Lasseter, who directed the first two \"Cars\" films. The film stars the voices of Dane Cook, Stacy Keach, Priyanka Chopra, Brad Garrett, Teri Hatcher, Danny Mann, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Roger Craig Smith, John Cleese, Carlos Alazraqui, Val Kilmer, and Anthony Edwards."
}
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"text": "Peter Pan is a Disney media franchise based on J. M. Barrie's original play and novel, which officially commenced with the 1953 theatrical film \"Peter Pan\". The spin-off film series \"Tinker Bell\" has continued this franchise into the 21st century.",
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"text": "Pixar ( ), also referred to as Pixar Animation Studios, is an American computer animation film studio based in Emeryville, California that is a subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company. Pixar began in 1979 as the Graphics Group, part of the Lucasfilm computer division, before its spin-out as a corporation in 1986, with funding by Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Jobs, who became the majority shareholder. Disney purchased Pixar in 2006 at a valuation of $7.4 billion, a transaction that resulted in Jobs becoming Disney's largest single shareholder at the time. Pixar is best known for CGI-animated feature films created with RenderMan, Pixar's own implementation of the industry-standard RenderMan image-rendering application programming interface, used to generate high-quality images.",
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"text": "Cars Toons is a series of American computer-animated short films by Pixar. It features Lightning McQueen and Mater from \"Cars\". Larry the Cable Guy reprises his role as Mater while Keith Ferguson replaces Owen Wilson as Lightning McQueen (until \"The Radiator Springs 500 ½\" when Wilson reprises his role).",
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"text": "Cars is a CGI-animated film series and Disney media franchise set in a world populated by anthropomorphic vehicles created by John Lasseter. The franchise began with the 2006 film, \"\"Cars\", produced by Pixar and released by Walt Disney Pictures. The film was followed by a sequel in 2011. A third film was released in 2017. DisneyToon Studios produced the spin-off films \"Planes\" (2013) and \"\" (2014).",
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"text": "Tron is an American science fiction media franchise. It began in 1982 with the Walt Disney Pictures film \"Tron\". It was followed by various film tie-ins, a comic series and the 2010 sequel \"\". More sequels were planned but have now been suspended, and a premiered on Disney XD in June 2012.",
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"text": "Toy Story 3 is a 2010 American 3D computer-animated comedy-drama film produced by Pixar Animation Studios for Walt Disney Pictures. It is the third installment in Pixar's \"Toy Story\" series, and the sequel to 1999's \"Toy Story 2\". It was directed by Lee Unkrich, the editor of the first two films and the co-director of \"Toy Story 2\", written by Michael Arndt, while Unkrich wrote the story along with John Lasseter and Andrew Stanton, respectively director and co-writer of the first two films. The plot focuses on the toys Woody, Buzz Lightyear, and their friends dealing with an uncertain future as their owner, Andy, prepares to leave for college. The film features an ensemble voice cast with Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Joan Cusack, Don Rickles, Wallace Shawn, John Ratzenberger, Estelle Harris, Jodi Benson, and John Morris reprising their roles from the previous films, along with Blake Clark as the voice of Slinky Dog (because Jim Varney died ten years before the release of the film) and Ned Beatty, Michael Keaton, Whoopi Goldberg, Timothy Dalton, Kristen Schaal, Bonnie Hunt, and Jeff Garlin voicing the new characters introduced in this film.",
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"text": "Toy Story is a computer animated film series and Disney media franchise that began with the original 1995 film, \"Toy Story\", produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. The franchise is based on the anthropomorphic concept that all toys, unknown to humans, are secretly alive, and the films focus on a diverse group of toys that feature a classic cowboy, Sheriff Woody, and modern spaceman, Buzz Lightyear. The group unexpectedly embark on adventures that challenge and change them.",
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"text": "Transformers (Japanese: トランスフォーマー , Hepburn: Toransufōmā ) is a media franchise produced by American toy company Hasbro and Japanese toy company Takara Tomy. Initially a line of transforming toys rebranded from Takara's \"Diaclone\" and \"Microman\" toylines, the franchise began in 1984 with the \"Transformers\" toy line, and centers on factions of transforming alien robots (often the Autobots and the Decepticons) in an endless struggle for dominance or eventual peace. In its history, the franchise has expanded to encompass comic books, animation, video games and films.",
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"text": "Ratchet & Clank is a 2016 American-Canadian 3D computer-animated science-fiction action comedy film based on the video game series of the same name. The film stars the voices of James Arnold Taylor, David Kaye, Paul Giamatti, John Goodman, Bella Thorne, Rosario Dawson, and Sylvester Stallone.",
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"text": "The Fairly OddParents is a series of live action spinoff telefilms produced through Nickelodeon, loosely based on Butch Hartman's animated series \"The Fairly OddParents\". The series currently comprises three films: \"\" (2011), \"A Fairly Odd Christmas\" (2012), and \"A Fairly Odd Summer\" (2014). The three films take place in a separate universe from the animated series.",
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"text": "Minions is a 2015 American computer-animated comedy film, serving as a spin-off/prequel to the \"Despicable Me\" franchise. Produced by Illumination Entertainment for Universal Pictures, it was directed by Pierre Coffin and Kyle Balda, written by Brian Lynch, and produced by Chris Meledandri and Janet Healy. The film stars the voices of Coffin (as the Minions, including: Kevin, Stuart and Bob), Sandra Bullock, Jon Hamm, Michael Keaton, Allison Janney, Steve Coogan and Jennifer Saunders with the narration provided by Geoffrey Rush. It was first foreshadowed in the end credits of \"Despicable Me 2\" (2013), where Kevin, Stuart and Bob, three of the Minions, are seen auditioning for the film.",
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"text": "Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness is an American computer-animated television series spun off from the \"Kung Fu Panda\" films. It takes place after the first film, showing Po's training to becoming a successful Dragon Warrior, where the second film is, according to the series' executive producer Peter Hastings, \"not unlike a very long, super-deluxe 3-D version of one of our episodes\".",
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"text": "Thomas \"Tom\" McGrath (born August 7, 1964) is an American film director, animator, and voice actor known for co-directing (with Eric Darnell) the 2005 comedy \"Madagascar\" and its sequels, \"\" in 2008 and \"\" in 2012, also providing the voice of Skipper in all films, short films and \"The Penguins of Madagascar\" television series. He has portrayed Skipper in every \"Madagascar\" installment, being the only voice actor to do so. He has also worked as a voice actor on other DreamWorks animated features like \"Flushed Away\" in 2006 and \"Shrek the Third\" in 2007. He also stepped in on \"Flushed Away\" to help make improvements prior to its release. He has also directed other DreamWorks Feature Films such as Megamind and The Boss Baby.",
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"text": "Finding Dory is a 2016 American 3D computer-animated comedy adventure film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. Directed by Andrew Stanton with co-direction by Angus MacLane, the screenplay was written by Stanton and Victoria Strouse. The film is a sequel/spinoff to 2003's \"Finding Nemo\" and features the returning voices of Ellen DeGeneres and Albert Brooks, with Hayden Rolence (replacing Alexander Gould), Ed O'Neill, Kaitlin Olson, Ty Burrell, Diane Keaton and Eugene Levy joining the cast. The film focuses on the amnesiac fish Dory, who journeys to be reunited with her parents.",
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"text": "Thomas Papa (born November 10, 1968) is an American comedian, actor, writer, producer, television/radio host.",
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"text": "The Good Dinosaur is a 2015 American 3D computer-animated comedy-drama adventure film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. The film is directed by Peter Sohn in his directorial debut from a screenplay by Meg LeFauve from an original idea by Bob Peterson. Set on a fictional Earth in which dinosaurs never became extinct, the film follows a young \"Apatosaurus\" named Arlo, who meets an unlikely human friend while traveling through a harsh and mysterious landscape. The film features the voices of Raymond Ochoa, Jack Bright, Sam Elliott, Anna Paquin, A.J. Buckley, Steve Zahn, Jeffrey Wright, and Frances McDormand.",
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"text": "Ratatouille ( ; ] ) is a 2007 American computer-animated comedy film produced by Pixar and released by Buena Vista Pictures Distribution. It is the eighth film produced by Pixar and was co-written and directed by Brad Bird, who took over from Jan Pinkava in 2005. The title refers to a French dish, \"ratatouille\", which is served at the end of the film and is also a play on words about the species of the main character. The film stars the voices of Patton Oswalt as Remy, an anthropomorphic rat who is interested in cooking; Lou Romano as Linguini, a young garbage boy who befriends Remy; Ian Holm as Skinner, the head chef of Auguste Gusteau's restaurant; Janeane Garofalo as Colette, a rôtisseur at Gusteau's restaurant; Peter O'Toole as Anton Ego, a restaurant critic; Brian Dennehy as Django, Remy's father and leader of his clan; Peter Sohn as Emile, Remy's older brother; and Brad Garrett as Auguste Gusteau, a recently deceased chef. The plot follows Remy, who dreams of becoming a chef and tries to achieve his goal by forming an alliance with a Parisian restaurant's garbage boy.",
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"text": "Madagascar is a computer-animated franchise produced by DreamWorks Animation. Voices of Ben Stiller, Chris Rock, David Schwimmer and Jada Pinkett Smith are featured in the films. It began with the 2005 film \"Madagascar\", the 2008 sequel \"\", and the third film \"\" in 2012. A spin-off film featuring the penguins, titled \"Penguins of Madagascar\", was released in 2014. A fourth film, \"Madagascar 4\", was announced for 2018, but has since been removed from its schedule due to the studio's restructuring.",
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"text": "Nicholas Joseph Pitera (born March 7, 1986) is an American vocal artist who gained his popularity by the release of his YouTube videos, several of which have gone viral, and many others are remarkably popular. , Pitera also works as a 3D Modeler at Pixar Studios. Pitera is also a Cast Member For The Walt Disney Company. He is the son of Rudy Paul Pitera and Jill Patricia (Steinworth) Pitera. His father immigrated from Italy as a small boy.",
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"text": "Calling All Engines! is a 2005 direct-to-video special and a spinoff of the TV series, \"Thomas & Friends\". The film was co-produced by HIT Entertainment and was released in the United States on September 6, 2005 and in the United Kingdom on October 3 of the same year..",
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] |
5ade504d5542997c77adedef | Cleopatra Mathis, is an American poet who since 1982 has been the Frederick Sessions Beebe Professor in the English department at Dartmouth College, and is a faculty member at The Frost Place, a museum and nonprofit educational center for poetry located at Robert Frost's former home in Franconia, New Hampshire, in which country? | [
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"text": "Cleopatra Mathis (born 1947 in Ruston, Louisiana) is an American poet who since 1982 has been the Frederick Sessions Beebe Professor in the English department at Dartmouth College, where she is also director of the Creative Writing Program. Her most recent book is \"White Sea\" (Sarabande Books, 2005). She is a faculty member at The Frost Place Poetry Seminar."
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"text": "The Frost Place is a museum and nonprofit educational center for poetry located at Robert Frost's former home in Franconia, New Hampshire, United States."
}
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"text": "Robert Lee Frost (March26, 1874January29, 1963) was an American poet. His work was initially published in England before it was published in America. He is highly regarded for his realistic depictions of rural life and his command of American colloquial speech. His work frequently employed settings from rural life in New England in the early twentieth century, using them to examine complex social and philosophical themes. One of the most popular and critically respected American poets of the twentieth century, Frost was honored frequently during his lifetime, receiving four Pulitzer Prizes for Poetry. He became one of America's rare \"public literary figures, almost an artistic institution.\" He was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 1960 for his poetic works. On July 22, 1961, Frost was named poet laureate of Vermont.",
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"id": "15294298",
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"text": "The Robert Frost Farm, also known as the Homer Noble Farm, is a National Historic Landmark in Ripton, Vermont. It is a 150 acre farm property off Vermont Route 125 in the Green Mountains where American poet Robert Frost (1874-1963) lived and wrote in the summer and fall months from 1939 until his death in 1963. The property, historically called the Homer Noble Farm, includes a nineteenth-century farmhouse and a rustic wooden writing cabin (where Frost often stayed). The property is now owned by Middlebury College. The grounds are open to the public during daylight hours.",
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"text": "The Frost Garrison and House are a cluster of colonial-era buildings on Garrison Drive in Eliot, Maine. Sited on Frost's Hill, the complex includes a c. 1778 house, and two structures, the oldest dating to 1735, constructed as strongholds against Native American attacks. The older one is the only known surviviving garrison built for the defense of a single family. The house is also the ancestral home of poet Robert Frost, who is known to have visited the area. The complex was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.",
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"id": "3756078",
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"text": "Cynthia Huntington is an American poet, memoirist and a professor of English and Creative Writing at Dartmouth College. In 2004 she was named Poet Laureate of New Hampshire.",
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"id": "41518943",
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"text": "Carol Frost (born 1948) is an American poet. Frost has published several collections of poetry, and has held several teaching residencies. Frost is the founder and director of the Catskill Poetry Workshop at Hartwick College. Her work has featured in four Pushcart Prize anthologies.",
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"text": "Dartmouth College ( ) is a private Ivy League research university in Hanover, New Hampshire, United States. Established in 1769 by Eleazar Wheelock, it is the ninth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and one of the nine colonial colleges chartered before the American Revolution. Although founded as a school to educate Native Americans in Christian theology and the English way of life, Dartmouth primarily trained Congregationalist ministers throughout its early history before it gradually secularized, emerging at the turn of the 20th century from relative obscurity into national prominence.",
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"text": "The Robert Frost Farm in Derry, New Hampshire is a two-story, clapboard, connected farm built in 1884. It was the home of poet Robert Frost from 1900 to 1911. Today it is a New Hampshire state park in use as a historic house museum. The property is listed in the National Register of Historic Places as the Robert Frost Homestead.",
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"text": "Franconia is a town in Grafton County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 1,104 at the 2010 census. Set in the White Mountains, Franconia is home to the northern half of Franconia Notch State Park. Parts of the White Mountain National Forest are in the eastern and southern portions of the town. The Appalachian Trail crosses the southern part.",
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"text": "New Hampshire is a 1923 Pulitzer Prize-winning volume of poems written by Robert Frost. The book included several of Frost's most well-known poems, including \"Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening\", \"Nothing Gold Can Stay\" and \"Fire and Ice\". Illustrations for the collection were provided by Frost's friend, woodcut artist J. J. Lankes.",
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"id": "25534620",
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"text": "Mather House, whose formal name is Flora Mather House, is a college building named for Flora Stone Mather at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. It was built as a dormitory for the Flora Stone Mather College for Women of Western Reserve University, and currently houses classrooms and offices for the university's departments of art history, classics, history, and political science.",
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"id": "17696477",
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"text": "The Robert Frost House is an historic house at 29-35 Brewster Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It consists of four wood-frame townhouses, 2-1/2 stories in height, arranged in mirror image styling. Each pair of units has a porch providing access to those units, supported by turned posts and with a low Stick style balustrade. The Queen Anne/Stick style frame house was built in 1884, and has gables decorated with a modest amount of Gothic-style bargeboard. The house was home to poet Robert Frost for the last two decades of his life.",
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"text": "Salem College is a liberal arts women's college in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States founded in 1772. Originally established as a primary school, it later became an academy (high school) and finally a college. It is the oldest female educational establishment that is still a women's college and the oldest female institution in the Southern United States.",
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"id": "259568",
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"text": "Hanover is a census-designated place (CDP) and the main village in the town of Hanover in Grafton County, New Hampshire, United States. The population of the CDP was 8,636 at the 2010 census, out of 11,260 people in the entire town of Hanover. The CDP includes the campus of Dartmouth College.",
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"id": "14662599",
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"text": "James Hearst (August 8, 1900 - July 27, 1983), born James Schell Hearst, was an American poet, philosopher and university professor, who was sometimes described as the “Robert Frost of the Midwest.” (Alluding to this, someone once said to Frost, who was a friend of Hearst’s, that he was the “James Hearst of New England.”)",
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{
"id": "15427131",
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"text": "Mary Louise Hancock (born July 5, 1920) is a retired New Hampshire state senator, former New Hampshire State Planning Director and has been called the 'Grand Dame' and the 'Queen Bee' of New Hampshire politics. She is a long term resident of New Hampshire's capital city of Concord and was the first woman to be elected senator from the state's 15th district. She received both the Robert Frost Award and the Susan B. Anthony Award. She has received honorary degrees from Keene State College as well as Notre Dame College of New Hampshire. Ms. Hancock is a distant relative of famed revolutionary John Hancock.",
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{
"id": "51123803",
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"text": "Flora Lonette Davis Crittenden (born August 10, 1924) is retired Virginia schoolteacher and civil rights activist who served part-time as a member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Newport News, Virginia for eleven years.",
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{
"id": "6923777",
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"text": "Elizabeth Willis (born April 28, 1961, Bahrain) is an American poet and literary critic. She currently serves as Professor of Poetry at the Iowa Writers' Workshop. Willis has won several awards for her poetry including the National Poetry Series and the Guggenheim Fellowship. Susan Howe has called Elizabeth Willis \"an exceptional poet, one of the most outstanding of her generation.\"",
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{
"id": "600291",
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"text": "Diane Marie Antonia Varsi (February 23, 1938 – November 19, 1992) was an American film actress best known for her performances in \"Peyton Place\" – her film debut, for which she was nominated for an Academy Award – and the cult film \"Wild in the Streets\". She left Hollywood in order to pursue personal and artistic aims, notably at Bennington College in Vermont, where she studied poetry with poet and translator Ben Belitt, among others.",
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{
"id": "49370424",
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"text": "The Robert Frost Farm, also known as \"The Gully\", is a historic farm property on Buck Hill Road in South Shaftsbury, Vermont. The 1790 farmstead was purchased in 1929 by poet Robert Frost, and served as his primary residence until 1938. During this period of residency, Frost was awarded two Pulitzer Prizes for his poetry. The property was designated a National Historic Landmark and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1968; its landmark designation was withdrawn in 1986 after its private owners made alterations that destroyed important historic elements of the property.",
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{
"id": "41537904",
"score": 0.5820007920265198,
"text": "Ruby Altizer Roberts (April 22, 1907 – May 24, 2004) was an author and the poet laureate of Virginia.",
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}
] |
5a8ca554554299240d9c21b2 | What style of running also known as 'natural running', practiced in parts of Africa and Latin America was championed by South African and Great British athlete Zola Budd? | [
{
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"text": "Zola Pieterse (\"née\" Budd; born 26 May 1966) is a middle-distance and long-distance runner. She competed at the 1984 Olympic Games for Great Britain and the 1992 Olympic Games for South Africa, both times in the 3000 metres. In 1984 (unratified) and 1985, she broke the world record in the women's 5000 metres. She was also a two-time winner at the World Cross Country Championships (1985–1986). Budd's career was unusual in that she mainly trained and raced barefoot. She moved with her family to South Carolina in 2008, and competes at marathons and ultramarathons. She volunteers as assistant coach at Coastal Carolina University in Conway. Her mile best of 4:17.57 in 1985, still stands as the British record."
},
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"id": "6727252",
"score": 0.6485617756843567,
"text": "Barefoot running, also called \"natural running\", is the act of running without footwear. With the advent of modern footwear, running barefoot has become less common in most parts of the world but is still practiced in parts of Africa and Latin America. In some Western countries, barefoot running has grown in popularity due to perceived health benefits."
}
] | [
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"id": "884035",
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"text": "Josia Thugwane (born 15 April 1971) is a South African athlete, best known for winning the gold medal in the marathon race at the 1996 Summer Olympics. Thugwane, who is of Ndebele heritage, is the first black athlete to earn an Olympic gold for South Africa.",
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"id": "36493091",
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"text": "Zharnel Hughes (born 13 July 1995) is a British sprinter who specialises in the 100 m and 200 m. Born and raised in the British Overseas Territory of Anguilla, he has competed internationally for Great Britain since 2015.",
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"id": "858287",
"score": 0.5997815728187561,
"text": "Juan Carlos Zabala a.k.a. \"El Ñandú Criollo\" (October 11, 1911 – January 24, 1983) was an Argentine long-distance runner, winner of the marathon race at the 1932 Summer Olympics.",
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"id": "28083489",
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"text": "Zola is a section of the Soweto township lying south of Johannesburg in Gauteng, South Africa. A number of well-known public figures, mostly musicians call Zola their home and were born and bred there.",
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"id": "10403956",
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"text": "Robert Garside (born 6 January 1967), calling himself The Runningman, is a British runner who is credited by Guinness World Records as the first person to run around the world. Garside began his record-setting run following two aborted attempts from Cape Town, South Africa and London, England. Garside set off from New Delhi, India on 20 October 1997, completing his run back at the same point on 13 June 2003.",
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{
"id": "4779882",
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"text": "Louis Jacobus van Zyl (born 20 July 1985), better known as L. J. van Zyl, is a South African athlete competing in the 400 metre hurdles. He is the South African record holder in the event with a personal best of 47.66 seconds. He is a three-time African Champion in the event and competed for his country at the 2008 Summer Olympics and 2012 Summer Olympics.",
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{
"id": "39924837",
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"text": "Football in South America is the most popular hobby and professional sport played by the continent's inhabitants. Football was introduced to South America in the nineteenth century thanks to the worldwide diffusion of British culture caused by the British diaspora and the acceptance of the sport by the region's Anglophile elite. Widely regarded as a symbol of modernity and good health, football overtime displaced older fashionable sports such as Bochas to become, by the middle of the twentieth century, the primary mainstream sport throughout most of the continent.",
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{
"id": "52124041",
"score": 0.5863763093948364,
"text": "Yotam Siachobe Muleya (1940 – 23 November 1959) was a long-distance runner who represented Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) and the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. Muleya broke racial barriers and opened a new era in Rhodesian sport when he beat the famous British four minute miler, Gordon Pirie, by 100 yards in a three-mile race at Salisbury, Southern Rhodesia in December 1958.",
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{
"id": "18564230",
"score": 0.5859044194221497,
"text": "Kamal Ziani (born 20 February 1972) is a retired Spanish long-distance runner who specialized in the marathon.",
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{
"id": "35396607",
"score": 0.5853150486946106,
"text": "Delano Williams (born 23 December 1993) is a British sprinter, originally from the British Overseas Territory of the Turks and Caicos Islands. In June 2013, it was confirmed that Williams would henceforth compete for Great Britain, as was his right by dint of the right to British citizenship of Turks and Caicos Islanders. Williams trains with the Racers Track Club in Jamaica.",
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{
"id": "5729054",
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"text": "Oscar Leonard Carl Pistorius OIB ( ; ] ; born 22 November 1986) is a South African sprint runner and convicted murderer. Both of Pistorius' legs were amputated below the knee when he was 11 months old. He was the tenth athlete to compete at both the Paralympic Games and Olympic Games, competing in sprint events for below-knee amputees in Paralympic events, and in non-disabled sprint events.",
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{
"id": "33080505",
"score": 0.5813797116279602,
"text": "Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen",
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},
{
"id": "26032",
"score": 0.5802571773529053,
"text": "Running is a method of terrestrial locomotion allowing humans and other animals to move rapidly on foot. Running is a type of gait characterized by an aerial phase in which all feet are above the ground (though there are exceptions). This is in contrast to walking, where one foot is always in contact with the ground, the legs are kept mostly straight and the center of gravity vaults over the stance leg or legs in an inverted pendulum fashion. A characteristic feature of a running body from the viewpoint of spring-mass mechanics is that changes in kinetic and potential energy within a stride occur simultaneously, with energy storage accomplished by springy tendons and passive muscle elasticity. The term running can refer to any of a variety of speeds ranging from jogging to sprinting.",
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{
"id": "8012489",
"score": 0.5783211588859558,
"text": "Dionicio Cerón Pizarro (born October 9, 1965 in Toluca) is a former marathon runner from Mexico, whose personal best in the classic distance was 2:08:30. He represented his native country two times at the Summer Olympics: in 1992 and 1996. He also won the London Marathon three consecutive times between 1994 and 1996, the only athlete to have achieved this feat.",
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},
{
"id": "6100761",
"score": 0.5775530338287354,
"text": "Donald (\"Don\") Smith Buddo (November 6, 1886 – July 27, 1965) was a Canadian athlete who competed at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London.",
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{
"id": "717898",
"score": 0.5767077207565308,
"text": "Trail running is a sport which consists of running and hiking over trails. In the United Kingdom and Ireland it is also called mountain or fell running although the two types do differ. It differs from road running and track running in that it generally takes place on hiking trails, often in mountainous terrain, where there can be much larger ascents and descents. It is difficult to definitively distinguish trail running from cross country running. In general, however, cross country is an IAAF governed discipline that is typically raced over shorter distances (rarely over 12 kilometers), whereas trail running is loosely governed, and run over longer routes.",
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{
"id": "1521220",
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"text": "The Criollo (in Spanish), or Crioulo (in Portuguese), is the native horse of Uruguay (1910), Argentina (1918), Brazil (1932) and Paraguay. with a reputation for long-distance endurance linked to a low basal metabolism. The breed, known for its hardiness and stamina, is popular in its home countries.",
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{
"id": "1095407",
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"text": "Fell running, sometimes known as hill running or mountain running, is the sport of running and racing, off road, over upland country where the gradient climbed is a significant component of the difficulty. The name arises from the origins of the English sport on the fells of northern Britain, especially those in the Lake District.",
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{
"id": "54986028",
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"text": "Athletics South Africa is the national governing body for the sport of athletics (including track and field, cross country, road running and racewalking) in South Africa, recognised by the IAAF, and also a member of Confederation of African Athletics. The association is based in Johannesburg.",
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{
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"text": "South Africans have a passionate following, although they remain largely divided along ethnic lines. Soccer, Cricket and Rugby are the most popular sports.",
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] |
5ade2a075542997c77aded8c | Sergeant James B. Bell received what honor for his actions in the war that broke out April 1861 | [
{
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"text": "Sergeant James B. Bell (August 9, 1835 – June 30, 1910) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War and a recipient of the U.S. military's highest decoration, the Medal of Honor, for his actions at the Battle of Missionary Ridge on November 25, 1863."
},
{
"id": "863",
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"text": "The American Civil War (commonly known as the \"Civil War\" in the United States) was fought in the United States from 1861 to 1865. The result of a long-standing controversy over slavery, war broke out in April 1861, when Confederates attacked Fort Sumter in South Carolina, shortly after Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated. The nationalists of the Union proclaimed loyalty to the U.S. Constitution. They faced secessionists of the Confederate States of America, who advocated for states’ rights to perpetual slavery and its expansion in the Americas."
}
] | [
{
"id": "8600562",
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"text": "James Joseph Bell (July 1, 1845 – June 1, 1901) was a United States Army soldier who received the Medal of Honor during the Indian Wars. His name is sometimes incorrectly given as James M. Bell.",
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{
"id": "40402679",
"score": 0.6929328441619873,
"text": "George H. Bell (March 12, 1839 – September 26, 1917) was a Union Navy sailor in the American Civil War and a recipient of the U.S. military's highest decoration, the Medal of Honor, for his actions during an 1861 engagement.",
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{
"id": "8182987",
"score": 0.6755515336990356,
"text": "Dennis Bell (December 28, 1866 – September 25, 1953) was a Buffalo Soldier in the United States Army and a recipient of America's highest military decoration—the Medal of Honor—for his actions in the Spanish–American War.",
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{
"id": "41226396",
"score": 0.6725866794586182,
"text": "Quartermaster James Brown (born 1826) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War. Brown received the country's highest award for bravery during combat, the Medal of Honor, for his action aboard the USS \"Albatross\" at Fort DeRussy on 4 May 1863. He was honored with the award on 16 April 1864.",
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{
"id": "1868582",
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"text": "James Franklin Bell (January 9, 1856 – January 8, 1919) was Chief of Staff of the United States Army from 1906 to 1910.",
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{
"id": "2982035",
"score": 0.6599447727203369,
"text": "Jacob Wilson Parrott (July 17, 1843–December 22, 1908) was the first recipient of the Medal of Honor, a new military award first presented by the United States Department of War to six Union Army soldiers who participated in the Great Locomotive Chase in 1862 during the American Civil War (1861–1865).",
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{
"id": "43215649",
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"text": "James B. Thompson (1843 – August 31, 1875) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War. Thompson received his country's highest award for bravery during combat, the Medal of Honor. Thompson's medal was won for capturing the flag of the Confederate's 15th Georgia Infantry at the Battle of Gettysburg on July 3, 1863. He was honored with the award on December 1, 1864.",
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{
"id": "29671248",
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"text": "James E. Bailey was a United States Army Sergeant during the Indian Wars who received the Medal of Honor on April 12, 1875 for service during the winter of 1872-73.",
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{
"id": "40847308",
"score": 0.6545722484588623,
"text": "Private James A. Campbell (December 20, 1844 to May 6, 1904) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War. Campbell received the country's highest award for bravery during combat, the Medal of Honor, for his action at Woodstock in Virginia on 22 January 1865 and at Amelia Courthouse in Virginia on 5 April 1865. He was honored with the award on 30 October 1897.",
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{
"id": "40903724",
"score": 0.6527788639068604,
"text": "Private James G. Clark (October 31, 1843 to December 16, 1911) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War. Clark received the country's highest award for bravery during combat, the Medal of Honor, for his action during the Second Battle of Petersburg in Virginia on 18 June 1864. He was honored with the award on 30 April 1892.",
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{
"id": "32408550",
"score": 0.649861216545105,
"text": "Tyree H. Bell often referred to by his full name, Tyree Harris Bell, was a Confederate States Army brigadier general, during the American Civil War.",
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{
"id": "41104080",
"score": 0.6484735012054443,
"text": "Ordinary Seaman James K. L. Duncan (July 6, 1845 to March 27, 1913) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War. Duncan received the country's highest award for bravery during combat, the Medal of Honor, for his action aboard the USS Fort Hindman on 2 March 1864. He was honored with the award on 31 December 1864.",
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{
"id": "16216732",
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"text": "James Parker Landis (July 20, 1843 – December 1, 1924) was a soldier in the Union Army and a Medal of Honor recipient for his role in the American Civil War.",
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{
"id": "38278941",
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"text": "On April 15, 1861, at the start of the American Civil War, the President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln, called for a 75,000-man militia to serve for three months following the bombardment and surrender of Fort Sumter. Some slave states refused to send troops against their neighboring slave states, with the result that most such states also declared secession from the United States and joined the Confederate States.",
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{
"id": "36815871",
"score": 0.644235372543335,
"text": "Harrison Collins (March 10, 1836 – December 25, 1890) was an American soldier who received the Medal of Honor for valor during the American Civil War.",
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{
"id": "37122344",
"score": 0.6439462900161743,
"text": "James B. Chandler (October 6, 1837 – July 12, 1899) was a Union Navy sailor in the American Civil War and a recipient of the U.S. military's highest decoration, the Medal of Honor, for his actions at the Battle of Mobile Bay.",
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{
"id": "39958015",
"score": 0.6433569192886353,
"text": "Corporal James Albert Barber (July 11, 1841 to June 26, 1925) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War. Barber was awarded the country's highest award for bravery during combat, the Medal of Honor, for his action at Petersburg, Virginia in April 1865. He was presented with the award on June 20, 1866.",
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},
{
"id": "11900192",
"score": 0.6423647403717041,
"text": "On April 12, 1861, South Carolina artillery opened fire on Fort Sumter to start the American Civil War. While many gold seekers in the Colorado Territory held sympathies for the Confederacy, the vast majority remained fiercely loyal to the Union cause.",
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{
"id": "102739",
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"text": "Custer developed a strong reputation during the Civil War. He participated in the first major engagement, the First Battle of Bull Run on July 21, 1861, near Washington, D.C. His association with several important officers helped his career as did his success as a highly effective cavalry commander. Custer was brevetted to brigadier general at age 23, less than a week before the Battle of Gettysburg, where he personally led cavalry charges that prevented Confederate cavalry from attacking the Union rear in support of Pickett's Charge. He was wounded in the Battle of Culpeper Court House in Virginia on September 13, 1863. In 1864, Custer was awarded another star and brevetted to major general rank. At the conclusion of the Appomattox Campaign, in which he and his troops played a decisive role, Custer was present at General Robert E. Lee's surrender to General Ulysses S. Grant, on April 9, 1865.",
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{
"id": "8422930",
"score": 0.6400981545448303,
"text": "Harry Bell (September 21, 1860 – November 10, 1938) was a United States Army Captain received the Medal of Honor for actions during October 17, 1899, during the Philippine–American War for leading a charge against a superior number of the enemy.",
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}
] |
5a8f7afc55429918e830d233 | What is the name of the Price is Right host who also the Miss USA pageant for twenty years? | [
{
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"text": "The pageant was hosted by Growing Pains star Alan Thicke, the first time in twenty years that Bob Barker did not host, and the pageant commentator was Tracy Scoggins. Barker, an animal rights activist, refused to be involved because one of the winner's prizes was a fur coat. There had been controversy surrounding the fur coats since the previous year, and Barker claimed he had asked pageant officials not to give away coats for years but that he had been ignored. Other animal rights activists threatened to picket the pageant in protest at its fur policy and disrupted a pre-pageant press conference. In an unrelated attack, Scoggins was attacked in an elevator following pageant rehearsals. The attacker was charged with attempted sexual assault."
},
{
"id": "343327",
"score": 0.6933791041374207,
"text": "Robert William Barker (born December 12, 1923) is an American former television game show host. He is known for hosting CBS's \"The Price Is Right\" from 1972 to 2007, making it the longest-running daytime game show in North American television history, and for hosting \"Truth or Consequences\" from 1956 to 1974."
}
] | [
{
"id": "27346282",
"score": 0.7065983414649963,
"text": "Miss USA 1973, the 22nd Miss USA pageant, was televised live by CBS from Broadway Theatre, New York City, New York on May 19, 1973, Hosted by Bob Barker who 8 months earlier began hosting The Price Is Right on CBS.",
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{
"id": "2608795",
"score": 0.6810129880905151,
"text": "Kathleen Joann Bradley (born January 10, 1951) is an American former model, actress and host. Bradley is primarily known as a \"Barker's Beauty\" on the CBS daytime game show \"The Price Is Right\" from 1990 until 2000. Bradley is noted as the first permanent African-American model on the show.",
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{
"id": "27357855",
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"text": "Miss USA 1971, the 20th Miss USA pageant, was televised live by CBS hosted by Bob Barker from the Jackie Gleason Auditorium in Miami Beach, Florida on May 22, 1971.",
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{
"id": "27375559",
"score": 0.6641401052474976,
"text": "Miss USA 1968, the 17th Miss USA pageant, was televised live by CBS from Miami Beach, Florida on May 18, 1968 hosted by Bob Barker.",
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{
"id": "17090648",
"score": 0.6536557674407959,
"text": "Miss USA 1986, the 35th Miss USA pageant, was televised live on May 20 from Miami, Florida on CBS. The ceremonies were hosted by Bob Barker. At the conclusion of the final competition, Christy Fichtner of Texas was crowned Miss USA, becoming the second consecutive winner from Texas.",
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{
"id": "3452257",
"score": 0.6531378030776978,
"text": "The American television game show \"The Price Is Right\" has, since its 1972 relaunch, employed a number of models to showcase the prizes and items that are given away on the show. From 1972 to 2007, the group was referred to as \"Barker's Beauties,\" in reference to Bob Barker, who hosted the show during that period.",
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{
"id": "5035449",
"score": 0.6504902839660645,
"text": "The Price is Right is a British game show based on the US version of the same name. It originally aired on ITV from 24 March 1984 to 8 April 1988, hosted by Leslie Crowther, then it aired on Sky One from 4 September 1989 to 31 August 1990, hosted by Bob Warman, then it aired back on ITV from 4 September 1995 to 16 December 2001, hosted by Bruce Forsyth, and finally on the same channel from 8 May 2006 until 12 January 2007, hosted by Joe Pasquale.",
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{
"id": "825428",
"score": 0.6407889127731323,
"text": "Pat Sajak ( , born Patrick Leonard Sajdak; October 26, 1946) is an American television personality, former weatherman, and talk show host, best known as the host of the American television game show \"Wheel of Fortune\".",
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{
"id": "5909850",
"score": 0.6392754912376404,
"text": "The Price Is Right is a television game show franchise originally produced by Mark Goodson and Bill Todman, and created by Bob Stewart, and is currently produced and owned by FremantleMedia (Endemol in Netherlands). The franchise centers on television game shows, but also includes merchandise such as video games, printed media and board games. The franchise began in 1956 as a television game show hosted by Bill Cullen and was revamped in 1972. This version was originally hosted by Bob Barker. Since 2007, Drew Carey has hosted the program.",
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{
"id": "1162213",
"score": 0.6352677345275879,
"text": "Dian Parkinson (born Dianna Lynn Batts; November 30, 1944, Jacksonville, North Carolina) is an American former model who worked as a prize presenter on \"The Price Is Right\".",
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{
"id": "1942640",
"score": 0.6292820572853088,
"text": "Michelle Renee Royer-Jefferson (born January 5, 1966) is an American TV Host and beauty queen who won Miss USA 1987 and second runner-up to Miss Universe 1987.",
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{
"id": "404557",
"score": 0.62901771068573,
"text": "John Leonard \"Johnny\" Olson (May 22, 1910 – October 12, 1985) was an American radio personality and television announcer. Olson is perhaps best known for his work as an announcer for game shows, particularly the work he did for Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions. Olson was the longtime announcer for the original \"To Tell the Truth\" and \"What's My Line?\" early in his career and spent over a decade as the announcer for both \"Match Game\" and \"The Price Is Right\", and he had been working on the latter series at the time of his death.",
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"id": "30045253",
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"text": "There are two versions of The Price Is Right in the Philippines, aired on two networks. The first version aired every Sunday on ABC (now TV5) and was hosted by Dawn Zulueta, with voice over provided off screen by Mark Mangaliman from 2001 to 2003. The second version, hosted by Kris Aquino on ABS-CBN, premiered on February 14, 2011. Voice over is provided by \"Rich,\" composed of the identically-named \"The Amazing Race Asia 4\" winners Richard Hardin and Richard Herrera ; at one point, due to a prior commitment by the Richards, ABS-CBN reporter Marc Logan, known for his tongue-in-cheek reporting and comedic voice overs, filled in for the duo.",
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{
"id": "2662140",
"score": 0.6244027018547058,
"text": "Brandi Sherwood (born January 13, 1971) is an American model and pageant winner. She was born in Idaho Falls, Idaho. She was Miss USA 1997 and (at age 18) Miss Teen USA 1989 and was a frequent rotating Barker's Beauty model on the US daytime television game show \"The Price Is Right\" from 2002-2009.",
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{
"id": "99959",
"score": 0.6242888569831848,
"text": "John William Carson (October 23, 1925 – January 23, 2005) was an American talk show host and comedian, best known for his 30 years as host of \"The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson\" (1962–1992). Carson received six Emmy Awards, the Television Academy's 1980 Governor's Award, and a 1985 Peabody Award. He was inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame in 1987. Carson was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1992 and received a Kennedy Center Honor in 1993.",
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{
"id": "5391506",
"score": 0.6215804219245911,
"text": "The Price Is Right is an American game show where contestants made successive bids on merchandise prizes with the goal of bidding closest to the actual retail price of the prize without going over. The show was a precursor to the current and best-known version of the show, which premiered in 1972 on CBS' daytime schedule. This makes \"The Price Is Right\" one of only a few game shows that have aired in some form across all three of what were then the Big Three television networks.",
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{
"id": "1788915",
"score": 0.6206286549568176,
"text": "Susie Castillo (born October 27, 1979) is an American actress, TV Host, model and beauty pageant titleholder who held the Miss USA title and competed in the Miss Teen USA and Miss Universe pageants. She pursued a career in the media, and as such, has made various television appearances and hosted shows such as MTV's \"Total Request Live\" as a VJ.",
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{
"id": "37032",
"score": 0.6175850629806519,
"text": "The Price Is Right is an American television game show created by Bob Stewart, Mark Goodson and Bill Todman. The show revolves around contestants competing to identify accurate pricing of merchandise to win cash and prizes. Contestants are selected from the studio audience when the announcer proclaims the show's famous catchphrase, \"Come on down!\"",
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{
"id": "60907",
"score": 0.6158971190452576,
"text": "Gene Rayburn (December 22, 1917 – November 29, 1999) was an American radio and television personality. He is best known as the host of various editions of the popular American television game show \"Match Game\" for over two decades.",
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{
"id": "17088705",
"score": 0.6151760816574097,
"text": "Host Bob Barker, a fervent animal rights activist, threatened to pull out of the pageant when he discovered that the delegates would be wearing real fur coats during the swimsuit competition segment. As Barker was already in New Mexico at the time, there was no time to find a replacement host and pageant officials agreed to a change. The delegates wore simulated fur for the segment, but real fur was still given as a prize to the Miss USA winner. Barker went on to host the 1987 Miss Universe pageant held in Singapore in May before stepping down for good.",
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] |
5ae7c2015542994a481bbdd2 | Which archipelago island nation is located southeast of Seychelles? | [
{
"id": "35705652",
"score": 0.8,
"text": "Colotis evanthides is a butterfly in the Pieridae family. It is found on the Comoros and Seychelles."
},
{
"id": "5403",
"score": 0.6755084991455078,
"text": "The Comoros ( ; Arabic: جزر القمر , \"Juzur al-Qumur / Qamar \"), officially the Union of the Comoros (Comorian: \"Udzima wa Komori,\" French: \"Union des Comores\" , Arabic: الاتحاد القمري \"al-Ittiḥād al-Qumurī / Qamarī \"), is a sovereign archipelago island nation in the Indian Ocean located at the northern end of the Mozambique Channel off the eastern coast of Africa between northeastern Mozambique and northwestern Madagascar. Other countries near the Comoros are Tanzania to the northwest and the Seychelles to the northeast. Its capital is Moroni, on Grande Comore. The Union of the Comoros has three official languages – Comorian, Arabic and French. The religion of the majority of the population is Islam."
}
] | [
{
"id": "57010",
"score": 0.8029208183288574,
"text": "The Seychelles is a small island nation located in the Indian Ocean northeast of Madagascar and about 1600 km east of Kenya. Seychelles lies between approximately 4ºS and 10ºS and 46ºE and 54ºE. The nation is an archipelago of 155 tropical islands, some granite and some coral. the majority of which are small and uninhabited. The landmass is only 459 km, but the islands are spread over an Exclusive Economic Zone of 1,374,000 km. About 90 percent of the population of 90,000 live on Mahé, 9 percent on Praslin and La Digue. Around a third of the land area is the island of Mahé and a further third the atoll of Aldabra.",
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{
"id": "41476270",
"score": 0.7936413884162903,
"text": "Seychelles, officially the Republic of Seychelles, is a 115-island country spanning an archipelago in the Indian Ocean, some 1500 km east of mainland Southeast Africa, northeast of the island of Madagascar.",
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{
"id": "27288",
"score": 0.776153564453125,
"text": "Seychelles ( ; French: ] ), officially the Republic of Seychelles (French: \"République des Seychelles\" ; Creole: \"Repiblik Sesel\"), is an archipelago and country in the Indian Ocean. The 115-island country, whose capital is Victoria, lies 1500 km east of mainland East Africa. Other nearby island countries and territories include Comoros, Mayotte (region of France), Madagascar, Réunion (region of France) and Mauritius to the south. With a population of roughly 92,000, it has the smallest population of any sovereign African country; however, it does have a larger population than the British overseas territory Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha.",
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{
"id": "41219226",
"score": 0.7402178049087524,
"text": "This is a survey of the postage stamps and postal history of Seychelles, an 115 island nation spanning an archipelago in the Indian Ocean, some 1500 km east of mainland Africa, northeast of the island of Madagascar. Seychelles was administered as a dependency of Mauritius from 1810 to 1903.",
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{
"id": "56697",
"score": 0.7229563593864441,
"text": "Mauritius is an island of Africa's southeast coast located in the Indian Ocean, east of Madagascar.",
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},
{
"id": "19201",
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"text": "Mauritius ( or ; French: \"Maurice\" ), officially the Republic of Mauritius (French: \"République de Maurice\" ), is an island nation in the Indian Ocean about 2000 km off the southeast coast of the African continent. The country includes the islands of Mauritius and Rodrigues, 560 km east of Mauritius, and the outer islands (Agaléga, St. Brandon and two disputed territories). The islands of Mauritius and Rodrigues form part of the Mascarene Islands, along with nearby Réunion, a French overseas department. The area of the country is 2,040 km2 . The capital and largest city is Port Louis.",
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{
"id": "41776444",
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"text": "Seychellois cuisine is the cuisine of the Republic of Seychelles, an archipelago country consisting of 115 islands. Fish plays a prominent part in country's cuisine because of its location in the Indian Ocean. The Seychelles's cuisine has been influenced by African, British, French, Indian and Chinese cuisines.",
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{
"id": "2058052",
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"text": "Mahé is the largest island (157.3 km²) of Seychelles, lying in the northeast of the nation in the Indian Ocean. The population of Mahé was 77,000, as of the 2010 census. It contains the capital city of Victoria and accommodates 86% of the country's total population. The island was named after Bertrand-François Mahé de La Bourdonnais, a French governor of Mauritius.",
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{
"id": "6686949",
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"text": "Southern Coral Group is a collective term for two islands of Outer Islands of the Seychelles, lying in the south of the island nation, between 135 and 300 kilometers south of the capital, Victoria, on Mahé Island.",
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{
"id": "2927838",
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"text": "Port of Victoria, is located in Seychelles, an archipelago in the Indian Ocean, northeast of Madagascar. Port-Victoria has no fixed handling equipment. Ships are handled through ship's gear by the private stevedores. Victoria (sometimes called Port Victoria) is the capital city of the Seychelles (smallest African capital) and is situated on the north-eastern side of Mahé, which is the main island of the archipelago. The city was first established as the seat of the British colonial government. As of 2009, the population is 25,000 (for Greater Victoria, which includes the suburbs), out of the population of 84 000. Victoria is served by Seychelles International Airport (completed in 1971.)",
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{
"id": "670780",
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"text": "Victoria is the capital city of Seychelles and is situated on the north-eastern side of Mahé island, the archipelago's main island. The city was first established as the seat of the British colonial government. In 2010, the population of Greater Victoria (including the suburbs) was 26,450 out of the country's total population of 90,945.",
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{
"id": "5200929",
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"text": "The Outer Islands or Coralline Seychelles (archipelago) is a collective term for those islands of the Seychelles that are not on the shallow Seychelles Bank (Seychelles Plateau) which defines the location of the granitic Inner Islands archipelago to the east. The local Seychellois Creole name for the outer islands is Zil Elwannyen Sesel , while the French name is \"Îles Eloignées \". They are all of coral formation, and in the western Indian Ocean.",
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},
{
"id": "1414995",
"score": 0.67772376537323,
"text": "Saint Brandon, also known as the Cargados Carajos Shoals, is an Indian Ocean archipelago about 430 km northeast of Mauritius consisting of a number of sand banks, shoals and islets. Saint Brandon consists of five island groups, with about 28–40 islands and islets in total, depending on seasonal storms and related sand movements. There are 22 named islands and shoals. The archipelago is low-lying and is prone to substantial submersion in severe weather. It has an aggregate land area estimated variously at 1.3 sqkm and 500 acre . Economic activity in the region is limited to fishing on the very extensive shallow bank covering approximately 900 sqmi around the islands. By the early 19th century, most of the islands were in use as fishing stations. Geographically, the archipelago is part of the Mascarene Islands and is situated on the Mascarene Plateau formed by the separation of the Mauritia microcontinent during the separation of India and Madagascar about 60 million years ago.",
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},
{
"id": "2157751",
"score": 0.6706194281578064,
"text": "Platte Island or Île Platte is part of the Southern Coral Group of islands in the Seychelles that are part of the Outer Islands.",
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},
{
"id": "5030875",
"score": 0.6703260540962219,
"text": "Seychelles competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "7564668",
"score": 0.6696609258651733,
"text": "Madagascar is an island country in the Indian Ocean, off the coast of Southeast Africa. The nation comprises the island of Madagascar (the fourth-largest island in the world), and numerous smaller peripheral islands.",
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},
{
"id": "49975583",
"score": 0.6693903207778931,
"text": "Cocos Islands, also called Ile Aux Cocos, are a group of small islets in the Seychelles archipelago.",
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},
{
"id": "50011751",
"score": 0.6685653924942017,
"text": "Long Island is an island in Seychelles, lying in the northeast shores of Mahe.",
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},
{
"id": "13193380",
"score": 0.6677576899528503,
"text": "The Granitic Seychelles are the islands in the Seychelles which lie in central position on the Seychelles Bank and are composed of granite rock. They make up the majority of the Inner Islands, which in addition include the coral islands along of the rim of the Seychelles Bank, namely Bird Island and Denis Island.",
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},
{
"id": "14714488",
"score": 0.6668769717216492,
"text": "The Southeast Peninsula of Saint Kitts island is located in Saint Kitts and Nevis, in the Lesser Antilles archipelago of the Caribbean.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5a7dd2795542990b8f503ac9 | Which host of Dancing on Ice is most recognized for presenting the lifestyle programme "This Morning"? | [
{
"id": "29583818",
"score": 0.6548494696617126,
"text": "The sixth series of Dancing on Ice started on 9 January 2011 and ended on 27 March 2011 on ITV. Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby return as hosts whilst Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean return to mentor the celebrities. This series saw a huge revamp of the show which included the show moving from Elstree to Shepperton Studios, acquiring a new look set, and was broadcast in high definition for the first time on ITV1 HD, STV HD and UTV HD."
},
{
"id": "1140024",
"score": 0.6588217616081238,
"text": "Phillip Bryan Schofield (born 1 April 1962) is an English television presenter currently employed by ITV. He is most recognised for presenting the lifestyle programme \"This Morning\", which he has co-hosted since 2002, and has also hosted other programmes on the channel."
}
] | [
{
"id": "3617148",
"score": 0.7002108693122864,
"text": "Dancing on Ice is a British television show presented by Phillip Schofield along with Holly Willoughby from 2006 to 2011, again from 2018 and Christine Bleakley from 2012 to 2014, in which celebrities and their professional partners figure skate in front of a panel of judges. The series, broadcast on ITV, started on 14 January 2006 and ended on 9 March 2014 after the show's contract was not renewed. On 4 September 2017, it was announced that a revived series would air on ITV in 2018.",
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},
{
"id": "17876065",
"score": 0.6837891936302185,
"text": "The first series of Dancing on Ice aired on ITV from 14 January 2006 until 4 March. It was presented by Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby, and judged by \"The Ice Panel\", consisting of Nicky Slater, Karen Kresge, Jason Gardiner, Karen Barber and Robin Cousins. Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean coached and trained the contestants.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "1859050",
"score": 0.6802271008491516,
"text": "Andi Eleazu Peters (born 29 July 1970) is an English television presenter, producer, journalist, voice-over artist, and voice actor currently employed by ITV and is best known for roles on Breakfast TV shows \"GMTV\", \"Good Morning Britain\" and \"Lorraine\" and for hosting \"Dancing on Ice: Extra\" and \"The Big Reunion\". He also made fame for starring in the first series of ITV skating competition Dancing on Ice.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "26375386",
"score": 0.6717661023139954,
"text": "The fifth series of Dancing on Ice began airing on ITV on 8 January 2010 with a preview show, then started officially on 10 January, and concluded with the final on 28 March. The show was presented by Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby. A new Dancing on Ice companion show called \"Dancing on Ice: Friday\" was hosted by Ben Shephard and last year's contestant Coleen Nolan.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "19744915",
"score": 0.6682730913162231,
"text": "The fourth series of \"Dancing on Ice\" began on ITV on Sunday 11 January 2009. Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby returned as main presenters, while Karen Barber, Nicky Slater, Jason Gardiner, Ruthie Henshall and Robin Cousins returned to \"The Ice Panel\".",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "54405750",
"score": 0.6573469638824463,
"text": "The upcoming tenth series of Dancing on Ice is due to began airing on ITV in January 2018, the tenth series was officially confirmed by ITV during \"This Morning\" on 4 September 2017. This will be the first series since 2014. The series will be revived and will have a new judging line up, ice rink and logo.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "9019124",
"score": 0.6503226161003113,
"text": "Sterren Dansen Op Het IJs is a Dutch spin-off of British show Dancing on Ice. The hosts are singer Gerard Joling and Nance Coolen.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "33165631",
"score": 0.6474046111106873,
"text": "Dancing on Ice is a Greek reality TV show. The show features celebrities paired with professionals from the world of figure skating. The show is based on the British show, \"Dancing on Ice\". The show has a schedule similar to the reality TV show \"Dancing with the Stars\" with performance shows on Sundays nights. Jenny Balatsinou serves as host while Petros Kostopoulos, Elena Paparizou, and Alexis Kostalas serve on the judging panel. The show premiered on 6 November 2011.",
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},
{
"id": "8907090",
"score": 0.6472117304801941,
"text": "Dancing on Ice is a British made dance competition television series franchise produced around the world. The format, devised by London Weekend Television and Granada Television for ITV, has been a prime-time hit in eight different countries, including Britain and subsequently in Italy and Chile. In Australia, where it was titled \"Torvill and Dean's Dancing on Ice\", it was axed after just one series owing to production costs.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "7321059",
"score": 0.6446006298065186,
"text": "Dancing on Ice in the Netherlands and Belgium is broadcast by the Dutch TV channel RTL 4 and the Belgian TV channel VTM and hosted by Martijn Krabbe and Francesca Vanthielen. The members of the jury are: Joan Haanappel, Sjoukje Dijkstra, Thierry Smits, Katrien Pauwels and Jeroen Prins. The format derives from the British TV programme \"Strictly Come Dancing; this version uses the same name as the American one.",
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},
{
"id": "8544829",
"score": 0.6430221796035767,
"text": "The second series of Dancing on Ice aired on ITV from 20 January 2007 until 17 March 2007. It was presented by Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby, and judged by \"The Ice Panel\", consisting of Nicky Slater, Natalia Bestemianova (who replaced Karen Kresge), Jason Gardiner, Karen Barber and Robin Cousins. Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean coached and trained the contestants. In this series, eleven celebrities competed, compared to ten in the first series. The series was won by former rugby star Kyran Bracken, with Melanie Lambert as the professional winner.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "1814822",
"score": 0.640733003616333,
"text": "This Morning is a British daytime television programme that is broadcast on ITV. The show airs live on weekdays from 10:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. featuring news, topical items, showbiz, style and beauty, home and garden, food, health, real life and more similar features.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "5692732",
"score": 0.6380451321601868,
"text": "Looking Good, Feeling Great was a daytime programme in the UK, shown on ITV. Fern Britton (co-host of \"This Morning\") and her panel of experts take viewers through a step-by-step guide on how to live a healthier lifestyle.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "11470245",
"score": 0.6349067687988281,
"text": "Viewer's Choice Award for Lifestyle Host (Gemini Awards)",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "646617",
"score": 0.6330901384353638,
"text": "Denise van Outen (born Denise Kathleen Outen; 27 May 1974) is an English actress, singer, dancer and presenter. She is best known for presenting \"The Big Breakfast\", for playing Roxie Hart in the musical \"Chicago\" both in the West End and on Broadway and for finishing as runner-up in the tenth series of the BBC One dancing show \"Strictly Come Dancing\".",
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},
{
"id": "6515559",
"score": 0.6311315894126892,
"text": "Christopher Jonathan Hollins (born 20 March 1971) is an English journalist, presenter and sportsman, currently employed by the BBC and best known for being the sports correspondent for \"BBC Breakfast\" until 2012, and for winning \"Strictly Come Dancing\" 2009.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "21234111",
"score": 0.628720760345459,
"text": "The third series of Dancing on Ice began on 13 January 2008 and ended on 16 March. The show moved to Sunday nights rather than Saturdays with Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby returning to present. Karen Barber, Nicky Slater, Jason Gardiner and Robin Cousins returned to \"The Ice Panel\". Ruthie Henshall joined \"The Ice Panel\" as a replacement for former judge, Natalia Bestemianova. The commissioning of the series was first confirmed by Schofield at the BAFTA Awards.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "5852201",
"score": 0.6266895532608032,
"text": "Torvill and Dean's Dancing on Ice was an Australian reality television series which was based on the original British version, \"Dancing on Ice\". The series premiered on the Nine Network on Tuesday, 11 July 2006 at 7:30 pm , and involved celebrities ice dancing on a specially constructed ice rink located in Sydney's north-west suburbs. The series ran for one season before being cancelled, and the winner of the competition was model Jake Wall. The series reportedly cost several million dollars to produce and received above-average ratings.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "1290437",
"score": 0.6263279318809509,
"text": "Kate Thornton is an English journalist and television presenter, best known as the first presenter of \"The X Factor\" (2004–2006) and for presenting daytime shows including \"Loose Women\" (2009–2011) and \"This Morning\" (2009–2012, 2014). In 2010, she co-presented the first series of \"71 Degrees North\" alongside Gethin Jones.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "4068372",
"score": 0.6253102421760559,
"text": "Ruth Wendy Langsford (born 17 March 1960) is an English television presenter, best known for presenting numerous shows with her husband Eamonn Holmes such as \"This Morning\" (2000–present), \"Gift Wrapped\" (2014) and \"\" (2015–present).",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5a84860d5542997175ce1eeb | Which film did George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin write the famous jazz song for? | [
{
"id": "3225333",
"score": 0.6842712759971619,
"text": "\"They Can't Take That Away from Me\" is a 1937 jazz song (see 1937 in music) written by George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin and introduced by Fred Astaire in the 1937 film \"Shall We Dance\"."
},
{
"id": "4041420",
"score": 0.6359744668006897,
"text": "Shall We Dance, released in 1937, is the seventh of the ten Astaire-Rogers musical comedy films. The idea for the film originated in the studio's desire to exploit the successful formula created by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart with their 1936 Broadway hit \"On Your Toes\". The musical featured an American dancer getting involved with a touring Russian ballet company. In a major coup for RKO, Pan Berman managed to attract the Gershwins – George Gershwin who wrote the symphonic underscore and Ira Gershwin the lyrics – to score this, their second Hollywood musical after \"Delicious\" in 1931."
}
] | [
{
"id": "10542217",
"score": 0.7187513709068298,
"text": "\"Love Is Here to Stay\" is a popular song and jazz standard. The music was written by George Gershwin with lyrics by Ira Gershwin for the movie \"The Goldwyn Follies\" (1938).",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "17403225",
"score": 0.7074984908103943,
"text": "Rhapsody in Blue is a musical composition by American composer George Gershwin.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "1945227",
"score": 0.7044433951377869,
"text": "\"I Got Rhythm\" is a piece composed by George Gershwin with lyrics by Ira Gershwin and published in 1930, which became a jazz standard. Its chord progression, known as the \"rhythm changes\", is the foundation for many other popular jazz tunes such as Charlie Parker's and Dizzy Gillespie's bebop standard \"Anthropology (Thrivin' on a Riff)\".",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "11346870",
"score": 0.7018678784370422,
"text": "\"Clap Yo' Hands\" is a song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "5978022",
"score": 0.6866134405136108,
"text": "\"The Man I Love\" is a popular standard, with music by George Gershwin and lyrics by his brother Ira Gershwin. Originally part of the 1924 score for the Gershwin government satire \"Lady, Be Good\" as \"The Girl I Love\", the song was deleted from the show as well as from both the 1927 anti-war satire \"Strike Up the Band\" (where it first appeared as \"The Man I Love\") and 1928 Ziegfeld hit \"Rosalie\" after tryouts. It is the basis for the 1947 film \"The Man I Love\" starring Ida Lupino and Bruce Bennett and featured prominently throughout.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "11338751",
"score": 0.6855757236480713,
"text": "\"Looking For a Boy\" is a song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "309",
"score": 0.6828435063362122,
"text": "An American in Paris is a jazz-influenced orchestral piece by the American composer George Gershwin, written in 1928. Inspired by the time Gershwin had spent in Paris, it evokes the sights and energy of the French capital in the 1920s and is one of his best-known compositions.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "11346685",
"score": 0.682020902633667,
"text": "\"For You, For Me, For Evermore\" is a song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "152506",
"score": 0.6812376379966736,
"text": "Rhapsody in Blue is a 1924 musical composition by American composer George Gershwin for solo piano and jazz band, which combines elements of classical music with jazz-influenced effects.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "4311328",
"score": 0.6810231804847717,
"text": "Rhapsody in Blue is a 1945 fictionalized screen biography of the American composer and musician George Gershwin (September 26, 1898 – July 11, 1937) released by Warner Brothers.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "11321743",
"score": 0.6800662875175476,
"text": "\"Let's Kiss and Make Up\" is a song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "11311812",
"score": 0.6789520978927612,
"text": "\"A Foggy Day\" is a popular song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin, introduced by Fred Astaire in the 1937 film \"A Damsel in Distress\". It was originally titled \"A Foggy Day (In London Town)\" in reference to the pollution-induced pea soup fogs that were common in London during that period, and is often still referred to by the full title.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "11308673",
"score": 0.6768746972084045,
"text": "\"I've Got a Crush on You\" is a song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "11930055",
"score": 0.6758793592453003,
"text": "\"Strike Up the Band\" is a 1927 song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin with the collaboration of Millie Raush. It was written for the 1927 musical \"Strike Up the Band\", where it formed part of a satire on war and militaristic music. Although the musical was not successful, the instrumental version of the song, titled the \"March from \"Strike Up the Band\"\", has become quite well known.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "6031187",
"score": 0.673206627368927,
"text": "\"Someone to Watch Over Me\" is a song composed by George Gershwin with lyrics by Ira Gershwin from the musical \"Oh, Kay!\" (1926), where it was introduced by Gertrude Lawrence. Gershwin originally approached the song as an uptempo jazz tune, but his brother Ira suggested that it might work much better as a ballad, and George ultimately agreed. It has been performed by many artists since its debut and is a jazz standard as well as a key work in the Great American Songbook. It is also referenced in the Frank McGuinness play \"Someone Who'll Watch Over Me\".",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "2214634",
"score": 0.6730467677116394,
"text": "Porgy and Bess is a 1959 American musical film directed by Otto Preminger. It is based on the 1935 opera \"Porgy and Bess\" by George Gershwin, DuBose Heyward, and Ira Gershwin, which is in turn based on Heyward's 1925 novel \"Porgy\", as well as Heyward's subsequent 1927 non-musical stage adaptation, co-written with his wife Dorothy. The screenplay for the film, which turned the operatic recitatives into spoken dialogue, was very closely based on the opera and was written by N. Richard Nash.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "13066",
"score": 0.6709483861923218,
"text": "George Jacob Gershwin ( ; September 26, 1898 July 11, 1937) was an American composer and pianist. Gershwin's compositions spanned both popular and classical genres, and his most popular melodies are widely known. Among his best-known works are the orchestral compositions \"Rhapsody in Blue\" (1924) and \"An American in Paris\" (1928) as well as the opera \"Porgy and Bess\" (1935).",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "11337216",
"score": 0.6703319549560547,
"text": "\"Stiff Upper Lip\" is a 1937 song composed by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin. It references the British expression 'Stiff upper lip'.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "4766250",
"score": 0.6666722297668457,
"text": "\"Caravan\" is a jazz standard composed by Juan Tizol and Duke Ellington, and first performed by Ellington in 1936. Irving Mills wrote seldom performed lyrics. Its exotic sound interested exotica musicians; Martin Denny, Arthur Lyman, and Gordon Jenkins all covered it. Woody Allen used the song in two of his films, \"Alice\" and \"Sweet and Lowdown\". The song is also heavily featured in the 2014 film \"Whiplash\" as an important plot element. The Mills Brothers recorded an a cappella version, making the instruments' sounds with their voices, and Johnny Mathis recorded the song in 1956. There are more than 350 recordings of this song by Duke Ellington's orchestra, the great majority of them now in the public domain.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "3164274",
"score": 0.6664919853210449,
"text": "\"Oklahoma\" is the title song from the Broadway musical \"Oklahoma!\", named for the setting of the musical play. The music and lyrics were written by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. The melody is reprised in the main title of the 1955 film version and in the overtures of both film and musical productions.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5ae4f16d55429913cc204539 | Who directed the film which Jiaban de Tianshi was shooting while she recorded track 10 on her first album ? | [
{
"id": "2056258",
"score": 0.6413347721099854,
"text": "假扮的天使 (py. Jiǎbàn de Tiānshǐ, English; \"Pretend Angel\") is an album by Taiwanese singer/actress/model Vivian Hsu, released September 19, 2000 on the BMG label. This is Vivian's first album that prominently features hard rock songs. Track 10 is a children's sing-along with Vivian, which she recorded while shooting the film \"The Accidental Spy\", part of which was shot in Turkey (hence the title of track 5)."
},
{
"id": "2183017",
"score": 0.8,
"text": "The Accidental Spy is a 2001 Hong Kong martial arts action film, starring Jackie Chan and directed by Teddy Chan. Filming took place in Seoul, Hong Kong, Istanbul and Cappadocia, Turkey."
}
] | [
{
"id": "22116348",
"score": 0.6263521909713745,
"text": "Butterfly ( ) is the tenth studio album by Taiwanese singer Jolin Tsai ( ). It was released on March 27, 2009, by Warner Music Taiwan. The anticipated follow-up to her 2007 studio album \"Agent J\" was her first record after signing with Warner in December 2008. In March 2009, the music video of the lead single, \"Real Man\", premiered on the Asia's largest LED-screen of the time in Beijing. Always reinventing the visual style of her music, Tsai employed some stunning ballet routines in the music video of the titular dance anthem, \"Butterfly\". Although critics reacted negatively and commented the album a \"confusing patchwork\", the album was a commercial success. The album has sold more than 1 million copies sold in Asia, with more than 190,000 copies sold in Taiwan alone, and became the best-selling album of the year in Taiwan. The title track, \"Butterfly\", reached number 10 on the Hit FM Top 100 Singles of the Year. The lead single, \"Real Man\", reached number 25 on the chart.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "13102999",
"score": 0.6159935593605042,
"text": "Air Diary (), released in September 2007, is a Chinese semi-autobiographical film based on pop singer Xu Fei's early musical career. It is the first movie produced by Jackie Chan under his \"Chinese New Movie Supporting Scheme\" ().",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "45020773",
"score": 0.6027290225028992,
"text": "See You Tomorrow () is a 2016 Chinese-Hong Kong romantic comedy film written and directed by Chinese writer Zhang Jiajia in his directorial debut and produced by Wong Kar-wai with Alibaba Pictures. It is based loosely on Zhang's own best-selling book \"Passing From Your World\" in the collection \"I Belonged to You\". It stars Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Takeshi Kaneshiro and Angelababy. Filming started in July 2015. It was released in China by Alibaba Pictures on December 23, 2016.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "31920251",
"score": 0.6019463539123535,
"text": "Love in Disguise (). is a 2010 Chinese-language romantic comedy movie. It was directed by Chinese-American singer-songwriter, record producer, actor and film director Wang Leehom and filmed in Shanghai. \"Love in Disguise\" went on to become the highest grossing film for a first-time director in Chinese history grossing over 60 million RMB domestically.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "49201531",
"score": 0.5986617207527161,
"text": "Ten Years () is a 2015 Hong Kong dystopian speculative fiction film. It offers a vision of the semi-autonomous territory in the year 2025, with human rights and freedoms gradually diminishing as the mainland Chinese government exerts increasing influence there. Produced on a shoestring budget, the film was a surprise hit, beating \"\" at the Yau Ma Tei cinema where it was first released.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "29219989",
"score": 0.5970238447189331,
"text": "I Am... World Tour is a live DVD/CD concert film and live album by American R&B recording artist Beyoncé. Beyoncé produced, directed, and edited the concert film for her own production company Parkwood Pictures. The DVD was filmed in the presence of more than a million fans during her worldwide I Am... World Tour, running from March 2009 through February 2010, in support of her third studio album, \"I Am... Sasha Fierce\" (2008). The DVD release is a combination of performances from the tour, including guest appearances from Jay-Z and Kanye West, as well as backstage moments. Beyoncé explained that the idea of filming her worldwide performances came when she realized that she was feeling lonely. She edited the DVD for nine months and it serves as her directorial debut.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "2559570",
"score": 0.5968186855316162,
"text": "The World () is a 2004 Chinese film written and directed by Jia Zhangke. Starring Jia's muse, Zhao Tao, as well as Chen Taisheng, \"The World\" was filmed on and around an actual theme park located in Beijing, Beijing World Park, which recreates world landmarks at reduced scales for Chinese tourists. \"The World\" was Jia's first to gain official approval from the Chinese government. Additionally, it was the first of his films to take place outside of his home province of Shanxi.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "15191961",
"score": 0.596816897392273,
"text": "Tian Mi Mi (; literally \"very sweet\") is a 1979 Mandarin Chinese song by Teresa Teng. The lyrics were written by Zhuang Nu (莊奴, 1922–2016)Chinese Music - Page 126 Jie Jin - 2011 -\"The songs of Teresa Teng, including Story of Little Town (Xiao Cheng Gu Shi), Sweetness (Tian Mi Mi) and I only Care about You (Wo Zhi Zai Hu Ni), were widely spread on the mainland. \"</ref> The film is named after and features the Teresa Teng song.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "4866746",
"score": 0.5960959196090698,
"text": "Comrades: Almost a Love Story () is a 1996 Hong Kong film starring Maggie Cheung, Leon Lai, Eric Tsang, and Kristy Yang. It was directed by Peter Chan. The title refers to Tian mi mi, a song by Teresa Teng whose songs are featured in the film. It was filmed on location in Hong Kong and New York City.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "29644931",
"score": 0.5938059687614441,
"text": "Under the Hawthorn Tree () is 2010 Chinese film directed by Zhang Yimou. It was adapted from the popular 2007 novel \"Hawthorn Tree Forever\" by Ai Mi, which was based on a true story set during the Cultural Revolution. The film was released in Mainland China (September 2010), Hong Kong (November 2010) and in Singapore (February 2011).",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "53796439",
"score": 0.5917679667472839,
"text": "Nine Songs of the Moving Heavens (), is a CG Chinese animated TV series that was released on March 10, 2016, directed by Robin Shen. It can also be translated as \"Nine Songs of the Sky\". It is the prequel to \"The Legend of Qin\", which takes place before the time of the Qin Dynasty.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "2045735",
"score": 0.5909627079963684,
"text": "Tian Yuan (; born 30 March 1985) is a Chinese singer-songwriter, actress, novelist and photographer. Born in Wuhan, China, she majored in English at Beijing Language and Culture University, and graduated in 2007.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "3142178",
"score": 0.5899249315261841,
"text": "The Blue Kite () is a 1993 drama film directed by Tian Zhuangzhuang. Though banned by the Chinese government upon its completion (along with a ten-year ban on filmmaking imposed on Tian), the film soon found a receptive international audience. Along with Zhang Yimou's \"To Live\" and Chen Kaige's \"Farewell My Concubine\", \"The Blue Kite\" serves as one of the quintessential examples of China's Fifth Generation filmmaking, and in particular reveals the impact the various political movements, including Anti-Rightist Movement and Cultural Revolution, had upon directors who grew up in the 1950s and 1960s.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "642351",
"score": 0.589026153087616,
"text": "First Love is the debut Japanese-language studio album (second overall) by Japanese recording artist Utada Hikaru, released on 10 March 1999 on Toshiba-EMI. Born and raised in New York City to music-oriented parents, Utada moved to Tokyo to attend Seisen International School and American School in Japan. From there, she began writing and composing music for her debut effort. Utada, her father Teruzane Utada and producer Akira Miyake produced the album and remain her two main co-producers and composers.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "22973901",
"score": 0.5877557992935181,
"text": "Super, Girls! (), directed by Jian Yi, is a 2007 independent Chinese documentary that follows 10 female teenagers on their quest to become instant superstars on China’s biggest television show. The Chinese equivalent of \"American Idol\", the \"Super Girls Singing Contest\" spawned an unprecedented pop culture phenomenon. Drawing over 400 million viewers, the ending text of the documentary implies the show was cancelled by the Chinese government for political reasons. The film accesses the contestants’ lives over several months. Through interviews and footage of auditions and competitions, \"Super, Girls!\" examines sexuality and success in the new China.",
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},
{
"id": "41713414",
"score": 0.5874348878860474,
"text": "Shakira is the tenth studio album by Colombian singer and songwriter Shakira, released on 21 March 2014 by RCA Records. It is her first English-language album since her eighth studio album, \"She Wolf\" (2009). Shakira revealed in November 2011 that she had begun work on the album, which continued into 2014. The album was initially set to be released in 2012, but was delayed because of Shakira's pregnancy. Since starting the album, Shakira departed Epic Records, signed a new management deal with Roc Nation and subsequently signed to Epic's sister label, RCA Records.",
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{
"id": "26551514",
"score": 0.5856324434280396,
"text": "\"10 Minutes\" is a song by Romanian dance/pop vocalist Inna extracted from her debut studio album \"Hot (2009)\". Released on 25 January 2010, the single acts as the fifth release from her full-length record. \"10 Minutes\" was written and produced by the Play & Win-members Radu Bolfea, Sebastian Barac and Marcel Botezan, and was released digitally and physically mid 2010. The official music video for the single was shot in London, United Kingdom by Paul Boyd and premiered on 29 June 2010 on Inna's YouTube channel. Lyrically, \"10 Minutes\" speaks about partying and going to clubs. It is a house song, more influenced by American music than its predecessor \"Amazing\". \"10 Minutes\" peaked at number-eight on the French Singles Chart, making it Inna's fourth song in-a-row to enter the chart's top-ten.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "39571512",
"score": 0.5854525566101074,
"text": "Yuanfang De Jia (, officially Homeland, Dreamland) is a travel documentary series created by China Central Television, which was first broadcast on 1 December 2010, on CCTV-1, CCTV-4, and CCTV-22.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "13156165",
"score": 0.5841983556747437,
"text": "Hidden Track (尋找周杰倫) is a film based in Hong Kong with a mixture of Mandarin and Cantonese speakers.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "45707306",
"score": 0.5841047763824463,
"text": "Play ( ) is the thirteenth studio album by Taiwanese singer Jolin Tsai ( ). It was released on November 15, 2014, by Warner Music Taiwan. The album melds dancehall with bubblegum pop, breathtaking love songs with hilariously catty weirdness and euphorically catchy melodies with propulsive rhythms. The album garnered critical acclaim and was declared as \"easily the best album of the year\". The music video of the title track, \"Play\", became the most-viewed Chinese-language music video of 2014 on YouTube and thrust her into the international spotlight. Nolan Feeney from \"Time\" magazine claimed the music video \"the year's best pop music video.\" The album has sold more than 85,000 copies in Taiwan alone, and made her the best-selling female singer of the year in Taiwan. The title track, \"Play\", reached number 1 on the Hit FM Top 100 Singles of the Year. The ninth track, \"The Third Person and I\", reached number 8 on the chart. The album earned Tsai six Golden Melody Award nominations for Best Mandarin Album, Song of the Year, Best Vocal Recording Album, and three Best Music Videos, and she finally won for Best Mandarin Album and Best Vocal Recording Album. The album also earned Tsai an MTV Europe Music Award nomination for Best Taiwanese Act. The album also earned Tsai an Mnet Asian Music Award for Best Asian Artist.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5a816f0955429903bc27b963 | Subterranean fiction and the Hollow Earth theory are based on what kind of concept? | [
{
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"text": "Subterranean fiction is a subgenre of adventure fiction or science fiction which focuses on underground settings, sometimes at the center of the Earth or otherwise deep below the surface. The genre is based on and has in turn influenced the Hollow Earth theory."
},
{
"id": "13912",
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"text": "The Hollow Earth is a pseudoscience concept proposing that the planet Earth either is entirely hollow or otherwise contains a substantial interior space. The scientific community has dismissed the notion since at least the late 18th century. The concept of a hollow Earth recurs many times in folklore and as the premise for subterranean fiction, and a subgenre of adventure fiction (\"Journey to the Center of the Earth\", \"At the Earth's Core\"). It is also featured in some present-day pseudoscientific and conspiracy theories."
}
] | [
{
"id": "8307722",
"score": 0.7204118967056274,
"text": "Travelling to the Earth's center is a popular theme in science fiction. Some subterranean fiction involves traveling to the Earth's center and finding either a Hollow Earth or Earth's molten core.",
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{
"id": "25169687",
"score": 0.671927273273468,
"text": "Subterranean is a novel by James Rollins. Beneath the ice at the bottom of the Earth is a magnificent subterranean labyrinth, a place of breathtaking wonders – and terrors beyond imagining. A team of specialists led by archaeologist Ashley Carter has been hand-picked to explore this secret place and to uncover the riches it holds. But they are not the first to venture here – and those they follow did not return. There are mysteries here older than humanity, and revelations that could change the world. But there are also things that should not be disturbed – and a devastating truth that could doom Ashley and the expedition: they are not alone. For the caverns are inhabited by an entire subterranean ecosystem of primitive mammals - some intelligent, others savage, all beyond the reach of today's knowledge.",
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{
"id": "24316",
"score": 0.6646446585655212,
"text": "Pellucidar is a fictional Hollow Earth invented by American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs for a series of action adventure stories. In a crossover event between Burroughs' series, there is a Tarzan story in which the Ape Man travels into Pellucidar.",
"topk_rank": 2
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{
"id": "18672144",
"score": 0.6488717794418335,
"text": "Hollow Earth Expedition is a pulp fiction role-playing game set in the fictitious Hollow Earth (see Hollow Earth theory), published by Exile Game Studio. The game has been nominated for several Origins and ENnie awards since its release in 2006. The main rule book is \"Hollow Earth Expedition\".",
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{
"id": "31926269",
"score": 0.6424799561500549,
"text": "Warren Billy Smith, (Iowa, 1931–2003) was an American author who wrote books on cryptozoology and the hollow earth theory.",
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{
"id": "628762",
"score": 0.640964150428772,
"text": "Weird fiction is a subgenre of speculative fiction originating in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It can be said to encompass the ghost story and other tales of the macabre. Weird fiction is distinguished from horror and fantasy in its blending of supernatural, mythical, and even scientific tropes. British authors who have embraced this style have often published their work in mainstream literary magazines even after American pulp magazines became popular. Popular weird fiction writers included Edgar Allan Poe, William Hope Hodgson, H. P. Lovecraft, Lord Dunsany, Arthur Machen, M. R. James, and Clark Ashton Smith.",
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{
"id": "1379331",
"score": 0.6393190622329712,
"text": "Earth mysteries are a wide range of spiritual, quasi-religious and pseudoscientific ideas focusing on cultural and religious beliefs about the Earth, generally with regard to particular geographical locations of historical significance. Believers in Earth mysteries generally consider certain locations to be \"sacred\", or that certain spiritual \"energies\" may be active at those locations. The term \"alternative archaeology\" has also been used to describe the study of Earth mystery beliefs.",
"topk_rank": 6
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{
"id": "3027901",
"score": 0.6346364617347717,
"text": "Plutonism (or volcanism) is the geologic theory that the igneous rocks forming the Earth originated from intrusive magmatic activity, with a continuing gradual process of weathering and erosion wearing away rocks, which were then deposited on the sea bed, re-formed into layers of sedimentary rock by heat and pressure, and raised again. It proposes that basalt is solidified molten magma. The name \"Plutonism\" references Pluto, the classical ruler of the underworld, while \"volcanism\" echoes the name of Vulcan, the ancient Roman god of fire and volcanoes. The \"Oxford English Dictionary\" traces use of the word \"plutonists\" to 1799, and the appearance of the word \"Plutonism\" to 1842.",
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{
"id": "34420620",
"score": 0.6269481778144836,
"text": "Hollow Earth is the debut novel from sibling writing pair John Barrowman and Carole Barrowman which was published in the United Kingdom on 2 February 2012 by Buster Books.",
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{
"id": "23403325",
"score": 0.6218088269233704,
"text": "Mythical continents are a great theme for fantasy and science fiction writers. Many modern occult or New Age writers speculate about ancient civilizations that dwelled on continents now submerged below sea level. As the study \"Lost Continents\" by L. Sprague de Camp seeks to show, there is no real scientific evidence for any lost continents in recent history; however, some rather large islands did sink when the sea levels rose after the end of the last interglacial, possibly being the origin of many lost continent legends, and some lost continents are likely to have existed millions of years ago. De Camp himself wrote some fiction stories on this theme.",
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{
"id": "23851263",
"score": 0.6217625737190247,
"text": "American gothic fiction is a subgenre of gothic fiction. Elements specific to American Gothic include: rationality/rational vs irrational, puritanism, guilt, Das Unheimliche (strangeness within the familiar as defined by Sigmund Freud), ab-humans, ghosts, monsters, and domestic abjection. The roots of these concepts lay in a past riddled with slavery, a fear of racial mixing (miscegenation), hostile Native American relations, their subsequent genocide, and the daunting wilderness present at the American frontier. American Gothic is often devoid of castles and objects which allude to a civilized history. Differentiating between horror and terror is important in the study of these texts.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "5943109",
"score": 0.6203564405441284,
"text": "In science fiction, a geofront is a large, excavated subterranean space typically used for urban expansion.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "6483201",
"score": 0.6184619665145874,
"text": "Subterranean Press is a small press publisher in Burton, Michigan. Subterranean is best known for publishing genre fiction, primarily horror, suspense and dark mystery, fantasy, and science fiction. In addition to publishing novels, short story collections and chapbooks, Subterranean also produced a quarterly publication called \"Subterranean Magazine\", specialising in short fiction and edited by William Schafer; it had also an online direct seller. In addition to trade editions, the company produces collector's and limited editions. These books are issued with author signatures, in both numbered and lettered states, and are produced using high-grade book papers and bindings with matching slipcases and traycases.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "8340639",
"score": 0.6167715191841125,
"text": "Paranoid fiction is a term sometimes used to describe works of literature that explores the subjective nature of reality and how it can be manipulated by forces in power. These forces can be external, such as a totalitarian government, or they can be internal, such as a character's mental illness or refusal to accept the harshness of the world he or she is in.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "30862769",
"score": 0.6157177090644836,
"text": "Dying Earth is a subgenre of science fantasy which takes place in the far future at either the end of life on Earth or the End of Time, when the laws of the universe themselves fail. Themes of world-weariness, innocence (wounded or otherwise), idealism, entropy, (permanent) exhaustion/depletion of many or all resources (such as soil nutrients), and the hope of renewal tend to dominate.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "26787",
"score": 0.6146530508995056,
"text": "Science fiction (often shortened to SF or sci-fi) is a genre of speculative fiction, typically dealing with imaginative concepts such as futuristic science and technology, space travel, time travel, faster than light travel, parallel universes, and extraterrestrial life. Science fiction often explores the potential consequences of scientific and other innovations, and has been called a \"literature of ideas\". It usually avoids the supernatural, and unlike the related genre of fantasy, historically, science-fiction stories were intended to have a grounding in science-based fact or theory at the time the story was created, but this connection is now limited to hard science fiction.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "21408584",
"score": 0.6137776970863342,
"text": "Prehistoric fiction is a literary genre in which the story is set in the period of time prior to the existence of written record, known as prehistory. As a fictional genre, the realistic description of the subject varies, without necessarily a commitment to develop an objective anthropological account.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "84369",
"score": 0.6132680177688599,
"text": "The underworld or netherworld is an otherworld thought to be deep underground or beneath the surface of the world in most religions and mythologies. Typically, it is a place where the souls of the departed go, an afterlife or a realm of the dead. Chthonic is the technical adjective for things of the underworld.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "50681608",
"score": 0.6107451915740967,
"text": "Subterranean warfare is warfare carried out under the ground surface.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "12298605",
"score": 0.610177755355835,
"text": "Tunnels is a subterranean fiction novel by British authors Roderick Gordon and Brian Williams. It was initially self-published as The Highfield Mole in 2005, and re-released as \"Tunnels\" by Chicken House in 2007. The story follows Will Burrows, a 14-year-old 'archaeologist', who stumbles upon an underground civilization called The Colony. Will and friend Chester flee The Colony and set out to find Will's father, in the Deeps, a place even deeper in the Earth than The Colony.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5ae24952554299492dc91c13 | What Scottish actor that read Pest Control? | [
{
"id": "16025563",
"score": 0.6506867408752441,
"text": "Pest Control is an exclusive to audio \"Doctor Who\" story, produced as part of BBC Books' New Series Adventures line, and the first entry in the series to be produced. Written by author Peter Anghelides and read by series star David Tennant, it is also the first non-televised \"Doctor Who\" adventure to feature the companion Donna Noble (the first standard printed books featuring her were released in autumn 2008). \"Pest Control\" was released on CD on 8 May 2008 and is also available for download."
},
{
"id": "1672146",
"score": 0.6256459355354309,
"text": "David Tennant (born David John McDonald; 18 April 1971) is a Scottish actor and voice actor. He is best known for his roles as the Tenth Doctor in the British television series \"Doctor Who\", Alec Hardy in \"Broadchurch\", Giacomo Casanova in the TV serial \"Casanova\", Kilgrave in \"Jessica Jones\", and Barty Crouch, Jr. in the film \"Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire\". In addition to his appearances on screen, he has worked as a voice actor and in theatre, including Prince Hamlet in a critically acclaimed 2008 stage production of \"Hamlet\" and as the voice of Scrooge McDuck in the new \"DuckTales\" series starting in 2017. In January 2015, Tennant received the National Television Award for Special Recognition."
}
] | [
{
"id": "18581372",
"score": 0.6334453821182251,
"text": "Ian McDiarmid ( ; born 11 August 1944) is an Olivier and Tony award-winning Scottish character actor and director. He has appeared in 47 films since 1976. Internationally, he is most famous for his role as Palpatine in the \"Star Wars\" film series.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "861800",
"score": 0.6315897107124329,
"text": "Gregor Fisher (born 22 December 1953) is a Scottish comedian and actor. He is perhaps best known for his long portrayal as protagonist and suffering Glasgow alcoholic Rab, in the popular comedy series \"Rab C. Nesbitt\", a role he has held since the show's first episode in 1988. He has also had roles in films such as \"Love Actually\", \"Lassie\" and \"Wild Target\".",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "10268265",
"score": 0.6289684176445007,
"text": "Actors who have appeared in \"Bugs\", a British television drama series.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "21222169",
"score": 0.6283016800880432,
"text": "James McAvoy ( ; born 21 April 1979) is a Scottish actor. He made his acting debut as a teen in 1995's \"The Near Room\" and continued to make mostly television appearances until 2003, when his feature film career began and he continued to work in both areas from then on. His notable television work includes the drama show \"State of Play\" and the science fiction show \"Frank Herbert's Children of Dune\".",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "19672919",
"score": 0.6219409108161926,
"text": "Ewan Gordon McGregor {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} ( ; born 31 March 1971) is a Scottish actor, and singer. He is known for his role in the \"Trainspotting\" films as well as his role in the \"Star Wars\" film franchise.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "13355387",
"score": 0.6173246502876282,
"text": "James Mackenzie (born 15 May 1979) is a Scottish actor, best known for playing the lead role in the children's game show \"Raven\".",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "1921482",
"score": 0.617235004901886,
"text": "John Scot Barrowman, {'1': \", '2': \", '3': \", '4': \"} (born 11 March 1967), is a Scottish-American actor, singer, dancer, presenter and writer, who holds both British and American citizenship. Born in Glasgow, Scotland, he moved to the United States with his family in 1975. Encouraged by his high school teachers, Barrowman studied performing arts at the United States International University in San Diego before landing the role of Billy Crocker in Cole Porter's \"Anything Goes\" at London's West End.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "2460590",
"score": 0.616783857345581,
"text": "Iain Glen (born 24 June 1961) is a Scottish film, television, and stage actor. Glen is best known for his roles as Dr. Alexander Isaacs / Tyrant in the \"Resident Evil\" films and for portraying Ser Jorah Mormont on \"Game of Thrones\". Other notable roles include John Hanning Speke in \"Mountains of the Moon\", Sir Richard Carlisle in \"Downton Abbey\", the title role in \"Jack Taylor\" and Jarrod Slade in \"Cleverman\".",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "46306706",
"score": 0.6117593050003052,
"text": "Hugh Ross (born 28 April 1945) is a Scottish actor, with a wide variety of British TV, film and theatre credits. He is known for his supporting roles in the films \"Trainspotting\" and \"Bronson\"; and for his performances as Major Mungo Munro in the \"Sharpe TV series\", and as Narcisse in Clive Barker’s \"Nightbreed\".",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "18958666",
"score": 0.6111098527908325,
"text": "Robbie Coltrane, OBE (born Anthony Robert McMillan; 30 March 1950) is a Scottish actor and author. He is known for his roles as Rubeus Hagrid in the \"Harry Potter\" films, as Valentin Dmitrovich Zukovsky in the James Bond films \"GoldenEye\" and \"The World Is Not Enough,\" and as Dr. Eddie \"Fitz\" Fitzgerald in the British TV series \"Cracker\" during the 1990s.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "40102135",
"score": 0.6106244325637817,
"text": "Iain McColl (27 January 1954 – 4 July 2013) was a Scottish film and television actor, best known for his roles on British television series. McColl starred on \"City Lights\", a BBC Scotland sitcom, from 1984 to 1991. He then co-starred on the BBC Two sitcom, \"Rab C Nesbitt\" during its first run (1988-1999). He rejoined the cast of \"Rab C Nesbitt\" again when the show was revived in 2008. Additionally, he appeared in guest spots on numerous other television shows, including \"Hamish Macbeth\", \"Still Game\" and \"Taggart\". McColl was also cast in a small role in the 2002 American film, \"Gangs of New York\", directed by Martin Scorsese.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "4724229",
"score": 0.6086135506629944,
"text": "James Cosmo (born 24 May 1948) is a Scottish actor known for his appearances in films including \"Highlander\", \"Braveheart\", \"Trainspotting\", \"Troy\", \"\", \"Ben-Hur\" and \"Wonder Woman\", as well as television series such as \"Game of Thrones\" and \"Sons of Anarchy\". On 3 January 2017 Cosmo entered the nineteenth series of \"Celebrity Big Brother\", on Day 19 of the series he won a pass to the final on 3 February 2017 and finished in fourth place.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "3554358",
"score": 0.607509195804596,
"text": "Peter Forbes is a Scottish actor.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "605277",
"score": 0.6069174408912659,
"text": "Hans Matheson (born 7 August 1975) is a Scottish actor. Some of his most notable film and television roles include \"The Virgin Queen\", \"Deathwatch\", \"The Tudors\", \"Tess of the D'Urbervilles\", \"Clash of the Titans\" and as Aeschylus in \"\". In addition to acting, Matheson plays guitar, violin and harmonica.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "1268572",
"score": 0.6054282784461975,
"text": "Angus Macfadyen (born 21 September 1963) is a Scottish actor known for his roles as Robert the Bruce in \"Braveheart\", Vice-Counsel Dupont in \"Equilibrium\", Jeff Denlon in the \"Saw\" franchise, Robert Rogers in the AMC historical drama \"\" and McCreedy in Cameron Crowe's \"We Bought a Zoo\". He has made appearances on several television series such as \"Californication\", \"Criminal Minds\" and the final season of \"Chuck\".",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "16218530",
"score": 0.6051476001739502,
"text": "William Nicholson \"Bill\" Simpson (11 September 193121 December 1986) was a Scottish film and television actor, best remembered for his portrayal of the title role in the long-running BBC TV series \"Dr. Finlay's Casebook\".",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "19614294",
"score": 0.6048937439918518,
"text": "Rowan Sebastian Atkinson, CBE (born 6 January 1955) is an English actor, comedian, and screenwriter best known for his work on the sitcoms \"Blackadder\" and \"Mr. Bean\". Atkinson first came to prominence in the BBC's sketch comedy show \"Not the Nine O'Clock News\" (1979–82), receiving the 1981 BAFTA for Best Entertainment Performance, and via his participation in The Secret Policeman's Ball from 1979. His other work includes the 1983 James Bond film \"Never Say Never Again\", playing a bumbling vicar in \"Four Weddings and a Funeral\" (1994), voicing the red-billed hornbill Zazu in \"The Lion King\" (1994), and featuring in the BBC sitcom \"The Thin Blue Line\" (1995–1996). His work in theatre includes the 2009 West End revival of the musical \"Oliver!\".",
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"text": "John Paton Laurie (25 March 1897 – 23 June 1980) was a Scottish actor. Throughout a long career, Laurie performed a wide range of theatre and film work. He is perhaps best remembered to modern audiences for his role as Private Frazer in the sitcom \"Dad's Army\" (1968–1977). Laurie appeared in scores of feature films with directors such as Alfred Hitchcock, Michael Powell, and Laurence Olivier. He was also a stage actor (particularly in Shakespearean roles) and speaker of verse, especially of Robert Burns.",
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"text": "Martin Quinn is a Scottish actor and voice actor.",
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"text": "Dugald Bruce Lockhart is an Anglo-Scottish actor.",
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] |
5ae6e6515542992ae0d163a3 | What subsidiary group owns the television network that televised the 73rd Academy Awards? | [
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"text": "The 73rd Academy Awards ceremony, presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), honored films of 2000 and took place on March 25, 2001, at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, beginning at 5:30 p.m. PST / 8:30 p.m. EST. During the ceremony, AMPAS presented Academy Awards (commonly referred to as Oscars) in 23 categories. The ceremony, televised in the United States by ABC, was produced by Gil Cates and was directed by Louis J. Horvitz. Actor Steve Martin hosted the show for the first time. Three weeks earlier in a ceremony at the Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, California held on March 3, the Academy Awards for Technical Achievement were presented by host Renée Zellweger."
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{
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"text": "The American Broadcasting Company (ABC) television network is an American English language commercial broadcast television network that is owned by the Disney–ABC Television Group, a subsidiary of the Disney Media Networks division of The Walt Disney Company. The network is headquartered on Columbus Avenue and West 66th Street in Manhattan, New York City. There are additional major offices and production facilities elsewhere in New York City, as well as in Los Angeles and Burbank, California."
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"text": "A&E Networks (branded as A+E Networks) is an American media company that owns a group of television channels available via cable & satellite in the U.S. and abroad. \"A&E\" stands for \"Arts & Entertainment\". The company is a joint venture with Hearst Communications and Disney–ABC Television Group, a unit of the Disney Media Networks subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company.",
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"text": "The Fox Entertainment Group is an American entertainment company that operates through four segments, mainly filmed entertainment, television stations, television broadcast networks, and cable network programming. The company is wholly owned and controlled by the American media conglomerate 21st Century Fox, which is owned and chaired by Rupert Murdoch, since the company acquired all the stock of Fox. The transaction was completed on March 12, 2005. The division was part of the renamed 21st Century Fox after it had spun off its publishing divisions into the newly formed \"New\" News Corporation in 2013 as part of a corporate re-organization.",
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"text": "A&E (previously Arts & Entertainment Network) is an American digital cable and satellite television network that serves as the flagship television property of A&E Networks, a joint venture between the Hearst Corporation and Disney–ABC Television Group subsidiary of the Walt Disney Company (both of which maintain a 50% ownership interest).",
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"text": "The American Broadcasting Company (ABC) is an American broadcast television television network owned by the Disney Media Networks subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company, which originated in 1927 as the NBC Blue radio network, and five years after its 1942 divorce from NBC and purchase by Edward J. Noble (adopting its current name the following year), expanded into television in April 1948. s of March 2015 , the network currently has eight owned-and-operated stations, and current affiliation agreements with 238 other television stations.",
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"text": "Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. (also known simply as Turner) is an American media conglomerate that is a division of Time Warner and manages the collection of cable television networks and properties initiated or acquired by Ted Turner. The company was founded in 1970, and merged with Time Warner on October 10, 1996. It now operates as a semi-autonomous unit of Time Warner. The company's assets include CNN, HLN, TBS, TNT, Turner Classic Movies, Cartoon Network, Adult Swim, Boomerang and TruTV. The company's current chairman and CEO is John K. Martin. The headquarters of Turner's properties are located in both the CNN Center in Downtown Atlanta and the Turner Broadcasting campus off Techwood Drive in Midtown Atlanta, which also houses Turner Studios. Across Interstate 75/85 from the Techwood campus is the original home of Turner's WTBS superstation (now separated into its TBS cable network and Peachtree TV), which today houses the headquarters of Adult Swim and Williams Street Productions.",
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"text": "Viacom Inc. ( ) is an American multinational media conglomerate with interests primarily in cinema and cable television. It is currently the world's sixth largest broadcasting and cable company in terms of revenue—behind Comcast, The Walt Disney Company, Time Warner,",
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"text": "AXS TV (pronounced \"access\") is an American cable and satellite television network that is managed by film company 2929 Entertainment (through AXS TV, LLC)—which they founded as HDNet (through HDNet, LLC) in 2001 before it was rebranded as AXS TV in 2012—with a consortium of partners consisting of Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), Ryan Seacrest (through Ryan Seacrest Media), Creative Artists Agency, and CBS Corporation. The network's programming specializes in live music events, as well as comedy, movies, and mixed martial arts, among others. The AXS TV company includes the channel HDNet Movies.",
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"text": "ABC, Inc. DBA the Disney–ABC Television Group (simply Disney–ABC), formerly known as Capital Cities/ABC Inc., is a subsidiary holdings company that manages all of The Walt Disney Company's Disney and ABC-branded television properties. The group includes the ABC Television Network (including ABC Daytime, ABC Entertainment, and ABC News divisions), as well as Disney's A&E Television Networks and its 80% controlling stake in ESPN, Inc. While holding the controlling stake in ESPN, Disney–ABC and ESPN operate as separate units of Disney Media Networks.",
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"text": "The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) is an American English language commercial broadcast television network that is a flagship property of NBCUniversal, a subsidiary of Comcast. The network is headquartered at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City, with additional major offices near Los Angeles (at 10 Universal City Plaza), and Chicago (at the NBC Tower). The network is part of the Big Three television networks. NBC is sometimes referred to as the \"Peacock Network\", in reference to its stylized peacock logo, introduced in 1956 to promote the company's innovations in early color broadcasting. It became the network's official emblem in 1979.",
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"text": "Fox Broadcasting Company (often shortened to Fox and stylized as FOX) is an American commercial broadcast television network owned by Fox Entertainment Group, a subsidiary of 21st Century Fox. The network is headquartered at 20th Century Fox studio on Pico Boulevard in Century City of Los Angeles with additional major offices and production facilities at the Fox Television Center in nearby West Los Angeles and Fox Broadcasting Center in the Yorkville neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It is the third largest major television network in the world based on total revenues, assets and international coverage.",
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"text": "History (originally The History Channel from 1995 to 2008) is an American digital cable and satellite television network that is owned by A&E Networks, a joint venture between the Hearst Corporation and the Disney–ABC Television Group division of the Walt Disney Company. In addition to its self-named flagship channel, History provides sister channels such as History en Español (Spanish language) and Military History.",
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"text": "The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) is an American broadcast television television network owned by the NBCUniversal Television Group division of NBCUniversal, which originated as a radio network in November 1926 and expanded into television in April 1939. s of March 2015 , the network currently has eleven owned-and-operated stations, and current affiliation agreements with 222 other television stations.",
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"text": "Time Warner, Inc. is an American multinational mass media and entertainment conglomerate headquartered in New York City. It is currently the world's third largest entertainment company in terms of revenue, after Comcast and The Walt Disney Company. It was also once the world's largest media conglomerate. Time Warner was first founded in 1990, with the merger of Time Inc. and Warner Communications. The current company consists largely of the assets of the former Warner Communications (as well as HBO, a Time Inc. subsidiary prior to the merger), and the assets of Turner Broadcasting (which was acquired by the company in 1996).",
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"text": "The CW Television Network (commonly referred to as just The CW) is an American English-language broadcast television network that is operated by The CW Network, LLC, a limited liability joint venture between CBS Corporation, the former owners of United Paramount Network (UPN), and Warner Bros. Entertainment, a division of Time Warner, former majority owner of The WB Television Network. The \"CW\" name is an abbreviation derived from the first letters of the names of its two parent corporations (CBS and Warner Bros.).",
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"text": "Hulu (stylized as hulu) is an American subscription video on demand service owned by Hulu LLC, a joint venture with The Walt Disney Company (through Disney–ABC Television Group) (30%), 21st Century Fox (through Fox Entertainment Group) (30%), Comcast (through NBCUniversal) (30%), and as of August 10, 2016, Time Warner (through Turner Broadcasting System) (10%, minority stake).",
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] |
5ab6966e554299110f219a22 | Who was the film composer from Argentina that developed music for the 2013 action-adventure survival horror video game "The Last of Us?" | [
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"text": "The music for the 2013 action-adventure survival horror video game \"The Last of Us\", developed by Naughty Dog and published by Sony Computer Entertainment, was composed by musician Gustavo Santaolalla. Supplementary music for the game's downloadable content \"\" was composed by Santaolalla, Andrew Buresh, Anthony Caruso and Jonathan Mayer. Both soundtracks were produced by Santaolalla, Mayer, and Aníbal Kerpel, with separate segments recorded in both Los Angeles and Nashville. Santaolalla, known for his minimalist approach to composing, was excited to work on the soundtrack due to the game's focus on the characters and story. He began composing the music early in the game's development, with few instructions from the development team on the tone that they intended. In collaboration with each other, the team and Santaolalla aimed to make the soundtrack emotional, as opposed to scary. Santaolalla used various instruments to compose the score, including some that were unfamiliar to him."
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"text": "Gustavo Alfredo Santaolalla (born 19 August 1951) is an Argentine musician, film composer and producer. He has won Academy Awards for Best Original Score in two consecutive years, for \"Brokeback Mountain\" in 2005, and \"Babel\" in 2006. More recently, he composed the original score for the video game \"The Last of Us\", and the theme music for the Netflix series \"Making a Murderer\"."
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"text": "The Last of Us is an action-adventure survival horror video game developed by Naughty Dog and published by Sony Computer Entertainment. It was released for the PlayStation 3 worldwide on June 14, 2013. Players control Joel, a smuggler tasked with escorting a teenage girl named Ellie across a post-apocalyptic United States. \"The Last of Us\" is played from a third-person perspective; players use firearms and improvised weapons, and can use stealth to defend against hostile humans and cannibalistic creatures infected by a mutated strain of the \"Cordyceps\" fungus. In the game's online multiplayer mode, up to eight players engage in cooperative and competitive gameplay.",
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"text": "The development of \"The Last of Us\", an action-adventure survival horror video game, began after \"\"' release in October 2009. Sony Computer Entertainment published \"The Last of Us\" on June 14, 2013 for the PlayStation 3. The three-year development, led by studio Naughty Dog, was kept secret for the majority of development. In the game, players assume control of Joel, tasked with escorting the young Ellie across a post-apocalyptic United States, in an attempt to create a potential cure against an infection to which Ellie is immune. Creative director Neil Druckmann was inspired to include Infected as a main feature of the game after discovering the \"Cordyceps\" fungi. His story, set twenty years after the outbreak starts and much of civilization is destroyed, explored the possibility of the fungi infecting humans.",
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"text": "The Last of Us: Left Behind is an action-adventure survival horror video game developed by Naughty Dog and published by Sony Computer Entertainment. It was released worldwide for the PlayStation 3 on February 14, 2014, as a downloadable expansion pack to \"The Last of Us\"; it was later bundled with \"The Last of Us Remastered\", an updated version of the game released for the PlayStation 4 on July 29, 2014, and was released as a standalone expansion pack for both consoles on May 12, 2015. Players control Ellie, a young girl who spends time with her friend Riley after her unexpected return, within a post-apocalyptic world.",
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"text": "The Last of Us Remastered is an action-adventure survival horror video game developed by Naughty Dog and published by Sony Computer Entertainment. An enhanced port of 2013's \"The Last of Us\", \"Remastered\" was released for the PlayStation 4 worldwide in July 2014. Among minor gameplay additions, the game features enhanced graphics and rendering upgrades including increased draw distance, an upgraded combat mechanic and higher frame rate. It also includes the downloadable content episode \".\"",
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"text": "\"The Last of Us\", an action-adventure survival horror video game developed by Naughty Dog, deals with the relationship between an older man, Joel, and a teenaged girl, Ellie. Joel is tasked with escorting Ellie across a post-apocalyptic United States in an attempt to create a potential cure against an infection to which Ellie is immune. The relationship between the two characters became the basis of the game's development.",
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"text": "The Last of Us Part II is an upcoming action-adventure survival horror video game developed by Naughty Dog and published by Sony Interactive Entertainment for PlayStation 4. It was announced at the PlayStation Experience event in December 2016, and will serve as the sequel to 2013's \"The Last of Us\".",
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"text": "Bruce Straley is an American game director, artist and designer. He previously worked for the video game developer Naughty Dog, known for his work in the video games \"The Last of Us\" and \"\". Straley's first video game work was as an artist at Western Technologies Inc, where he worked on two titles. Following this, he worked as a designer on titles for different companies, prior to his employment at Crystal Dynamics, where he worked as a designer on \"\" and \"\".",
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"text": "The Last of Us is a 2017 Tunisian drama film directed by Ala Eddine Slim. It was selected as the Tunisian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards.",
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"text": "Insane (stylized as inSANE) was a survival horror video game, formerly in development by Volition to be published by THQ, in collaboration with film director Guillermo del Toro. It was being developed for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, and was to be released in 2013. It was intended as the first installment of a planned trilogy of \"Insane\" video games.",
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"text": "Andrés Muschietti (] ;; born 26 August 1973), usually credited as Andy Muschietti, is an Argentine film director and screenwriter, best known for directing the 2013 horror film \"Mama\" and the 2017 adaptation of Stephen King's \"It\".",
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{
"id": "10039547",
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"text": "Lucio Godoy is a Spanish-Argentinian film composer & music producer.",
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{
"id": "1245635",
"score": 0.6300959587097168,
"text": "Michael Giacchino ( ; ] ; born October 10, 1967) is an American composer of music for films, television and video games. He composed the scores to the television series \"Lost\", \"Alias\" and \"Fringe\", the video game series \"Medal of Honor\" and \"Call of Duty\" and many films such as \"The Incredibles\", \"\", \"Ratatouille\", \"Star Trek\", \"Up\", \"Super 8\", \"\", \"Star Trek Into Darkness\", \"Dawn of the Planet of the Apes\", \"Jurassic World\", \"Inside Out\", \"Zootopia\", \"Star Trek Beyond\", \"Doctor Strange\", \"Rogue One\", \"\", \"War for the Planet of the Apes\" and \"Coco\".",
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"id": "39746321",
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"text": "Neil Druckmann (born December 5, 1978) is an Israeli-American writer, creative director and programmer for the video game developer Naughty Dog, known for his work in the video games \"The Last of Us\" and \"\". He was born and raised until the age of 10 in Israel, where his experiences with entertainment would later influence his storytelling techniques. He studied computer science at Carnegie Mellon University, before searching for work in the video game industry.",
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{
"id": "18231616",
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"text": "Olivier Deriviere (born 26 December 1978) is a French video game composer, best known for his work on the \"Alone in the Dark\", \"Obscure\" and \"Remember Me\" soundtracks; the latter of which notably won the 2013 \"IFMCA\" award for Best Original Score for a Video Game or Interactive Media.",
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{
"id": "590055",
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"text": "Alberto Evaristo Ginastera (] ; April 11, 1916June 25, 1983) was an Argentine composer of classical music. He is considered one of the most important 20th-century classical composers of the Americas.",
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"id": "46573480",
"score": 0.6170185208320618,
"text": "Ellie is a fictional character in the 2013 video game \"The Last of Us\", and the main protagonist of the upcoming video game \"The Last of Us Part II\". In the first game, the character Joel is tasked with escorting Ellie across a post-apocalyptic United States in an attempt to create a potential cure for an infection to which Ellie is immune. She is voiced by Ashley Johnson, who also provided motion capture for the character. While players briefly assume control of Ellie for a portion of the game, the computer's artificial intelligence primarily controls her actions, often assisting in combat by attacking or identifying enemies. Ellie reappeared as the sole playable character in the downloadable content prequel campaign, \"\", in which she spends time with her friend Riley. Ellie is also the main character in the comic book prequel, \"\", wherein she befriends Riley and has her first encounter with the rebel group the Fireflies.",
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"id": "668863",
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"text": "Gaspar Noé (] ; ] ; born December 27, 1963) is an Argentinian film director and screenwriter living in France. He is the son of Argentinian painter, writer and intellectual Luis Felipe Noé and was born in Buenos Aires in 1963. He is mostly known for his four feature films: \"I Stand Alone\", \"Irréversible\", \"Enter the Void\" and \"Love\".",
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"id": "40671792",
"score": 0.614027202129364,
"text": "\"We Remain\" is a song by American singer Christina Aguilera, taken from \"\", the soundtrack to the 2013 American science-fiction adventure film \"\". It was released as the third single from the soundtrack on October 1, 2013, following Coldplay's \"Atlas\" and Sia's \"Elastic Heart\". Composed by Ryan Tedder, Brent Kutzle and Mikky Ekko, \"We Remain\" is an arena pop power ballad about perseverance. Contemporary music critics lauded the song for its sound and picked it as one of the highlights from the soundtrack. The single appeared on a few national record charts including Belgium and South Korea.",
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"id": "43547630",
"score": 0.6137537956237793,
"text": "Silent Hills is a cancelled survival horror video game that was under development by Kojima Productions for PlayStation 4. Directed by Hideo Kojima, along with Guillermo del Toro, it was to be the ninth main installment in the \"Silent Hill\" series.",
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{
"id": "230254",
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"text": "Alfonso John Romero (born October 28, 1967) is an American director, designer, programmer, and developer in the video game industry. He is best known as a co-founder of id Software and designer for many of their games, including \"Wolfenstein 3D\", \"Dangerous Dave\", \"\", \"Doom\" and \"Quake\". His game designs and development tools, along with new programming techniques created and implemented by id Software's lead programmer John D. Carmack, led to a mass popularization of the first person shooter, or FPS, in the 1990s. He is credited with coining the FPS multiplayer term \"deathmatch\".",
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] |
5a7c578655429935c91b5167 | What board game was published sooner, Capitol or Lord of the Rings? | [
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"text": "Capitol is a German-style building game set in the ancient Roman Empire, designed by Aaron Weissblum and Alan R. Moon. The game was published by Schmidt Spiele in 2001. It was redeveloped into a quicker-playing card game named \"Clocktowers\" and published by Jolly Roger Games."
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"id": "2364573",
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"text": "Lord of the Rings is a board game based on the high fantasy trilogy \"The Lord of the Rings\" by J. R. R. Tolkien. Published in 2000 by Kosmos in Germany, Wizards of the Coast in the U.S., and Parker Brothers in the U.K., the game is designed by Reiner Knizia and features artwork by illustrator John Howe. It won a Spiel des Jahres special award for \"best use of literature in a game\" and in 2004 it won the Games Magazine Games 100 Honor in the Family Strategy category. A slightly revised version was later published by Fantasy Flight Games."
}
] | [
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"id": "21023715",
"score": 0.6685760617256165,
"text": "Middle Earth was a trilogy of board games published by Simulations Publications, Inc. based on \"The Lord of the Rings\" novel by J. R. R. Tolkien. It consists of the games \"War of the Ring\", \"\", and \"Sauron\", all published in 1977.",
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"id": "726861",
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"text": "Capitol (1979) was Orson Scott Card's second published book. This collection of eleven short stories set in the Worthing series is no longer in print. However six of the stories have been reprinted in \"The Worthing Saga\" (1990) and one of them in \"Maps in a Mirror\" (1990).",
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"id": "23012464",
"score": 0.6532569527626038,
"text": "Cubicle 7 Entertainment Ltd is a British games company that creates and publishes tabletop games. Best known for its \"Doctor Who\" and \"Lord of the Rings\" games, Cubicle 7 offers titles covering a range of licensed and self-developed properties.",
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"id": "19983338",
"score": 0.64070725440979,
"text": "Lord of the Rings Adventure Game is a role-playing game based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien (specifically \"The Lord of the Rings\" and \"The Hobbit\") under license from Tolkien Enterprises. Iron Crown Enterprises (I.C.E.) published the game until they lost the license on 22 September 1999.",
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"id": "8006595",
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"text": "Lord of the Rings: Game One (released in North America as The Fellowship of the Ring: A Software Adventure) is a computer game released in 1985 and based on the book \"The Fellowship of the Ring\", by J. R. R. Tolkien. It was the follow-up to the 1982 game \"The Hobbit\", although did not reach the same level of critical and commercial success as its predecessor, and is considered inferior by the gaming community, with many complaining about the removal of the real-time aspects and complex AI patterns of the previous game, and puzzles that lacked coherent solutions.",
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"id": "55032393",
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"text": "War of the Ring is a 1976 board wargame published by Fantasy Games Unlimited. It is based on the Middle-earth works of J. R. R. Tolkien.",
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{
"id": "889759",
"score": 0.6324424743652344,
"text": "Risk: \"The Lord of the Rings\" Trilogy Edition is a board game based upon the game Risk and in J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional land of Middle-earth rather than the actual Earth. The board is divided into nine regions of Middle-earth taken from \"The Lord of the Rings\".",
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"id": "18088976",
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"text": "Sophisticated Games is a UK-based developer of board games best known for its series of Lord of the Rings games which are based directly on J. R. R. Tolkien's books. The company started up in 1998 in Cambridge, UK and is run by ex book publisher Robert Hyde in partnership with Ken Howard and Sophia Hyde.",
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{
"id": "146563",
"score": 0.6270530223846436,
"text": "Wizards of the Coast (often referred to as WotC or simply Wizards) is an American publisher of games, primarily based on fantasy and science fiction themes, and formerly an operator of retail stores for games. Originally a basement-run role-playing game publisher, the company popularized the collectible card game genre with \"\" in the mid-1990s, acquired the popular \"Dungeons & Dragons\" role-playing game by purchasing the failing company TSR, and experienced tremendous success by publishing the licensed \"Pokémon Trading Card Game\". The company's corporate headquarters are located in Renton, Washington in the United States of America.",
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},
{
"id": "3234418",
"score": 0.6269701719284058,
"text": "The Lord of the Rings: War of the Ring is a 2003 real-time strategy game (RTS) developed by Liquid Entertainment and published by Sierra Entertainment. Set in J. R. R. Tolkien’s fictional Middle-earth, it expands upon the events of the War of the Ring as told in his fantasy novel, \"The Lord of the Rings\".",
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},
{
"id": "8292352",
"score": 0.6253479719161987,
"text": "The Lord of the Rings is a 2003 pinball game designed by George Gomez and distributed by Stern Pinball. It is based on the The Lord of the Rings (film series), which was first released in 2001. It features the highest possible score multiplier in pinball to date: During a combined \"Two Towers\" and \"Gollum\" Multiball it is possible to achieve a 84x Jackpot (when scoring seven subsequent combo Jackpot shots, having the 2x scoring Elf gift and the Sméagol phase of Gollum Multiball running at once).",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "41357715",
"score": 0.6251764297485352,
"text": "The Lord of the Rings Dice Building Game is a dice-building game produced by WizKids. It is based on \"The Lord of the Rings\" film trilogy directed by Peter Jackson, and the book that inspired it, written by J. R. R. Tolkien. The game mechanics are often compared to Quarriors! though they are not identical.",
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},
{
"id": "54728717",
"score": 0.6248517632484436,
"text": "Adventures in Middle-Earth is a tabletop role-playing game published by Cubicle 7. It is set in J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle-earth, in the time between \"The Hobbit\" and \"The Lord of the Rings\". It is a redesigned version of \"The One Ring Roleplaying Game\" that is compatible with the Fifth edition rules of D&D, via the OGL. It was released in 2016. Books are also released in PDF format as well, often being released in PDF format long before the physical release of the book.",
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},
{
"id": "1739541",
"score": 0.6244726777076721,
"text": "The Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game (abbreviated to \"LotR SBG\"), previously marketed as The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey Strategy Battle Game and The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug Strategy Battle Game and now as The Hobbit: The Battle of Five Armies Strategy Battle Game, is a tabletop miniature wargame produced by Games Workshop. It is based on \"The Lord of the Rings\" film trilogy directed by Peter Jackson, and the book that inspired it, written by J. R. R. Tolkien.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "1461136",
"score": 0.6235696077346802,
"text": "Middle-earth Collectible Card Game (MECCG) is a collectible card game released by Iron Crown Enterprises in late 1995. It is the first CCG based on J.R.R. Tolkien's fictional universe of Middle-earth, with added content from ICE's Middle-earth Role Playing Game.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "1471770",
"score": 0.6234480142593384,
"text": "Sauron is a fictional character from J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle-earth fantasy writings, and the title of one of the three games in the board game \"Middle Earth\" based on the character.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "33292873",
"score": 0.621453583240509,
"text": "The One Ring Roleplaying Game (first released in 2011 under the title The One Ring: Adventures over the Edge of the Wild) is a tabletop role-playing game published by Cubicle 7. It is set in J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle-earth, in the time between \"The Hobbit\" and \"The Lord of the Rings\". Since its release, a number of other materials have been published, with more on the way.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "55211828",
"score": 0.6146034002304077,
"text": "The Siege of Minas Tirith is a 1975 board wargame published by Fact and Fantasy Games.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "222914",
"score": 0.6132113933563232,
"text": "The Lord of the Rings Roleplaying Game, released by Decipher Inc. in 2002, is a role-playing game set in the Middle-earth of J. R. R. Tolkien's fiction. The game is set in the years between \"The Hobbit\" and \"The Fellowship of the Ring\", but may be run at any time from the First to Fourth Age and contains many examples of how to do so. Sourcebooks cover the events of \"The Lord of the Rings\" and Peter Jackson's film trilogy adaptation.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "106154",
"score": 0.6068592667579651,
"text": "Middle-earth Role Playing (MERP) is a 1984 role-playing game based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien (specifically \"The Lord of the Rings\" and \"The Hobbit\") under license from Tolkien Enterprises. Iron Crown Enterprises (I.C.E.) published the game until they lost the license on 22 September 1999.",
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}
] |
5a74bb6a55429929fddd84dc | Which opened first The Psychiatric Institute of Washington or St. Elizabeths Hospital? | [
{
"id": "53830",
"score": 0.7693737745285034,
"text": "St. Elizabeths Hospital opened in 1855 as the first federally operated psychiatric hospital in the United States. Housing over 8,000 patients at its peak in the 1950s, the hospital at one point had a fully functioning medical-surgical unit, a school of nursing, and accredited internships and psychiatric residencies. Its campus was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1990."
},
{
"id": "31224860",
"score": 0.721537172794342,
"text": "The Psychiatric Institute of Washington (PIW) is an acute (104 bed) psychiatric hospital in Washington, D.C. Opened in 1967, PIW is a short-term, private hospital. It offers behavioral healthcare to patients suffering from mental and addictive illnesses, including children, adolescents, adults and the elderly. Services offered by PIW include inpatient, partial and intensive outpatient hospitalization, and group treatment programs for substance abuse and addiction."
}
] | [
{
"id": "2334211",
"score": 0.6892465353012085,
"text": "The New York State Psychiatric Institute, located in the Columbia University Medical Center in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, was established in 1895 as one of the first institutions in the United States to integrate teaching, research and therapeutic approaches to the care of patients with mental illnesses. In 1925, the Institute affiliated with Presbyterian Hospital, now New York-Presbyterian Hospital, adding general hospital facilities to the Institute's psychiatric services and research laboratories.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "29829287",
"score": 0.6684617400169373,
"text": "St. Elizabeth Hospital is a new medical facility in Enumclaw, Washington, United States. It is part of the Franciscan Health System, based in Tacoma. Franciscan is affiliated with Catholic Health Initiatives, a national non-profit organization with headquarters in Englewood, Colo.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "34765099",
"score": 0.6359001398086548,
"text": "Winfred Overholser (1892 – October 6, 1964) was an American psychiatrist, president of the American Psychiatric Association, and for 25 years the superintendent of St. Elizabeths Hospital, a federal institution for the mentally ill in Washington, D.C.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "11939953",
"score": 0.6346889734268188,
"text": "Western State Hospital is a psychiatric hospital located at 9601 Steilacoom Boulevard SW in Lakewood, Washington. Administered by the Washington Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), it is the largest psychiatric facility west of the Mississippi River, with 806 beds, and the second oldest state-owned enterprise, after the University of Washington.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "3484115",
"score": 0.6287575364112854,
"text": "Visits to St Elizabeths is a poem by Elizabeth Bishop modelled on the English nursery rhyme \"This is the house that Jack built\". The poem refers to the confinement between 1945 and 1958 of Ezra Pound in St Elizabeths Hospital, Washington, D.C. The nursery rhyme style gives an unusual effect to the strange or unsettling descriptions of a psychiatric hospital in the poem. Likewise the poem treats Pound ambivalently describing him by turns as \"honored\", \"brave\", \"cruel\", and \"wretched\" among other things.",
"topk_rank": 4
},
{
"id": "12164964",
"score": 0.6268591284751892,
"text": "Western State Hospital, called Western State Lunatic Asylum in its early years, is a hospital for the mentally ill in Staunton, Virginia, which admitted its first patient on July 24, 1828.",
"topk_rank": 5
},
{
"id": "50745459",
"score": 0.6239205598831177,
"text": "The Maine Insane Hospital, later the Augusta Mental Health Institute, was a psychiatric hospital in Augusta, Maine. It was the principal facility for the care and treatment of Maine's mentally ill from 1840 to 2004, and its surviving buildings represent the oldest surviving complex of mental care facilities in the United States. The complex is located on the east bank of the Kennebec River, immediately south of the former Kennebec Arsenal, and now primarily houses state offices. The hospital was replaced by the Riverview Psychiatric Center, located just to the south. The hospital's core complex was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, with the listing enlarged to encompass the entire campus in 2001.",
"topk_rank": 6
},
{
"id": "6848885",
"score": 0.6217467188835144,
"text": "The Institute of Living is a residential psychiatric facility in Hartford, Connecticut, which merged with Hartford Hospital in 1994. The hospital was built in 1823, and was opened to admissions in 1824. Eli Todd was its first director. The hospital cost $12,000 to build and could serve up to 40 patients at a time. It was the first hospital of any kind established in Connecticut and the third psychiatric hospital in the United States. The hospital's 35 acre campus was landscaped by Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1860s.",
"topk_rank": 7
},
{
"id": "30872327",
"score": 0.6145113110542297,
"text": "The Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital, known to many simply as Sheppard Pratt, is a psychiatric hospital located in Towson, a northern suburb of Baltimore, Maryland. Founded in 1853, it is one of the oldest private psychiatric hospitals in the nation. Its original buildings, designed by architect Calvert Vaux, and its Gothic gatehouse, built in 1860 to a design by Thomas and James Dixon, were designated a National Historic Landmark in 1971.",
"topk_rank": 8
},
{
"id": "19718978",
"score": 0.6096729636192322,
"text": "St. Elizabeth Health Services is a private Roman Catholic hospital in Baker City, Oregon, United States. It opened August 24, 1897 as St. Elizabeth Hospital. In 1912, a 115-bed facility was constructed at 2365 4th Street. The hospital moved to its current location on Pocahontas Road in April 1969.",
"topk_rank": 9
},
{
"id": "7033213",
"score": 0.6075054407119751,
"text": "The Institute of Pennsylvania Hospital, also known as Kirkbride's Hospital or the Pennsylvania Hospital for Mental and Nervous Diseases, was a psychiatric hospital located at 48th and Haverford Streets in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. It operated from its founding in 1841 until 1997. The remaining building, now called the Kirkbride Center is now part of the Blackwell Human Services Campus.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "53345218",
"score": 0.6059003472328186,
"text": "St. Elizabeth Hospital, founded in 1899, is a hospital serving the south side of Appleton, in Outagamie County, Wisconsin. Its emergency department is a level III trauma center.",
"topk_rank": 11
},
{
"id": "24403594",
"score": 0.6052125692367554,
"text": "Eastern State Hospital is a psychiatric hospital established in 1891 in Medical Lake, a small community 20 miles southwest of Spokane, Washington. The original building was a Kirkbride Plan and the current building has a similar floor plan with male and female wings extending out from the main building.",
"topk_rank": 12
},
{
"id": "34306149",
"score": 0.5994187593460083,
"text": "St. Mary's Hospital was a psychiatric facility located in the village of Burghill, Herefordshire. Founded in 1868 as the Hereford County and City Lunatic Asylum, it was designed by architect Robert Griffiths, County Surveyor of Staffordshire (extended by John Giles, Gough and Trollope) and opened in August 1871.",
"topk_rank": 13
},
{
"id": "49278881",
"score": 0.5972902178764343,
"text": "The Dorothea Dix Psychiatric Center is a psychiatric hospital operated by the state of Maine. It is located at 656 State Street in Bangor, and was previously known as the Eastern Maine Insane Asylum and the Bangor Mental Health Institute. It was established in 1895, and the main building on its campus is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.",
"topk_rank": 14
},
{
"id": "20693753",
"score": 0.5966919660568237,
"text": "St Nicholas Hospital is an NHS psychiatric hospital located in Gosforth, Newcastle upon Tyne, England, UK. The entrance is located on Jubilee Road. The buildings range from Victorian-era to modern facilities and occupies 12 ha of land.",
"topk_rank": 15
},
{
"id": "6338383",
"score": 0.5922754406929016,
"text": "Oregon State Hospital is a public psychiatric hospital in the U.S. state of Oregon, located in the state's capital city of Salem. Founded in 1862 and constructed in the Kirkbride Plan design in 1883, it is the oldest operating psychiatric hospital in the state of Oregon, and one of the oldest continuously operated hospitals on the West Coast.",
"topk_rank": 16
},
{
"id": "41063191",
"score": 0.592032790184021,
"text": "St. Elizabeth Healthcare (Kentucky) is the system of Roman Catholic hospitals covering Northern Kentucky. The first hospital was founded in 1861 in Covington, under the patronage of St. Elizabeth of Hungary. The recent acquisition of the St. Luke Hospitals expanded the system to cover all of northern Kentucky. Currently there are six medical centers which are located in",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "39927627",
"score": 0.5902584791183472,
"text": "St. Luke’s Rehabilitation Institute is a rehabilitation hospital that provides inpatient and outpatient care for children and adults in Washington state in the United States. It provides treatment for stroke, spinal cord injuries, orthopedic issues, brain injuries, other injuries and illnesses. St. Luke’s is the largest (102 beds) and only level 1 trauma rehabilitation hospital in the Inland Northwest region. St. Luke's was named one of the nations \"Top 100 Most Wired\" hospitals in 2013.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "17012064",
"score": 0.5893886685371399,
"text": "St. Michael's Hospital is a National Health Service psychiatric hospital situated in Warwick, Warwickshire, England run by Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership NHS Trust. It was founded in 1995, largely to replace the outdated Central Hospital in the nearby village of Hatton. The hospital was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 8 November 1996. The wards on the hospital are named after trees, i.e. Ferndale, Larches, Willowvale and Hazelwood and there is a day centre called Cedarwood.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
5adffbc255429906c02daa9a | What citizens provided uniforms for the 2010 Winter Olympic Indian athletes? | [
{
"id": "25148001",
"score": 0.7565841674804688,
"text": "Three athletes represented India at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. They did not win any medals. Typically for the Summer Olympics, Indian Olympic athletes are supported indirectly (through jobs for athletes at the Ministry of Railways), augmented by private support from various sources, including (this year) support and uniforms provided by Indo-Canadians. At the 2010 Winter Olympics, two skiers, both Ladakh Scouts and graduates of the High Altitude Warfare School, are supported indirectly by the Indian Army, while the third athlete has cobbled together late-arriving Ministry of Sports support, augmented by contributions from two corporations, Swissair and Limca; Winter Olympians from India receive no financial support from the Indian Olympic Association."
},
{
"id": "18690262",
"score": 0.6276777386665344,
"text": "Indo-Canadians or Indian Canadians are Canadian citizens whose heritage is fully or partially South Asian (including Indian and other origins), children of persons who immigrated from India and/or South Asia to Canada, or persons of Indian/South Asian origin who have Canadian citizenship. The terms \"East Indian\" and \"South Asian\" are popularly used to distinguish people of ancestral origin from India in order to avoid confusion with the First Nations of Canada. Statistics Canada uses \"East Indian\" to refer to people specifically from post-partition India."
}
] | [
{
"id": "28914618",
"score": 0.6555387377738953,
"text": "The 2010 Commonwealth Games (officially known as the XIX Commonwealth Games), was a multi-sport event held in Delhi, India from 3 to 14 October 2010. It was the first time that India hosted the Commonwealth Games and the second time it was held in Asia after Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in 1998. A total of 6,081 athletes from 71 Commonwealth Games Associations (CGAs) participated in this Games, competing in 272 events in 21 sports.",
"topk_rank": 0
},
{
"id": "7564733",
"score": 0.654378354549408,
"text": "Indians are the people who are the nationals or citizens of India, the second most populous nation containing 17.50% of the world's population. \"Indian\" refers to nationality, but not ethnicity or language. The Indian nationality consists of many regional ethno-linguistic groups, reflecting the rich and complex history of India. India hosts all major ethnic groups found in the Indian Subcontinent. The diaspora populations with Indian ancestry, as a result of emigration, are somewhat widespread most notably in Asia and North America.",
"topk_rank": 1
},
{
"id": "365813",
"score": 0.6435790657997131,
"text": "The 2010 Commonwealth Games (Hindi: 2010 राष्ट्रमण्डल खेल), officially known as the XIX Commonwealth Games, were held in Delhi, India, from 3 to 14 October 2010. A total of 6,081 athletes from 71 Commonwealth nations and dependencies competed in 21 sports and 272 events, making it the largest Commonwealth Games to date. It was also the largest international multi-sport event to be staged in Delhi and India, eclipsing the Asian Games in 1951 and 1982. The opening and closing ceremonies were held at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, the main stadium of the event. It was the first time that the Commonwealth Games were held in India and the second time they were held in Asia after Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in 1998. It was also the first time a Commonwealth Republic hosted the games, second in a country not presently headed by British monarch since Malaysia in 1998. The official mascot of the Games was \"Shera\" and the official song of the Games, \"Jiyo Utho Bado Jeeto\", was composed by celebrated Indian musician A.R. Rahman.",
"topk_rank": 2
},
{
"id": "27404334",
"score": 0.6422985196113586,
"text": "Canada competed in the 2010 Commonwealth Games which were held in Delhi, India from October 3–14, 2010. Canada competed in 15 out of 17 sports with the exceptions being netball (team did not qualify) and tennis (scheduling conflicts). Canada's team consisted of 251 athletes, which was a decrease of 3 from the 2006 games. However, the events at these games were much more than they were in 2006. Several athletes withdrew due to safety concerns, including medal contenders Priscilla Lopes-Schliep, Perdita Felician and Dietmar Trillus. Ken Pereira, Captain of the Men's field hockey team, was named the flag bearer on September 18, 2010, becoming the first Indo-Canadian and field hockey player to receive the honour.",
"topk_rank": 3
},
{
"id": "24384478",
"score": 0.6397259831428528,
"text": "India hosted the 2010 Commonwealth Games which were held in Delhi from 3 to 14 October 2010. India won 101 medals in total, including 38 Gold medals, enabling it to finish the Games at second position behind Australia. For the first time in the history of the Games India won over 100 medals in total. For the first time in the history of the Games, India won a medal in Gymnastics, where Ashish Kumar won a Silver and a Bronze. And it was after a gap of 52 years that India won a Gold in Athletics when Krishna Poonia won Gold in Women's discus throw and when Geeta Phogat won India's first ever gold medal in women's wrestling.",
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},
{
"id": "26335424",
"score": 0.6363928318023682,
"text": "India participated in the 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou, China between 12–27 November 2010. The contingent was led by Gagan Narang. India put up its best ever performance at Asian Games. They finished the games at 65 medals including 14 golds which is India's second best performance ever since inception of Asian Games in 1951. These games also witnessed first ever medals in Gymnastics and Roller Sports.",
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},
{
"id": "7656000",
"score": 0.6333374381065369,
"text": "India competed at the Winter Olympic Games for the first time at the 1964 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria.",
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},
{
"id": "18940490",
"score": 0.6321401000022888,
"text": "The 2010 Winter Olympics, officially known as the XXI Olympic Winter Games, was a winter multi-sport event held in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, from February 12 to February 28. A total of 2,632 athletes representing 82 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) (+2 from 2006 Olympics) participated in 86 events (+2 from 2006) from 15 different sports and disciplines (unchanged from 2006).",
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},
{
"id": "4011340",
"score": 0.6316038966178894,
"text": "India competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.",
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},
{
"id": "51163010",
"score": 0.626254677772522,
"text": "Bharat Chikara (born 10 October 1985) is an Indian field hockey player who has played as a midfielder for the national team. He was part of the team that won the bronze medal at the 2010 Asian Games and silver medal at the 2010 Commonwealth Games.",
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},
{
"id": "33535378",
"score": 0.6260209679603577,
"text": "This is a list of flag bearers who have represented India at the Olympics. Flag bearers carry the national flag of their country at the opening ceremony of the Summer and Winter Olympic Games.",
"topk_rank": 10
},
{
"id": "10886000",
"score": 0.624176025390625,
"text": "Nepali or Nepalese also known as Gurkha or Gorkhali are citizens of the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal under the provisions of Nepali nationality law. The country is home to people of many different national origins. As a result, people of Nepal do not equate their nationality with ethnicity, but with citizenship and allegiance. Although citizens make up the majority of Nepalese, non-citizen residents, dual citizen, and expatriates may also claim a Nepalese identity. Nepalese are descendants of migrants from parts of India, Tibet, and parts of Burma and Yunnan, along with indigenous peoples.",
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},
{
"id": "178749",
"score": 0.6227807998657227,
"text": "The 2010 Winter Olympics, officially known as the XXI Olympic Winter Games (French: Les \"XXIes Jeux olympiques d'hiver\") and commonly known as Vancouver 2010, informally the 21st Winter Olympics, were a major international multi-sport event held from February 12 to 28, 2010, in Vancouver, Canada, with some events held in the surrounding suburbs of Richmond, West Vancouver and the University Endowment Lands, and in the nearby resort town of Whistler. Approximately 2,600 athletes from 82 nations participated in 86 events in fifteen disciplines. Both the Olympic and Paralympic Games were organized by the Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC), headed by John Furlong. The 2010 Winter Olympics were the third Olympics hosted by Canada and the first by the province of British Columbia. Previously, Canada hosted the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, and the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta. Vancouver is the largest city to host the Winter Olympics, a title soon to be turned over to Beijing in 2022.",
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},
{
"id": "30961207",
"score": 0.6227020025253296,
"text": "The Maratha (] ; archaically transliterated as Marhatta or Mahratta) is a group of castes in India found predominantly in the state of Maharashtra. According to the \"Encyclopædia Britannica\", \"Marathas are people of India, famed in history as yeoman warriors and champions of Hinduism.\"",
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},
{
"id": "4397998",
"score": 0.6203966736793518,
"text": "India was represented at the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne by a 270-member strong contingent comprising 183 sportspersons and 77 officials. 2004 Summer Olympics silver medalist Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore was the flag bearer for India.",
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},
{
"id": "30837848",
"score": 0.6202705502510071,
"text": "Indian Gorkhas (Nepali: भारतीय गोर्खा , Bharatiya Gorkha) also known as Nepali Indian (Nepali: नेपाली भारतीय , Nepali Bharatiya) are Nepali-speaking Indian people. The term \"Indian Gorkha\" is used to differentiate between Gurkhas who are Indian natives of the region under the Gorkhaland Territorial Administration, and those who are Nepali citizens allowed to stay in India as per the 1950 Indo-Nepal Treaty of Peace and Friendship.",
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},
{
"id": "4238778",
"score": 0.6194313168525696,
"text": "Neha Ahuja (born 1981) is the first Indian woman in the history of India to qualify for the Winter Olympics, and the first Indian to be competing in the Giant Slalom and Slalom alpine skiing finals. Daughter of an Indian Border Security Officer, Comdt. S. P Ahuja, Principal of Indian Institute of Skiing and Mountaineering and Director of Winter Sports, she was one of the four Indians competing at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin. Her sister Shefali Ahuja represented India in the 3rd Winter Asian games held in Harbin, China. Neha's younger sister, Swati Ahuja participated the fourth season of MTV Roadies.",
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},
{
"id": "26323000",
"score": 0.6188713312149048,
"text": "India competed at the 2010 South Asian Games held in Dhaka, Bangladesh from 29 January to 8 February 2010. India ranked 1st with 90 gold medals in this edition of the South Asian Games.",
"topk_rank": 17
},
{
"id": "14933401",
"score": 0.6168006062507629,
"text": "The Indian national ice hockey team (Hindi: भारतीय आइस हॉकी टीम ) is the national men's ice hockey team of India. It is controlled by the Ice Hockey Association of India and a member of the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). India is currently not ranked in the IIHF World Rankings and have not entered in any IIHF World Championships.",
"topk_rank": 18
},
{
"id": "51053842",
"score": 0.6164239645004272,
"text": "Himachali people are Indo Aryan and Indo Tibetan group of India. Mostly living in Indian States of Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Chandigarh, Delhi. Small communities of Himachali people can also be found in Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, Saudi arabia, Qatar etc. Himachali people wear traditional outfits.",
"topk_rank": 19
}
] |
Subsets and Splits