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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Trivia buffs to show stuff at fundraiser

Www.Spokane7.Com

(Posted Thursday) Trivia geeks unite.

Next Thursday, Spokane’s “best and the brightest” – and I use that term very loosely – will converge at the Bing Crosby Theater to reveal just how much useless knowledge is rattling around the old noggin.

That’s right. It’s the first Spokane Trivia Championship, to benefit STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) programs at the Spokane Public Library.

The event, sponsored by the Spokane Public Library Foundation, will feature teams showing off their cultural, historical and geographical knowledge. The teams represent such august organizations as Witherspoon Kelley attorneys at law, Avista, the Inlander, Lewis & Clark High School and The Spokesman-Review.

Yes, The Spokesman-Review. Yours truly is on the team, having beaten Shawn Vestal in extra innings of the newsroom tryouts for the privilege. Taking the stage with me are copy editor Michael McGarr and The Slice’s Paul Turner. And I’m warning you, we all know a lot of useless stuff.

The fun begins at 7 p.m. at the Bing, 901 W. Sprague Ave. Tickets are $12, available through TicketsWest. Children 12 and younger can enjoy this family-friendly event free of charge.

Mark Robbins, the guy from those Northern Quest commercials, is the emcee. For more information, visit www.spokanelibraryfoundation.org.

Carolyn Lamberson

Trolls, comedy and Denzel

(Posted Tuesday) Another coming Friday and another lineup of movie offerings. Here are a few:

“The Equalizer” (also IMAX): Denzel Washington stars in Antoine Fuqua’s update of the 1980s-era television show about a vigilante loner who seeks justice for the powerless.

“The Song”: An aspiring singer-songwriter finds success ain’t what he thought it was. Here’s a line from one critic’s review: “There are many hurdles to overcome here, including headlines, gossip and someone who has lost his way and must find it with religion.”

“The Boxtrolls” (3-D/2-D): Based on the children’s novel “Here Be Monsters!,” this animated feature explores the underground world of creatures who come out at night. Between the creatures and their human foes, two guesses as to who the real monsters are.

Dan Webster