The Goodbye to 2021 Edition of the Pub Quiz Newsletter with Dr. Andy

Dear Friends of the Pub Quiz,

TL;DR: I am raising money for the Smith-Lemli-Opitz Foundation, and I could use your help.

We are all familiar with walkathons. Devotees to a (typically medical) charity will explain the need, set up a course, and then hope that all the participants will harass their friends into pledging to the cause, either in the form of a lump sum or a dollar amount donation per mile walked.

I’ve been running a low-key walkathon in 2021, and I hope you will participate in helping me raise money for a worthy cause. As you may know, my son and frequent walking partner Jukie has a rare metabolic disorder called Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (or SLO). Individuals with SLO cannot metabolize cholesterol properly, a deficiency that affects every system of their bodies, including brain health and development. SLO has a high mortality rate (80% at or before birth), and the children born with it wrestle with a series of maladies for the entirety of their lives. For example, my son Jukie, who turns 21 on Tuesday, has cognitive and developmental delays and is non-verbal. 

Jukie has participated in research into SLO at both Oregon Health & Science University and at the National Institutes of Health in Washington, D.C. We would take our boy to the ends of the earth to improve his health and quality of life, as well as the lives others like him. Sadly, because SLO is relatively rare, fewer researchers than we would hope actually devote the time and resources necessary to understand this unusual syndrome.

Of course, “treating” SLO is a daily concern in our family. During the pandemic, I was charged with getting our stir-crazy boy out of the house. Not understanding coronavirus, and generally unable to mask, at first Jukie appreciated the Pixar film festival, but soon, he had to venture out. So we started taking long walks, mostly in the afternoons. First we explored the circuit of South Davis greenbelts on which we live, and then eventually we ventured to other neighborhoods. 

Because of a medication change at the start of the pandemic, Jukie had put on some extra weight, but a few months of a healthy diet and a regimen of daily, low-impact exercise helped him trim down. Over our last year of walking, Jukie will often slow down, but he has rarely taken a rest. Like most of us during this pandemic, he has just kept going.

In 2020, Jukie joined me for most of my walks. According to my phone, I averaged 4.6 miles a day, for a total of 1,679 miles. In 2021, I resolved to walk even farther. Was it 15,00 miles? 1,750? 2,000? How do you think we did? No, really, I want you to guess.

I hereby invite you to pledge to the Smith-Lemli-Opitz Foundation in support of our year-long walkathon in honor of Jukie and others like him and medical research into his syndrome. If you think I walked 2,000 miles this year, and you wanted to pledge a penny a mile, that would be 20 bucks. If you think we averaged five miles a day this year, and wanted to pledge a dollar a daily mile, that would be five bucks. If you wanted pledge a dime for every thousand steps that I averaged in 2021, and if I walked a few more (instead of a lot more) steps this year compared to last, you might end up pledging $12 (for an average of 12,000 steps). 

In my next newsletter, and on Jukie’s birthday of January 4 via Facebook, I will reveal the grand total of miles, average miles, and steps that I walked (and sometimes ran) in 2021, and then invite you to pledge a tax-deductible gift to the SLO Foundation, or to adjust your pledge if your gift represented an underestimation of our 2021 walking prowess. I hope to raise $1000, but I bet I could do even more with your help.

For this fundraiser, we are using the Giving Hearts Day giving portal. Gretchen Noah, President and Treasurer of the Smith-Lemli-Opitz Foundation, has already convinced businesses and other organizations to pledge more than $10,000 in matching funds, thus doubling any donations raised through this fundraiser. My wife Kate also volunteers as the Director of Family Support and Communication for the Foundation, so I hear many stories about the families of newly-diagnosed babies – they would benefit significantly from our support.

So please pledge, either today or, even more helpfully, starting on January 3rd to take advantage of the matching pledges. With your help, we could improve the lives of people who are born every day with the rare Smith-Lemli-Opitz Syndrome.

Thanks!

This week’s pub quiz is highly topical, and a little funereal, as perhaps you might expect for this last day of a difficult year. Expect questions on diamonds, online video, isolation, Iceland, people named Maradona, invented sandwiches, James Bond, hedonism, computer engineers, music collectives, California cities, important scientists, our friend Freud, calligraphy, male actors, pirates on TV, people who lament, fighter pilots, painting sins, searchlights, miners, dope monarchs, nuns, quizmasters, dreams of togetherness, years ending in zero, international flights, the US Census, loquacious villains, beloved departures, hate crimes, scientific nomenclature, Amazonian monsters, onetime American allies, French phrases, current events, and Shakespeare.

Thanks to everyone who supported the Pub Quiz and these newsletters throughout the year, especially those teams who support these efforts at premium levels, including Quizimodo, The Outside Agitators, and, especially, The Original Vincibles. Your support and kindness will be long remembered. If your resolutions include supporting Dr. Andy’s Pub Quiz, please visit me on Patreon.

Happy New Year to you and your families. I hope you remain sane and healthy!

Fondly,

Dr. Andy

P.S. And here are three questions from last week’s Pub Quiz:

  1. Internet Culture. What company with a “duck” in its name is promising to release a desktop browser that’s as fast and as straightforward as a smartphone app? 
  1. Newspaper Headlines. The county surrounding Chicago is joining the Windy City in requiring vaccine proof for people wanting to enter bars, restaurants, and gyms. Name the county.   
  1. Four for Four. Surprisingly, which two of the following people were born in New York City: Harry Belafonte, Yo-Yo Ma, Saoirse Ronan, Ravi Shankar?  

P.P.S. “It is always important to know when something has reached its end. Closing circles, shutting doors, finishing chapters, it doesn’t matter what we call it; what matters is to leave in the past those moments in life that are over.” Paulo Coelho

P.P.P.S. My next Poetry Night takes place via ZOOM on November 6 at 7 PM. We are featuring the Poet Laureate of Sacramento and a poet from New York (via Kentucky). Great fun!