Overview
The KYVE Apple Bowl is a televised single elimination competition between high school students. 20-30 high schools come from all over Central Washington to compete at the Apple Bowl studio, which is located on the Central Washington University campus in Ellensburg. The first and second place team members receive savings bonds from Washington's tree fruit industry. Many of the teams also participate in Knowledge Bowl and Quiz Bowl.
The competition airs on KYVE Public Television each spring.
![caption](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/58/2010_Apple_Bowl_Winners.jpg/400px-2010_Apple_Bowl_Winners.jpg)
Format
Apple Bowl is played between two teams of three members each, with all six individuals using a lockout buzzer system to answer questions. Each team has a captain who is required to answer the questions in some of the rounds. A host reads the questions and determines the correct responses, although off-camera judges are used when an answer is contentious. The competition consists of three rounds: the Tossup Round, Lightning Round, and Bonus Round.
The Tossup Round does not involve active teamwork; rather, an individual on either team can buzz in and collect 10 points for his or her team for a correct response. If one member of the team answers incorrectly, no other members of that team can buzz in, although a member of the opposing team can still offer an answer. This round lasts 10 minutes, after which the host takes a short break to "get to know" the contestants Jeopardy! style by asking personal questions that were created by the players before recording.
The Lightning Round does not require use of the buzzers and instead provides the teams with four categories of questions from which to answer. The team with the fewer points is allowed to choose the first category it wishes to answer on, with the moderator asking a series of up to 15 questions for the team to answer. During this round, team members are allowed to confer but only the captain can give an answer unless he or she "defers" to a teammate. For each category, the responding team has three minutes to answer as many of the 15 questions they can, with each question worth 5 points. After the first team has either completed its set of questions or run out of time, the other team may choose a question set from the remaining three categories.
The Bonus Round integrates the other two rounds by allowing contestants to answer questions individually, as in the Tossup Round, but also requires the team to confer on a set of four bonus questions if the initial answer was correct. These bonus questions are read out by the host successively, with the team members answering all four questions in a row after up to 15 seconds of conference. The bonus sets are not related to the initial question. For example, a tossup question about a species of whales may be followed with four bonus questions on "Obscure World Capitals." The tossup question is worth 10 points while each of the bonuses are 5 points. Like the Lightning Round, only the captain can answer the four bonus questions.
History
Apple Bowl first began in 1980. The program does not have a regular host, although that position has been filled by community member Marco Bicchieri from 2007 to present. The winning team for the 2010 season was Ellensburg High School, which fielded five members. Each member received a medal and $1500 in savings bonds. The runner-up team of Riverside Christian School received $500 in savings bonds.
http://kcts9.org/series/kyve-apple-bowl/archive?page=3 http://www.locatetv.com/tv/kyve-apple-bowl-2010/6663804 http://www.dailyrecordnews.com/news/article_3e640a4a-3b6a-11df-955f-001cc4c03286.html http://www.cwu.edu/~relation/pr-feb25a-04.html