X Marks the Spot

X Marks the Spot

"X Marks the Spot" was a quiz and panel game that was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between 1998 and 2006. It could be likened to be a more light-hearted version of "Round Britain Quiz". It was presented by the comedian and author Pete McCarthy until his death in October 2004. The writer and broadcaster David Stafford took over the reins from series 7.

The game consisted of three celebrities identifying four places around the United Kingdom, as well as a supplementary question set in those locations. The four locations join up to form a giant X on the map. Where the two lines cross, a treasure is (metaphorically) hidden. The panel have to identify the treasure using up to four lines of a riddle gained by answering the supplementary questions correctly. Unlike the UK television programme "Treasure Hunt", there is no actual buried treasure and the panel do not have to fetch it, merely identify it.

The format, created by John Higgs, encouraged the team of three contestants to co-operate rather than compete against each other, and was designed to encourage the telling of interesting anecdotes and digressions. It was inspired in part by the book "Lights out for the Territory" by Iain Sinclair, in which the author walks across London and at one point takes a route that marks an 'X' across the ground. Another influence was an interview with Paul Devereux, the editor of "The Ley Hunter" magazine, a periodical devoted to ley lines and other earth mysteries. Devereux had eventually concluded that most ley lines were nothing more than co-incidence, and commented that it was remarkably easy to draw a line on a map that crossed a number of interesting places.

The questions were written by David J. Bodycombe and the programme was an independent production by Hewland International for BBC Radio 4.


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  • X marks the spot — The phrase x marks the spot is used to refer to the letter X (or the × symbol) marking something s location. It can refer to:* x mark, the mark used in such instances * X Marks the Spot , a 1931 film directed by Erle C. Kenton * X Marks the Spot …   Wikipedia

  • X marks the spot. — sent. This is the exact place! (A catchphrase.) □ This is where it happened. X marks the spot. □ X marks the spot where we first met …   Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • X marks the spot — An indication made on maps or documents of importance to call attention to a place or a feature of some importance. * /The treasure hunter said to his companion, Here it is; X marks the spot. / …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • X marks the spot — An indication made on maps or documents of importance to call attention to a place or a feature of some importance. * /The treasure hunter said to his companion, Here it is; X marks the spot. / …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • X\ marks\ the\ spot — An indication made on maps or documents of importance to call attention to a place or a feature of some importance. The treasure hunter said to his companion, Here it is; X marks the spot …   Словарь американских идиом

  • x marks the spot — look for x, begin at x, x is important    Someone had written on the map X marks the spot where we were abducted by aliens …   English idioms

  • x marks the spot — This is used to say where something is located or hidden …   The small dictionary of idiomes

  • X marks the spot — phrase used in games and mysteries for saying that something important can be found at a particular place Thesaurus: general words for location and placesynonym places of a particular typehyponym Main entry: x …   Useful english dictionary

  • The Spot — For other uses of the term spot, see Spot (disambiguation page). The Spot, or thespot.com, was the first episodic fiction website, and pioneered the underwriting of bandwidth and production costs by offering paid advertising banners on the web… …   Wikipedia

  • x marks the spot —    This is used to say where something is located or hidden.   (Dorking School Dictionary) …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

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