Daily Dispatch

Parisians ease lockdown blues with nightly neighbourh­ood quiz

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“What country’s flag has a yellow cross on a blue background?” Noam Cartozo shouts out of the fifth-floor window of his Paris apartment. “Sweden!” comes the shouted reply from another apartment window and applause ripples through the street.

This nightly general knowledge quiz is how the residents of Rue Saint-Bernard, in the 11th district of Paris, are relieving the boredom and isolation of a coronaviru­s lockdown that is now nearly a month old.

It has spread beyond the street. Cartozo, an actor and comedian who hosts the quiz, broadcasts it on his Instagram account, with one video garnering 1.1m views.

“I saw that the neighbours were looking a bit sad about the confinemen­t,” said Cartozo, who compères the quiz with toilet rolls festooned around his neck, a satire on the coronaviru­s-related wave of panic buying seen in some cities.

“I wanted to create a bit of atmosphere in the neighbourh­ood to help with all of that,” he said.

France this week became the fourth country in the world to cross the threshold of 10,000 coronaviru­s-related deaths. Officials say the lockdown is slowing the outbreak but the restrictio­ns will not be eased any time soon.

Cartozo hit on the idea for the quiz after Paris residents started emerging on to their balconies at 8pm each night to applaud health care workers dealing with the epidemic.

Keen to prolong that moment of connection, Cartozo started playing music for the street.

“But I noticed I was the only one dancing,” he said. “In the end I decided to give them a series of questions, and the game took off.”

The quiz pits people whose

I saw that the neighbours were looking a bit sad ... I wanted to create a bit of atmosphere to help with all of that

house numbers have even numbers, on one side of the street, against those with odd numbers. Prizes include toilet paper and pasta.

Neighbours appreciate the diversion.

“It makes the days seem shorter,” said resident Laura Coles, who was taking part in the quiz on Wednesday evening.

“It’s good to talk to people, to laugh with people,” said her daughter, Lou.

Cartozo has dubbed the nightly quiz “Questions for a Balcony”, a play on the title of long-running quiz show on French television, Questions for a Champion.

Yet despite landing his own hit show, the performer said he was keen for it to end.

“We all want to get out, we want to see our friends and families again. The shorter this game is, the better it is for everyone.” —

 ?? Picture: REUTERS / CHARLES PLATIAU ?? RIGHT OR WRONG? Noam Cartozo, a Parisian comedian, hosts a daily quiz ‘Questions for a Balcony’ with his neighbours from his balcony in Paris during a lockdown imposed to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s disease.
Picture: REUTERS / CHARLES PLATIAU RIGHT OR WRONG? Noam Cartozo, a Parisian comedian, hosts a daily quiz ‘Questions for a Balcony’ with his neighbours from his balcony in Paris during a lockdown imposed to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s disease.

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