A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject.(January 2020) |
Karl Coryat |
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Karl Coryat is an American writer, comedian, and musician.
In 1996, he was a two-day champion on the television game show Jeopardy! [1] Subsequently, he wrote an online article with advice for prospective Jeopardy! contestants, which included a method to play along at home, keep score, and gauge one's performance. Enthusiasts of the show, and now even the show itself, refer to this as the "Coryat score". [2] [3]
Coryat scores ignore all Final Jeopardy! rounds, wrong Daily Doubles, and only count correct Daily Doubles by the answer value.[ citation needed ]
As an early member of the Immersion Composition Society, Coryat is the co-author (along with Nicholas Dobson) of The Frustrated Songwriter's Handbook, which details the method that ICS members use to write a large number of songs quickly. Tim Rice-Oxley used the method to write songs for the Keane album Strangeland , [4] and Jez Williams, guitarist for British band Doves, has cited the book as inspiration for their 2009 album Kingdom of Rust. [5] Coryat also wrote Guerrilla Home Recording and edited The Bass Player Book (all published by Hal Leonard Corporation). As a music journalist, he has interviewed Prince, [6] Sting, Geddy Lee, Flea, Brian Wilson, Les Claypool, and others for Bass Player magazine.[ citation needed ]
As a multi-instrumentalist musician (vocals, bass, guitar, drums, and keyboards), he has been recording music under the name Eddie Current since the 1980s. [7]
Coryat's essay "Toward an Informational Mechanics" was awarded a Judging Panel Discretionary Prize in the 2012 physics essay competition sponsored by the Foundational Questions Institute and Scientific American magazine. [8] Drawing on work by John Archibald Wheeler, Carlo Rovelli, and Bob Coecke, the essay calls for a generalization of quantum mechanics that incorporates informational legacy or context into quantum measurements, which might ultimately lead to a description of an "it from bit" universe with the least possible complexity. [9] He has produced video essays on how the biocentric universe theory of Robert Lanza may be the best route to this. [10]
As a comedian under the pseudonym Edward Current, [11] he makes YouTube satires of religious fundamentalism and politics, [12] as well as serious videos demonstrating physics [13] [14] and criticizing the 9/11 Truth movement. [15]
Coryat attended Brunswick School and the University of California, Berkeley. He lives in Arkansas.[ citation needed ]