There is hardly any person who does not love watching Kaun Banega Crorepati. The show has been airing for over 13 seasons now and never goes a day when the questions do not leave us scratching our heads. Tonight was no different. Well, it was slightly different. Why you ask? Because an 11-year-old graced the hot seat. Yes, you are reading that right.
For the Children’s Day special, Amitabh Bachchan hosted a bunch of children on his show. The kiddos contested to grace the hot seat after answering the fastest finger first question. The first one to take over the hot seat was 11-year-old Krishiv Khandelwal. He got the three questions asked in the fastest finger round right and joined Big B on the stage.
Krishiv, an extremely talented and knowledgeable boy for his age, took home Rs 12,50,000. He would have played further but decided to quit after he failed to answer the question worth Rs 25,00,000.
It so happened that Krishiv was confused between two options and when he was unable to decide which one is correct, he decided to keep his Rs 12,50,000 safe and step back. He had used up all of his lifelines and the first one that he availed on the show was an audience poll.
Do you think you can answer the question he was asked correctly? If so, put your knowledge to the test!
Question for Rs 25 lakh that Krishiv was asked
In 2020, the Olympic Games that were to take place in Tokyo were postponed. In which year were the Tokyo Olympics cancelled for the first time?
Options:
A. 1916
B. 1940
C.1944
D. 1948
Amitabh Bachchan gave a little history to Krishiv about Tokyo Olympics 1940. For the unversed, the 1940 Winter Olympics were scheduled from 3 to 12 February 1940 in Sapporo, Japan, but they were eventually cancelled due to the onset of World War II.
A little about contestant Krishiv…the 11-year-old has won over 33 times medals (29 gold, 3 silver and 1 bronze) in several academic tests. He knows basic programming languages like Jaya and C++. He revealed on KBC 13 tonight that he created a bot system for his school that helped his teachers fasten the attendance regulation process