Bingo

Bingo or B-I-N-G-O may refer to:

Arts and entertainment

Games

  • Bingo, a game using a printed ticket of numbers
    • Bingo (United Kingdom), a game using a printed ticket of 15 numbers on three lines; most commonly played in the UK
    • Bingo (U.S.), a game using a printed ticket of randomly generated 5x5 grid of numbers; most commonly played in the USA and Canada
  • Bingo (United Kingdom), a game using a printed ticket of 15 numbers on three lines; most commonly played in the UK
  • Bingo (U.S.), a game using a printed ticket of randomly generated 5x5 grid of numbers; most commonly played in the USA and Canada
  • Bingo (card game), named by analogy to the game Bingo
  • Bingo (Scrabble), a slang term used in the game Scrabble in North America for playing all seven of one's tiles
  • Fictional characters

  • Bingo, a character on the 1968–1970 television series The Banana Splits
  • Bingo Brown, the preteen protagonist of four novels by Betsy Byars
  • Bingo Little, a character in a number of books by comic author P. G. Wodehouse
  • Bingo (Better Call Saul)

    "Bingo" is the seventh episode of the first season of the AMC television series Better Call Saul, the spinoff series of Breaking Bad. The episode aired on March 16, 2015.

    Plot

    At the police station, Jimmy and Mike return the notepad to Detective Abbasi, claiming they found it in the parking lot. Despite Abbasi's accusations against Mike, his partner Detective Sanders privately assures Mike that he has little to fear. Jimmy finds Chuck standing outside his home, claiming to build up tolerance to electromagnetic fields outdoors as he feels useless. Jimmy stores some legal documents at Chuck's house with an ulterior motive for him to get involved in cases. Jimmy brings Kim to an office suite he is considering for his practice and asks her to join him as his partner. She turns him down due to her loyalty to Hamlin, Hamlin & McGill.

    Later, Kim meets with the Kettlemans and proposes a plea deal that involves a sixteen month prison sentence, returning the $1.6 million in embezzled money, and an admission of guilt. Since losing a trial would mean a thirty year prison sentence for Craig, she recommends this course of action. However, Betsy flatly rejects the deal, maintaining her husband's innocence and denying that there is any money to return. They fire Kim and seek out Jimmy for legal counsel. Jimmy initially urges them to accept Kim's deal, but Betsy blackmails him by pointing out that their "retainer" paid to Jimmy would implicate him taking a bribe. While picking up records from HHM, Jimmy discovers that Kim has been demoted as a result of losing the Kettlemans as clients.

    Bingo (nickname)

    Bingo is a nickname for:

  • William Bingo Bingham (1885-?), baseball player in the Negro Leagues
  • Elwood Bingo DeMoss (1889–1965), baseball player and manager in the Negro Leagues
  • Rudolph Kampman (1914-1987), Canadian National Hockey League player
  • Gene "Bingo" O Driscoll, a former Gaelic footballer from the 1980s to the 2000s
  • Robert Bingo Smith (born 1946), American retired National Basketball Association player
  • Greeks (finance)

    In mathematical finance, the Greeks are the quantities representing the sensitivity of the price of derivatives such as options to a change in underlying parameters on which the value of an instrument or portfolio of financial instruments is dependent. The name is used because the most common of these sensitivities are denoted by Greek letters (as are some other finance measures). Collectively these have also been called the risk sensitivities,risk measures or hedge parameters.

    Use of the Greeks

    The Greeks are vital tools in risk management. Each Greek measures the sensitivity of the value of a portfolio to a small change in a given underlying parameter, so that component risks may be treated in isolation, and the portfolio rebalanced accordingly to achieve a desired exposure; see for example delta hedging.

    The Greeks in the Black–Scholes model are relatively easy to calculate, a desirable property of financial models, and are very useful for derivatives traders, especially those who seek to hedge their portfolios from adverse changes in market conditions. For this reason, those Greeks which are particularly useful for hedging—such as delta, theta, and vega—are well-defined for measuring changes in Price, Time and Volatility. Although rho is a primary input into the Black–Scholes model, the overall impact on the value of an option corresponding to changes in the risk-free interest rate is generally insignificant and therefore higher-order derivatives involving the risk-free interest rate are not common.

    Charm quark

    The charm quark or c quark (from its symbol, c) is the third most massive of all quarks, a type of elementary particle. Charm quarks are found in hadrons, which are subatomic particles made of quarks. Example of hadrons containing charm quarks include the J/ψ meson (J/ψ), D mesons (D), charmed Sigma baryons (Σ
    c
    ), and other charmed particles.

    It, along with the strange quark is part of the second generation of matter, and has an electric charge of +23 e and a bare mass of 1.29+0.05
    −0.11
     GeV/c2
    . Like all quarks, the charm quark is an elementary fermion with spin-12, and experiences all four fundamental interactions: gravitation, electromagnetism, weak interactions, and strong interactions. The antiparticle of the charm quark is the charm antiquark (sometimes called anticharm quark or simply anticharm), which differs from it only in that some of its properties have equal magnitude but opposite sign.

    The existence of a fourth quark had been speculated by a number of authors around 1964 (for instance by James Bjorken and Sheldon Glashow), but its prediction is usually credited to Sheldon Glashow, John Iliopoulos and Luciano Maiani in 1970 (see GIM mechanism). The first charmed particle (a particle containing a charm quark) to be discovered was the J/ψ meson. It was discovered by a team at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), led by Burton Richter, and one at the Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL), led by Samuel Ting.

    Charm (album)

    Charm is the critically acclaimed third studio album from American rapper/record producer Danny! (see 2006 in music) and the first of his records to be released commercially. As evidenced in the title, Charm was a huge milestone in Danny!'s career; after two unsuccessful attempts to make a name for himself in the music world (2004's The College Kicked-Out and 2005's F.O.O.D.), the record unanimously won rave reviews, culminating in the inclusion of the album on the 49th Annual Grammy Awards short list and, eventually, a record deal with Definitive Jux Records.

    Widely regarded as one of the strongest entries in his discography (rivaled by 2008's And I Love H.E.R.), Charm helped Danny! achieve a moderate buzz in the underground hip-hop community and become South Carolina's most heralded hip-hop artist to date. The song "Cafe Surreal" from this album would go on to become a signature tune in commercial bumpers for the MTV early morning video countdown program aMTV, being played since its pilot in early 2009, and was also featured in a 2013 ad campaign for Crown Royal.

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    Syracuse St. Patrick’s Parade, Wizard of Oz on Ice, ‘Mamma Mia!’: 12 things to do ...

    The Post-Standard 10 Mar 2025
    Patrick’s Day spirit by participating in Bingo Night at The Song & Dance ... Bingo Night ... Patrick’s Day Bingo Night. Grab a green drink, test your luck, and play for exciting prizes in six rounds of festive bingo.
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