No, not an entertainer. And I’ll add that, while I am an author that is also not my claim to fame; my books sell because they are about the thing that makes me famous.
Richard Moran
I will reserve my next DQ until the previous 2 have been answered

DQ: Does your noteworthyness involve a sex scandal?
No sex scandal.
I’m still out of the game but I think I understand now.
Please, though, allow me to state this as if I were talking to a 6 year old.
Too many rules give this adjunct and that trump and this whatever the hell the term they use. Please let me do this in normal people speak.
1- The guesser guesses by initials, and asking pertinent questions that may lead to the person with those initials. For example, if the initials are WS, the guesser may ask “Did you write Hamlet”?
If the asker answers “Yes”. You win. If the asker answers “No, and I don’t know who you mean”, then that guesser gets a non descript question, correct? Such as “Are you a writer”? Is this correct?
I’m sorry, but too many games have rules that are too cryptic for me to grok. Just explain what is needed in normal, human terms and we can all have fun.

No, not an entertainer.
Clarification: By ‘in the entertainment industry’, I didn’t mean only performers. I include musicians, singers, directors, producers, screenwriters, cinematographers, etc.

<snip>Is this correct?<snip>
yes. But this is a very old game. It was old when my parents taught it to me 40 years ago. The wordiness of the rules is to remove any ambiguity - perfect example is Xema realizing that the Direct Mode can continue as long as the answers are “yes” (I did not remember that rule - nor did I look for it when looking for support of my claim)

If the asker answers “No, and I don’t know who you mean”, then that guesser gets a non descript question, correct? Such as “Are you a writer”? Is this correct?
It is, though I think it would be clearer if you replaced “non descript” with “yes-no”.
Clarification: By ‘in the entertainment industry’, I didn’t mean only performers. I include musicians, singers, directors, producers, screenwriters, cinematographers, etc.
That is how I understood the question. Answer remains “no”.
Okay - this is what we know[ul]
[li]Not an actor[/li][li]Is in politics, but not his claim to fame[/li][li]Male[/li][li]Living[/li][li]not in any facet of the entertainment industry[/li][li]was not involved in a sex scandal[/li][/ul]
my reserved DQ is
Were you prominantly involved in Watergate?
eta: and by prominantly, I mean, someone whose name appeared in more than one news article or commissioned report
Information now known about R.M.
- Living male
- Not in the entertainment industry
- Sometime politician and author (though neither is what he’s best known for)
- Not involved in any sex scandal

Were you prominantly involved in Watergate?
No connection with Watergate.

1- The guesser guesses by initials, and asking pertinent questions that may lead to the person with those initials. For example, if the initials are WS, the guesser may ask “Did you write Hamlet”?
If the asker answers “Yes”. You win. If the asker answers “No, and I don’t know who you mean”, then that guesser gets a non descript question, correct? Such as “Are you a writer”? Is this correct?
Basically: A person thinks of a person and gives the person’s initials. The guessers have to deduce whose initials they are. The guesser has to have a specific person in mind. For example, WS. The guesser might think of William Shakespeare and ask, ‘Did you write Hamlet?’
If WS is William Shakespeare, the ‘host’ will say ‘Yes. I’m William Shakespeare.’
If WS is not William Shakespeare there are three possible answers:
[ul][li]No, I’m not William Shakespeare; or[/li][li]No, I’m not [some other name with the initials WS – say, ‘William Smith’]; or[/li][li]No, and I don’t know who you mean[/ul][/li]William Shakespeare matches the condition of the question; he did write Hamlet. You win. But William Smith didn’t write Hamlet, the play. He doesn’t fit the condition, so you get a DQ. (Unless Smith was a performance artist who wrote ‘Hamlet’ on a hundred pigs or something. In that case he fits the question as asked, and you don’t get a DQ. But I’d expect the host to explain his answer in that case.) If the host does not know that William Shakespeare wrote Hamlet and can’t think of anyone else that fits the question as asked (such as our hypothetical Mr. Smith), he says he doesn’t know. You get a DQ.
The DQs should be designed to narrow the field. DQs are a lot like 20 Questions. ‘Are you male?’, ‘Are you alive?’, ‘Are you American?’ and ‘Is your claim to fame in aerospace?’ would lead the questioner to think of a dead American male who flew. So the next indirect question might be ‘Did you have an argument over whether you would wear your space helmet on Apollo 7?’ The host will then say, ‘Yes. I’m Wally Schirra.’
Clarification for Johnny L.A.:
R.M. is not infrequently asked (and paid) to address audiences about the aspect of his life for which he is famous. Does this make him part of the entertainment industry? If so, you are entitled to another DQ.
DQ2: Is your main claim to fame as a sports figure?

Does this make him part of the entertainment industry?
I’d say no. Paid lecturers/key note speakers/workshop leaders, although presenting to an audience, are not entertainers, even if their subject matter is very entertaining

Clarification for Johnny L.A.:
R.M. is not infrequently asked (and paid) to address audiences about the aspect of his life for which he is famous. Does this make him part of the entertainment industry?
I don’t think so. For example, in the previous round with Douglas Bader I was asked if DB had worked in the entertainment industry for any period of time. He was a technical advisor on The Battle Of Britain (uncredited), so I said yes. He was also listed as having appeared on a couple of interview shows. I would not have counted those. It was because he worked on a film that I said yes.
IQ: Are you known for writing on agriculture?
Abby_Emma_Sasha: I forgot to say that Indirect Questions can be designed to elicit an ‘I don’t know’ response. You still have to have a specific person in mind, and that person must fit the question. But the question can be stated in such a way as to make it difficult for the host to know who you’re talking about so that you will get a DQ.
DQ2: Is your main claim to fame as a sports figure?
Yes (though take care not to define “sports” too narrowly).
You are entitled to another DQ.
Did you shrink the kids?