Você acertaria essa pergunta difícil que valia R$ 300 mil no 'Domingão'?
Ler resumo da notícia
O engenheiro civil Leonardo Cremonesi, de Franca (SP), não acertou a pergunta de R$ 300 mil no 'Quem Quer Ser Um Milionário', quadro do Caldeirão do Huck deste domingo (22).
O que aconteceu
A pergunta era a seguinte: Quantas Terras são necessárias para preencher o volume total do nosso Sol?
Com as seguintes alternativas:
a) 1 milhão e 100 mil
b) 1 milhão e 200 mil
c) 1 milhão e 300 mil
d) 1 milhão e 400 mil
A resposta correta era letra C, isso porque o volume do Sol em relação ao planeta Terra é aproximadamente 1,3 milhão de vezes maior.
Leonardo errou a pergunta, mas conseguiu garantir R$ 150 mil para casa. E aí, você acertaria a resposta?
Leonardo chutou a pergunta de R$300 mil, errou, mas levou pra casa o prêmio de R$150 mil!!! ☺️ #QuemQuerSerUmMilionário #Domingão pic.twitter.com/XRWGosDEeD-- TV Globo 📺 (@tvglobo) February 22, 2026
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Source Quality
Source classification (primary/secondary/tertiary), named vs anonymous, expert credentials, variety
Summary
Few named sources, relies on basic factual reporting without expert input.
Specific Findings from the Article (2)
"O engenheiro civil Leonardo Cremonesi, de Franca (SP)"
Identifies contestant by name and profession.
Named source"quadro do Caldeirão do Huck deste domingo (22)"
References a TV show as context without direct sourcing.
Tertiary sourcePerspective Balance
Acknowledgment of multiple viewpoints, counterarguments, and balanced presentation
Summary
One-sided presentation focused solely on contestant's outcome.
Specific Findings from the Article (1)
"Leonardo errou a pergunta, mas conseguiu garantir R$ 150 mil para casa."
Reports only the contestant's result without alternative viewpoints.
One sidedContextual Depth
Background information, statistics, comprehensiveness of coverage
Summary
Shallow coverage with minimal background beyond basic facts.
Specific Findings from the Article (2)
"o volume do Sol em relação ao planeta Terra é aproximadamente 1,3 milhão de vezes maior."
Provides factual answer explanation.
Statistic"quadro do Caldeirão do Huck deste domingo (22)"
Minimal context about the show and date.
BackgroundLanguage Neutrality
Absence of loaded, sensationalist, or politically biased language
Summary
Mostly neutral language with one minor sensationalist element.
Specific Findings from the Article (2)
"A resposta correta era letra C, isso porque o volume do Sol"
Factual, neutral explanation.
Neutral language"Leonardo chutou a pergunta de R$300 mil, errou, mas levou pra casa o prêmio de R$150 mil!!! ☺️"
Emotional tone with exclamation marks and emoji.
SensationalistTransparency
Author attribution, dates, methodology disclosure, quote attribution
Summary
Good attribution with author, date, and clear quote attribution.
Specific Findings from the Article (1)
"Leonardo Cremonesi, de Franca (SP), não acertou a pergunta"
Clear attribution of contestant's action.
Quote attributionLogical Coherence
Internal consistency of claims, absence of contradictions and unsupported causation
Summary
No logical issues detected; narrative flows consistently.
Core Claims & Their Sources
-
"Contestant Leonardo Cremonesi failed to answer a R$300,000 question on 'Quem Quer Ser Um Milionário' but won R$150,000."
Source: Article reporting based on show outcome Named secondary
-
"The correct answer to 'How many Earths fit in the Sun's volume?' is 1.3 million."
Source: Factual statement without source attribution Unattributed
Logic Model Inspector
ConsistentExtracted Propositions (4)
-
P1
"Leonardo Cremonesi is a civil engineer from Franca, SP"
Factual -
P2
"The show aired on Sunday, February 22"
Factual -
P3
"The correct answer was option C"
Factual -
P4
"Contestant's wrong answer causes R$150,000 prize instead of R$300,000"
Causal
Claim Relationships Graph
View Formal Logic Representation
=== Propositions === P1 [factual]: Leonardo Cremonesi is a civil engineer from Franca, SP P2 [factual]: The show aired on Sunday, February 22 P3 [factual]: The correct answer was option C P4 [causal]: Contestant's wrong answer causes R$150,000 prize instead of R$300,000 === Causal Graph === contestants wrong answer -> r150000 prize instead of r300000
All claims are logically consistent. No contradictions, temporal issues, or circular reasoning detected.