Nobody here can match Kuroto for her dedication to all things Tolkien.
She saw the newest Hobbit film three times (at least) in the first week of its release, and that didn't surprise me one bit, because she did the same for the first two films as well. What did surprise me was that she flew to England to attend the world premiere. And I don't mean that she actually got to go inside the cinema - she travelled all the way there just to stand near the red carpet so she could catch a glimpse of the stars and get a few autographs.
Her bedroom (at her mother's house) is absolutely covered in LoTR memorabilia. Her computer's desktop wallpaper has been something Hobbit related for the last few years, without fail. She has all the extended edition DVDs and many of the video games - not forgetting the books, of course, some of which she has in both English and Finnish.
And if you think all that amounts to just fandom, not geekery, you'd be wrong. Ask her anything you like about any of the Middle Earth stories and she'll have an answer for you. Go look in the Hobbit thread if you don't believe me. Then come back here and vote for her
She sounds deserving, indeed. I was known as "The LotR Geek" in my senior year of high school, and I couldn't tell you how many times I've read the various Tolkien books, but beyond a few posters (not currently up) and an Elvish cloak brooch, I can't really boast of a Middle-earth bedroom.
I do have multiple copies of the books, though, and would love to have first editions of all of them ("The Silmarillion" and "The Book of Lost Tales: Part One" are all I have on that front).
I like to think I make up for these shortcomings with my extreme geekiness on other fronts, such as my obscene comic collection (mostly Marvel, I confess), the multiple bookshelves of older and more modern classics (Shakespeare, Bronte, Mallory, Stephen King, Neil Gaiman, Douglas Adams, Frank Herbert, Michael Moorcock, Lovecraft, Poe, Arthur C. Clarke, Dante, Robert A. Heinlein, Robert Jordan, Jules Verne, Homer, Melville, Rowling, of course, way more I can't think of right now), as well as biographies, autobiographies, philosophy books, stuff on political theory, humor books, school books, religious texts, art books, TV show and film companion books, classic children's stories (e.g. all the "Little House on the Prairie" books, not just the originals written by Laura Ingalls Wilder), Japanese books ... all the anime and games ... and, shit, how do I ever get pussy?