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Trivia of the Day Blog
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
March Rankings
Here are the rankings for March 2009: There were 22 questions, with a total of 22 points: #1 (22 correct): AC918 (Anne) Aggiemom Marie Bouchard Carol Carrara Catherine (SpclDove) Cathy (ThtWildCat) ChristmasFun Grace Daisy Kathy Dent (BOOKWORM) Donna Golfitr Susan Hardisty Jeanie Maggie Nancy Mello Ronald Mello PREY TIME Snowflake Tanny XTEX4 #2 (21 correct): GZULU INBALANCE1 K. Pavlov SusanL C. Underwood Dave W. (SILVERANBLACK) #3 (20 correct): Dragon S. Giordano KANGA Peggy Mueller #4 (19 correct): #5 (18 correct): George Malits mjnapco Tessa #6 (16 correct): Pat Cieslak Larry Iannetti Bill Tootill #7 (15 correct): Sandy DeCoff Becky Salz Stephanie Twine-Haig #8 (14 correct): Baxtersplace Caro7lk Brian Chenevert Linda Guilfoil Linda Hodgdon KathyKraj Talula~ #9 (13 correct): Marc Enyedy Maxine Kingsbury Quietone9498 #10 (12 correct): Ben Guilfoil Honorable Mentions: Abuckle; Lorrie Cook; Courtney; Melissa Hammond; Kelly Jefferson; JMB; Mary Jane Leach; MH Techs; Patti Moreau; PeniVixen; Jacki Tibbitts; Paul Vangel Congratulations & Good Luck in April! Take care --- Joe
Trivia for 4/1
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Answer for 3/31: A barcarolle is a folk-type song traditionally sung by people in what profession? Venetian gondoliers. The name is barcarolle (also barcarola) is also used for music composed in this style, sometimes in operas. 54 people answered correctly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Question for 4/1: Ended March with a definition, so we will begin April the same way: What does the word 'cachinnate' mean? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Trivia for 3/31
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Answer for 3/30: Olympic champion Bruce Jenner took on a TV role as Officer Steve McLeish when one of the stars of this show was temporarily out due to a contract dispute. What show was this? "CHiPs". Erik Estrada was absent for 6 episodes in 1981, and Jenner filled in briefly as a different officer. 54 people answered correctly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Question for 3/31: A barcarolle is a folk-type song traditionally sung by people in what profession? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Monday, March 30, 2009
Trivia for 3/30
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Answer for 3/27: Often considered the opposite of a more well-known term, 'jamais vu' is a term used to describe what sensation? The feeling that one is experiencing or doing something for the very first time, while rationally knowing that they have been in the situation or experience before. Considered the opposite of 'deja vu', where one feels like they have done something before that is really a new and different experience. 53 people answered correctly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Question for 3/30: Olympic champion Bruce Jenner took on a TV role as Officer Steve McLeish when one of the stars of this show was temporarily out due to a contract dispute. What show was this? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Friday, March 27, 2009
Trivia for 3/27
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Answer for 3/26: What was Mr. Magoo's first name? 57 people answered correctly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Question for 3/27: Often considered the opposite of a more well-known term, 'jamais vu' is a term used to describe what sensation? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Trivia for 3/26
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Answer for 3/25: Born Ehrich Weiss on March 24, 1874 in Budapest, this man became well known for many things. He starred in movies in France and Hollywood; he loved aviation and had the first controlled powered flight over Australia with a an also-successful landing; he then moved on to debunking psychics and mediums. This pursuit led to the end of his friendship with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who was a firm believer in such things. However, Weiss was best known under a different name and for a different set of skills and he died, in 1926, because of one of these 'stunts'. Who was he? Harry Houdini, the master magician and escape artist. When someone asked if he could really handle blows to the abdomen, Houdini replied yes. But before he could prepare himself, the man hit him several times. Apparently already suffering from appendicitis, the incident led to peritonitis and he died on on October 31, 1926. 60 people answered correctly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Question for 3/26: What was Mr. Magoo's first name? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Trivia for 3/25
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Answer for 3/24: Lady Tremaine is the villainess in which Disney classic? "Cinderella". Lady Tremaine is the Wicked Stepmother's name. 56 people answered correctly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Question for 3/25: Born Ehrich Weiss on March 24, 1874 in Budapest, this man became well known for many things. He starred in movies in France and Hollywood; he loved aviation and had the first controlled powered flight over Australia with a an also-successful landing; he then moved on to debunking psychics and mediums. This pursuit led to the end of his friendship with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who was a firm believer in such things. However, Weiss was best known under a different name and for a different set of skills and he died, in 1926, because of one of these 'stunts'. Who was he? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Trivia for 3/24
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Answer for 3/23: An animal that is said to be diurnal does what? A diurnal animal is one that is active during the daytime and rests at night, the opposite of a nocturnal animal. 52 people answered correctly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Question for 3/24: Lady Tremaine is the villainess in which Disney classic? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Monday, March 23, 2009
Trivia for 3/23
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Answer for 3/20: Lori Lieberman wrote a poem after seeing a young Don McLean perform his song "Empty Chairs" in concert. Composers Charles Fox and Norman Gimbel turned her poem into a song and Lieberman included it on her self-titled album in 1971. But the song became a huge hit when it was covered in 1973 by Roberta Flack. What is this song? "Killing Me Softly with His Song". The Fugees covered the song in 1996, with Lauryn Hill on lead vocals. It was a hit for them, as well. 48 people answered correctly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Question for 3/23: An animal that is said to be diurnal does what? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Friday, March 20, 2009
Trivia for 3/20
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Answer for 3/19: This structure, a 'campanile', is found in Italy. Construction began in 1173 but wasn't completed for over a hundred years. It is most widely known for what went wrong with its construction. What is this? The Leaning Tower of Pisa, or simply the Tower of Pisa. Worked stopped as they reached the third floor, due to a foundation set in weak soil. It took a hundred years to finish the tower, and the bell chamber wasn't added for another hundred years. The tower has undergone a structural strengthening in recent years and appears to have stopped moving. A campanile is a free-standing bell tower, often adjacent to a church or cathedral. 51 people answered correctly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Question for 3/20: Lori Lieberman wrote a poem after seeing a young Don McLean perform his song "Empty Chairs" in concert. Composers Charles Fox and Norman Gimbel turned her poem into a song and Lieberman included it on her self-titled album in 1971. But the song became a huge hit when it was covered in 1973 by Roberta Flack. What is this song? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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