Wednesday, October 31, 2012

QUESTION: Holiday

What was Frosty's nose made out of?

ANSWER: Awards

Joan Cusack

With an uneasy mix of new talent and established actors like the afore-mentioned Robert Downey Jr., Anthony Michael Hall, and Randy Quaid, the 1985-1986 season was a bizarre hodgepodge of performers with little to no chemistry. In the end, only Dennis Miller, Jon Lovitz, and Nora Dunn survived and, with one exception, rightfully so. That one exception was Joan Cusack (John’s sister) who went on to be the first SNL actress nominated for an Oscar in 1988′s Working Girl. She also scored another nomination in 1997 for In and Out.

Matt: WRONG 
Record: 519-437

Monday, October 29, 2012

QUESTION: Awards

Who was the first Saturday Night Live cast member to be nominated for an Oscar (after their time on SNL)?

ANSWER: Medical

Bed wetting
Nocturnal enuresis, commonly called bedwetting, is involuntary urination while asleep after the age at which bladder control usually occurs. Nocturnal enuresis is considered primary (PNE) when a child has not yet had a prolonged period of being dry. Secondarynocturnal enuresis (SNE) is when a child or adult begins wetting again after having stayed dry.

Matt: CORRECT
Record: 519-436

Friday, October 26, 2012

QUESTION: Medical

What is the more common term for Nocturnal enuresis?

ANSWER: Products

Bayer

Today, aspirin is a generic word in Australia, France, India, Ireland, New Zealand, Pakistan, Jamaica, Colombia, the Philippines, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States. Aspirin, with a capital "A", remains a registered trademark of Bayer in Germany, Canada, Mexico, and in over 80 other countries, where the trademark is owned by Bayer, using acetylsalicylic acid in all markets, but using different packaging and physical aspects for each.

Matt: CORRECT 
Record: 518-436

Thursday, October 25, 2012

QUESTION: Products

What company owns the trademark, Aspirin?

ANSWER: Weather

Drizzle


Matt: CORRECT 
Record: 517-436

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

QUESTION: Weather

What is the technical term, per the National Weather Service, for raindrops that are less than half a millimeter in diameter?

ANSWER: People

Lady Bird Johnson

In 1970, Johnson published A White House Diary, her intimate, behind-the-scenes account of her husband's presidency spanning November 22, 1963, to January 20, 1969. Beginning with Kennedy's assassination, Mrs. Johnson recorded the momentous events of her times, including the Great Society's War on Poverty, the national civil rights and social protest movements, her own activism on behalf of the environment, and the Vietnam War. Johnson was acquainted with a long span of fellow First Ladies, from Eleanor Roosevelt to Laura Bush, and was protected by the United States Secret Service for 44 years, longer than anyone else in history.

Matt: WRONG 
Record: 516-436

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

QUESTION: People

Who was protected by the US Secret Service longer than anyone in history?

ANSWER: Television

Kojak

In the early episodes of the series, Kojak is often seen smoking thin, brown More-brand cigarettes. Following the 1964 Surgeon General's Report on smoking, cigarette commercials were banned from American television in 1971, and trying to quit smoking became common in the 1970s. To cut down on his own habit, Kojak (and quite possibly Savalas himself) began using lollipops as a substitute. The lollipop made its debut in the Season 1 episode "Dark Sunday", broadcast on December 12, 1973: Kojak lights a cigarette as he begins questioning a witness, but thinks better of it and sticks a lollipop (specifically, a Tootsie Pop) in his mouth instead. Later in the episode, Kevin Dobson's character Crocker asks about the lollipop and Kojak replies, "I'm trying to bridge the generation gap." Lollipops became a trademark of the character, but contrary to popular belief they were only a partial substitute for cigarettes and Kojak did not quit smoking.

Matt: -- 
Record: 516-435

Monday, October 22, 2012

QUESTION: Television

What detective switched to lollipops as a vice after quitting smoking?

ANSWER: Saints

St. Jude

Saint Jude is one whose aid is sought when all hope is lost, especially in grave health matters and life-and-death situations. It is customary to make a vow that if he helps when called upon, one will publish a notice of thanks in the newspaper. Thus there often appear in the Personals column of newspaper classified ads ex-votos to this effect. The typical wording is a terse, "Thank you, St. Jude." or "St. Jude, I thank you for your intercession in response to my prayers." Each one of those notices represents a prayer that was answered by Saint Jude. This magnifies the saint's name and gives hope to those who read the notice and realize that they too may find, through Saint Jude, the help they sorely need.

Matt: WRONG 
Record: 516-435

Friday, October 19, 2012

QUESTION: Saints

Who is the patron saint of lost causes?

ANSWER: Computers

A

The home row is a key concept in typing. It is that middle horizontal row of the keyboard that starts with A and goes all the way across. The idea behind the home row is that each finger remains in light contact with a particular key there when it is not typing in order to keep "grounded", providing a reference point for every other key.

Matt: CORRECT 
Record: 516-434

Thursday, October 18, 2012

QUESTION: Computers

What is the only vowel on a keyboard's home row? Don't look at your keyboard!!

ANSWER: Places

Niagara Falls

Goat Island (previously called Iris Island) is a small island in the Niagara River, located in the middle of Niagara Falls between the Bridal Veil Falls and the Horseshoe Falls. The island is at the southwest corner of the City of Niagara Falls (and of Niagara County), New York, in the United States and is part of Niagara Falls State Park.

 Goat Island has no residents, but is a popular destination for tourists visiting the falls on the U.S. side; it offers some of the most spectacular views available there, in particular at Terrapin Point. Goat Island is connected to the U.S. mainland by two bridges carrying foot, car, and trackless train traffic, and to the smaller Luna Island (adjacent to the American Falls) by a pedestrian bridge. Goat island is largely wooded and is interlaced with foot trails. The Cave of the Winds tour elevator provides access down to the foot of the falls.

Matt: CORRECT
Record: 515-434

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

QUESTION: Places

NY's Goat Island sits right in the middle of what?

ANSWER: Music

The microphone


Matt: CORRECT 
Record: 514-434

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

QUESTION: Music

In the song Piano Man, what "smells like beer"?

ANSWER: Mythology

Arachne

In Greco-Roman mythology, Arachne was a great mortal weaver who boasted that her skill was greater than that of Athena, goddess of wisdom and strategy. Arachne refused to acknowledge that her knowledge came, in part at least, from the goddess. Offended by Arachne's arrogance, Athena set a contest between the two weavers. According to Ovid, the goddess was so envious of the magnificent tapestry and the mortal weaver's success, and perhaps offended by the girl's choice of subjects (the loves and transgressions of the gods), that she destroyed the tapestry and loom and slashed the girl's face. “Not even Pallas nor blue-fevered Envy \ Could damn Arachne's work. \ The brown haired goddess Raged at the girl's success, struck through her loom, Tore down the scenes of wayward joys in heaven.″ Ultimately, the goddess turned Arachne into a spider.

Matt: -- 
Record: 513-434

Monday, October 15, 2012

QUESTION: Mythology

Who was turned into a spider for her conceit after losing a tapestry-weaving contest to Athena?

ANSWER: Festivals

1810

Crown Prince Ludwig, later to become King Ludwig I, was married to Princess Therese of Saxe-Hildburghausen on October 12, 1810. The citizens of Munich were invited to attend the festivities held on the fields in front of the city gates to celebrate the happy royal event. The fields were named Theresienwiese ("Theresa's meadow") in honor of the Crown Princess, and have kept that name ever since, although the locals have since abbreviated the name simply to the "Wies'n". Horse races in the presence of the Royal Family marked the close of the event that was celebrated as a festival for the whole of Bavaria. The decision to repeat the horse races in the subsequent year gave rise to the tradition of the Oktoberfest.

The festival was eventually prolonged and moved ahead to September to allow for better weather conditions. Today, the last day of the festival is the first Sunday in October. In 2006, the Oktoberfest extended two extra days because the first Tuesday, October 3, was a national holiday. Over the past 200 years, Oktoberfest was canceled 24 times due to cholera epidemics and war.

Matt: WRONG
Record: 513-434

Friday, October 12, 2012

QUESTION: Festivals

What year was the first Oktoberfest held in Bavaria, Germany?

ANSWER: Countries

Great Britain

Operation Hurricane was the test of the first British atomic device on 3 October 1952. A plutonium implosion device was detonated in the lagoon between the Montebello Islands, Western Australia.

The weapon was a close copy of the Fat Man (Nagasaki) weapon, although the design was modified to use a levitated pit. This increased the power of the bomb, but was actually done as a safety measure. There were concerns that without the gap between the tamper and the pit, a criticality accident could occur. The bomb used plutonium produced mainly at Windscale (now Sellafield) in Cumbria with a low Pu-240 content since hurried production led to short irradiation times. However, Windscale could not quite meet the 1 August 1952 deadline for manufacturing the inner core and the device also used some Canadian-supplied plutonium.

Matt: WRONG
Record: 513-433

Thursday, October 11, 2012

QUESTION: Countries

What country became the world's third nuclear power with their successful "Operation Hurricane" test in 1952?

ANSWER: Baseball

Boston Red Sox & Cincinnati Reds

A well-known moment of Fisk's career came in the 12th inning of Game 6 of the 1975 World Series at Fenway Park. He hit Cincinnati Reds pitcher Pat Darcy's second pitch down the left field line that appeared to be heading into foul territory. The enduring image of Fisk jumping and waving the ball fair as he made his way to first base is considered by many to be one of baseball's greatest moments. The ball struck the foul pole, giving the Red Sox a 7–6 win and forcing a seventh and deciding game of the fall classic.

 The image of him waving the ball fair changed the way baseball was televised. During this time, cameramen covering baseball were instructed to follow the flight of the ball. In a 1999 interview, NBC cameraman Lou Gerard admitted that the classic shot was not due to his own skills as a cameraman, but because he had been distracted by a nearby rat. Unable to follow the ball, he kept the camera on Fisk instead. This play was perhaps the most important catalyst in getting camera operators to focus most of their attention on the players themselves.

Matt: CORRECT 
Record: 513-432

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

QUESTION: Baseball

What two teams were playing in the world series when Carlton Fisk hit his dramatic game 6 home run?

ANSWER: Firsts

Late Show Top Ten List


Matt: WRONG 
Record: 512-432

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

QUESTION: Firsts

On September 18, 1985, "Things that almost rhyme with 'peas'" was the very first what?

ANSWER: Books

Tommyknockers

While walking in the woods near the small town of Haven, Maine; Roberta (Bobbi) Anderson, a writer of Wild West-themed fiction, stumbles upon a metal object which turns out to be a protrusion of a long-buried alien spacecraft. Once exposed, the spacecraft begins releasing an invisible, odorless gas into the atmosphere which gradually transforms people into beings similar to the aliens who populated the spacecraft. The transformation, or "becoming," provides them with a limited form of genius which makes them very inventive, but does not provide any philosophical or ethical insight. Instead, it provokes psychotic violence (on the part of people like Becka Paulson, who kills her adulterous husband by fatally rewiring their TV, killing herself in the process) and the disappearance of a young boy, David Brown, whose older brother Hilly teleports him to another planet, referred to as Altair 4 by the Havenites.

Matt: CORRECT 
Record: 512-431

Monday, October 8, 2012

QUESTION: Books

Which Stephen King novel is named after a children's rhyme about creatures that come "knocking at the door" every night?

ANSWER: Celebrities

2004

In September 2004, it was revealed that Dangerfield had been in a coma for several weeks. Afterward, he began breathing on his own and showing signs of awareness when visited by friends. However, on October 5, 2004, he died at the UCLA Medical Center, from complications of the surgery he had undergone in August. He was a little over a month and a half short of his 83rd birthday. Dangerfield was interred in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles. His headstone reads, "Rodney Dangerfield... There goes the neighborhood.”

Matt: WRONG 
Record: 511-431

Friday, October 5, 2012

QUESTION: Celebrities

Rodney Dangerfield died on this day, in what year?

ANSWER: Books/Movies

Sleigh bell

The boy is handpicked by Santa Claus to receive "The First Gift Of Christmas." Realizing that he could choose anything in the world, the boy asks for the beautiful-sounding silver bell (that only believers in Santa can hear) that had fallen from Santa's sleigh. The boy places the bell in the right pocket of his robe, and all the children watch as Santa takes off for his yearly deliveries.

Matt: WRONG 
Record: 511-430

Thursday, October 4, 2012

QUESTION: Books/Movies

In Polar Express, the boy is picked to receive the first gift of Christmas, what item does he choose?

ANSWER: Geography

Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea, officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, is a country in Oceania, occupying the eastern half of the island of New Guinea (the western portion of the island is a part of the Indonesian provinces of Papua and West Papua) and numerous offshore islands. It is located in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, in a region defined since the early 19th century as Melanesia. The capital is Port Moresby.

Matt: WRONG 
Record: 511-429

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

ANSWER: Geography

What Pacific country is named after a region in Africa?

ANSWER: Military

Marines

Lance corporal (LCpl) is the third enlisted rank in order of seniority in the U.S. Marine Corps, just above private first class and below corporal. It is not a non-commissioned officer rank. In the Marine Corps, to call a lance corporal "corporal" is considered disrespectful to the higher rank.

 The USMC is the only component of the U.S. Armed Forces to currently have lance corporals. Promotion to lance corporal is based on time in-grade and the conduct of the Marine. Further promotion to the NCO ranks (Corporal and above) is competitive and takes into account the individual service record of the Marine. There can only be a certain number of Corporals and Sergeants in each MOS, so even with a qualifying cutting score promotions may be delayed due to an excessive number of corporals occupying billets in a certain MOS.

Matt: CORRECT 
Record: 511-428

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

QUESTION: Military

Which is the only military branch with the rank of lance corporal?

ANSWER: Magazines

Princess Diana

Diana’s image appeared on the cover of People magazine 52 times.

Matt: WRONG 
Record: 510-428

Monday, October 1, 2012

QUESTION: Magazines

Who has been on the People magazine cover more than anyone?

ANSWER: TV Theme Songs

Full House


Matt: CORRECT 
Record: 510-427