Hot off the Press
Beyond the Cape
Songs of the Summer
Going for Gold
Capes n' Claws
100

In April 2022, NOAA published a report noting that global sea level has risen 8-9 inches since 1880 due to this man made phenomenon.

Global Warming

100

Step aside, Simone Biles! This ultra patriotic hero's name faced many itterations, including Super American.

Captain America

100

Bananarama's "Cruel Summer" was featured in this iconic 1984 film, starring Ralph Macchio and Pat Morita as they take on the Cobra Kai dojo.

The Karate Kid

100

The opening ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics featured this fictional spy skydiving into the Olympic Stadium alongside Queen Elizabeth II.

James Bond

100

The most abundant land bird in North America, characterized by its warm orange or red underparts and dark heads.

Robin

200

A June 2024 article in NPR explained this phenomenon, described by a National Weather Service meteorologist as "like a lid on a pot" trapping heat inside.

Heat Dome

200

Thor, Loki, and Odin are all adapted from from the mythology of this North Germanic peninsula.

Scandinavia

200

In 2014, this singer/DJ's song "Summer" was a smash hit, peaking at number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 and topping the charts in their native UK.

Calvin Harris

200

At the 2008 Beijing Games, American swimmer Michael Phelps won eight gold medals, besting the former record of seven set by this man in 1972.

Mark Spitz

200

There are more than 20 quadrillion of these colonial, matriarchal insects on our planet.

Ant-Man

300

In June 2024, Boston reached its highest temperature ever recorded, peaking at 108 at this combined measurement of heat and humidity.

Heat Index

300

"Wham!" "Pow!" "Crash!" - all examples of this linguistic trait.

Onomatopoeia

300

Don Henley wasn't singing about baseball, but the name "Boys of Summer" also refers to this MLB team - champs in '55, '59, '63, '65, '81, '88, and 2020.

Los Angeles Dodgers

300

The Olympic motto "Citius, Altius, Fortius" translates to "Faster, higher," and this comparative word.

Stronger

300

Also called the carcajou or quickhatch, this arctic-dwelling creature's diet includes porcupine, marmot and lemmings.

Wolverine

400

On June 30, 1962, environmentalist Rachel Carson published this groundbreaking book that started the Environmental movement in America.  

Silent Spring

400

Superman's Achilles heel gave its name to a 2000 hit by this Mississippi rock band.

3 Doors Down

400

The catchy piano intro to Kid Rock's "All Summer Long" was sampled from "Werewolves of London", a 1978 hit by this American singer-songwriter.

Warren Zevon

400

The first modern Olympic games were held in Athens, Greece in this year, when 169 out of the 241 competing athletes that year were Greek.

1896

400

The intimidating mascot of an NFC South football team.

Black Panther

500

In 1861, Robert Fitzroy published the first ever public weather forecast in this British daily newspaper.

The Times

500

In a classic example of "RAS Syndrome", the C in "DC Comics" stands for this word.

Comics

500

Originally known as St. John's College, this New York university counts among its alumni Geraldine Ferraro, Denzel Washington, and "Summertime Sadness" singer Lana Del Rey - though her classmates might've known her as Elizabeth.

Lana Del Rey

500

At the 1992 Olympics, athletes from parts of the former Soviet Union competed under this name - country code EUN, after its French translation.

The Unified Team

500

This notorious, unconventional footwear brand gained overnight popularity during the early days of the coronavirus pandemic.  

Killer Croc

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