Linguistic Arts (Literature and History)
Music
Visual Arts
Media Arts
Culinary Arts
500

Which legendary English outlaw lived in Sherwood Forest and stole from the rich and gave to the poor?

Robin Hood

500

The _____ is a drum that has an adjustable pitch.

Timpani

500

Who painted Starry Night?

Vincent Van Gogh

500

Who is the mascot for Disney?

Mickey Mouse

500

True or false: the British government told their people that onions help see in the dark to hide the fact that they had invented a new radar technology.

False (they said it was carrots)

650

Which American president is famous for wearing a top hat and leading the U.S. through the Civil War until his assassination in 1865?

Abraham Lincoln

650

Who is known as the bandmaster of America?

John Philip Sousa

650

True or false: Ancient Roman sculptors made statues with detachable heads.

True

650

True or false: Yoda was originally named Bluffy.

False (he was originally named Buffy).
650

Which is safer while cooking: a sharp knife or a dull knife?

A sharp knife (dull knives may slip and cut you)

800

True or false: The Lord of the Rings is a trilogy.

False

800

True or false: the octobass is called the octobass because it is an octave below the bass

True

800

How many days did Le Bateau hang upside-down in MoMA before someone noticed?

46 days

800

What video game console survived a barracks bombing during the Gulf War and is still on display–and functional–at a store in New York?

Nintendo Game Boy

800

A chef with a hundred-pleated hat was said to have mastered 100 ______ recipes.

Egg

1000

In what year did World War II end?

1945

1000

In 2013, the British Navy used whose songs to scare off Somali pirates, as they believed the pirates would "hate them most".

Britney Spears

1000

How long did it take da Vinci to paint the lips of the Mona Lisa?

12 years!

1000

In what year was the first mainstream American film to show a toilet flushing, Psycho, made?

1960

1000

Which is botanically a berry:

a) strawberries

b) peaches

c) mulberries

d) watermelons

e) olives

d) Watermelons

2000

To whom was the editorial in the New York Sun starting with "Your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except what they see. They think that nothing can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds." (Hint: it had to do with Santa Claus).

Virginia O'Hanlon (the editorial is "Yes, Virginia, There is a Santa Claus.")

2000

The metal band Hatebeak has what kind of bird as its lead singer?

A gray parrot named Waldo

2000

Who was Salvador Dalí named after?

His older brother who had died 9 months before he was born.

2000

Who was the original Shrek before his passing in 1997?

Chris Farley

2000

Apples float because they are ___% air.

25

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