Mythology 101
Medicinal Madness
Strange Animals
Movie Quotes
Thanksgiving & Feasting?
200

Wednesday is named after this Norse god.

Odin (Wodin)

200

This pungent kitchen staple has been used for centuries as an antimicrobial remedy and was even hung around necks during medieval plagues.

Garlic

200

This flightless bird from Australia can run up to 30 mph and has a terrifying “dinosaur-like” call, but can’t fly at all.

Emu

200

“They may take our lives, but they’ll never take our freedom!”

Braveheart

200

This U.S. president tried to move Thanksgiving in 1939 to lengthen the Christmas shopping season, a move critics mockingly called “Franksgiving.”

Franklin D. Roosevelt

400

This month of the year is named after the Roman god of war.

March (Mars)

400

This bright yellow spice, common in curries, has been used in Ayurvedic medicine for thousands of years for inflammation—thanks to its compound curcumin.

Turmeric

400

This is the only mammal that can truly fly (not glide like others)

Bat

400

“Roads? Where we’re going, we don’t need roads.”

Back to the Future

400

This first U.S. president to informally pardon a turkey.

Abraham Lincoln

600

Describing someone as self-obsessed with their own appearance and egotistical can be easily captured by one term, named after this Greek mythological character.

Narcissus

600

This herb contains compounds that were historically used as a natural anesthetic during surgeries, pupil dilator, and pain reliever despite its high toxicity.

Belladonna (Nightshade)

600

This ocean creature has three hearts and blue blood due to a copper-based molecule called hemocyanin.

Octopus
600

“I’m not bad. I’m just drawn that way.”

Who Framed Roger Rabbit?

600

This 1953 mistake at a frozen-food company, involving 260 tons of leftover turkey, accidentally created this now-classic American convenience meal.

TV Dinner

800

The word “hysterical,” meaning overly emotional or out of control, stems from an ancient Greek belief that this organ could wander around the body and cause illness.

The uterus.

800

This traditional Chinese fungus, often found growing on dead caterpillars, became famous as a performance-enhancing tonic due to claims it boosts stamina.

Cordyceps

800

This tiny animal, famous for surviving extreme environments, can endure freezing, radiation, and even space exposure by entering a state called cryptobiosis.

Tardigrade (Water Bear)

800

“I want you to hit me as hard as you can.”

Fight Club

800

This U.S. state consumes more turkey per capita on Thanksgiving than any other—despite not being one of the biggest turkey producers.

California

1000

Calling something a “Sisyphean task” means it is endless and futile—just like the punishment of Sisyphus, which was this. 

Pushing a boulder uphill.

1000

This herb—now better known for flavoring absinthe—was historically used to expel parasites and was considered so potent it was called “the Plant of Immortality” by the ancient Egyptians.

Wormwood

1000

This lizard can squirt blood from its eyes as a defense mechanism, confusing predators and giving it a chance to flee.

Horned Lizard

1000

"I drink your milkshake! I drink it up!"

There Will Be Blood 

(spoken by Daniel Day Lewis, the greatest actor who ever lived)

1000

A brutal winter in 1609 (12 years before the first Thanksgiving) left Jamestown, Virginia pilgrims in a catastrophic famine--they resorted to eating dogs, horses and even each other. The name for this event is known as this.

The Starving Time.

M
e
n
u