Classic Radio & TV Stars
The Vintage Kitchen
Name That Tune
Sports Heroes
Historic Firsts
100
  • Q: This comedian was famous for his "feud" with Fred Allen and for always claiming to be 39 years old, no matter how much time passed.

A: Jack Benny

100
  • Q: Starting in the late 1940s, housewives began hosting "parties" to sell these airtight plastic storage containers.

A: Tupperware

100
  • Q: This 1939 song, often associated with Jimmy Davis, includes the line: "You'll never know dear, how much I love you."

A: "You Are My Sunshine"

100
  • Q: Known as "The Yankee Clipper," this baseball star famously had a 56-game hitting streak in 1941.

A: Joe DiMaggio

100
  • Q: In 1945, this international organization was founded in San Francisco to replace the League of Nations and maintain world peace.

A: The United Nations

200
  • Q: She was the ditzy but lovable half of a husband-and-wife comedy duo alongside George Burns.

A: Gracie Allen

200
  • Q: In 1953, the Swanson company changed American dinner time forever by introducing this frozen, pre-portioned meal.

A: The TV Dinner

200
  • Q: Patti Page had a massive 1950 hit with this song about a girl who loses her sweetheart at a dance.

A: "The Tennessee Waltz"

200
  • Q: This track and field legend won four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, defying Hitler’s theories of racial superiority.

A: Jesse Owens

200
  • Q: This Scottish scientist’s 1928 discovery of "mold juice" finally became widely available as this life-saving medicine in the 1940s.

A: Penicillin

300
  • Q: Known as "Mr. Television," he hosted Texaco Star Theater and was famous for his outrageous costumes and slapstick humor.

A: Milton Berle

300
  • Q: These colorful, heat-resistant glass nesting bowls became a staple in almost every 1940s and 50s kitchen.

A: Pyrex

300
  • Q: This 1957 Jerry Lee Lewis hit warned listeners that "there's a whole lot of shakin' goin' on."

A: "Great Balls of Fire"

300
  • Q: He was the heavy-weight boxing champion from 1937 to 1949, nicknamed the "Brown Bomber."

A: Joe Louis

300
  • Q: This iconic orange-gate bridge in California was completed and opened to the public in 1937.

A: The Golden Gate Bridge

400
  • Q: This masked hero and his faithful friend Tonto first rode across the radio airwaves in 1933 before moving to TV.

A: The Lone Ranger

400
  • Q: Families would often save these little gummed labels from grocery stores and paste them into books to trade for household appliances.

A: S&H Green Stamps

400
  • Q: Doris Day sang this song in 1945, perfectly capturing the feeling of soldiers returning home from the war.

A: "Sentimental Journey"

400
  • Q: This woman was a multisport phenom who won two gold medals in track in 1932 before becoming a champion professional golfer.

A: Babe Didrikson Zaharias

400
  • Q: These two territories were officially admitted as the 49th and 50th U.S. states in 1959.

A: Alaska and Hawaii

500
  • Q: He was a beloved redhead comedian known for characters like Clem Kadiddlehopper and the "Mean Widdle Kid."

A: Red Skelton

500
  • Q: Before the electric version became popular, this manual tool was used to whip cream or beat eggs by turning a side crank.

A: Hand Crank Egg Beater (or Rotary Beater)

500
  • Q: This "Singing Cowboy" was famous for his theme song "Back in the Saddle Again."

A: Gene Autry

500
  • Q: This Boston Red Sox legend, known as "The Splendid Splinter," was the last MLB player to hit over .400 in a season (1941).

A: Ted Williams

500
  • Q: In 1947, Chuck Yeager became the first person to fly faster than the speed of sound in this rocket-powered plane.

A: The Bell X-1