🍑💍💍
Peach Rings
1. I've technically been in a car accident
2. I've been skydiving
3. My aunt burned my foot
1. (Truth)
2. (Lie)
3. (Truth)
I play with my chin hairs when I think.
Jerry
“Ohw ouy annog llac? sretsubtsohg!”
Ghostbusters Theme Song by Ray Parker Jr.
“The Nightmare Before Christmas” is based on a poem
(FACT) The stop-motion animated feature is actually based on a poem written by none other than its producer, Tim Burton, who penned the prose in 1982.
🥜🧈☕
Peanut Butter Cup
1. I want to live in Hawaii again
2. I'm an avid sneakerhead
3. I enjoy art and various artworks
1. (Lie)
2. (Truth)
3. (Truth)
I tend to be overly gullible.
Dom
“I walyas efle leik ydobesmo’s gnwthaic me”
Somebody's Watching Me by Rockwell
Black and orange are the colors of Halloween because ancient Celts believed black symbolized prosperity and good luck, while orange was associated with fire and the sun’s energy, used to ward off evil spirits.
(CAP) Actually, black symbolized the “death” of summer and orange symbolized the fall harvest.
🐍🚗S
Snickers
1. I've lived in 4 different states
2. I've enjoyed working in retail for three years
3. I've been to the beach more than once
1. (Truth)
2. (Truth)
3. (Lie)
I eat peanut butter by the spoonful when I'm high
Jaida
“Sith si Lwloanhee! Veeryobdy csream!”
This is Halloween from The Nightmare Before Christmas
“Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn and caldron bubble” is a famous line from a 1926 children’s book about friendship, where a group of friends gathers to make a potion for a school science fair, completely unrelated to witches."
(CAP) The line "Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn and caldron bubble" is from Shakespeare's play "Macbeth," specifically referring to the scene where the three witches stir a potion in a cauldron.
✌🌊🧻
Tootsie Roll
1. I have a scar on my left foot
2. I got my ears pierced in 2021
3. "In The Night" was the first Weeknd song I heard
1. (Lie)
2. (Truth)
3. (Truth)
I notice peoples footwear before anything else.
Omar
"It’s lsoce to hgimdtin, stniohegm lveis' knilrug in the adrk"
Thriller by Michael Jackson
People used to carve turnips, not pumpkins.
(FACT) Initially, the Irish and Scottish carved turnips as a way to remember deceased souls. When they immigrated to the U.S., they realized that pumpkins were much easier to carve and the rest, as they say, is history.
😄🏃♂️🪑
Jolly Rancher
1. I hate musicals
2. I really like D&D
3. My shoe game could be better
1. (Truth)
2. (Truth)
3. (Lie)
I like to do a Mongolian voice
Tony
"Ti saw a eon-eyde eon hnored, ilfyn' prelpu elpeop taree, ures lokos rnegsta ot em."
Purple People Eater by Sheb Wooley
To encourage more positive Halloween activities, “Beggars' Night” was implemented on Oct. 30, the night before the holiday. On that night, children went door to door to get “treats for eats,” but only if they told a joke first.
(FACT) According to the Des Moines Register, the concept began back in the late 1930s after Halloween shenanigans often resulted in a wave of vandalism.