Social Media
Trumpster Fires
Summer Blockbusters
Reality TV
Sports Spots
100

This platform was once known as Picaboo and was an iOS-only app before it was renamed, rebranded, and launched across iOS and Android in 2012.

Snapchat

100

This Trumpster invented the now infamous phrase "alternative facts."

Kellyanne Conway during a Meet the Press interview in Jan 2017

100

The summer blockbuster was invented with the nationwide release of this movie in 1975, which chomped a record-breaking $123 million at the box office.

Jaws

100

Ashton Kutcher hosted this prank-based show from 2003 to 2007.

Punk'd

100

This L.A. venue has seen many events in its 94-year history, including 2 Olympic games

The Coliseum

200

This platform is said to be “the king of the second screen,” as users often flock to the service during big events. 

Twitter

200

This Press Secretary assured reporters that she/he would never lie to them, before immediately going on to lie to them for 10 months.

Kayleigh McEnany

200

This became the top-earning inspirational-teacher movie of all time (even now) when it debuted in the summer of 1989.

Dead Poet's Society

200

A hipper, updated version of Life Styles of the Rich and Famous, this reality show spotlighting celebrity homes aired on MTV from 2000 to 2010.

MTV Cribs

200

1n 1990, after a $5M donation, this school's indoor sports facility was renamed Coors Events Center

University of Colorado

300

A very early iteration of this platform displayed a header image featuring a man’s face obscured behind binary code. The identity of the man could not be seen clearly, but it later came to light that the face was Al Pacino.

Facebook

300

This Trumpster called Trump "the most flawed person [he's] ever met." He also said Trump is the first president in his lifetime “who does not try to unite the American people—does not even try."

John Kelly [in 2019]

300

This summer blockbuster, released in 2008, marked the second time Paul Rudd wrote himself a lead role in a movie.

Ant-Man

300

This nonfiction program shows the lives of Oregon-based family the Roloffs, which includes parents Matt and Amy, fraternal twins Zach and Jeremy, daughter Molly, and son Jacob. Matt, Amy, and Zach have dwarfism, and major storylines of the show are focused on the obstacles they face.

Little People, Big World

300

San Diego State's Aztecs play this sport in Tony Wynn Stadium

baseball

400

This platform was a once popular live-streaming app that closed in 2016. It was ahead of its time, launching a live-streaming service ahead of Twitter and Facebook, but its fame was short-lived.

Meerkat

400

This Trumpster lasted only 10 days in White House; he stepped down after a week that included an expletive-laden phone call with reporters where he criticized Steve Bannon and Reince Priebus.

Anthony Scaramucci

400

For the opening of this movie, Tom Cruise, at the age of 52, strapped himself to the outside of a plane flying at 5,000 feet. No stunt double.

Mission: Impossible 5

400

This, the longest-running reality tv show (running for 31 years) ended this summer in response to the Black Lives Matter movement.

Cops

400

Three Rivers Stadium was home to this city's NFL and MLB teams until it's demolition in 2001 

Pittsburgh

500

Not many people are aware that the 99% movement started on this platform. What was a simple post here was taken as an ideology to stand up against the corporate greed that the top 1% of the wealthiest are causing.

Tumblr

500

This Trumpster didn't appreciate comedian Michelle Wolf's roast at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, which included an allusion to her makeup and to her role in The Handmaid's Tale.

Sarah Huckabee Sanders

500

Steven Spielberg hit the jackpot in the summer of 1982 when both E.T.: The Extraterrestrial and this movie opened a week apart in June.

Poltergeist

500

Project Runway aired for three seasons on this network before it returned to its original home on Bravo TV after Harvey Weinstein declared bankruptcy and sold the rights to Bravo. 

Lifetime Network

500

Demolished in 1996 to make way for Turner Field, this stadium was home to the Atlanta Braves for 30 years.

Fulton County Stadium