A Serious Pursuit of the Trivial

  • Golden II

    This is a second outing for a theme based on the title. The word ‘golden’ appears in either the question or the answer, so there’s no multiple-choice.

    Quidditch arena.
    Image Pinterest
    1. The Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay are connected by what strait?
    2. In 1967, what British group had number 1 on the UK Singles Chart and number 11 on the US charts with Silence is Golden?
    3. In Quidditch, the Seeker needs to capture what to end the game?
    4. In 2017, the Vegas Golden Knights made their debut in which sports league?
    5. Nicole Kidman’s character in The Golden Compass (2007) was who?

    Good luck! I will post the answers later today.

  • Golden | Answers

    The Golden Girls.
    Image BBC

    The answers to my earlier post are shown in bold below. I have included the question simply for your information.

    1. The Golden Girls, which first aired in 1985, was set in which US city?
      • MiamiThe Golden Girls is an American sitcom about four older women sharing a home in Miami. The show aired on NBC for seven seasons, spanning 180 episodes receiving critical acclaim, winning multiple awards including Emmys and Golden Globes. The series ranked among the top ten in Nielsen ratings for six seasons and is still popular today.
        Goldeneye, Jamaica.
        Image Wikipedia
    2. English author Ian Fleming’s Caribbean estate was named…
      • Goldeneye—is the name of Ian Fleming’s estate in Jamaica, built in 1946 on a cliff overlooking a private beach. The estate, featuring a three-bedroom house and swimming pool, hosted celebrities and filmmakers. It is now a hotel and resort.
        Jack Nicklaus, Augusta National Golf Club, 2006.
        Image Wikipedia
    3. Who is the ‘Golden Bear’, a winner of over 70 events on the PGA Tour?
      • Jack Nicklaus—nicknamed “the Golden Bear”, is an American retired professional golfer and golf course designer. He won 117 professional tournaments, including a record 18 major championships, and is widely regarded as one of the greatest golfers of all time. Nicklaus also holds records for the most top three finishes in PGA Tour history and the most major tournament appearances.
        Golden Horn, Bosphorus and Sea of Marmara.
        Image Wikipedia
    4. What body of water do the Halic Bridge and Ataturk Bridge cross? (Two word answer)
      • Golden Horn—is an inlet of the Bosphorus in Istanbul near to where the Bosphorus meets the Sea of Marmara. A natural inlet the Golden Horn separates the old historic heart of Istanbul from the remainder of the city.
        William Wordsworth.
        Image National Trust/Wikipedia
    5. Wordsworth’s poem, which includes the following quoted lines, has what multiple-word title?
      • I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud—the full poem is shown below. I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud is a popular lyric poem by William Wordsworth, inspired by a walk with his sister in 1802. First published in 1807 and revised in 1815 It is sometimes called Daffodils.Wordsworth’s poem, which includes the following quoted lines, has what multiple-word title?

    I Wondered Lonely as a Cloud

    By William Wordsmith

    I wandered lonely as a cloud
    That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
    When all at once I saw a crowd,
    A host, of golden daffodils;
    Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
    Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.

    Continuous as the stars that shine
    And twinkle on the milky way,
    They stretched in never-ending line
    Along the margin of a bay:
    Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
    Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.

    The waves beside them danced; but they
    Out-did the sparkling waves in glee:
    A poet could not but be gay,
    In such a jocund company:
    I gazed—and gazed—but little thought
    What wealth the show to me had brought:

    For oft, when on my couch I lie
    In vacant or in pensive mood,
    They flash upon that inward eye
    Which is the bliss of solitude;
    And then my heart with pleasure fills,
    And dances with the daffodils
  • Golden

    Today’s post, 6 June 2025, has a theme based on the post title. The word ‘golden’ is contained in either the question or the answer consequently, there is no multiple-choice.

    The Golden Girls.
    Image BBC
    1. The Golden Girls, which first aired in 1985, was set in which US city?
    2. English author Ian Fleming’s Caribbean estate was named…
    3. Who is the ‘Golden Bear’, a winner of over 70 events on the PGA Tour?
    4. What body of water do the Halic Bridge and Ataturk Bridge cross? (Two word answer)
    5. Wordsworth’s poem, which includes the following quoted lines, has what multiple-word title?
      When all at once I saw a crowd,
      A host, of golden daffodils;
      Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
      Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.

    Good luck! I will post the answers later today.

  • Numbers | Answers

    The answers to my earlier post are shown in bold below. I have included the question simply for your information.

    Most of the Apollo astronauts gathered at the Johnson Space Center in Houston in 1978
    Image Wikipedia
    1. 46 BCE was known as annus confusionis, the ‘Year of Confusion’, as its length was altered to align with the implementation of the Julian Calendar. Consequently 46 BCE consisted of how many days?
      • 445 days—In 45 BCE, Julius Caesar introduced the Julian calendar, adding leap months to the Roman calendar to align it with the solar year. This resulted in the preceding year, 46 BCE, becoming known as the ’Year of Confusion’, a 445-day year—— almost 80 days longer than the orbit of Earth around the Sun, the sidereal year.
    2. The Complete Deaths by Spymonkey is a play which includes all the onstage deaths in the works of William Shakespeare. Including one which may often be overlooked, how many deaths are there in total?
      • 75—Spymonkey perform all 74, 75 when the black ill-favoured fly killed in Titus Andronicus (Act III, scene 2) is counted, onstage deaths from Shakespeare’s works, ranging from stabbings to poisonings, in a humorous and moving tribute. Directed by Tim Crouch, the show has delighted audiences worldwide since its 2016 Brighton Festival debut.
    3. What number features in the title of the 1915 book which was the first of five novels featuring Richard Hannay?
      • 39The Thirty-Nine Steps, a 1915 adventure novel by John Buchan, introduced Richard Hannay, a resourceful hero. The novel, serialised and published in 1915, has been adapted numerous times, including films and a stage play.
    4. The Summer and Winter Olympics were last held in the same year in …
      • 1992—The 1992 Albertville Olympic Games were the last Winter Games to be staged in the same year as the Summer Games.
    5. How many astronauts walked on the moon between 1969 and 1972?
      • 12—Twelve astronauts have landed on the Moon. This was achieved through six NASA missions, each with two pilot-astronauts flying a Lunar Module. The missions spanned 41 months, beginning on July 20, 1969, with Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on Apollo 11, and ending on December 14, 1972, with Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt on Apollo 17. Cernan was the last man to step off the lunar surface. All Apollo lunar missions had a third crew member who remained on board the command module.
  • Numbers

    Image Pinterest

    A few questions with various numbers as the answers.

    1. 46 BCE known as annus confusionis, the ‘Year of Confusion’, as its length was altered to align with the implementation of the Julian Calendar. Consequently, 46 BCE consisted of how many days?
      • 319 days
      • 386 days
      • 445 days
    2. The Complete Deaths by Spymonkey is a play which includes all the onstage deaths in the works of William Shakespeare. Including one which may often be overlooked, how many deaths are there in total?
      • 63
      • 69
      • 75
    3. What number features in the title of the 1915 book which was the first of five novels featuring Richard Hannay?
      • 10
      • 21
      • 39
    4. The Summer and Winter Olympics were last held in the same year in …
      • 1988
      • 1992
      • 1996
    5. How many astronauts walked on the moon between 1969 and 1972?
      • 8
      • 10
      • 12

    Good luck! I will post the answers later today.

  • Through the looking glass

    The answers to my earlier post are shown in bold below. I have included the question simply for your information.

    First public demonstration in Annonay, 4 June 1783.
    Image Wikipedia
    1. On 4 June 1783, an uncrewed hot-air balloon was launched at Annonay in southeastern France. This marked the first public demonstration of the discovery that hot air in a large, lightweight bag rises. Who made this discovery and constructed and launched the balloon? Who made this discovery and constructed and launched the balloon?
      • Montgolfier Brothers—Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Étienne, invented the hot air balloon and conducted the first untethered flights in 1783.
        Transcontinental Express.
        Image Pinterest
    2. On this day in 1876, the first Transcontinental Express arrived in San Francisco after travelling from New York. How long did the journey take?
      • 83 hours and 39 minutes—On 4 June 1876, the Transcontinental Express, an express train, arrived in San Francisco, California, via the first transcontinental railroad. This remarkable feat was achieved in just 83 hours and 39 minutes, leaving New York City behind. The news of the Transcontinental Express’s arrival spread rapidly across the United States, captivating newspapers and sparking widespread excitement.
        Ariane 5 flight VA-256 on the launch pad with the James Webb Space Telescope
        Image Wikipedia
    3. Today in 1996, the maiden flight of the European Space Agencies Ariane 5 rocket ended in an explosion after 37 seconds. What was the cause of this incident?
      • Software bug—Ariane flight V88, the maiden flight of Ariane 5, failed due to software errors causing the rocket to veer off course and self-destruct. The failure, costing over US$370 million, is known as one of the most infamous software bugs in history.
        Henry Ford sits in his first automobile, the Ford Quadricycle, in 1896.
        Image Wikipedia
    4. In 1896, Henry Ford completed a successful test on his first gasoline-powered automobile. What did he call it?
      • Ford Quadricycle—in 1896, Henry Ford completed his first experimental automobile, the Quadricycle, in Detroit. This success led to his founding of the Ford Motor Company in 1903 and become one of the world’s richest men. The original Quadricycle is in The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
        Illustration of Humpty Dumpty by John Tenniel, from Through the Looking Glass, 1871.
        Image Wikipedia
    5. On 4 June 1937, an American supermarket chain introduced one of the world’s first shopping carts. What was the supermarket chain?
      • Humpty Dumpty—Sylvan Goldman, owner of the Humpty Dumpty supermarket chain in Oklahoma. Inspired by a night of contemplation in his office in 1936, Goldman wondered how customers could move more groceries.
  • Through the looking glass

    Here are a few questions which are related to today’s date, June 4th.

    Illustration from Through the Looking Glass.
    Image Wikipedia
    1. On 4 June 1783, an uncrewed hot-air balloon was launched at Annonay in southeastern France. This marked the first public demonstration of the discovery that hot air in a large, lightweight bag rises. Who made this discovery and constructed and launched the balloon? Who made this discovery and constructed and launched the balloon?
      • Leclerc Bothers
      • Meirovitz Brothers
      • Montgolfier Brothers
    2. On this day in 1876, the first Transcontinental Express arrived in San Francisco after travelling from New York. How long did the journey take?
      • 67 hours and 54 minutes
      • 75 hours and 22 minutes
      • 83 hours and 39 minutes
    3. Today in 1996, the maiden flight of the European Space Agencies Ariane 5 rocket ended in an explosion after 37 seconds. What was the cause of this incident?
      • Fuel leak
      • Lightning strike
      • Software bug
    4. In 1896, Henry Ford completed a successful test on his first gasoline-powered automobile. What did he call it?
      • Ford Gasoline-Carriage
      • Ford Model A
      • Ford Quadricycle
    5. On 4 June 1937, an American supermarket chain introduced one of the world’s first shopping carts. What was the supermarket chain?
      • Humpty Dumpty
      • Daisy
      • Tweedledum and Tweedledee

    Good luck! I will post the answers later today.

  • Hatches, matches and despatches | Answers

    The answers to my earlier post are shown in bold below. I have included the question simply for your information.

    Josephine Baker, 1940.
    Image Wikipedia
    1. Born in St Louis, Missouri, on 3 June 1926, this singer and dancer was a resistance member and spy in occupied France during World War II. Who was she?
      • Josephine Baker—born in St. Louis, Missouri, was an American-born French dancer, singer and actress. She renounced her US citizenship and became a French national in 1937. Baker aided the French Resistance during World War II, working with the British and US Secret Services. After the war, she received French honours. Baker was inducted into the Panthéon in Paris in 2021, the first black woman to receive this honour.
        Rafael Nadal, 2009.
        Image Wikipedia
    2. Tennis player Rafael Nadal was born on this day in 1986. He won his first Grand Slam singles title in 2005 at the …
      • French Open—Rafael Nadal, a former Spanish professional tennis player, won 92 ATP Tour-level singles titles, including 22 major titles and an Olympic gold medal. He holds the record for the longest single-surface win streak in the Open Era.
        Château de Candé, Monts, Indre-et-Loire, France, 2007.
        Image Wikipedia
    3. On this day in 1937, the Duke of Windsor, formerly King Edward VIII, married Wallis Simpson, the woman for whom he had abdicated the British throne. Where were they married?
      • Château de Candé, Tours, France—The Dukedom of Windsor was created in 1937 for Edward VIII after his abdication to marry Wallis Simpson. The title, derived from Windsor Castle, became extinct upon Edward’s death in 1972 as he died without issue. They were married in France where he lived in exile, no members of his family attended the wedding.
        Anthony Quinn in Barabbas (1961)
        Image Wikipedia
    4. An actor who died today in 2001 had played the following roles during a long career. In 1961, he was Andrea Stavros in The Guns of Navarone; the same year, he took the title role in Barrabas and the following year, he was the Bedouin sheikh Auda Abu Tayi in Lawrence of Arabia (1962). Who was he?
      • Anthony Quinn—Anthony Quinn, born in Mexico and raised in the US, was a two-time Academy Award-winning actor known for his passionate roles in over 100 films, television shows and stage productions. He was also a civil rights activist, painter and author.
        Frank Kafka, 1923.
        Image Wikipedia
    5. An author and lawyer who died on this day in 1924 has an adjective named after him. The adjective is defined as ‘characteristic or reminiscent of the oppressive or nightmarish qualities of …’s fictional world’. What name is omitted from this definition?
      • Frank Kafka—the adjective is kafkaesque. Kafka was a Jewish, Austrian and Czech writer from Prague, known for exploring alienation and absurdity. His best-known works include The Metamorphosis, The Trial and The Castle. Despite being prolific, he burned much of his work due to self-doubt and was relatively unknown until his influence spread globally after World War II, two decades after his death.
  • Hatches, matches and despatches

    A few questions related to people who were born, got married or died on today’s date, June 3.

    King Edward VIII, 1936.
    Image Wikipedia
    1. Born in St Louis, Missouri, on 3 June 1926, this singer and dancer was a resistance member and spy in occupied France during World War II. Who was she?
      • Josephine Baker
      • Mata Hari
      • Edith Cavell
    2. Tennis player Rafael Nadal was born on this day in 1986. He won his first Grand Slam singles title in 2005 at the …
      • Australian Open
      • French Open
      • US Open
    3. On this day in 1937, the Duke of Windsor, formerly King Edward VIII, married Wallis Simpson, the woman for whom he had abdicated the British throne. Where were they married?
      • Chapel Royal, Holyrood Palace, Edinburgh, Scotland
      • Château de Candé, Tours, France
      • Crathie Kirk, Balmoral, Scotland
    4. An actor who died today in 2001 had played the following roles during a long career. In 1961, he was Andrea Stavros in The Guns of Navarone; the same year, he took the title role in Barrabas and the following year, he was the Bedouin sheikh Auda Abu Tayi in Lawrence of Arabia (1962). Who was he?
      • Anthony Daniels
      • Anthony Perkins
      • Anthony Quinn
    5. An author and lawyer who died on this day in 1924 has an adjective named after him. The adjective is defined as ‘characteristic or reminiscent of the oppressive or nightmarish qualities of …’s fictional world’. What name is omitted from this definition?
      • Lewis Carroll
      • Frank Kafka
      • Bram Stoker

    Good luck! I will post the answers later today.

  • A trivial pursuit | Answers

    The answers to my earlier post are shown in bold below. I have included the question simply for your information.

    Alfred Deakin.
    Image Wikipedia
    1. Alfred Deakin became prime minister for the third time on the 2 June 1909. In what country was he premier?
      • Australia—Alfred Deakin, Australia’s second Prime Minister, was a key figure in Federation and early Australian politics. He served three terms, leading the Protectionist Party and later the Liberal Party, and is remembered for his influence on the “Australian settlement” and the establishment of a two-party system.
        Coronation portrait of Queen Elizabeth II, June 1953.
        Image Wikipedia
    2. Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation, today in 1953, took place at…
      • Westminster Abbey—The coronation of Elizabeth II as Queen of the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth realms took place on 2 June 1953 at Westminster Abbey. The ceremony, televised for the first time, included an oath, anointing, and crowning.
    3. On this day in 1962, during the FIFA World Cup, police had to intervene multiple times in a match to stop violence between Italian players and those from…
      • Chile—The Battle of Santiago, a 1962 FIFA World Cup match between Chile and Italy, was known for its violence, including two red cards, numerous punches, and four police interventions.
        Painting of two alleged witches being tried in Salem, Massachusetts as part of the infamous witchhunts.
        Image Wikipedia
    4. Today in 1692, the first person to be tried for witchcraft in Salem went on trial and was found guilty. Who was she?
      • Bridget Bishop—Bridget Bishop was accused of witchcraft by five young women and tried in the first case of the Salem Witchcraft Trials. Multiple witnesses testified against her, claiming she harmed them through apparitions and physical attacks. Despite a jury finding a third nipple on her, Bishop was ultimately convicted of witchcraft based on the sheer number of accusations and her perceived dishonesty in court. She was sentenced to death and hanged.
        Surveyor 1.
        Image Wikipedia
    5. On 2 June 1966, Surveyor 1 became the first US spacecraft to soft-land on another world when it touched down in Oceanus Procellarum on…
      • Moon—Surveyor 1, the first US lunar soft-lander, successfully landed on the Ocean of Storms (Oceanus Procellarum) on 2 June 1966. It transmitted 11,237 photos of the lunar surface to Earth, providing valuable data for the Apollo Moon landings.