PETER’S QUIZ - Answers!
Here are the Day 1 answers!
Entertainment:
- Who is the current voice of Kermit the Frog?
Steve Whitmire!
As you may or may not know, I’m totally obsessed with The Muppets. When I moved countries I got rid of all my non-Muppet books, and over the course of reading everything I could about their creation and development (and Jim Henson’s death), you pick up a lot of incidental information. This one, to me, is an insanely obvious one, but I think maybe one or two people got it.
(That’s the main reason I wanted to put this quiz together! I’m always fascinated by how much other people consider obvious that I don’t know at all, and vice-versa.)
- What is the highest-grossing film directed by a woman?
Frozen!
At its peak, Frozen was the fifth-highest grossing film of all time. It’s still the highest-grossing animated film, and since Jennifer Lee was one of the directors, it’s the highest-grossing film directed by a woman.
A few people pointed out that it shouldn’t count, because it’s only co-directed by a woman, but fuck that. No one has ever said “No Country For Old Man doesn’t belong on a list of films directed by a man.” (Also, Disney/Pixar tend to use “co-directed” in a really specific way that doesn’t apply here. Frozen was directed by Jennifer Lee. It was also directed by Chris Buck. I have no issue with that.)
- Which is the only Pixar film that the Pizza Planet truck doesn’t appear in?
The Incredibles!
The Pizza Planet truck features prominently in Toy Story and Toy Story 2, and since then has become one of the Pixar easter eggs (along with the Pixar Ball, A113, and a reference to a future film) that appears in all of their features. Except for The Incredibles - there’s a bunch of different reasoning for this, but the one that makes the most sense is “Brad Bird was new to the company and didn’t realize they were doing that”.
The best cameo is in Brave (it’s a wooden carving in the witch’s hut) and the worst is in The Good Dinosaur (there are rocks which are shaped like the truck above the pawprint rocks on the silo). I really want to make a series of YouTube videos about Easter Eggs some day; they’re one of my total obsessions.
- Name two Rob Reiner films in which a character always reads the last page of a book before reading the rest.
Alex and Emma, and When Harry Met Sally.
No one got this one. I should have seen this coming - firstly, knowing what films Rob Reiner directed isn’t super common (unlike Tarantino or The Coen Brothers or even Spielberg, who have a really distinct style, Rob Reiner is incredible because of the versatility of his work). Secondly, one of the films is shiiiiiiit, and I don’t blame you for not having seen it/not remembering its weird reference to one of his earlier, vastly superior works.
- Why was Beyonce’s song “Drunk In Love” banned from several college radio stations?
The line “Eat the cake, Anna Mae”, an obscure reference to a Tina Turner documentary.
This one flabbergasted me at the time. The song itself doesn’t make any direct reference to domestic violence, but it quotes a scene in a doco where Tina Turner is being forced to eat cake by her abusive partner. I find it so, so weird that some places banned the song not because of anything it directly says, but because if you saw this documentary and remembered the context of the scene and remembered the line and connected them, you might be…triggered? Offended? I don’t even know. Bizarre.
- For which song did Amanda Palmer request 4-syllable item suggestions from Twitter?
The Ukulele Anthem
One of my favourite songs, there’s an extended part where she lists off items. “Your flask of Jack, your virator, your fear of heights, your Nikon lens, your disco stick, your ginsu knives, your rosary.”
Now that I actually count it, I guess she asked for 3-syllable items. I don’t think anyone got this, and I doubt changing “4” to “3” would have drastically altered that fact.
- We had a spy on the inside. That’s right:
HERCULES MULLIGAN
This is one of the best lines from one of the greatest musicals of all time. The reason I generally dislike trivia is because it’s a binary state - you either get it or you don’t. You can’t work at it like a puzzle or strategize, it’s just “oh I know that!” or “nope, no idea”.
You either knew this one or you didn’t, and that’s fine! That’s trivia. That’s why it sucks but I think that’s also why people like it so much.
- Immediately before hosting his own late night talk show, which TV series was Conan O’Brien a writer for?
The Simpsons.
I actually phrased this as “Before” (no “immediately”) and so I also accepted Saturday Night Live as an asnwer, but know that the above is the -true- form of the question.
And yeah, Conan was a Simpsons writer! I think that’s so cool and interesting. His best-known episode is widely considered the best Simpsons episode of all time, Marge vs The Monorail. After he left the show, the writers wrote him in a few times, which is fun.
- Who was the youngest showrunner in TV history?
Seth MacFarlene!
Absolutely no one got this, which was bewildering to me. Again though, that’s why I made this quiz - turns out that my total obsession with showrunners is not a common thing.
When he started Family Guy (which he was the showrunner for, as well as voicing the three main characters), Seth MacFarlene was twenty-four.
Twenty. Four. Amazing.
- Which Australian TV series did Greg Daniels adapt for the US?
Kath and Kim
Greg Daniels is best known for being the co-creator of Parks and Recreation and for bringing The Office to the US (and not being the showrunner for seasons 6-8, which I’m watching now. They’re the worrrrrrst.) Before that, he was a Simpsons writer.
At some point, he tried to adapt Kath and Kim (probably the best-known Aussie sitcom from the last 20-30 years) for a US audience.
It bombed. It bombed hard.
More answers tomorrow!