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Grab some Spam and bust out your silliest walk, because this week, Justin has written six trivia questions about the classic sketch comedy show, Monty Python’s Flying Circus! We also talk about an odd literary technique, philosophy, and a legendary aviator.
1:41: Q1 (Arts & Literature): The surrealist comedy of Flying Circus, which often transitioned directly from one sketch to another with little to no explanation or closure, has been compared to what literary device, prominently featured in James Joyce’s Ulysses, among other works?
8:24: Q2 (Everything Else): In the “Philosopher’s Football Match” sketch, what existentialist philosopher, who originated the concept of the Übermensch, played forward for the German team, and received a yellow card for telling referee Confucius that he has no free will?
16:08: Q3 (Sports & Games): Another Flying Circus sketch depicts the “Olympic Finals of” this game, which does actually have an annual world championship held in the abandoned town of Consonno, Italy, where the game is called “Nascondino”.
25:05: Q4 (Music): The theme song from Monty Python’s Flying Circus is the “Liberty Bell March”, written by this American composer, often called America’s “March King”.
32:05: Q5 (Times & Places): The title of the Pythons’ TV show, “Flying Circus”, originated as a nickname for the four squadrons of fighter planes commanded by this World War I German Ace, known to history as the “Red Baron”.
38:22: Q6 (Movies & TV): The Monty Python comedy troupe released five feature-length movies. Name the first of the five, which was basically just a collection of sketches from the first two seasons of Flying Circus.
Theme music: "Thinking it Over" by Lee Rosevere, licensed under CC BY 2.0
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That Anger Management Crap Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/that-anger-management-crap/id1455137395
Rollercoaster of Thought Podcast: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/anchor-podcasts/rollercoaster-of-thought
By Big Heads Media4.8
2424 ratings
Grab some Spam and bust out your silliest walk, because this week, Justin has written six trivia questions about the classic sketch comedy show, Monty Python’s Flying Circus! We also talk about an odd literary technique, philosophy, and a legendary aviator.
1:41: Q1 (Arts & Literature): The surrealist comedy of Flying Circus, which often transitioned directly from one sketch to another with little to no explanation or closure, has been compared to what literary device, prominently featured in James Joyce’s Ulysses, among other works?
8:24: Q2 (Everything Else): In the “Philosopher’s Football Match” sketch, what existentialist philosopher, who originated the concept of the Übermensch, played forward for the German team, and received a yellow card for telling referee Confucius that he has no free will?
16:08: Q3 (Sports & Games): Another Flying Circus sketch depicts the “Olympic Finals of” this game, which does actually have an annual world championship held in the abandoned town of Consonno, Italy, where the game is called “Nascondino”.
25:05: Q4 (Music): The theme song from Monty Python’s Flying Circus is the “Liberty Bell March”, written by this American composer, often called America’s “March King”.
32:05: Q5 (Times & Places): The title of the Pythons’ TV show, “Flying Circus”, originated as a nickname for the four squadrons of fighter planes commanded by this World War I German Ace, known to history as the “Red Baron”.
38:22: Q6 (Movies & TV): The Monty Python comedy troupe released five feature-length movies. Name the first of the five, which was basically just a collection of sketches from the first two seasons of Flying Circus.
Theme music: "Thinking it Over" by Lee Rosevere, licensed under CC BY 2.0
E-Mail: [email protected]
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/quizandhers/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/quizandhers
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/quizandhers/
That Anger Management Crap Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/that-anger-management-crap/id1455137395
Rollercoaster of Thought Podcast: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/anchor-podcasts/rollercoaster-of-thought