Obscure questions are good, obscure answers are bad. For example, instead of asking "who directed the 1939 fantasy film Wizard of Oz" you should ask "Victor Fleming directed what 1939 fantasy film?" Everyone has heard of Wizard of Oz so they can at least guess the answer. Not many people have heard of Victor Fleming. Good trivia games should make players think the answer is on the tip of their tongue or smack themselves for not guessing that.
“When you’re feeling blue, just remember—it’s better than feeling brown (in your pants).”
-Albert Einstein
OMFG My 10 year old just asked Alexa on our Echo for a challenge and this is what she said.

"When dreaming, imagine success.
When preparing, imagine failure.
When acting, imagine success."
“My name is Blixa Bargeld. And I’m here for my COMPUTER!”
– Also Blixa Bargeld, when picking up said computer from a computer store in Berlin where Xiu Xiu now resides
#XiuXiu #Blixa #Bargeld #Berlin #COMPUTER
And there is music no one hears
Unless they quiet all the way down
And lean way out over the edge.
“I have no data yet. It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts."
-Sherlock Holmes, a Scandal in Bohemia
>Concrete building salesman slaps side of collapsed concrete building
This bad boy can hold so many corpses


