30 Holiday Trivia Questions and Answers That Will Start Arguments at the Dinner Table
Thirty holiday trivia questions and answers that have genuinely divided rooms. The one about Rudolph's origin story alone has caused three near-friendships to end.
The word “quiz” might be a hoax. In the late 1700s, a Dublin theater manager named Richard Daly allegedly bet friends he could introduce a meaningless word into the English language within 48 hours. He had the letters Q-U-I-Z chalked on walls across the city overnight. By morning, everyone was asking what it meant. The story is almost certainly apocryphal, but the fact that nobody can definitively prove where the word actually comes from makes it the perfect opening for what we’re doing here: turning trivia quizzes back on themselves.
I’ve been running live trivia for years, and the one topic that consistently catches people off guard is the quiz itself. People who can rattle off capital cities and Oscar winners go completely blank when you ask them about the history of the thing they’re doing right now. There’s something satisfying about that. So here are 50 questions about quizzes, game shows, pub trivia, and the whole culture of competitive knowing. Some of these have played in real rooms. Some of them started arguments that lasted longer than the event.
1. What decade saw the first known use of the word “quiz” to mean a test of knowledge?
Most people guess the 1700s because of the Dublin wall-chalking story. But that story, if it happened at all, was about the word as a curiosity, not as a test.
2. What was the name of the first major TV quiz show in the United States, which premiered on CBS in 1950?
This one separates the game show historians from everyone else. People instinctively reach for the scandals of the late ’50s, but the format was already thriving before any of that.
3. In what country did the modern pub quiz originate in the 1970s?
This one feels easy, and it is. But I include it because I’ve watched Americans confidently say “Ireland” with their whole chest.
4. The 1950s quiz show scandals in the US led to what specific piece of federal legislation?
A game show cheating scandal that actually changed the law. That sentence alone is worth the question.
5. What quiz show was at the center of the scandal dramatized in the 1994 Robert Redford film “Quiz Show”?
Even people who’ve seen the movie sometimes blank on the show’s name. They remember Ralph Fiennes and the sweat and the glass booth.
6. Trivial Pursuit was invented in 1979 by two Canadians. What were their names?
I’ve asked this at maybe twenty events. Nobody has ever gotten both names. Not once.
7. How many categories does a standard Trivial Pursuit game have?
Quick one. Feels like a freebie. It’s not, for about 30% of people.
8. In the UK version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?,” what is the name of the host who presented the show from 1998 to 2014?
9. What is the maximum number of questions a contestant must answer correctly to win the top prize on the US version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?”
People who’ve watched the show a hundred times still get tripped up here.
10. What year did the first person win the top prize on the US “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?”
11. On “Jeopardy!”, what must all contestant responses be phrased as?
I know. Everyone knows this. But I once watched a table of eight adults argue about whether it had to be “What is” specifically or whether any question form worked. The argument lasted eleven minutes.
12. How many years did Alex Trebek host “Jeopardy!”?
13. Before Alex Trebek, who was the original host of “Jeopardy!” when it debuted in 1964?
This is one of those questions where the answer sounds wrong even when you know it.
14. What is the highest single-day winnings record on “Jeopardy!”, and who holds it?
15. In “Jeopardy!”, what is the term for the two hidden opportunities in each round where a contestant can wager any amount of their current score?
16. What country hosts the annual World Quizzing Championships?
Trick framing , it’s not hosted in one country.
17. The “University Challenge” TV quiz show in the UK is based on what American show?
18. Who has hosted “University Challenge” since 1994?
19. “Kaun Banega Crorepati,” the Indian version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?,” is hosted by what Bollywood legend?
20. In how many countries has some version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?” aired?
Go with your gut. Whatever number you’re thinking, it’s probably low.
21. What Nordic country is famous for its intensely competitive pub quiz culture, with national championships drawing thousands of teams?
22. The quiz show “Fifteen to One” was a long-running staple of which British TV channel?
23. In 2001, a British Army major named Charles Ingram won the top prize on “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?” The win was voided. Why?
This one plays beautifully in a room because half the people remember the story and half don’t, and the ones who remember it can barely contain themselves.
24. What online quiz platform, launched in 2013, became a staple in classrooms worldwide and is named after a combination of the words “knowledge” and “academy”?
25. BuzzFeed popularized a specific type of online quiz in the 2010s. What was the defining characteristic that made them go viral?
Everyone’s taken one. Few people can articulate what made them different.
26. What website, launched in 2007, is known for user-created quizzes and is particularly famous for its geography quizzes where users name countries on a blank map?
27. What 2020 phenomenon led to an explosion in virtual pub quizzes worldwide?
I’m not going to insult your intelligence with commentary on this one.
28. What is the name of the annual trivia contest held in Stevens Point, Wisconsin, that holds the Guinness World Record for being the world’s largest trivia competition?
29. In standard pub trivia format, what is the typical number of rounds in an evening?
30. In competitive quiz bowl (the academic format played in US schools and colleges), how many players are on each team during a match?
31. In quiz bowl, what are the questions that any player can buzz in on before the question is finished called?
32. What term describes a trivia question that is so easy it would embarrass anyone who got it wrong?
There’s no official dictionary definition, but every quizmaster I know uses the same word.
33. In many pub trivia formats, what is the bonus round where teams wager points from their existing score before hearing the question?
34. What is the term for a question in competitive quizzing that contains multiple clues arranged from hardest to easiest, rewarding players who buzz in early?
35. The LearnedLeague is an invitation-only online trivia league. What makes it unusual compared to most trivia quizzes?
36. What 2008 film, set in Mumbai, uses a quiz show as its central narrative device?
37. In the movie “Slumdog Millionaire,” the protagonist Jamal knows the answers to the quiz show questions because of what?
38. What 1994 comedy film features a character who becomes a contestant on “Jeopardy!”?
This one stumps people more than you’d expect.
39. “Saturday Night Live” has a recurring sketch parodying “Jeopardy!” What actor plays Alex Trebek in those sketches?
40. What British sitcom, set in a pub, features a recurring quiz night that often drives the plot?
There are actually several correct answers here, but one towers above the rest.
41. What is the name of the long-running BBC radio quiz show, hosted by Nicholas Parsons for over 50 years, where panelists must speak on a subject without hesitation, repetition, or deviation?
42. In what year did “Jeopardy!” hold its “Greatest of All Time” tournament, and who won?
43. Ken Jennings’ famous 74-game winning streak on “Jeopardy!” ended in 2004. What was the Final Jeopardy category that did him in?
People remember that he lost. Almost nobody remembers the details.
44. In 2011, IBM’s Watson computer competed on “Jeopardy!” against Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter. What did Jennings write on his Final Jeopardy answer that became famous?
45. What is the name of the classic board game, first published in 1982, that became the best-selling board game in its first year of release and involves answering trivia questions to fill a circular playing piece with wedges?
46. What color represents the “Science & Nature” category in the original Trivial Pursuit?
Everyone thinks they know this. About half of them are confusing it with another category.
47. The word “trivia” comes from Latin. What does it literally mean?
This is one of my favorite questions to ask at a trivia night because it feels like it should be obvious and then isn’t.
48. What American professor is widely credited with sparking the modern trivia craze when he published the book “Trivia” in 1966?
49. What is the name of the common pub quiz format where teams trade answer sheets with another team for scoring, and what’s the inherent problem with it?
Every quizmaster has a war story about this.
50. In competitive quizzing circles, there’s a concept called the “Mastermind effect,” named after the BBC quiz show. What does it describe?
I save this one for last because it names something every person who’s ever sat in a quiz has felt but never had the words for.
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