“Lounger Feud”

in print

This week I’m going to plunk a game in this space from my YouTube gig. There are really no correct answers in this one, which is always fun. It’s based on “Family Feud,” (I even throw in some “good answer” stuff for fun) but we call it “Lounger Feud,” since the channel is called “Lounging with Lisa.” Get it?

At any rate, I will supply the number one answer in the answer section at the end. I use a secret panel consisting of a wide range of ages and backgrounds for the “survey said,” portion.

This probably will not fill the entire column space like most of my games do because it isn’t really trivia based. There are more questions than usual though. The goal is for you to try and get the number one answer. Let the games begin, as they say.

One: Name something most people have in their refrigerators at all times.

Two: Name something found in a dresser drawer.

Three: What policy would most Americans like to see implemented?

Four: Name something people do to relax.

Five: What is a favorite honeymoon destination of Americans?

Six: Name a famous movie from the 1980s.

Seven: Name a sitcom from the 1980s.

Eight: Name something you’d find at a fire station.

Nine: Name a musical instrument found in orchestras.

Ten: What is a popular brand of soda pop?

Eleven: Name any Barbara Streisand song.

Twelve: Give me a Steven Spielberg production.

Thirteen: When someone says the name Richard Dreyfuss, what movie pops into your head? (I’m trying to jazz up the way I ask these since most say, “NAME...blah, blah...”)

Fourteen: What is a main ingredient used to prepare cookies?

Fifteen: What is something that is an autumn necessity?

Sixteen: Name something you take on a road trip.

Seventeen: What do you consider to be a Halloween tradition?

Eighteen: What do most people do before going to sleep?

Nineteen: Name a winter comfort food.

Twenty: Tell me a common abbreviation used in chat rooms.

Twenty One: Name a Jimmy Stewart movie.

Twenty Two: What is something that most politicians say?

Twenty Three: What is something you might hear in church?

Twenty Four: Say the first Jewish holiday that comes to mind.

Twenty Five: Name a ballroom dance.

Twenty Six: What is a popular snack?

Twenty Seven: Name something that bothers people about the Republican Party.

Twenty eight: Name something that bothers people about the Democratic Party.

Twenty Nine: Name something found in a daily paper. (I gave up on trying to avoid using “NAME.”)

Thirty: Name a cable news personality who has been discredited but has not been fired.

Thirty One: Why do people enlist in the military?

Thirty Two: Name something you might see at a political convention.

Thirty Three: What is something you might spot at an amusement park?

Thirty Four: Name an alternative researcher of any kind.

Thirty Five: Name a leading intellectual from the past 50 years.

Thirty Six: Name something that seems “off” about the official JFK assassination story.

Thirty Seven: Give me a member of the “Rat Pack.”

Thirty Eight: What is a city in Texas?

Thirty Nine: What is a New England State?

Forty: Name a country in the UK.

I think that covers it for the week. Be sure to stay tuned to this spot for my end of year piece in next week’s paper. Gee, I just committed to doing something entertaining and exciting. I hope I call pull that off!

Number one answers: One, Ketchup.

Two, Socks.

Three, Universal Health Care.

Four, Watch TV.

Five, Niagara Falls.

Six, “Back to the Future.”

Seven, The Cosby Show.

Eight, Fire Truck.

Nine, Violin.

Ten, Coke/Coca Cola.

Eleven, “The Way We Were.”

Twelve, “E.T.”

Thirteen, “Jaws.”

Fourteen, Sugar.

Fifteen, Raking leaves.

Sixteen, Map/GPS.

Seventeen, Trick or Treating.

Eighteen, Brush teeth.

Nineteen, Chili/Soup.

Twenty, LOL (means “laugh out loud”).

Twenty One, “It’s a Wonderful Life.”

Twenty Two, “I promise...”

Twenty Three, The Choir.

Twenty Four, Passover.

Twenty Five, Waltz.

Twenty Six, Popcorn.

Twenty Seven, Only care about the rich.

Twenty Eight, Hillary Clinton/The Clintons.

Twenty Nine, Obituary/Deaths.

Thirty, Rachel Maddow.

Thirty One, To pay for college/higher educational opportunities.

Thirty Two, Liars.

Thirty Three, Merry-Go-Round/Carousel.

Thirty Four, Dr. Judy Wood/Lisa Houserman (Yes, most of my panelists are under the impression that I’m an alternative researcher. I do a lot of research but am best at weeding out the liars from the actual “truth tellers” is all. I’m OK at gathering information, mainly.)

Thirty Five, Noam Chomsky.

Thirty Six, “Magic Bullet Theory.”

Thirty Seven, Dean Martin.

Thirty Eight, Dallas.

Thirty Nine, Maine.

Forty, Scotland.

THE END (Interstate Crosscheck, VIPS “Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity” check their forensic study on the LEAK not a hack that unfolded during the 2016 election cycle. “War is a Racket,” by General Smedley D. Butler)