Saturday, January 4, 2020

January 04 - National Trivia Day




Happy National Trivia Day! On January 4th, today celebrates those who accumulate and hoard tidbits of useless trivia? National Trivia Day, of course! 

Each year, the holiday recognizes the collectors of unconnected, irrelevant data, facts, history, and quotes in the recesses of their brains. They are the ones who usually proffer these sometimes astounding bits of history when friends and family least expect it.  

The word trivia is plural for the word trivium.

In ancient times, the term “trivia” was appropriated to mean something very new.

Nostalgic college students in the 1960s, along with others, began to informally trade questions and answers about the popular culture of their youth. 

After writing trivia columns, Columbia University students Ed Goodgold and Dan Carlinsky created the earliest inter-collegiate quiz bowls that tested culturally (and emotionally) significant, yet virtually useless information, which they dubbed trivia contests. "Trivia" (Dell, 1966) was the first book treating trivia in the revolutionary new sense, authored by Ed Goodgold and Dan Carlinsky. This book later achieved a ranking on the New York Times bestseller list.

  •   Over time, the word “trivia” has come to refer to obscure and arcane bits of dry knowledge as well as nostalgic remembrances of pop culture. 
  •   In North America, the game Trivial Pursuit peaked in 1984, when consumers bought over twenty million games! 
  •   Steven Point, Wisconsin, holds the largest current trivia contest at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point’s college radio station WWSP 89.9 FM. During the April 2013 event, the university hosted the forty-fourth annual contest. Typically, four hundred teams participate, ranging from one to one hundred and fifty players.  The competition, which is open to anyone, spans fifty-four hours over a weekend with eight questions each hour! 
  •   The first season of the popular American television classic game show "Jeopardy!" premiered on March 30, 1964.
      
HOW TO OBSERVE

Are you into trivia? Challenge someone to a trivia contest. Attend a trivia night or host one at home. Show off your trivia savvy. While you’re at it find out how much you know about the National Days. See if you can answer these questions. Some of them, we aren’t even sure of the answers.

  •   How many days are listed on National Day Calendar®? 
  •   Is there a food holiday on every day of the year? 
  •   How many chocolate holidays are there? 
  •   We love our pets. Do you know how many pet holidays there are? 
  •   What’s the oldest National Day on the calendar? 
  •   How many technology days are on the calendar?

Check out the National Day Calendar® Trivia page and see if you can answer all the questions correctly. Use #NationalTriviaDay to share on social media.

Educators, visit the National Day Calendar® Classroom for ways to use trivia in the classroom and resources.

HISTORY

Robert L Birch of Puns Corps. founded National Trivia Day. The first celebration took place as early as 1980, a year before the popular board game, Trivial Pursuit, debuted.  
  
#NationalTriviaDay 
@nichecinema 

January 04 - National Spaghetti Day


Happy National Spaghetti Day! On January 4th, today offers an opportunity to pick your sauce and add it to that long, thin cylindrical pasta of Italian and Sicilian origin.  Usually made from semolina flour, this pasta has been a worldwide favorite for ages and loved by millions. 

There are a variety of different pasta dishes based on spaghetti, and the sauce determines most of them. Some examples include spaghetti ala Carbonara, garlic and oil, tomato sauce, meat sauce, bolognese, Alfredo sauce, clam sauce or other sauces. We traditionally serve spaghetti dishes topped with grated hard cheeses such as Pecorino Romano, Parmesan and Grana Padano.

The word spaghetti is plural for the Italian word spaghetto, which is a diminutive of spago, meaning “thin  string” or “twine.”

American restaurants offered spaghetti around the end of the 19th century as Spaghetti Italienne (which is believed to have consisted of noodles cooked past al dente and a mild tomato sauce flavored with easily found spices and vegetables such as cloves, bay leaves, and garlic). Decades later, cooks added oregano and basil to many recipes.

Spaghetti Origins

There is a significant debate on the origin of spaghetti. However, we do know that pasta has been consumed for many, many years. There are records in the Jerusalem Talmud of itrium, a kind of boiled dough, commonly available in Palestine from the 3rd to 5th centuries A.D.
   
A 9th-century Arab dictionary describes itriyyaas as string-like shapes made of semolina and dried before cooking. In an 1154 writing for the Norman King of Sicily, itriyya is mentioned being manufactured and exported from Norman Sicily.
   
Dried pasta became popular in the 14th and 15th centuries due to its easy storage. People were able to store the dried pasta in ships when exploring the New World. A century later, pasta was present around the globe during the voyages of discovery. (Wikipedia)


On Top of Spaghetti

Sung to the tune of “On Top of Old Smoky,” the fun children’s song, “On Top of Spaghetti,” was written and originally sung by American folk singer and songwriter Tom Glazer with the Do-Re-Mi Children’s Chorus in 1963.

“On top of spaghetti, 
All covered with cheese, 
I lost my poor meatball, 
When somebody sneezed. 
It rolled off the table, 
And on to the floor, 
And then my poor meatball, 
Rolled out of the door.”

FUN FACT:

In March 2009, the world record for the largest bowl of spaghetti was set and then reset in March of 2010 when a Garden Grove California Buca di Beppo restaurant successfully filled a swimming pool with more than 13,780 pounds of pasta!

HOW TO OBSERVE

Make your favorite spaghetti dish and be sure to make enough to share. You can always invite friends to join you at your favorite Italian restaurant and split a plate. If you do, be sure to tag the restaurant and use #NationalSpaghettiDay to post on social media.

HISTORY

National Day Calendar® continues researching the origins of this pasta-loving holiday.

#NationalSpaghettiDay 
@BarillaUS
@Foodimentary 
@nichecinema