All posts tagged Trivia night

Trivia Night Update: Rules and Registration

Posted on March 30, 2010 @ 10:18am No comments

Those of you who attended the summer edition know the drill. For those who did not, the breakdown is after the jump. Sign up and registration forms are there, too.

Trivia Roundup

Posted on September 3, 2009 @ 1:50pm No comments

Adworkers Team Trivia – Dog Days edition has come and gone and it was Sirius-ly fun. Once again the collective minds of the Milwaukee advertising and design community did not disappoint on their knowledge of all things useless.

Read about the winners (and losers) after the jump.

Brainiacs Welcome. Idiots, Moreso.

Posted on August 10, 2009 @ 11:50am No comments

Halloween Trivia Night Wrap Up

Posted on November 7, 2008 @ 3:27pm No comments

Perhaps they concentrated too much on their costumes. Maybe it was the pizza that slowed the brains down a bit. If need be, you can always point a finger at the booze. Needless to say, the scores for the Halloween Edition of Adworker Team Trivia needed something to blame and it certainly could not be the brilliant questions we asked. After a highly vocal hatred among the community for having a spelling category last April, we acquiesced and replaced it! Unfortunately, we added an even more hated round—Song Lyrics.

Screw Mensa! We did smart good.

Posted on April 11, 2008 @ 1:49pm 2 Comments

For those of you who felt your brain is above knowing the Skipper’s real name is Jonas Grumby, opting not to attend our Team Trivia Night, here is a brief recap: Team Martindale, Ludden & Rayburn, also known as Nonbox, took first place. What they lack in clever team naming abilities they make up for in useless knowledge. Boelter + Lincoln took second, followed by Purple Onion and The Factoids (bvk #2)-side note: “Purple Onion & The Factoids” would be a good band name. Truth be told, it was a three-way tie or 2nd so easy on the bragging rights B+L, you just happened to guess better at your final score. For those who didn’t attend, prior to the start of the event, every team had to write down what they thought their total score out of 64 questions would be. Incidentally, just in case you needed further proof of the egos in this business, every team guessed way higher than they actually scored.