Trivia questions which, amazingly, have two answers

I honestly can’t remember if that’s the answer I had in mind back then. If those are the two movies I was thinking of, then there’s actually a third.

In Bedazzled, during Stanley’s first wish (or was it his first?) he brings Margaret back to his apartment. They’re lying on the floor listening to Brahms when the record starts skipping. The scene is foreshadowed a bit with George (the Devil) tearing the last pages from books and scratching records.

This isn’t me trying to make an absurdly twisted question to fulfill a point – by being so specific I’m actually emphasizing the unlikeliness of the coincidence. I could’ve just asked “in which movie did the heroine see the villain pull someone’s heart out with his bare hands?” It’s sort of incredible that there could be two answrrs in which the year of the movie is 1984, or two answers where the heroine is Kate Capshaw, or two answers in which the victim lives

Ah! That’s probably right. I was sure about Foul Play, but unsure about 10. Plenty of seduction and playing of LPs in 10 (Maurice ravel’s “Bolero”), but no record skipping that I can recall (though, with that particular piece of music, who could tell!).

It definitely happens in 10. Dudley and Bo Derek are in bed with Ravel’s “Bolero” playing on his large console stereo with the lid propped open. The record starts skipping, he throws a pillow, which causes the lid to fall, and then the record continues playing. At least, that’s how I remember it; haven’t seen the movie in ages.

I guess that was Moore’s trademark scene, kinda like William Holden and blowing up bridges. The switch to CDs seems to have doomed his career.

Ha!!!

I hear he was a composer and he’s been pretty busy lately . . .
. . . decomposing.

In which 1994 film, prominently featuring a circle motif, does a beloved leader fall to his death from a great height?

On Seinfeld, who said, “and by the way, they’re real and they’re spectacular!”?

Teri Hatcher and Phil Morris

Now it can be added unfortunately… :face_vomiting:

Which US President was elected to 2 non-consecutive terms?

Which 1987 Billboard #1 song was previously a top ten hit in the 60s for Tommy James and the Shondells?

Ooh, I know this one. Post #63 and Post #174.

Mony Mony, covered by Billy Idol, and I Think We’re Alone Now, covered by Tiffany

Both of which were spoofed on “Weird Al” Yankovic’s Even Worse (as “Alimony” and “I Think I’m a Clone Now”).

Or like Tom Hanks peeing.

:cry: :worried: (I went through all the emojis and I don’t see any “embarassed face”)

Correct - isn’t that amazing? Especially since the 80s versions are in such different styles, you would never think they were from the same original artist.

Now that would have made the question even better, if I had known it!

Even Worse has four total parodies of 80s covers of oldies, plus a style parody of James Taylor cake “Good Old Days.” Indeed, Al, indeed.

Same principle…what 1999 movie starring Mena Suvari had the word “American” in the title. Another one came out a year later, but I think it was retitled to piggyback on the others.

I usually use ‘blush’ with a colon on each side of the word:

:blush:

What are the digestive properties of the food additive maltodextrin?

Oo, same vein…

What theatrically-released Christmas movie in 1989 featured young Johnny Galecki?