Generated by Rank Math SEO, this is an llms.txt file designed to help LLMs better understand and index this website. # Pop Culture Madness ## Sitemaps [XML Sitemap](https://popculturemadness.com/sitemap_index.xml): Includes all crawlable and indexable pages. ## Posts - [July 9 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/july-9-in-pop-culture-history/): July 9 offers an eclectic mix of things to celebrate: Fashion Day, International Town Criers Day, National Sugar Cookie Day, National Don't Put All Your Eggs in One Omelet Day, National No Bra Day, and Martyrdom of the Bab, a solemn holy day in the Baha'i faith commemorating the 1850 execution of the faith's forerunner figure. Also, Nude Recreation Week typically falls in the second week of July, which pairs interestingly with Fashion Day. The calendar contains multitudes. - [Telstar 1: The Satellite That Shrunk the World](https://popculturemadness.com/telstar-1-the-satellite-that-shrunk-the-world/): On July 10, 1962, a shiny little orb named Telstar 1 launched into space aboard a NASA Delta rocket from Cape Canaveral. It didn’t carry humans or weapons — just possibility. And within days, it would beam television signals across the Atlantic, making it the first satellite to relay live television, telephone, and telegraph transmissions between continents. - [July 8 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/july-8-in-pop-culture-history/): July 8 gives you four solid reasons to do absolutely nothing productive: Be a Kid Again Day, Math 2.0 Day, National Milk Chocolate with Almonds Day, and SCUD Day — aka Savor the Comic, Unplug the Drama Day. SCUD Day and Be a Kid Again Day on the same date is either brilliant scheduling or a conspiracy. Either way, compliance is strongly encouraged. - [1995 Pop Culture Headlines](https://popculturemadness.com/1995-pop-culture-headlines/): 1. The Great Hanshin Earthquake Strikes Kobe, Japan (January 17, 1995): This magnitude 6.9 earthquake devastated the port city, killing more than 6,000 people and causing extensive damage to buildings and infrastructure that many had assumed were earthquake-resistant. Trivia: The disaster exposed serious weaknesses in Japan's seismic building codes and emergency response systems, prompting sweeping nationwide reforms to construction standards and disaster preparedness in the years that followed. - [2005 Pop Culture Headlines](https://popculturemadness.com/2005-pop-culture-headlines/): 1. Condoleezza Rice Sworn In as Secretary of State (January 26, 2005): Rice became the highest-ranking African American woman ever to serve in a presidential cabinet, taking over the nation's top diplomatic post as President Bush began his second term. Trivia: Rice had previously served as National Security Advisor during Bush's first term, making her transition into the Secretary of State role a natural continuation of an already close working relationship with the president. - [2002 Top Ten Music Charts](https://popculturemadness.com/2002-top-ten-music-charts/): 2002 music sat right in the middle of the early-2000s handoff. Teen pop was still around, pop-punk and emo-friendly rock were rising, hip-hop and R&B were dominating radio, dance remixes had major pop life, and American reality-TV music was about to become a permanent part of the chart conversation. - [July 7 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/july-7-in-pop-culture-history/): The celebration of World Chocolate Day is all about the consumption of chocolate. Chocolate was introduced to Europe on July 7, 1550. - [Pop Culture Trivia Quiz: What Happened In 1929?](https://popculturemadness.com/what-happened-in-1929/): 1929 was a pivotal chapter in history, marking the close of the Roaring Twenties and the start of dramatic global changes. Known for its stark contrasts, 1929 saw remarkable achievements in culture and technology as well as the beginnings of economic turmoil that would shape the decade to come. From iconic films and music to landmark historical events, the year offered a mix of optimism, innovation, and challenges. - [July 6 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/july-6-in-pop-culture-history/): July 6 is National Fried Chicken Day, International Kissing Day, National Air Traffic Control Day, Take Your Webmaster to Lunch Day, Umbrella Cover Day, and Virtually Hug a Virtual Assistant Day — the last of which is either a gesture of appreciation for technology or a sign that the holiday naming committee had a very unusual Thursday. - [July 5 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/july-5-in-pop-culture-history/): July 5 is Bikini Day, Mechanical Pencil Day, National Apple Turnover Day, and National Graham Cracker Day. It is also, notably, the day after the Fourth of July — a holiday with its own distinct character, defined primarily by leftover potato salad, a vague ringing in the ears, and the discovery that 179 days remain in the year. - [The Fourth Of July](https://popculturemadness.com/the-fourth-of-july/): The Fourth of July, officially known as Independence Day, commemorates the adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. It’s a day marked by fireworks, parades, barbecues, and flags—but behind the red, white, and blue is a story filled with politics, philosophy, and yes, even a bit of scheduling drama. - [July 3 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/july-3-in-pop-culture-history/): July 3 is National Fried Clam Day, American Redneck Day, Disobedience Day, National Chocolate Wafer Day, National Eat Your Beans Day, Stay Out of the Sun Day, Compliment Your Mirror Day, and Plastic Bag Free Day. It also marks the beginning of the Dog Days of Summer (July 3–August 11) and Air Conditioning Appreciation Days (July 3–August 15), both of which exist because someone had to name the feeling of not wanting to go outside. - [Pop Culture Trivia Quiz: What Happened In 1985?](https://popculturemadness.com/pop-culture-trivia-quiz-1985/): 1985 was a landmark year in pop culture, filled with iconic entertainment, groundbreaking achievements, and unforgettable trends. From blockbuster films to chart-topping music, the mid-'80s brought a unique energy that continues to influence culture today. Whether it was fashion trends, historical milestones, or technological advancements, 1985 remains a year that shaped the cultural landscape in remarkable ways. - [July 2 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/july-2-in-pop-culture-history/): July 2 is World UFO Day, International Joke Day, Made in the USA Day, National Financial Freedom Day, Freedom From Fear of Speaking Day, National Television Heritage Day, World Sports Journalists Day, Zip Code Day, and I Forgot Day — which exists so that people who forgot about I Forgot Day have a holiday to celebrate anyway. - [The Experience Machine](https://popculturemadness.com/the-experience-machine/): That’s the question posed by philosopher Robert Nozick in 1974 when he introduced the Experience Machine. At first glance, the offer seems irresistible: a lifetime of perfect happiness customized just for you. But once you understand the terms, the decision becomes far more complicated. - [Pop Culture Quiz: What Happened In 1978?](https://popculturemadness.com/pop-culture-quiz-1978/): (answers) - [July 1 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/july-1-in-pop-culture-history/): July 1 is Canada Day, American Zoo Day, National Creative Ice Cream Flavor Day, International Chicken Wing Day, National Postal Workers Day, Early Bird Day, and Second Half of the New Year Day — which is either motivating or alarming depending on how your resolutions are going. It is also, technically, Resolution Renewal Day, which exists precisely because most New Year's resolutions have not survived to see it. - [June 30 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-30-in-pop-culture-history/): The Tunguska event is one of the most powerful natural disasters in recorded history. On June 30th, 1908 an explosion near a sparsely populated forest flattened 80 million trees over an 830 square mile area and eyewitness reports suggest that at least three people may have died as a result. The Podkamennaya Tunguska River is an explosive, natural phenomenon that spans across Eastern Siberia. - [July in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/july-in-pop-culture-history/): 1819 - Johann Georg Tralles discoverd the Great Comet of 1819, (C/1819 N1). It was the first comet analyzed using polarimetry, by François Arago. - [June 29 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-29-in-pop-culture-history/): Around 2 am on U.S. Highway 90 near the Rigolets Bridge in Louisiana, an insecticide fogged tractor-trailer that had been slowed behind a truck spraying mosquito fogger, there was an unfortunate crash between the Buick and said pesticide shrouded vehicle while traveling at a high rate of speed (in excess of 55MPH), killing all three adults in the car. - [Songs of the Summer 1900-1959](https://popculturemadness.com/songs-of-the-summer-1900-1959/): Summer songs of the 1950s and earlier sound different from later beach-party, surf-rock, and classic rock summer playlists. Before the 1960s turned summer into a full pop-music industry, warm-weather music came from Tin Pan Alley, jazz bands, crooners, early rock and roll, doo-wop, novelty records, baseball songs, movie musicals, country standards, and jukebox favorites. - [June 28 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-28-in-pop-culture-history/): 1635 - Guadeloupe became a French colony. - [2003 Top Ten Music Charts](https://popculturemadness.com/2003-top-ten-music-charts/): 2003 music was one of the early-2000s years where everything seemed to happen at once. Beyoncé became a major solo star, 50 Cent changed hip-hop’s center of gravity, crunk and club rap got louder, pop-punk stayed busy, garage-rock revival bands kept guitars sharp, and Norah Jones quietly swept the Grammys with a sound that felt like it came from a different room entirely. - [June 27 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-27-in-pop-culture-history/): Helen Keller was born on June 27, 1880, in Tuscumbia Alabama USA but lost sight hearing when she only 19 months old, most likely due to illness which may be caused by scarlet fever or meningitis. Anne Sullivan, a teacher from the Perkins Institution for the Blind in Boston which Bell’s son-in-law directed; she remained with Helen Keller until her own death back October 1936 when they were both 60 years old at this stage of their life together as well as friends. - [Summer Songs of the 1960s](https://popculturemadness.com/summer-songs-of-the-1960s/): Summer songs of the 1960s brought together surf rock, Motown, sunshine pop, girl groups, garage rock, British Invasion hits, beach songs, hot-city anthems, and breezy oldies that still sound best with the windows down. The decade made summer music bigger, brighter, louder, and more youth-driven than ever before. - [Pop Culture Trivia Quiz: What Happened In 1939?](https://popculturemadness.com/what-happened-in-1939/): (answers) - [June 26 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-26-in-pop-culture-history/): One of the most popular ways to encode a product's price is with what we call barcodes. The first types emerged in 1973 when industry advisers chose IBM and Laurer as their standard for encoding pricing information layer on products using these lines that are then scanned by scanners designed just for them, but now you'll find other codes too like VIN numbers or wristbands worn in hospitals which use different patterns altogether. - [June 25 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-25-in-pop-culture-history/): The Battle of the Little Bighorn, known to many as Custer’s Last Stand and also referred to by some tribes who fought in it as Greasy Grass or the Battle on Holy Ground was an armed engagement that took place between combined forces of Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, Arapaho Tribes and U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment during June 1876 at a location near what is now Crow Agency Montana. - [Summer Songs of the 1980s](https://popculturemadness.com/summer-songs-of-the-1980s/): 1980s summer songs came from several different places at once: MTV, movie soundtracks, dance clubs, Top 40 radio, rock stations, beach radios, roller rinks, and car stereos that may or may not have eaten the cassette by Labor Day. - [Desperate & Toxic Pop Songs](https://popculturemadness.com/desperate-toxic-pop-songs/): Toxic love songs are not always simple breakup songs. They are songs about obsession, jealousy, mixed signals, control, neediness, selfishness, emotional chaos, bad decisions, and relationships that probably need boundaries more than another chorus. - [June 24 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-24-in-pop-culture-history/): In 1374 AD, A strange mania, originally from the Rhine Valley in 1374 took over several medieval towns. Victims were seized by an agonizing compulsion to dance for hours or days without rest or food before some people died of exhaustion. Within weeks this mystery illness had engulfed large areas of Germany, France, and The Netherlands with possibly hundreds falling victim. Similar "Dancing mania" marathons were known to have happened in 1237, 1284, and 1518. - [Common Idioms & Word Origins I](https://popculturemadness.com/common-and-uncommon-idioms/): It was formally repealed in the Criminal Law Act of 1967, along with the Profane Oaths Act of 1945 (for cursing) and the Blasphemy Act 1697 (for educated Christians denying The Trinity or One God). - [June 23 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-23-in-pop-culture-history/): On June 23, 1994, Johnny Cash wrote what many call The Greatest Love Letter of All Time: - [100 Years: 100 Songs of Summer](https://popculturemadness.com/100-years-100-songs-of-summer/): Summer Songs Each Year, One Song Becomes The Song Of The Summer The Top 100 Summer Songs 1920- 2019: 2025: Golden - KPop Demon Hunters 2024: A Bar Song (Tipsy) - Shaboozey 2023: Cruel Summer - Taylor Swift 2022: As It Was - Harry Styles 2021: Good 4 U - Olivia Rodrigo 2020: Watermelon Sugar - Harry Styles 2019: Old Town Road by Lil Nas X Featuring Billy Ray Cyrus 2018: In My Feelings – Drake 2017: Despacito – Luis Fonsi feat Daddy Yankee (and sometimes Justin Bieber) 2016: Closer – Chainsmokers featuring Halsey 2015: (tie) Shut Up and Dance – Walk The Moon and Uptown Funk by Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars 2014: Happy – Pharrell Williams 2013: Get Lucky – Daft Punk 2012: Call Me Maybe – Carly Rae Jepson 2011: Party Rock – LMFAO 2010: Firework – Katy Perry 2009: I Gotta Feeling – The Black Eyed Peas 2008: Single Ladies (Put A Ring On it) – Beyonce 2007: The Sweet Escape – Gwen Stefani and Akon 2006: Sexyback – Justin Timberlake 2005: Hollaback Girl – Gwen Stefani 2004: Yeah! – Usher Featuring Lil Jon & Ludacris 2003: Crazy In Love – Beyonce Featuring Jay-Z 2002: A Moment Like This – Kelly Clarkson 2001: Lady Marmalade – Christina Aguilera, Pink, Lil Kim, and Mya 2000: Who Let The Dogs Out – Baha Men 1999: Smooth – Santana with Rob Thomas 1998: I Don’t Want To Miss a Thing – Aerosmith 1997: Wannabe – Spice Girls 1996: Macarena – Los Del Rio 1995: Get Ready For This – 2 Unlimited 1994: All I Wanna Do – Sheryl Crow 1993: What Is Love – Haddaway 1992: Baby Got Back – Sir Mixx-A-Lott 1991: Summertime – DJ Jazzy Jeff and Fresh Prince 1990: (tie) Electric Boogie (aka The Electric Slide) – Marcia Griffiths and Ice Ice Baby by Vanilla Ice 1989: Love Shack – B-52’sC 1988: Pour Some Sugar On Me – Def Leppard 1987: Living On A Prayer – Bon Jovi 1986: That’s What Friends Are For – Dionne & Friends 1985: We Built This City – Jefferson Starship 1984: Thriller – Michael Jackson 1983: It’s Raining Men – The Weather Girls 1982: I Love Rock and Roll – Joan Jett & The Blackhearts 1981: Super Freak – Rick James 1980: You Shook Me All Night Long – AC/DC 1979: Y.M.C.A. – Village People 1978: Last Dance – Donna Summer 1977: Dancing Queen – Abba 1976: Play That Funky Music – Wild Cherry 1975: Get Down Tonight – KC & The Sunshine Band 1974: Takin Care Of Business – Bachman Turner Overdrive (BTO) 1973: Let’s Get It On – Marvin Gaye 1972: American Pie – Don McLean 1971: Joy To The World – Three Dog Night 1970: I’ll Be There – Jackson Five 1969: Sweet Caroline – Neil Diamond 1968: Sittin On The Dock Of The Bay – Otis Redding 1967: Ain’t No Mountain High Enough – Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell 1966: I’m A Believer – The Monkees 1965: Unchained Melody – Righteous Brothers 1964: Twist and Shout – Beatles 1963: Louie Louie – The Kingsmen 1962: Twist and Shout – Isley Brothers 1961: Let’s Twist Again – Chubby Checker 1960: The Twist – Chubby Checker 1959: Mack The Knife – Bobby Darin 1958: At The Hop – Danny & the Juniors 1957: Jailhouse Rock – Elvis Presley 1956: Hound Dog – Elvis Presley 1955: Rock Around The Clock – Bill Haley & The Comets 1954: Sh-Boom – The Chords 1953: (How Much is That) Doggie in the Window – Patty Page 1952: Singin’ in the Rain – Gene Kelly 1951: Unforgettable – Nat King Cole 1950: Music Music Music – Teresa Brewer 1949: Riders in the Sky (A Cowboy Legend) – Vaughn Monroe 1948: The Woody Woodpecker Song – Kay Kyser 1947: Peg O’ My Heart – Buddy Clark 1946: The Gypsy – The Ink Spots 1945: Sentimental Journey – Les Brown 1944: Swinging on a Star – Bing Crosby 1943: You’ll Never Know – Dick Haymes 1942: Deep In The Heart of Texas – Alvino Rey or Bing Crosby or Horace Heidt or Merry Macs 1941: Stardust – Artie Shaw 1940: I’ll Never Smile Again – Tommy Dorsey 1939: Beer Barrel Polka – The Andrews Sisters (or Will Glahe) 1938: A Tisket, A-Tasket – Ella Fitzgerald with Chick Webb 1937: It Looks Like Rain in Cherry Blossom Lane – Guy Lombardo 1936: The Glory of Love – Benny Goodman 1935: Cheek To Cheek – Fred Astaire 1934: Cocktails For Two – Duke Ellington 1933: Stormy Weather – Leo Reisman featuring Harold Arlen 1932: In A Shanty In Old Shanty Town – Ted Lewis 1931: Minnie The Moocher – Cab Calloway 1930: Dancing With Tears In My Eyes – Nat Shilkret 1929: Honey – Rudy Vallee 1928: Ramona – Paul Whiteman (or by Gene Austin) 1927: I’m Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover – Ben Burnie 1926: Valencia – Paul Whiteman 1925: Sweet Georgia Brown – Ben Burnie 1924: California, Here I Come – Al Jolson 1923: That Old Gang of Mine – Bill Murray and Ed Smalle 1922: Stumbling – Paul Whiteman 1921: Cherie – Paul Whiteman 1920: When My Baby Smiles At Me – Ted Lewis - [Novelty and Comedy Songs in Pop](https://popculturemadness.com/novelty-and-comedy-songs-in-pop-music/): Novelty songs and comedy songs have always had their own strange little corner of popular music. Some are parody records. Some are funny story songs. Some are character songs. Some are viral videos. Some are holiday songs. Some are dance crazes. Some are so odd that nobody can quite explain how they became hits, which is part of the fun. - [Pop Culture Trivia Quiz: What Happened In 1947?](https://popculturemadness.com/what-happened-in-1947/): (answers) - [June 22 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-22-in-pop-culture-history/): This Ohio River is and was one of the most polluted in America with thirteen documented cases of it catching fire, starting as early as 1868 and continuing beyond 1952 when its largest blaze caused over $1.3 million worth of damage. One event stands out: 1912 recorded five deaths due to contaminated water traveling downriver from Akron's rubber factories into Cleveland, where people drank straight from their faucets. - [Pop Culture Trivia Quiz: What Happened In 1959?](https://popculturemadness.com/what-happened-in-1959/): (answers) - [The Isolated Tribe](https://popculturemadness.com/the-isolated-tribe/): This is the dilemma of The Isolated Tribe, a real-world ethical question with deep implications for anthropology, public health, sovereignty, and moral responsibility. It forces us to ask: Is helping always helpful? Does knowledge justify interference? And who decides what “progress” means? - [June 21 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-21-in-pop-culture-history/): The June solstice is the only day of the year when all locations inside the Arctic Circle experience a continuous period of daylight for 24 hours. On the Antarctic Circle, there are 24 hours of nighttime on the June solstice. Each solstice can occur on the 20th, 21st, or 22nd of that month, depending on your location. - [Top 200 Summer Songs Of The 2000s](https://popculturemadness.com/the-top-200-summer-songs-of-the-2000s/): Summer songs of the 2000s came in two big flavors. Some were obvious warm-weather songs about summer, beaches, sunshine, vacation, and no-shoes freedom. Others became summer songs because they were everywhere: radio, clubs, MTV, school dances, pool parties, sports highlights, ringtones, and burned CDs with someone’s handwriting on them. - [June 20 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-20-in-pop-culture-history/): The original invention of an iced dessert can be credited to one man in 1874 by Robert McCay Green, during the Franklin Institute semicentennial (200th anniversary) celebration where it caused such sensation amongst all those who were present at their demonstration with people running up afterward asking for more. On a hot day, Mr.Green ran out of ice and went to get some from his neighboring vendor- but he couldn't find any there either, so he used what he had in hand. He used vanilla ice cream instead of ice and this became the first soda/frozen treat on the planet. - [Top 125 Summer Songs of the 70s](https://popculturemadness.com/the-top-125-summer-songs-of-the-1970s/): Summer songs of the 1970s came in two wide varieties. Some songs directly described summer, beaches, boardwalks, parks, sunshine, vacation, and warm-weather freedom. Others became summer songs because they were everywhere: AM radio, FM rock stations, roller rinks, dance clubs, drive-ins, car stereos, beach towns, and backyard cookouts. - [Top 100 2000s Bubblegum Hits](https://popculturemadness.com/top-100-2000s-bubblegum-hits/): 2000s bubblegum pop hits were bright, catchy, dramatic, danceable, and often impossible to remove from your brain without professional assistance. The decade had teen-pop leftovers from the TRL era, Disney Channel energy, early YouTube moments, pop-rock singalongs, ringtone hooks, reality-show breakthroughs, dance-pop explosions, and a whole lot of choruses that sounded built for malls, school dances, iPods, and car stereos. - [Cruising Songs](https://popculturemadness.com/cruising-songs/): This list mixes classic rock driving songs, soul cruising songs, country road songs, pop road-trip songs, hip-hop car songs, instrumental driving themes, beach-trip music, highway anthems, and modern playlist favorites. Some are made for speed. Some are made for scenery. Some are made for singing badly with friends, which is basically a road-trip tradition. - [June 19 in Pop Culture History](https://popculturemadness.com/june-19-in-pop-culture-history/): Juneteenth is a day to celebrate the freedom of African Americans who were enslaved in America. It originated back on June 19th, 1865 when Union soldiers arrived at Galveston and learned that slavery had ended two years earlier. Formerly enslaved people in Galveston, Texas celebrated after the announcement of their freedom. The following year they organized what became the annual celebration on June 19th called "Jubilee Day." - [Pop Culture Quiz: What Happened In 1981?](https://popculturemadness.com/pop-culture-quiz-1981/): (answers) - [2004 Top Ten Music Charts](https://popculturemadness.com/2004-top-ten-music-charts/): 2004 music was one of the clearest early-2000s crossover years. Hip-hop and R&B dominated pop radio, alternative rock had a major revival through The Killers, Modest Mouse, Franz Ferdinand, and Green Day, country crossed into wider pop culture, and danceable club records were everywhere. - [June 18 in Pop Culture Trivia](https://popculturemadness.com/june-18-in-pop-culture-trivia/): If we can stand up to him, all Europe may be free and the life of the world may move forward into broad, sunlit uplands. But if we fail, then the whole world, including the United States, including all that we have known and cared for, will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of perverted science. - [Top 100+ Retro Songs](https://popculturemadness.com/top-100-retro-songs/): Retro songs are songs that bring back an era, a school year, a summer, a dance floor, a car ride, a childhood bedroom, a mall memory, a first crush, or a moment when a song was so overplayed that everyone swore they never wanted to hear it again. Then time passed, and suddenly that same song became fun again. That is the retro cycle at work. ## Pages - [July 1982 Movies Quiz](https://popculturemadness.com/july-1982-movies-quiz/): ???? Welcome to the Summer of 1982 — Possibly the Greatest Week at the Movies... Ever - [Fourth of July Quiz](https://popculturemadness.com/fourth-of-july-quiz/): It’s the most explosive holiday on the American calendar—full of fireworks, hot dogs, parades, and red-white-and-blue everything. But behind the backyard BBQs and sparklers lies a revolutionary story packed with bold declarations, secret debates, and one very long scroll of signatures. - [Pop Culture Search](https://popculturemadness.com/pop-culture-search/):   - [Calendar](https://popculturemadness.com/calendar/): Ongoing - [(Almost) Christmas Music Quiz](https://popculturemadness.com/almost-christmas-music-quiz/): <img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-19080" src="https://popculturemadness.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/Holiday-Music-Quiz.jpg" alt="" width="900" height="600" / - [Hollywood Sign Quiz](https://popculturemadness.com/hollywood-sign-quiz/): It started as a blinking real estate ad and ended up a cultural monument. The Hollywood Sign has been vandalized, rebuilt, blown up in movies, and immortalized on everything from postcards to punk albums. It’s more than a few letters on a hill—it’s one of pop culture’s most recognizable icons. - [What Kind of Goose Are You?](https://popculturemadness.com/what-kind-of-goose-are-you/): Score - [Juneteenth Quiz](https://popculturemadness.com/juneteenth-quiz/): Every day on the calendar holds its own quiet place in history, and June 13th is no exception. From pivotal moments in politics to milestones in art, science, and human progress, this date has witnessed events that continue to echo in our collective memory. Some were joyful, others solemn, but all helped shape the world in ways big and small. - [Space Age Quiz](https://popculturemadness.com/space-age-quiz/): Score - [Flag Day Quiz](https://popculturemadness.com/flag-day-quiz/): Flag Day may not come with fireworks or a long weekend, but it marks a powerful turning point in American history. On June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress approved the Stars and Stripes as the official flag of the United States. Since then, it’s become more than a symbol—it's been stitched into every battlefield, moon landing, and Olympic medal ceremony in American memory. - [Privacy & Copyright](https://popculturemadness.com/privacy-copyright/): Effective date: July 11, 2019 - [Pop Culture Madness](https://popculturemadness.com/): Pop Culture History ## Categories - [1920s](https://popculturemadness.com/1920s/) - [1930s](https://popculturemadness.com/1930s/) - [1940s](https://popculturemadness.com/1940s/) - [1950s](https://popculturemadness.com/1950s/) - [1960s](https://popculturemadness.com/1960s/) - [1970s](https://popculturemadness.com/1970s/) - [1980s](https://popculturemadness.com/1980s/) - [1990s](https://popculturemadness.com/1990s/) - [2000s](https://popculturemadness.com/2000s/) - [2010s](https://popculturemadness.com/2010s/) - [African-American Diary](https://popculturemadness.com/african-american-diary/) - [American Diary](https://popculturemadness.com/american-diary/) - [Annual](https://popculturemadness.com/annual/) - [Awards](https://popculturemadness.com/awards/) - [Debatable](https://popculturemadness.com/debatable/) - [Delaware](https://popculturemadness.com/delaware/) - [Fixed It For You](https://popculturemadness.com/fixed-it-for-you/) - [Funny Stuff](https://popculturemadness.com/funny/) - [History](https://popculturemadness.com/history/) - [Holidays](https://popculturemadness.com/holidays/) - [Law Breaking](https://popculturemadness.com/law-breaking/) - [Letters](https://popculturemadness.com/letters/) - [Live Entertainment](https://popculturemadness.com/live-entertainment/) - [Local](https://popculturemadness.com/local/) - [Movies](https://popculturemadness.com/movies/) - [Music](https://popculturemadness.com/music/) - [News](https://popculturemadness.com/news/) - [Number One Hits](https://popculturemadness.com/number-one-hits/) - [PCM Charts](https://popculturemadness.com/pcm-charts/) - [People](https://popculturemadness.com/people/) - [Playlists](https://popculturemadness.com/playlists/) - [Podcasts](https://popculturemadness.com/podcasts/) - [Politics](https://popculturemadness.com/politics/) - [RIP](https://popculturemadness.com/rip/) - [Security](https://popculturemadness.com/security/) - [Speeches](https://popculturemadness.com/speeches/) - [Top 100](https://popculturemadness.com/top-100/) - [Trivia](https://popculturemadness.com/trivia/) - [Video](https://popculturemadness.com/video/) ## Tags - [1173](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1173/) - [1300](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1300/) - [1605](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1605/) - [1739](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1739/) - [1753](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1753/) - [1775](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1775/) - [1789](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1789/) - [1796](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1796/) - [1800s](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1800s/) - [1820](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1820/) - [1824](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1824/) - [1852](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1852/) - [1857](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1857/) - [1860](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1860/) - [1862](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1862/) - [1863](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1863/) - [1865](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1865/) - [1875](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1875/) - [1876](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1876/) - [1877](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1877/) - [1883](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1883/) - [1885](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1885/) - [1888](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1888/) - [1890](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1890/) - [1891](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1891/) - [1893](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1893/) - [1894](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1894/) - [1896](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1896/) - [1898](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1898/) - [1900](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1900/) - [1901](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1901/) - [1902](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1902/) - [1903](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1903/) - [1904](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1904/) - [1905](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1905/) - [1906](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1906/) - [1906s](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1906s/) - [1907](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1907/) - [1908](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1908/) - [19080s](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/19080s/) - [1909](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1909/) - [1910](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1910/) - [1911](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1911/) - [1912](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1912/) - [1913](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1913/) - [1914](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1914/) - [1915](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1915/) - [1916](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1916/) - [1917](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1917/) - [1918](https://popculturemadness.com/tag/1918/)