My friend (who's several years younger than I am) did an escape room where they had to dial a number on a rotary phone, and they lost because NONE OF THEM KNEW HOW TO DO IT.
I feel like it should be pretty intiuitive, but apparently not. I used to have a toy that was styled after a rotary phone (which I'm pretty sure they still sell, actually). Plus I've seen so many old horror films.
@@sgtraytango during the late 1990s my grandpa still used such rotary phone, though my parents house phone had buttons, I have never used a rotary phone but I do know that you can't rotate it to hastely to put in the next number or it might register and call a wrong number.
Eggs have a protective layer when laid that helps keep bacteria out as well as helping maintain their inner temperature. Here in America those eggs are washed which removes that layer which means we have to refrigerate them
Oh is that why? I was dumbfounded when they said that. It's the same in Canada as the US but why do they wash them? There is probably a good reason gut it seems dumb without the context of what purpose it's supposed to serve.
@@MorinehtarTheBluePretty much because the USDA (in the US at least, I'm not sure for Canada) decided it's safest to thoroughly wash and require refrigeration for the eggs instead of relying on their natural coating and hoping they aren't otherwise contaminated. I live on a chicken farm and we just take the eggs that won't hatch and eat them though so we've never refrigerated ours and it's been fine
@@theisaacpigg27_32 The way I understood it, it's because in the UK they vaccinate the chickens against salmonella, while here in the US we don't. I knew we washed our eggs, and maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but I was very quite amused when Mike suggested we burn our eggs.
@@bishielurfer That's not actually it. It is because of the washing process that they require refrigeration. Eggs naturally have an almost waxy coating that let them remain safe at room temperature. In the US, all commercially sold eggs (ones not directly from the farm) are pasteurized to kill any bacteria unless specifically labeled as unpasteurized.
@@dallasl3688 Not all eggs in the US are pasteurized. The process to pasteurize eggs which are still in their shell is patented and the patent is currently owned by only one company. In shell pasteurized eggs are sold under the brand name Davidson's Safest Choice®, all other eggs in the shell are not pasteurized, however liquid eggs sold in bottles etc are all pasteurized.
@@gsesquire3441 I'm in america, I've never heard it used as a slur. I've heard it used to describe government agents and ghosts, but never once was it even vaguely racial.
@@gsesquire3441 Yes historically and not contemporarily which still makes you out of touch. Snowflake used to disparage white people but it means something different, if no less nasty, now.
@@gsesquire3441 I'm about as likely to do that as call an asian a coolie. It is certainly still rude. But the point being that people don't do that anyway. Even racists don't use that word in that manner anymore dumbass.
I feel the same anytime anyone of the crew reads one of my comments. Im glad they shoutout everyone's comments as well, not going to throw shade on any other channels but I've noticed some only mention comments if they have a donation attached, and while I totally understand the reasoning behind it, makes for a less enjoyable time watching. As always thank you OX crew for everything you do and for producer John for always being there for all us lads, lads, lads, lads, and ladies
@Vice- Virgo That's a common speculative take, just want to note that Saturn is not the god of time -- Saturn is Cronus, not Chronos. Cronus (titan) is the god of agriculture, Chronos (primordial) is the god of time and sometimes the grandfather of Cronus (or generations above). They sound so similar that it's become a common modern misconception since the 1500's (Plutarch aside) to mistakenly claim they're the same. Saturn was related to time because, being the god of agriculture, seasonal changes and harvesting seasons are timely, hence the association with time. The Roman equivalent for a "god of time" was Janus, not Saturn. Seems that Jackbox didn't do more than a cursory Google search while fact-checking.
@@RyderVFX The origins of Castor and Pollux is my go-to for Greek/Roman madness, with such delightful story elements as a woman being raped by a god pretending to be a swan, laying eggs, and giving birth to two sets of twins, with one twin from each set immortal.
@@outsidexbox _“Maybe Jackbox just isn’t your game. I know, why don’t we have a spelling contest?”_ 😉 Love Tombstone, Doc is such an amazing character.
Amused by how often they go "WE'RE NOT AMERICAN, THIS ISN'T FAIR" to questions that make absolutely no more sense to Americans than they do to anyone else.
@@ChiBoomyBoom So I just looked it up. Apparently Pennsylvanian Dutch. So fuck me I guess. I'm from the south, usually we have the dishes people never heard of.
Yep. I have a real problem with people starting to say something interesting only to stop because people are generically shrieking. Shrieking < that story about Luke's Granny's phone.
Feeling old, because I understand rotary phones or, as they were called at the time, phones They decided on three numbers the same, a line fault could trigger 111, so that was rejected, 000 was rejected because 0 waa used for operators So 999 because it is findable in the dark and smoke as 2nd hole in from the stop 0 was used for switchboards
I'm all for the team vibing to the music in between rounds. Another very fun Jackbox stream all! I both like and dislike TMP, because it is very fun, but I am also rubbish at it.
I have very specific fields or hyper interest. I’ll nail that fandom quiz but do abysmal on those boxes trivia sets that were always 90s pop music and tabloids
Mike: Fig Newtons surely have to be named after someone Jane: they’re named after figs!!! I have to say nothing has made me laugh harder than this in a while so thank you oxbox crew
I intended to get up to watch this live, but overslept (stream started at 9am my time). 🙃 Anyway, wanted to tell the Oxboxtra crew that I was having a bit of a rubbish day yesterday and seeing the tweet that there’d be a livestream today with all five of you cheered me up a bit. Thanks for all you do to help make our lives a little brighter!
Jane reading out the prompts and distracting everyone made me laugh. That being said, I really appreciate knowing what the minigames are now because Jane was reading them out.
I was watching this as a recording, saying, “Andy V is alive,” feeling mildly clever, and then it was said in the video. “Ah, they got there before me. 😆”
The number of films alone made about or including the O.K. Corral shoot-out should've been his tip off. I mean, there's even one that's hard to miss. A little classic called... Tombstone.
Fairly sure 999 is the emergency number in the UK because 9 is the number you have to go all the way around to ring; the idea being it’s the three digit number least likely to be dialled by accident.
The logic behind 911 in America is that 9 and 1 are on opposite corners of a pushpad, so would take deliberate effort to hit 9 and then go all the way over to 1 (this was the days before candybar phones and butt-dialling by rocking around so your pants tighten over the corners).
Here in New Zealand, the emergency number has been 111 since forever - but our rotary phones had a different layout, with 1 in the position where you'd find 9 on a UK phone.
Difficult to do by accident, but easy when in a stressful situation where your hand might be shaking. Since you can just throw the dial all the way to the end there's no precision required when aiming for a particular number.
This is and QuipLash are def my favorite "Party" Livestream - Games. What I really wanna ask is what you guys were saying near the start of Stream, somethin about Andy's *SONG?!* He said "it already has 3 verses", or something? If you know what I'm saying, like if I can hear this anywhere, _please_ tell me how?! Thankee! 💚
I LOVE "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch!" Probably the only classic Christmas song that's just a few minutes of savage insults. Sung by Thurl Ravenscroft (a.k.a. Tony the Tiger), by the way. At least in the classic version of the story. The Jim Carrey one is okay (both song and movie), but adds too much unnecessary flair. The original is timeless brilliance. You're a mean one, Mr. Grinch You really are a heel You're as cuddly as a cactus, you're as charming as an eel, Mr. Grinch You're a bad banana with a greasy black peel! You're a monster, Mr. Grinch Your heart's an empty hole Your brain is full of spiders, you've got garlic in your soul, Mr. Grinch I wouldn't touch you with a thirty-nine-and-a-half foot pole! You're a vile one, Mr. Grinch You have termites in your smile You have all the tender sweetness of a seasick crocodile, Mr. Grinch Given a choice between the two of you I'd take the seasick crocodile! You're a foul one, Mr. Grinch You're a nasty-wasty skunk Your heart is full of unwashed socks, your soul is full of gunk, Mr. Grinch The three words that best describe you are as follows, and I quote "Stink, stank, stunk!" You're a rotter, Mr. Grinch You're the king of sinful sots Your heart's a dead tomato splotched with moldy purple spots, Mr. Grinch Your soul is an appalling dump heap overflowing with the most disgraceful Assortment of deplorable rubbish imaginable, mangled up in tangled up knots! You nauseate me, Mr. Grinch With a nauseous super "naus"! You're a crooked dirty jockey and you drive a crooked hoss, Mr. Grinch You're a three decker sauerkraut and toadstool sandwich with arsenic sauce! ...25 incredibly savage insults that don't have one bit of swearing or other vulgarity. And listening to it makes your heart feel warm and reminds you of great holiday memories!
Starts at 0:12 for fellow murder fiends in a bit of a rush 😈😁 Great stream as usual guys 😃 and hugs to Ellen and Jane since missed out on saying bye on live chat 🤗🤗
That was a shame, outside xbox is great but the hate towards J.K. Rowling is undeserved. She is a good writer and brought countless people joy with her works, but now she is harresed by people for having a opinion they don't share. She even defended her statements with strong arguments, but it seems that arguments don't matter anymore in todays world
Pretty much the nature of trivia and contemporary answers. Then again they tend to update products like this to keep them fresh and the old questions get left behind. It's not like they're going to play the older versions at this point which is why they're playing trivia murder party 2.
Different chicken breeds lay different colored eggs, and you dont have to refrigerate any fresh eggs unless they are washed cause they lose a protective coating that keep them fresh
1:24:17 in 1916, The SS Mont Blanc was a French cargo ship that carried ammunition, TNT, Picric Acid( an organic compound similar to TNT), gasoline and gun cotton to the allies in Europe during the first world war. All that caught fire after the Mont Blank collided with the SS Imo, and the Mont Blank exploded in Halifax harbor with the force of nearly 3 kilotons of TNT, it was the largest man made explosion before the atomic bomb.💥💥🔥🔥
@@TheVagabond7 That was a thing in a DnD one-shot by TFS At the Table: Lee, Harvey, and Oswald, enforcers in the employ of the owner of the local tavern, the Grassy Gnoll.
24:45 - No, Jane, Jupiter and Saturn are both Roman gods. The ones that share their names with planets in our solar system are always the Roman names. Mercury = Hermes Venus = Aphrodite Mars = Ares Jupiter = Zeus Saturn = Cronus [one of the Titans] Neptune = Poseidon Pluto = Hades The only ones I can think of that share the same name are Apollo and Nemesis, but there might be others. Even Hercules is the Roman name for Herakles.
31:13 - No, early on it was actually about when the band's first record (be it a single or an LP) was released: to be eligible for induction, it has to have been at least 25 years since an artist's first commercial release. The Beach Boys - Surfin' [single] - 1961 Bob Dylan - Bob Dylan [LP] - 1962 The Beatles - Love Me Do [single] - 1962 The Rolling Stones - Come On [single] - 1963 The Beach Boys were first eligible in 1986 for the 1987 class, but the first two years of inductions ('86 and '87) were artists who got big in the '50s, so they were pushed back to the 1988 class with the Beatles and Bob Dylan. The Rolling Stones weren't eligible until 1988 for the 1989 class, which is when they were inducted. The sheer number of memorable acts that sprung up in the '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s (and some questionable inductee choices like "The Lovin' Spoonful," not to mention controversy over induction of non-rock acts like ABBA, Miles Davis, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, etc. [though they were inducting some country, pop, and soul/Motown acts from the very start]) means they're still playing catch-up seemingly at random, especially with only 5-7 performer inductees per year (sometimes they get around that by having someone get an "Award for Musical Excellence" [basically lifetime achievement], like Ringo Starr solo in 2015), but had they stuck with 10-12 like their first couple inductee classes, it would be much better, IMO.
58:35 - Richard Bachman, actually. (The last name came from him hearing a Bachman-Turner Overdrive song on the radio while thinking it up.) It's because general consensus at the time was that an author should only have one book published a year to avoid oversaturating the market, and he wanted to be able to release more. It was also an attempt to see if his success was based on his writing skill, or on luck & name recognition. He got outed after his fifth book as Bachman ("Thinner"), so he feels it was too soon to tell for sure either way. He's revisited the pseudonym twice, once for "The Regulators" in 1996 which was a mirror-universe novel to "Desperation" under his own name, and I believe both were published simultaneously. Then in 2007, he rediscovered an early manuscript, "Blaze," which he gave another draft to tighten up the writing and update some references, and because it was an early book, less in his familiar horror style, he felt it fit better with his Bachman books, so he had himself credited thusly.
The question about which state of matter has more densely packed particles actually depends on the substance. Water being the biggest exception with its solid being less dense than its liquid form.
The "Americans say "math", but British people say "maths". That's weird right?" immediately after Jane's "I can do maths!" was perfect. Their collective groan following was also pretty funny. You're all wrong though. It's math.
Hilarious and entertaining as always. Some of the "American" questions made me, an American, chuckle. (FTR, Shoefly pie is a Pennsylvania Dutch dish. As a PA resident and someone who went to college in Amish Country I can say Shoefly pie is good for one bite...it is way to sweet and rich and gooey to eat any more of it.) And the end of each round of this game was shockingly exciting and tense. Fun times!
24:43 NO JANE! NO! THEY ARE BOTH ROMAN. Saturn=Kronos, titan of time (the Roman version was sometimes also titan of agriculture) Jupiter=Zeus, god of the sky (AKA horniest bastard ever) Mars=Ares, god of war Ceres=Demeter, goddess of agriculture
@Luke - 999 is because the rotary phones send pulses and in the "old" days a branch hitting a cable on a windy day would cause a pulse to be sent down the line and 999 (3 sets of 9 pulses) would stop false dials.
@@MorinehtarTheBlue, that and Luke's Sonic the Hedgehog fetish. If Sonic pops up in one of these it's usually Luke, but sometimes Andy, or Mike.....but mostly Luke!
I work nights so I usually miss these even though they’re at a totally normal time for my time zone - but construction noise kept me awake, so yay? I guess? XD
I wish they'd play Earwax. It's fun, and quite frequently the task is somehow related to other players (which is bit awkward when playing with friends of friends rather than people who know each others enough not to accidentally insult someone which has been quite close few times in our games..)
Some of the reason famous authors use pseudonyms is so that they don't get pre-judged; it happens most often when they are writing in a genre they aren't known for. That way people don't assume anything about based on author alone
Jane, Jane, Jane Jupiter and Zeus are Roman and Greek names for the same god. Knowing that Saturn and Kronos ( Cronus or Chronos) were the same god would have given you the answer with the association to time. Edit: Yes viking is a profession. The people were Norse, or Scandinavian but only those involved in certain seafaring aspects of the culture (positively: trader or explorer or negatively: raider or pirate) were vikings. It may as well be an old Norse word that means mariner.
Jane's tombstone: "Here lies Jane: She knew the tenth digit of pi."
Jane is so awesome
No, i'm just seeing
HERE LIES JANE
3.141592653
Ellen: you can bet on whos gonna die
Mike: oh that sounds horrible
Jane: *laughs maniacally*
Her inner Prudence is coming out.
Only just started it so I don’t know how wrong I am, but as soon as I saw that I though: So not Jane then!
"Missouri has the world's largest fork?"
Me, living in Missouri: "We do?!?!?"
Same lol
I’m guessing it’s in Branson.
@@usbiv223 Nope, Springfield. It's 35 feet long and weighs ELEVEN TONS, sayeth the Internet.
@@usbiv223 Branson does have the largest fork and meatball.
Show me.
My friend (who's several years younger than I am) did an escape room where they had to dial a number on a rotary phone, and they lost because NONE OF THEM KNEW HOW TO DO IT.
Ouch. (Laughs maniacally)
Through multiple rounds of Trivia Murder Party, I am proud to say that I now know how to dial a rotary phone.
I feel like it should be pretty intiuitive, but apparently not. I used to have a toy that was styled after a rotary phone (which I'm pretty sure they still sell, actually). Plus I've seen so many old horror films.
@@bishielurfer I wonder what the age cut-off is between those of us who have used one, and those who have no idea.
@@sgtraytango during the late 1990s my grandpa still used such rotary phone, though my parents house phone had buttons, I have never used a rotary phone but I do know that you can't rotate it to hastely to put in the next number or it might register and call a wrong number.
40:30 - Jane gets away with a swear - unnoticed! :)
Not the first time. ;)
That's why she never fixed her audio, plausible deniability.
Eggs have a protective layer when laid that helps keep bacteria out as well as helping maintain their inner temperature. Here in America those eggs are washed which removes that layer which means we have to refrigerate them
Oh is that why? I was dumbfounded when they said that. It's the same in Canada as the US but why do they wash them? There is probably a good reason gut it seems dumb without the context of what purpose it's supposed to serve.
@@MorinehtarTheBluePretty much because the USDA (in the US at least, I'm not sure for Canada) decided it's safest to thoroughly wash and require refrigeration for the eggs instead of relying on their natural coating and hoping they aren't otherwise contaminated. I live on a chicken farm and we just take the eggs that won't hatch and eat them though so we've never refrigerated ours and it's been fine
@@theisaacpigg27_32 The way I understood it, it's because in the UK they vaccinate the chickens against salmonella, while here in the US we don't.
I knew we washed our eggs, and maybe I'm misunderstanding something, but I was very quite amused when Mike suggested we burn our eggs.
@@bishielurfer That's not actually it. It is because of the washing process that they require refrigeration. Eggs naturally have an almost waxy coating that let them remain safe at room temperature. In the US, all commercially sold eggs (ones not directly from the farm) are pasteurized to kill any bacteria unless specifically labeled as unpasteurized.
@@dallasl3688 Not all eggs in the US are pasteurized. The process to pasteurize eggs which are still in their shell is patented and the patent is currently owned by only one company. In shell pasteurized eggs are sold under the brand name Davidson's Safest Choice®, all other eggs in the shell are not pasteurized, however liquid eggs sold in bottles etc are all pasteurized.
Game: 1069 audience members
Ellen (quietly): Nice.
*Ellen starts singing Dragostea Din Tei*
@The Gaming Meta It's me, Picasso!
@@TheDanishGuyReviews eh, I don't get it.
@@Sean-ne3gx Lyrics from Dragostea Din Tei.
@@TheDanishGuyReviews I did get it, I was quoting something else
No Ellen, Luke is the most “West” by quite “A Way”! 😁
Boooooo boooo boooo boo
I can only assume that this comment is severely under appreciated because it is left under a live stream vod
1:13:40 "I'm a dead ghost"
You should have said you're a Luke Spook. Luke Spooks get like spikes.
@@gsesquire3441 Nearly everything is some form of slur in America, unfortunately.
@@gsesquire3441 I'm in america, I've never heard it used as a slur. I've heard it used to describe government agents and ghosts, but never once was it even vaguely racial.
@@sambakich7494 I always thought it referred to undercover cops too, but maybe it's just the secretive types at the federal level. Who knows?
@@gsesquire3441 Yes historically and not contemporarily which still makes you out of touch. Snowflake used to disparage white people but it means something different, if no less nasty, now.
@@gsesquire3441 I'm about as likely to do that as call an asian a coolie. It is certainly still rude. But the point being that people don't do that anyway.
Even racists don't use that word in that manner anymore dumbass.
Not gonna lie, Luke reading out my comment at the end absolutely made my day. Thank you all for what you do!
It's always awesome when that happens 🙂
♥️♥️♥️
I feel the same anytime anyone of the crew reads one of my comments. Im glad they shoutout everyone's comments as well, not going to throw shade on any other channels but I've noticed some only mention comments if they have a donation attached, and while I totally understand the reasoning behind it, makes for a less enjoyable time watching. As always thank you OX crew for everything you do and for producer John for always being there for all us lads, lads, lads, lads, and ladies
Andy and Jane singing the lyrics to the Yuri on Ice OP was unexpected, but welcome
Where was this? I missed it.
@@michaelmcdonald1463 1:05:11 !
@@michaelmcdonald1463 ruclips.net/video/69gStketMjk/видео.html "Yuri on Ice has taught me nothing!"
@@Dirzech thank you, fellow human!
Thanks to Jane, I will never be able to think about the Mariana Trench without imagining it filled to the brim with pasta sauce.
You're confusing it with the marinara trench?
I love how when Mike killed Luke at around 59:24, it was by explosion. How fitting.
That phone ring at the beginning has my brain auto-completing "Hello? Hello? Welcome to your new summer job at Freddy Fazbear's..."
As much as we miss the couch, we really appreciate all these livestreams from you guys. Thanks for the good content
I feel like we may now safely add 'good at dancing' to the already robust creative repertoire of the oxboxtra team.
Apparently you missed Mike dancing the salsa as a golden lizard person on stage. Especially great since he had no idea how the dance goes.
@@godconvoy That's one of my favorite D&D moments. Mike has some extra spicy dance skills.
I loved when they danced to the 'You are dead' song in one of their list videos. If I find it again, I'll leave a link cause it's brilliant.
Also, Jane, Saturn was Jupiter's father and one of the Titans. Their Greek names were Cronus and Zeus respectively.
@Vice- Virgo That's a common speculative take, just want to note that Saturn is not the god of time -- Saturn is Cronus, not Chronos. Cronus (titan) is the god of agriculture, Chronos (primordial) is the god of time and sometimes the grandfather of Cronus (or generations above). They sound so similar that it's become a common modern misconception since the 1500's (Plutarch aside) to mistakenly claim they're the same. Saturn was related to time because, being the god of agriculture, seasonal changes and harvesting seasons are timely, hence the association with time. The Roman equivalent for a "god of time" was Janus, not Saturn. Seems that Jackbox didn't do more than a cursory Google search while fact-checking.
Hmm, never knew who Saturn was originally. Something new everyday...
@@BoojumFed and we haven't even scratched the surface of how bonkers some of that mythology gets.
@@RyderVFX The origins of Castor and Pollux is my go-to for Greek/Roman madness, with such delightful story elements as a woman being raped by a god pretending to be a swan, laying eggs, and giving birth to two sets of twins, with one twin from each set immortal.
The Jesus cinematic universe made me do a spit take
2:17 "What do you mean funny, funny how? How am I funny? I'm funny like a clown? Do I amuse you?"
None of you saw Tombstone with Kurt Russel and Val Kilmer? The OK Corral scene is in it and it's awesome!
I love that movie, my brain just went blank - Andy
@@outsidexbox , I for sure thought I've heard Andy mention that movie and the actors in it many times.
@@outsidexbox _“Maybe Jackbox just isn’t your game. I know, why don’t we have a spelling contest?”_ 😉 Love Tombstone, Doc is such an amazing character.
@@Incoherent-excitement _"I'm your hukleberry"_ still gives me chills.
Amused by how often they go "WE'RE NOT AMERICAN, THIS ISN'T FAIR" to questions that make absolutely no more sense to Americans than they do to anyone else.
Also, in my experience, you can turn off American Centric content in the settings of all the Jackbox games.
@Steve N You never heard of the iconic American dish Shoofly Pie. It's the one with all the ingredients.
@@TheHortoncrow I genuinely laughed out at this comment
@@ChiBoomyBoom So I just looked it up. Apparently Pennsylvanian Dutch.
So fuck me I guess. I'm from the south, usually we have the dishes people never heard of.
47:55 I love how Andy made himself laugh with that answer
Undoubtedly my favorite of the Jackboxes so far. It's like if every player in Mario Party was under constant threat of death.
I need to know what Luke found weird about his Grandma’s rotary phone
It still had candy crush
Maybe it was one of those ones with the drawer in the base
Yep. I have a real problem with people starting to say something interesting only to stop because people are generically shrieking. Shrieking < that story about Luke's Granny's phone.
Feeling old, because I understand rotary phones or, as they were called at the time, phones
They decided on three numbers the same, a line fault could trigger 111, so that was rejected, 000 was rejected because 0 waa used for operators
So 999 because it is findable in the dark and smoke as 2nd hole in from the stop
0 was used for switchboards
Fun fact: I have heard grandmasters call the knight a “horsie” while playing.
Jane, who is totally not an over-a-thousand-year-old witch/eldritch being, is not old enough to remember rotary phones.
I'm all for the team vibing to the music in between rounds.
Another very fun Jackbox stream all! I both like and dislike TMP, because it is very fun, but I am also rubbish at it.
When I was a kid I really loved trivias and was very good at them, but this one... This one made me feel sooooo silly! I'd die every round, I swear...
I have very specific fields or hyper interest. I’ll nail that fandom quiz but do abysmal on those boxes trivia sets that were always 90s pop music and tabloids
Mike: Fig Newtons surely have to be named after someone
Jane: they’re named after figs!!!
I have to say nothing has made me laugh harder than this in a while so thank you oxbox crew
I think they're named after a town in Massachusetts. Which is probably named after somebody, if you want to press the issue.
@@toymachine2328 Could also be a corruption of 'new town.'
I intended to get up to watch this live, but overslept (stream started at 9am my time). 🙃 Anyway, wanted to tell the Oxboxtra crew that I was having a bit of a rubbish day yesterday and seeing the tweet that there’d be a livestream today with all five of you cheered me up a bit. Thanks for all you do to help make our lives a little brighter!
I hope you didn't miss Janes sick dance moves at the end 💃
Ellen saying "nice" when the viewer count reached 1069 and the others missing it gives me life
Jane can compute pi (an irrational number) by counting with her fingers! Amazing!
I'll remember to tell people that's what I'm doing when I'm counting out a digit of pi.
"Pop quiz, hotshot, get off my plane!" should be on a t-shirt...
It’s videos like this that remind me how much I love Oxbox/Oxtra. Every video they put out brightens my day.
Jane reading out the prompts and distracting everyone made me laugh. That being said, I really appreciate knowing what the minigames are now because Jane was reading them out.
Didn’t expect the Short Circuit references towards the end, but I am 100% here for it lol
I was watching this as a recording, saying, “Andy V is alive,” feeling mildly clever, and then it was said in the video. “Ah, they got there before me. 😆”
For some reason hearing Mike say the Jesus Cinematic Universe had me dying 🤣
The end credits song is on Spotify and it makes me so happy.
What's the name of the song?
Andy 5 is alive! No disassemble.
Tumbleweed from Red Dead Redemption was inspired by Tombstone Arizona, I believe!
Dang Mike. I barely even got time to jam
1:08:17 Luke with the sneaky comeback 👏🏻👏🏻
Andy didn't know Tombstone? hand in your cowboy gun, and American History badge!
The number of films alone made about or including the O.K. Corral shoot-out should've been his tip off. I mean, there's even one that's hard to miss. A little classic called...
Tombstone.
Pretty sure he even referenced tombstone once in Morgan Mondays but could be remembering wrong.
@@Corpseplower I'll be your huckleberry.
@@TheStigHCE09 I have two guns. One for each of you.
@@Suztvfan yeah, his Arthur is basically Doc Holiday from Tombstone...
Fairly sure 999 is the emergency number in the UK because 9 is the number you have to go all the way around to ring; the idea being it’s the three digit number least likely to be dialled by accident.
The logic behind 911 in America is that 9 and 1 are on opposite corners of a pushpad, so would take deliberate effort to hit 9 and then go all the way over to 1 (this was the days before candybar phones and butt-dialling by rocking around so your pants tighten over the corners).
Here in New Zealand, the emergency number has been 111 since forever - but our rotary phones had a different layout, with 1 in the position where you'd find 9 on a UK phone.
Difficult to do by accident, but easy when in a stressful situation where your hand might be shaking. Since you can just throw the dial all the way to the end there's no precision required when aiming for a particular number.
Thanks!
Mike with the andre the seal reference!!! Havent thought of that movie for 20 years 🤣🤣🤣
I love that end credits song so much. Can barely hear over them talking, but it just grooves. It's nice.
This is and QuipLash are def my favorite "Party" Livestream - Games. What I really wanna ask is what you guys were saying near the start of Stream, somethin about Andy's *SONG?!* He said "it already has 3 verses", or something? If you know what I'm saying, like if I can hear this anywhere, _please_ tell me how?! Thankee! 💚
I immensely appreciated the Red Dragon reference!!
Good to know Jane's priorities on knowing the weight of a human skeleton: light enough to put in a suitcase to take on holiday...
I love spending time with you guys. I feel like I’m good friends with each of you.
I LOVE "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch!" Probably the only classic Christmas song that's just a few minutes of savage insults. Sung by Thurl Ravenscroft (a.k.a. Tony the Tiger), by the way. At least in the classic version of the story. The Jim Carrey one is okay (both song and movie), but adds too much unnecessary flair. The original is timeless brilliance.
You're a mean one, Mr. Grinch
You really are a heel
You're as cuddly as a cactus, you're as charming as an eel, Mr. Grinch
You're a bad banana with a greasy black peel!
You're a monster, Mr. Grinch
Your heart's an empty hole
Your brain is full of spiders, you've got garlic in your soul, Mr. Grinch
I wouldn't touch you with a thirty-nine-and-a-half foot pole!
You're a vile one, Mr. Grinch
You have termites in your smile
You have all the tender sweetness of a seasick crocodile, Mr. Grinch
Given a choice between the two of you I'd take the seasick crocodile!
You're a foul one, Mr. Grinch
You're a nasty-wasty skunk
Your heart is full of unwashed socks, your soul is full of gunk, Mr. Grinch
The three words that best describe you are as follows, and I quote
"Stink, stank, stunk!"
You're a rotter, Mr. Grinch
You're the king of sinful sots
Your heart's a dead tomato splotched with moldy purple spots, Mr. Grinch
Your soul is an appalling dump heap overflowing with the most disgraceful
Assortment of deplorable rubbish imaginable, mangled up in tangled up knots!
You nauseate me, Mr. Grinch
With a nauseous super "naus"!
You're a crooked dirty jockey and you drive a crooked hoss, Mr. Grinch
You're a three decker sauerkraut and toadstool sandwich with arsenic sauce!
...25 incredibly savage insults that don't have one bit of swearing or other vulgarity. And listening to it makes your heart feel warm and reminds you of great holiday memories!
Starts at 0:12 for fellow murder fiends in a bit of a rush 😈😁 Great stream as usual guys 😃 and hugs to Ellen and Jane since missed out on saying bye on live chat 🤗🤗
Thank you, kind stranger
@@christoferwray6257 No problem 🙂
@@payasoartwork5906 Obviously you aren't in a rush, seeing as you found the time to be needlessly rude to a commenter who was clearly joking.
@0:13 if you can find this before the lovely crew are up.
Good job cutting.. Let's say Jane?
From Andy's opening comment it might have been mike
Seeing all of their expressions and tones of voice drop at just seeing the name JK Rowling is a mood
That was a shame, outside xbox is great but the hate towards J.K. Rowling is undeserved. She is a good writer and brought countless people joy with her works, but now she is harresed by people for having a opinion they don't share. She even defended her statements with strong arguments, but it seems that arguments don't matter anymore in todays world
Some of these questions are gonna get so much harder in 10 ish years.
Pretty much the nature of trivia and contemporary answers. Then again they tend to update products like this to keep them fresh and the old questions get left behind. It's not like they're going to play the older versions at this point which is why they're playing trivia murder party 2.
@@MorinehtarTheBlue you get the "Year you were born","90s kids", etc editions, with questions relevant to the specified timeframe.
46:00 it seems very appropriate that Ellen is the best at following rules
Different chicken breeds lay different colored eggs, and you dont have to refrigerate any fresh eggs unless they are washed cause they lose a protective coating that keep them fresh
I did enjoy the 15 seconds of song at the beginning :D anyone know what it's called?
@@LuckyLucyHi thanks!
That was a lot of fun to watch.
Also, just like Jane, I had no idea that a Honda Passeport is a thing.
1:24:17 in 1916, The SS Mont Blanc was a French cargo ship that carried ammunition, TNT, Picric Acid( an organic compound similar to TNT), gasoline and gun cotton to the allies in Europe during the first world war.
All that caught fire after the Mont Blank collided with the SS Imo, and the Mont Blank exploded in Halifax harbor with the force of nearly 3 kilotons of TNT, it was the largest man made explosion before the atomic bomb.💥💥🔥🔥
14:10 I've just had the greatest idea for a D&D encounter: the gnoll knoll
Druid character: a grassy gnoll.
@@TheVagabond7 That was a thing in a DnD one-shot by TFS At the Table: Lee, Harvey, and Oswald, enforcers in the employ of the owner of the local tavern, the Grassy Gnoll.
I think that's Lolies' character's pet in Dice Breaker's Dungeon Breaker series. No, wait, that was Noel.
Missed joke from Jane. What was Saturn the god of? Sega. Nice.
My fav quote from this has to be Jane saying "Anne Rice I knew you'd save my life one day"
This is the best Jackbox game ever. The music in that final round is so tense!
Love the cameo from the Sports Direct mug that appears in every British (and a good few Irish) home, as though gifted by ghosts!
Don’t imagine anyone would ever call Joanne good, as a writer or a person. Good shout Ellen
27:00 how eggs are processed in the US removes the waxy protective coating on eggs making it so we have to refrigerate them
I really like the dancing at the end😊😊😊
1:01:06 “So Americans say ‘math,’ but the British say ‘maths.’ That’s weird, right?”
Roomful of Brits: No
10/10 for the intro song. Tbh was genuinely enjoying it
24:45 - No, Jane, Jupiter and Saturn are both Roman gods.
The ones that share their names with planets in our solar system are always the Roman names.
Mercury = Hermes
Venus = Aphrodite
Mars = Ares
Jupiter = Zeus
Saturn = Cronus [one of the Titans]
Neptune = Poseidon
Pluto = Hades
The only ones I can think of that share the same name are Apollo and Nemesis, but there might be others.
Even Hercules is the Roman name for Herakles.
31:13 - No, early on it was actually about when the band's first record (be it a single or an LP) was released: to be eligible for induction, it has to have been at least 25 years since an artist's first commercial release.
The Beach Boys - Surfin' [single] - 1961
Bob Dylan - Bob Dylan [LP] - 1962
The Beatles - Love Me Do [single] - 1962
The Rolling Stones - Come On [single] - 1963
The Beach Boys were first eligible in 1986 for the 1987 class, but the first two years of inductions ('86 and '87) were artists who got big in the '50s, so they were pushed back to the 1988 class with the Beatles and Bob Dylan. The Rolling Stones weren't eligible until 1988 for the 1989 class, which is when they were inducted.
The sheer number of memorable acts that sprung up in the '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s (and some questionable inductee choices like "The Lovin' Spoonful," not to mention controversy over induction of non-rock acts like ABBA, Miles Davis, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, etc. [though they were inducting some country, pop, and soul/Motown acts from the very start]) means they're still playing catch-up seemingly at random, especially with only 5-7 performer inductees per year (sometimes they get around that by having someone get an "Award for Musical Excellence" [basically lifetime achievement], like Ringo Starr solo in 2015), but had they stuck with 10-12 like their first couple inductee classes, it would be much better, IMO.
58:35 - Richard Bachman, actually. (The last name came from him hearing a Bachman-Turner Overdrive song on the radio while thinking it up.) It's because general consensus at the time was that an author should only have one book published a year to avoid oversaturating the market, and he wanted to be able to release more. It was also an attempt to see if his success was based on his writing skill, or on luck & name recognition. He got outed after his fifth book as Bachman ("Thinner"), so he feels it was too soon to tell for sure either way.
He's revisited the pseudonym twice, once for "The Regulators" in 1996 which was a mirror-universe novel to "Desperation" under his own name, and I believe both were published simultaneously. Then in 2007, he rediscovered an early manuscript, "Blaze," which he gave another draft to tighten up the writing and update some references, and because it was an early book, less in his familiar horror style, he felt it fit better with his Bachman books, so he had himself credited thusly.
And look at that, Uranus was left hanging in the breeze...
I want a shirt with Mike's face & a speech bubble that says "I don't even know what molasses ARE".
Andy I want you to know that I enjoyed and appreciated the fee seconds of music at the beginning and end of the stream ;)
The question about which state of matter has more densely packed particles actually depends on the substance. Water being the biggest exception with its solid being less dense than its liquid form.
I would absolutely enjoy a week-long survival stream with the Oxbox+Oxtra team
Hearing Jane swear really threw me. I always thought it would be Ellen to drop a livestream swear
The "Americans say "math", but British people say "maths". That's weird right?" immediately after Jane's "I can do maths!" was perfect.
Their collective groan following was also pretty funny.
You're all wrong though. It's math.
Hilarious and entertaining as always. Some of the "American" questions made me, an American, chuckle. (FTR, Shoefly pie is a Pennsylvania Dutch dish. As a PA resident and someone who went to college in Amish Country I can say Shoefly pie is good for one bite...it is way to sweet and rich and gooey to eat any more of it.) And the end of each round of this game was shockingly exciting and tense. Fun times!
24:43 NO JANE! NO! THEY ARE BOTH ROMAN.
Saturn=Kronos, titan of time (the Roman version was sometimes also titan of agriculture)
Jupiter=Zeus, god of the sky (AKA horniest bastard ever)
Mars=Ares, god of war
Ceres=Demeter, goddess of agriculture
This is always one of my fav games to play in the Jackbox party nights.
@Luke - 999 is because the rotary phones send pulses and in the "old" days a branch hitting a cable on a windy day would cause a pulse to be sent down the line and 999 (3 sets of 9 pulses) would stop false dials.
Useless fact. If the rotary part of the phone broke, you could tap out the pulses with the button that the handset sits on.
@@MarcUK Is that phone phreaking?
@@callumdonington2227 No, phone phreaking involves a Captain Krunch whistle. Or a Blue Box.
Aw, I missed my favorite Jackbox game
So glad you guys played it
"I went for maths"
Well there's your problem. There's no Nobel Prize for mathematics.
Jane been playing Civ I can see, Gandhi going to lay down the pain!
Beloved classic video game character "Sanic the Hedgehog"!🦔
Referencing the poorly drawn version Sanik meme. Of course he mispelled that and what was written was "Sanic A Hedgehog".
@@MorinehtarTheBlue, that and Luke's Sonic the Hedgehog fetish. If Sonic pops up in one of these it's usually Luke, but sometimes Andy, or Mike.....but mostly Luke!
I work nights so I usually miss these even though they’re at a totally normal time for my time zone - but construction noise kept me awake, so yay? I guess? XD
Mike, spinning the wheel of death: this is bs!
Also Mike, being immediately brought back to like: this is the kind of bs that works in my favour!
I wish they'd play Earwax. It's fun, and quite frequently the task is somehow related to other players (which is bit awkward when playing with friends of friends rather than people who know each others enough not to accidentally insult someone which has been quite close few times in our games..)
I wish I could've taken part in this stream, but it was during my work hours. Still really enjoyable to watch afterwards though 😄
Some of the reason famous authors use pseudonyms is so that they don't get pre-judged; it happens most often when they are writing in a genre they aren't known for. That way people don't assume anything about based on author alone
This is my favorite part box series
I feel like Survive the Internet from Jackbox Party Pack 4 would be a lot of fun too!
11:41 If you think about it* when you hug a person, you _are_ embracing a skeleton that's all wrapped up in other stuff.
*(I prefer not to)
Andy said 'who the F is the bye bye man' at the same time that I thought it lol
The "Midnight Screenings" channel had a pretty funny review of it
*Jason Vorhees murders Mike*
"That's so unfair! I didn't even have a sporting chance."
Ellen is really on top of making sure we press like on the video
Jane, Jane, Jane Jupiter and Zeus are Roman and Greek names for the same god. Knowing that Saturn and Kronos ( Cronus or Chronos) were the same god would have given you the answer with the association to time.
Edit: Yes viking is a profession. The people were Norse, or Scandinavian but only those involved in certain seafaring aspects of the culture (positively: trader or explorer or negatively: raider or pirate) were vikings. It may as well be an old Norse word that means mariner.