A close relative of the New Guinea singing dog, what animal gets its name from the Dharug language?
An actual, not-that-funny legal case in Australia inspired the famous "Seinfeld" line "maybe the WHAT ate your baby"?
In the Northern Territory, it's "protected wildlife." In the Capital Territory, it's a "pest animal." That's a snapshot of the Aussie relationship with what feral dogs?
Editor Helen Gurley Brown targeted single and career women, during her 1960s overhaul of what magazine?
Not Playgirl: A nude of Burt Reynolds on a fur rug was the first centerfold for what monthly mag known for its sex advice?
Celebrating its — wow — 140th birthday this year, what magazine shares its name with a cranberry-and-vodka cocktail?
"Virtute et armis" — "by valor and arms" — is the official motto of what U.S. state that's home to Vicksburg National Military Park?
In 2024, the Magnolia Tribune announced that what Southern state was adding a blues guitar to their drivers license designs?
An A.I. called "MISSI" accosts you the moment you enter the website of what Deep South state?
Though she wasn't originally credited, John Stuart Mill's wife helped him write his 1859 political treatise "On WHAT"?
Depicting a lady waving a big ol' French flag, Eugène Delacroix's most famous work is the barricade-storming painting "WHO Leading the People"?
If you want to get really technical, that big green statue in New York Harbor is "WHO Enlightening the World"?
What company trademarked the "puh plink chunk" sound made by their "windproof" signature product?
The "i" is topped by a flame in the logo of what American lighter brand that's been around since 1932?
Founder George Blaisdell liked the word for the toothy thing on the front of your jeans, but wanted it to sound more modern. That's how his lighter company got what name?