Pop Quiz

How many of these people do you know of? Without the aid of Google.


  • Total voters
    41
  • Poll closed .
Sep 1, 2007
3,786
15
It's late and I'm very sick to my stomach, so I'm going to do something to amuse myself. In the poll above you are ten names. You can select multiple options. Without using Google, check off the ones you actually do know about and list in a post. Do not describe who they are and what they did, just tell me the names.

I will post a one-or-two sentence explanation of each person sometime tomorrow whenever I feel like it.

Trust me, I am going somewhere with this.
 
May 8, 2008
1,081
0
Cumbria, UK
The only one I can put my finger on right now is Grigori Rasputin, however one or two others look vaguely familiar, I just can't remember where from...
 
Nov 23, 2007
607
1
51
NC
Lee Strasberg
Robert Greene
Richard Webster
Joseph Campbell
Count Saint-Germain
Grigori Rasputin
Zhuge Liang
 
Apr 27, 2008
1,805
2
Norway
Let me guess the aim of this little experiment.

We are an...uneducated rable of self absorbed over protective ****s.

Am I right?

G
 
Aug 31, 2007
369
0
Hartford, CT
I'm sorry to say, I only recognized five of them off the bat.

Lee Strasberg
Robert Greene
Richard Webster
Count Saint-Germain
Grigori Rasputin


Out of the other five, two seem familiar (Joseph Campbell & Zhuge Liang) but I can't check them because I can't really describe what they did. Kinda like an out-of-focus photograph....(damn, I'm old!) :)

BTW, great pop quiz. - and I hope you get better soon.
 
Apr 27, 2008
1,805
2
Norway
You have a rather cynical outlook. Has anyone ever told you that?

Other than you?

No.

It's not who I normally am, I'm all up for the quirky daydreamer, just trying to fall behind your footsteps.

Besides, I'm used to your threads having a cynical resolution.

Oh. and ****s is not what you think - I typed Tw*t. Not as bad as the other one.

G
 
Feb 27, 2008
2,342
1
34
Grand prairie TX
Id be suprised if no one has heard of Robert Howard. Well,seems to me his names comes up every week at least once in real life.(not forums)
Ive HEARD about most of them but only know of about 4.
 
Feb 16, 2009
217
0
South Bend, IN
To be honest, I know something about Grigori Rasputin and Lee Strasberg.

I have heard of Richard Webster, Count St. Germain and Victor Lustig as well, but I don't remember in what context I heard of them. Somehow I feel I should know more about these guys.

The rest I have never heard of.
 
Sep 1, 2007
3,786
15
Alright, time to come clean.

Lee Strasberg: American actor and drama instructor who popularized the Method school of acting. He personally taught such talents as Dustin Hoffman, Paul Newman, and Anne Bancroft.

Robert Greene: An author of three books analyzing strategy, tactics, and power dynamics through historical example. His works are "The 48 Laws of Power", "The Art of Seduction", and "The 33 Strategies of War."

Richard Webster: One of the best mentalists of our time, Richard is a modern expert in cold reading, mind reading, and the business side of mentalism. He has also penned over 40 different books for the shut-eye market.

Robert E. Howard: A prolific pulp fiction writer from the early 20th century credited with inventing the sword and sorcery genre with his characters King Kull of Atlantis and Conan the Cimmerian. He created his unique writing style by juxtaposing conventions of the heroic saga with the post-modernist perspective of his time.

Joseph Campbell: Perhaps the 20th century's greatest expert on mythology. Campbell's work theorized that mythic storytelling had a sublime aspect relating to the human condition and was essential to our culture as sentient beings.

Uta Hagen: A German actress today considered one of the greatest of all time. Her books "Respect for Acting" and "A Challenge for the Actor" are among the most influential texts ever written on the craft.

Count Saint-Germain: An 18th century charlatan who claimed to be an alchemist. Through brilliant acting and subtle implication, he became a legendary figure in the courts of Europe and Russia during his time to the point where many believed that he never actually died.

Grigori Rasputin: A Russian mystic of the 1800's whose enigmatic life was only out-matched by his legendary assassination. Following his death, a letter he wrote to the czar was released, predicting the events of the Red Terror with chilling accuracy.

Victor Lustig: A Czech con artist who perpetrated a number of frauds and scams characterized by their sheer audacity and spectacle. He is forever remembered as the man who sold the Eiffel Tower.

Zhuge Liang: Also known as Chuko Liang to Westerners, Zhuge was a powerful military strategist in 3rd century China. So great was his intelligence, cunning, and composure that friends and enemies alike called him Fulong: "the Sleeping Dragon."

Now, I'm sure the question at this point is, "Where the hell is he going with all this?" Simply this: it pays to know a little about a lot.

From studying books by Strasberg and Hagen I've learned more about acting, which has helped my performances. Reading Robert E. Howard and Joseph Campbell has helped me to refine my abilities as a storyteller. Studying Robert Greene and Richard Webster's works have helped me become a better entrepreneur. And learning about Count Saint-Germain, Victor Lustig, Zhuge Liang, and Rasputin have helped me greatly in constructing a character and mythos for my performances.

Start reading some books. Watch some documentaries. Take new classes. Learn to love learning. It can only help you.
 
Feb 27, 2008
2,342
1
34
Grand prairie TX
Grigori Rasputin: A Russian mystic of the 1800's whose enigmatic life was only out-matched by his legendary assassination. Following his death, a letter he wrote to the czar was released, predicting the events of the Red Terror with chilling accuracy.
QUOTE]

Ive always had an interest in rasputin but just never got quite into the subject.
Is it true he was supposedly shot dead and dumped in a river but then was actually found to have died from drowning and not from the bullets?
 
Sep 1, 2007
3,786
15
Ive always had an interest in rasputin but just never got quite into the subject.
Is it true he was supposedly shot dead and dumped in a river but then was actually found to have died from drowning and not from the bullets?

Specifically, they tried to poison him with cakes laced with cyanide. That didn't work as its probable that the cyanide vaporized during the baking process. The conspirators, a group of boyars (Russian nobles) and a British SIS agent led by Prince Yusupov and Duke Pavlovich, got nervous when he didn't drop dead from what they thought was enough cyanide to kill 5 men, so they shot him.

They left the room to plan of how to dispose of the body and Yusupov who fired the shot returned to get his coat and check on the body. Rasputin leaped up and strangled him, according to legend even hissing, "You bad boy," as he tried to throttle the life out of his would-be killer.

The other conspirators heard the noise, came in, and shot Rasputin three more times. He lived through that too, so they proceeded to beat the living hell out of him. That didn't kill him either, so they wrapped him in a sheet and threw him in the river.

His body was found three days later and the bastard had obviously made a hell of an effort to claw his way out. There is some speculation over whether he died of drowning... or hypothermia. If it were really the latter, that means he could have survived had he another minute or two to get free.

His remains were interred in an Eastern Orthodox cemetery, but enemies he had made dug up his body and burned it in a bonfire. Unfortunately, they didn't know that when cremating a body, you need to sever the tendons because they shrink when burned. The result was that the corpse sat up while engulfed in flames, most likely resulting in everyone present needing a new pair of pants and years of powerful psychotherapy.

Please keep in mind that this all took place two years after he survived being almost eviscerated by a prostitute in public in 1914. She stabbed him in the gut after being paid to kill him, convinced that he was the Anti-Christ.

And then of course there's that letter I mentioned in which he predicted he would not live to see the new year (he died on December 16), predicted a rebellion if he was assassinated by boyars (both of which came to pass), and that if one of the assassins was indeed related to Czar Nicholas (Duke Pavlovich was the czar's cousin), then none of the Romanov's would survive another two years. That they would all be assassinated by the Russian people (I think we all know how that went down).

This goes down in history as one of the most insanely creepy things ever.
 
Apr 27, 2008
1,805
2
Norway
I guess the conclusion wasn't so cynical after all...

His remains were interred in an Eastern Orthodox cemetery, but enemies he had made dug up his body and burned it in a bonfire. Unfortunately, they didn't know that when cremating a body, you need to sever the tendons because they shrink when burned. The result was that the corpse sat up while engulfed in flames, most likely resulting in everyone present needing a new pair of pants and years of powerful psychotherapy.

When I read that in my history book, I needed new pants.

I can totally imagine their horror when the 'Anti Christ' rises from the bonfire, looking like a well old zombie.

G
 
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