It seems like whenever I get pulled into a trivia night, it seems to be as the wild card in the deck.
Usually, I avoid themed trivia nights, being a more "random info" sort of guy, but some of my friends from work needed a sub, and it wasn't just a trivia night -- it was a True Crime Pottery Night. Having not done a pottery night, which has been a common social outing for years now, and intrigued by the blood-spattered examples of what could be done, it seemed like an interesting diversion for an evening.
But here is the first dilemma with any sort of pottery-painting night -- first you have to pick an item to turn into your masterpiece. Themes abound on the shelves of a place like Art At The Bodega, across the river from Peoria. Highland cows, dragons, toadstools, and the like, scattered among the mugs, plates, planters, and more functional pieces. But something in a Sherlockian theme?
Not all dogs can be a demon hound of the Baskervilles. (Missed opportunity, now that I think about it -- Watson's bull pup! They had young bulldogs!) Gasogenes, tantaluses, pipes, deerstalkers, cyanea capillata . . . nope . . . and what I thought was a snake turned out to be curled up primitive swan. A treasure chest looked more piratical than Agra. So I finally went with an object that wasn't just a plate, but still offered flat surfaces to create upon . . . a dresser that you could plant small plants in. A dresser from Bart's.
With that first problem solve and my compatriots joining me at the table to start painting, the true crime trivia began.
"I'm afraid all of my true crime knowledge is well over a century old," I apologized, before things took off
We named our team "The Saints of Bloody Gulch Road," combining our employer with an actual road from a hotel we once stayed at for work. And round one started with a seeming mandatory Dahmer question, which most folks knew. Followed by our first mis-step, which was all my fault: "Name the platform where true crime rose to prominence in popular culture."
Well, it's podcasting, of course, a true crime podcaster (or someone who plays a true crime podcaster, if that character believes Sherlock Holmes Is Real), will immediately tell you. But, sadly, apparently the desired answer was "Netflix."
The very next question was right in my wheelhouse, however. So much in my wheelhouse that I rolled my eyes so hard they about left my head. "What city did Jack the Ripper commit his crimes in?"
"Do we get extra points if we can name all of the victims?" I asked. Sadly, no.
Living in downstate Illinois, our state killer clown was easy to identify, but everyone in the room was from downstate Illinois. The name of the car OJ Simpson tried to escape in? If you lived through that year, Ford Broncos are etched in your mind. But then we got to the nitty gritty: The Zodiac Killer's unsolved clue. The BTK Killer's name. The state where some more recent murders that I never even heard of occurred. Ed Gein trivia.
But thank goodness for the play "Arsenic and Old Lace," when it came to "What is the most common poison used in murders?" Well, arsenic had a play written about it and strychnine and cyanide don't, soooo arsenic? Correct!
No Palmer and Pritchard questions. No Jonathan Wild questions. Nothing about Oscar Slater.
It appears that a knowledgable Sherlockians can be a bit weak on a subject that a current day Sherlock Holmes might be well versed in -- no great surprise there, of course. My chemistry knowledge is probably worse. But such an evening, even dipping lightly into that topic as we did painting pottery, gives one pause to wonder how many true crime devotees possess a Holmes-level knowledge of the annals of crime?
We might want to add one or two of them to our social circles.








