InKredible Kids

Pesach Trivia: A Family Game Show

Tziri Preis

Ready for a Pesach knowledge showdown that's perfect for the whole family? Our trivia game brings Jewish learning to life through challenging questions that will test what you know about Pesach while keeping everyone entertained from start to finish.

Two teams of kids go head-to-head in our studio – the confident "Pesach Pros" facing off against the determined "Gebruks Girls." 

The beauty of this episode is that you can play along right from home. Grab a paper and pen, follow the prompts, and see how your score compares to our studio contestants. 

Submit your score at inkrediblekids.org/pesach-trivia for a chance to win fantastic prizes including a $100 Amazon gift card, delicious Popinsanity popcorn, or the beloved Kichel It! family game. 

Don't forget to check out our family-friendly films at ikfilm.org – perfect viewing for those relaxing Chol HaMoed evenings!

Support the show

Speaker 1:

Hey kids, welcome back to the next episode of the Incredible Kids Podcast. My name is Moritz Ciri and I will be your host. Through this incredible journey, we are going to meet many incredible kids. They are going to share with us their stories, some of them super cool and different like you've never heard before, and some you may say are just ordinary, but all of them incredible. If you have great ideas, email me today at ikidpodcasts at gmailcom. And now it's time for Incredible Kids.

Speaker 1:

Hi everybody, and I hope everyone has been off to a wonderful start of your Pesach experience. Wherever you are in the world, and if you're here right now, that means that you are excited to play Pesach trivia together with us. We recorded this live in our studio at Incredible Kids and we hope that you can play from wherever you are listening from. So all you need is a paper and pen to jot down your answers. Follow the directions along with us. We are sure to have a really awesome time today, but not just that.

Speaker 1:

You have the opportunity to win prizes. So, after the entire game show is finished and you got to the end of this episode, take your score and submit it at incrediblekidsorg. Click on Pesach Trivia and there you'll find a very short form where you will enter your information so that you can win either a delicious Pop Insanity prize of delicious popcorn, or you can win a $100 gift card to Amazon, or you can be one of five winners who win the family favorite Kichelet game we love so much. So you're playing for the fun, but you're also incentivized that maybe you will be a lucky raffle winner. Raffle winners will be contacted as soon as those raffles are drawn after Pesach is finished, so you got not so much time to submit those scores. Also, be sure to check out our wonderful, incredible Kids films at ikfilmorg if you haven't yet watched Through their Eyes, that came out this past summer, or AmI a Hero that we released this past Hanukkah. Those are both great viewing options to watch over Halamoid as a family, literally appropriate for every single age adult and child in the family. And I surely hope that you enjoy those productions and once you play this game, share it with a friend, share it with the family, invite new, incredible kids to our wonderful community, and I hope that you are all having the most awesome Pesach and have a great time.

Speaker 1:

Here is our trivia game. Have a great time. Here is our trivia game. Hi, everybody, and welcome to the newest Kol Amowid Pesach game show. Today we have two very competent teams competing against each other the Price Kids and the Greenfield Kids. Yay, the Greenfield Kids are our newest guests on the show, and so I want to hear each of your names. Can you introduce yourselves to everybody?

Speaker 2:

My name is Devorah and I'm 11 years old. My name is Ricky and I'm 8 years old.

Speaker 1:

My name is Esther and I'm 5 years old. Devorah, Ricky and Esther Got it Amazing. We're so excited to compete against you guys. Where do you live? Paraguay? Are you also known as the Glorious Greenfield sometimes? Yeah, that's your claim to fame. On the Tehillim Army right, I actually met a lady who I think is your grandmother right In Cincinnati.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And she asked me if I know the Glorious Greenfields and I said it's really hard to forget a name like that. So good to meet you guys. We're so happy to have you on forgot a name like that.

Speaker 2:

So good to meet you guys. We're so happy to have you on. My name is.

Speaker 1:

Devorah and my name is Ahuva. Okay, for all of our listeners, it's quite simple. Everybody who's listening to us as we play live should take out a piece of paper and a pen and play with us together. You're going to keep track of all of your answers. There are going to be two rounds of the game. After round one of 10 questions, we will go over the answers and you will keep score, and then we will do round two. You will once again keep score and at the very end of the game, we are going to count up all of our points and see what your score is. And, of course, we're going to see who's our winner here. Is it going to be the green fields or the prices? And we're going to ask everybody at home to send their scores in. We're going to ask everybody to make up an awesome team name for your family for Pesach Trivia. Get talking and come up with a good name. Ready, okay, price Girls. Can you share with us what your team name is? Team Pesach Pros, pesach Pros, pesach Pros. I like it. Okay, you guys are pretty confident that you know everything. I see, greenfield kids. What's your team name? Gebructs girls. Gebructs girls. Should I make the assumption that your family keeps Gebructs yeah, yes, gebructs, or no Gebructs. Yes, you don't eat Gebruks we do. This confuses me a lot when people say they keep it. What's Gebruks? It's like when you have like matzo and you can't make it wet. So the Greenfields do make their matzo wet or they don't. We do. You do Gebruks. Girls against Pesach pros.

Speaker 1:

A couple of quick things that you should know. Number one if you don't know the answer to a question, just take a wild guess. And number two there is no googling answers, right? No looking up answers online. And no asking your parents. No, asking your parents. You guys, I can see you on the screen over here and there's no parental input allowed. We're gonna start strong. We're gonna start our first round of 10 questions right away. I will ask a question. You will hear some music and during the time of the music is a time for you to collaborate with your team to come up with what you think is the answer. Then we will stop and see what you got. Here we go. Question number one what happened to Rabbi Elazar Ben Azaria when he became the Nasi? What happened to Rabbi Elazar Ben Azaria when he became the Nasi team, the box girls? What you got? He got a beard. All right, team hayes pros he grew longer toes the answer is that he grew a white beard.

Speaker 1:

we just said it was a beard. If you just a beard, you only got half of the point, because part of the whole craziness of it was that he grew a white beard. And the reason why he grew a white beard was then because he was much more respected. He kind of looked like he was 70 years old. That's why in the Haggadah we say he woke up and he was like it's almost like I'm 70 years old, but he was really much, much, much younger. Question number two what Megillah do we read on Pesach? What Megillah do we read on Pesach? Are you sure you're not asking a parent for help?

Speaker 2:

Oh, I know it from EDS Clios in school.

Speaker 1:

Whoa, how awesome is that. Can we give a shout out to your school? What school do you go to? Pag, Incredible, Wonderful. And to you for knowing that Okay, Price Pros what you got Share share them also.

Speaker 1:

Cause of Mrs Grooming. Cause of Mrs Grooming. You also have a great program, benoistis Rao of Baltimore. There we go. What's her program called? Again, indigos Koleos? Is that what she calls it? Yeah, question number three what three items must you discuss at the Seder? What three items must you discuss at the Seder? You must discuss them. They must be a discussion, and it's not. Where did you get your new dress? Oh, my gosh, I love your Ka'aras at Waterdale. Those are not the discussions I'm talking about. What three important items must be discussed? Price Pros, you got one.

Speaker 2:

Matzah, maror and Pesach.

Speaker 1:

Greenfield Girls. We got Pesach Matzah and Maror Pesach Matzah and Maror. That's the order, by the way, the way they said it. But of course, if you're discussing them, it doesn't have to be in that order, but we got it wrong.

Speaker 1:

No, you got it right. You got it right. Both of you got the full credit for that. Pesach Matzah Amar. Give yourself one point if you got that answer so far, if you're playing with us at home and you got all three questions correct so far, you should have three points Correct. So far, you should have three points. Question number four why do we break the middle matzah? Why do we break the metal matzah? Rafi Komen.

Speaker 2:

Okay, To remind us of the hard work. No, no, because the Mitzrayim they try breaking us.

Speaker 1:

That's a creative answer, but I'm going to tell you the answer that gets a point. The answer that gets a point of why do we break the middle matzah is because we're remembering the lechem oni, the poor man's bread. It is true that the matzah that you break you end up putting away for the afikoman, but that's not why we do the act of breaking the metal matzo. You guys were both very close and you both gave very good guesses.

Speaker 2:

How much points it is for the people listening.

Speaker 1:

One point. It's usually one point, unless I say otherwise, but thank you for being on top of my game. Question number five Name as many things as you can that are substitutes for flour in a Pesach kitchen. So, on Pesach, we do not use flour in our baking and cooking because we don't want to make chametz. So in a Pesach kitchen you'll find many different flour substitutes. Potato starch yes.

Speaker 2:

I also got potato starch Sugar.

Speaker 1:

Don't use sugar instead of flour, naked Cornstarch no, not cornstarch, because that's going to be kidney-ish. Spartan might do things differently than us, but in an Ashkenaz home we don't use cornstarch on Pesach. So I'll give you some other possible answers. You could have said almond flour. What is that? Other kind of nut flours? There's one called like tapioca, you remember there's. There's like Rory makes this like mix of like five random flours and none of them are wheat flour. So there's a lot of different creative answers, all of those for each type of Pesach substitute flour that you got. You could give yourself one point. So count up your points for any kind that you got. So if you said potato starch and almond flour, you got two points. And, by the way, what happens and this is just, I'm curious if you guys know what happens when you do make a pan of brownies and you don't use flour? You use, let's say, potato starch instead of flour and it's like tshahakal. That's right. You don't make the same mazononos that you would have made around the year with hummus. A lot of people who are gluten-free the whole year round don't make mizonos on their cakes and cookies because they always have substitutes in their food, so they're used to that, okay.

Speaker 1:

Question number six what is the capital city of Egypt? What is the capital city of Egypt? For those people who don't know, egypt and Mitzrayim are the same thing. But if you look at the map of the world, like the map of planet Earth, it's not going to say Mitzrayim, it's going to say palace price pros. What's your guess? Somewhere around the nile, somewhere around the nile, okay. What's the name of this? What's your guess? Somewhere around the Nile, somewhere around the Nile, okay. What's the name of this city? That's the capital of the country. The answer is Cairo. C-a-i-r-o. Cairo, egypt. Question number seven how many times is Hashem's name in the Haggadah? How many times is Hashem's name in the Haggadah? How many times is Hashem's name in the Haggadah? How many times is Hashem's name in the Haggadah? In the Haggadah? Zero, gebruks, girls Ten. You very confidently said zero. Where did you get that assumption from?

Speaker 1:

Actually I think that's Moshe maybe I confused you, because a lot of people have a discussion about that, but this time the question was Hashem. And actually, if you want to know, hashem's name is mentioned in the Haggadah 255 times. You're both way off. But if you guessed anything between 200 and 300, okay. If you guessed anywhere between 200 and 300, you get one point. If you got 255, give yourself five points. Wow, yeah, that's really impressive. Question number eight how do you say Paro's magicians in Hebrew as it says it in the Torah? How do you say Paro's magicians in Hebrew as it says it in the Torah? Paro was really into his magicians. He always liked to ask.

Speaker 2:

The magicians called I forgot the name, but one part is like Kishuv, because they did magic.

Speaker 1:

Kishuv definitely means magic in Hebrew, but that's not what it's called in the Torah. The name of the magicians. Do you guys know Christ girls?

Speaker 2:

Can you ask Mrs Hack, because we're learning about it.

Speaker 1:

I could call your teacher and ask her, but if you don't know it, you ain't got no point.

Speaker 2:

We know one of them Because we're learning about it in Chumash, we Because we're learning about it in Chumash. We know one of them Because he says the Chachamim and the somethings, that's the magicians.

Speaker 1:

The answer is Khartumim. Yeah, that's what I remember, khartumim. If you got Khartumim, give yourself one point. If you did not guess Khartumim, then better luck next time. Okay, Question number nine Call me two rules about the Afi Coleman. Tell me two rules about the Afi Coleman, and I'm not talking about the thank you Hashem Afi Coleman. You know that guy that like puppet dude. The question should be where did Moro, you hide the afikomen last year In Leap of Schmaltzer's son's hat box. I hid the afikomen in Leap of Schmaltzer's son's hat.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Leap of Schmaltzer will never forget that.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, Shimmy, for helping me hide the afikomen.

Speaker 2:

Okay, you can't put it in the bathroom and you can't put it in the garbage, like in a non-holy place.

Speaker 1:

Hey, Greenfields, let's see if you got something for us. Two rules about the Afikomen.

Speaker 2:

Steal it and you have to eat it by a certain time.

Speaker 1:

The answer is two rules about the Afikomen it must be eaten before midnight and it must be the last thing eaten at the seder. The whole hiding thing is a minhug, so it's great to hide it, but the things that you must know. Rules that need to be followed are eat it before midnight and make sure it's the last thing you eat at the Seder. That needs to be the taste that you taste. Obviously you drink the arbocosos, the grape juice or the wine. Afterwards You're going to need to and you can have some water, but the last thing you eat. That's the key. If you got both of those answers, you can give yourself one point for each. If you only got one of the answers, give yourself one point. So Greenfield's got one point and the Price's got zero points.

Speaker 1:

Question number 10. Last question of round one of Pesach Tobia what was special about baby Moshe when he was born? What was special about baby Moshe when he was born? Now I'm just going to tell you that I'm looking for one answer, but it is possible there is more than one answer. So if you have somebody in the car with you or wherever you're playing in your house and that person just knows all these different mitrashim and they have something truthful, then they definitely should get that point. But I'm looking for an answer that I think you guys might know. Pace that prose.

Speaker 1:

He was born three months early and he was healthy. Okay, he was born three months early, but what was special about him when he was born?

Speaker 2:

He was healthy. The house lit up with like light from.

Speaker 1:

Okay, greenfields, what do you have? Good box gals, the shiny yes, the Madras says that the house was filled with light. You both got the point for that. The house was filled with light. You both got the point for that. Round one is now over. Count up your points from round one and write down the number. If you got any half a point, make sure to catch those in correctly. Okay, greenfields, what do you have? Six and a half Prices. What do you have? Five? Okay, let's see. You still have a chance to make a comeback in round two.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to the halfway segment of the Pesach Trivia Show, where you get to take a break, stretch out those fingers from writing down all of your answers and just listen. Guys, it's Pesach right now. You might be seeing people that you don't see the whole year. And do they know about Incredible Kids? And do they know that we here at Incredible Kids are in the middle of raising the volume? Yes, our campaign at ikraisecom is a chance for every single one of you to help Incredible Kids raise the volume, making sure that every single kid has a voice, for every single one of you to help Incredible Kids raise the volume, making sure that every single kid has a voice and every single kid knows how special they are, can recognize it at all times, and therefore we over here do everything we can at Incredible Kids to make sure that you have every possible resource you need to tap into your own incredibleness every single day.

Speaker 1:

So go to those grandparents and those friends and those cousins and neighbors and say do you want to be part of this incredible growth? Do you want to join and listen to a podcast? And then consider donating to my Incredible Kids Raise page? I do know that we released the prize brochure. There is a full prize brochure that you can check out at ikraisecom and you'll find all of the possible prizes you can earn as a reward for fundraising for incredible kids. So what are you waiting for? Get creative, get ambitious. You guys have already been acing it. I see your progress, I appreciate every single one of you and together we can make that difference.

Speaker 1:

And now back to round two. We are back with round two and the first question we have, question number 11. Who led the singing for the women after Kriyat Yamsov? Who led the singing for the women after Kriyat Yamsov? The Jewish people walk through the dry floor of the Yamsef Huge, huge miracles happening all over the place. And who led the singing for the women and girls? And her name is Mariam Mariam Hanavia. Let's see price pros. What do you have, mariam? We love Mariam, mariam Hanavia, mariam, the sister of Moshe, and we know about the women they believe so strongly. They brought all their tambourines and their drums, whatever instruments they had, with them. They brought it with them because they were so confident that Hashem would perform miracles that they would want to sing. Thank you, hashem. Do you think that they sing? Thank you, hashem.

Speaker 2:

No, no, it wasn't written yet.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, how do you know? Maybe it was like around and then it got lost, or something.

Speaker 2:

They probably sing it in Hebrew. Hold you, Hashem.

Speaker 1:

Like that tune or a different tune, I don't know, Different tune, probably.

Speaker 1:

I wish I was there. It probably was so amazing and the men also had singing. But Miriam, only let it for the women, number 12. Name at least five items on the cedar plate. Name at least five items on the cedar plate. On the cah-rah, okey dokeys. Egg the egg, the pizza, excellent, carpus, one of those carpus vegetables. Matzah, no, matzah on the seder plate, tender, oh, everything, whatever. No, it's not on the Seder plate. You might have one of those Chicken balls, chicken balls, the zroa, the bone, yes, the zroa bone, the shank bone.

Speaker 2:

Maror, maror Is there salt water on it? No, or is that dip thingy?

Speaker 1:

And I forgot what it's called. That's right. Good, how many did we just say six. We said six, that's right. And the reason why I asked for five at least is because some people don't have chasaras on their seder plate. So as long as you got five out of six, you're doing great. If you got it's like it's similar to maror people use like a piece of lettuce for it. If you got five, you can give yourself a half a point for each one a half, a half, a half, a half a half and a half. I only asked for five. So even if you got Question number 13. What do we stop saying in davening on Pesach? What do we stop saying in our davening when it comes time for Pesach? In the Siddur it says say this until Pesach. There are two answers to this question. Okay, let's go to the Gebrecht scale first, mashi.

Speaker 2:

Baruch HaMarech HaShem.

Speaker 1:

Correct Price pros. Is that what you wrote? Yeah, shimon HaShem, it's in Talmud. That's right. Okay, if you got that answer right, you can give yourself a point for each one, number 14. Pesach is about freedom. How many bad kings or countries do you know who Hashem freed us from throughout Jewish history? Pesach, we celebrate our freedom through all different hard periods for the Jewish people. How many different bad kings or bad countries or bad empires do you know about that we were freed from as Jewish people over the course of history? Write down as many of them that you know. Ready Prices begin Baba.

Speaker 2:

Shushan Egypt, germany, arab.

Speaker 1:

Okay, give yourself a half a point for each one that you got. And on Pesach, when we thank Hashem for freeing us from Mitzrayim and allowing us to be freed from their oppression and all the horrible things they did to us, we can thank Hashem and we can celebrate being free from all of those different nations throughout history. Okay, question number 15. Name as many materials that you need possible to clean your car for Pesach. Name as many things that you might use to clean your car for Pesach. Name as many things that you might use to clean your car for Pesach.

Speaker 2:

Which reminds me we need to clean our car for Pesach. Vacuum Broom your hands.

Speaker 1:

Hands are the handiest of them all, and I said feet. What do you need your feet for?

Speaker 2:

To kick out crumbs. Yeah, a garbage bag Rags Sparta. Cleaning spray Mop Wipe.

Speaker 1:

Okay, count them all up, you got a half a point for every single thing that you need to clean the car for. I know another one.

Speaker 2:

Three. I know another one. You know those things that like sometimes like janitors use to like in the playground. They like pick them up. It's like a special like stick thing. You go like this and then it looks like a hand that like grabs up the garbage. Yeah, like a grabber. Yeah, so you could use that to take out your snack bags.

Speaker 1:

Okay, hopefully you don't have that many things to grab, but in our car we might need a lot of grabbers. Question number 16. Why are there holes in matzah? Why does matzah have holes in it? Why do they make holes in matzah? This is something that's done intentionally in the matzah bakery. They make holes in the matzah. They have like this thing, this like roller thing that creates a ton of holes for the luxe that doesn't get burned. You said, or raw.

Speaker 2:

No, but because to remember how holy the Jews are.

Speaker 1:

Oh, that's hilarious. Wrong on all accounts, but very nice answers. We're going to shift the mic over to the Greenfields. What's your answer? Because bubbles, that's correct. Actually, we want to make sure that the matzah does not turn into a pita. It would normally start to bubble and will not have properly baked matzahs. So in order for it not to bubble and bake improperly, they create holes in it in the matzah bakery. You got one point. If you knew the answer to that, question, number 17.

Speaker 1:

Where does the color of wine come from, like what makes it whitish or reddish? Why is some wine white wine and red wine? Why is that? How does that happen? Where does the color of wine come from? On Pesach, a lot of people opt for red wine. You know it makes the mitzvah more special. A lot of people try to use red wine. How do you get red wine? Or how do you get white wine? What makes one red and one white? Okay, good, brocks, girls. Do you know the answer to this? The blood in the time. Are you telling me that our wine is made out of blood? My question is very scientific. Why is some wine red and some wine is white? Why is that? Because of the what I don't know. Okay, we're going to move the question over to the prices. What would make wine, either red or whitish they take?

Speaker 2:

off the peels, so it's white and they fill of what? The wine, the grape okay.

Speaker 1:

The answer is the color of wine comes from the grape skins. So if you look at a grape, it has skin, okay, around the ends of it, and red wine is made from grapes that became wine. It ferments into wine with the skins of the grapes on and the whiter wine is made from grapes that became wine. It ferments into wine with the skins of the grapes on and the whiter wine is made from grapes that were fermenting with the skin of the grapes off. So basically, if they peel the grapes before they turn into wine, then it's going to come just whitish, but the outside color of the grape, if it's kept on, then the wine is going to turn more reddish. So, yeah, I'm explaining it further. So, yes, we learned that together and you remember what I taught you. I'm so proud of you that you remember that and you can give yourselves a point. They happen to know that before. Good extra knowledge to know. I actually learned that recently. I always wonder that I never knew.

Speaker 1:

Question number 18. Who are the four sons in the Haggadah? Question number 18. Who are the four sons listed in the Haggadah? You say Baruch Hamachon, baruch Hu, and there are four sons who are listed in the Haggadah. Probably you guys learned about them in school already.

Speaker 2:

First the Chacham, then the Rasha, then the Tam, then She'en Yod-Ey-Lishol.

Speaker 1:

Boy, you got them all. What about you guys? Good luck, Scales Welcome.

Speaker 2:

Rasha Tom Shaino, your daily show.

Speaker 1:

Excellent, and if somebody wrote them in English, that works too. The wise son, the wicked son, the simple son and the son who does not know how to ask. And those are the four sons listed in the Haggadah Points. Do you get for it? Give yourself a half a point for each one. That means that you can get two points most. Question number 19.

Speaker 1:

What shape are the pupils of sheep Shapsalas? What color are the pupils of sheep? Pupils are the black part that you see from inside your eyes. Okay, those are pupils. You guys have pupils in your eyes. Look at each other's eyes. You see how you have like brown eyes or blue eyes, or pink eyes or yellow eyes. Yeah right, no, but let's say you have brown eyes, so there's a brown circle. The inside has a black dot. That's a pupil, but for some animals it's not a circle.

Speaker 1:

So my question to you is what sheep are the pupils of sheep? Okay, glorious Greenfields, that's not your team name. I know A square. You guessed a square. Price pros, what's your guess? It's like an oval-ish kind of thing.

Speaker 1:

The answer is rectangle, and the reason why Hashem made them have rectangular pupils is because their eyes can see really far and wide. They can look around and they can see a lot wider. And that's really cool for sheep because if you're grazing in the pasture and you need to like find where the good grass is to chew on like all across the lawn you can see so wide. You're like in landscape mode, you know like when you're like. You know like when you put your camera on your phone yeah, but it's more pointy. You know like when you put your phone in panoramic you ever tried making a panoramic picture and you go like see the whole width at the same time. Those are like the eyes of the sheep. How cool is that.

Speaker 1:

What do you want to be a sheep for a day? Would you like to be a sheep for the day? No, okay, just checking Question number 20. This is the final question of the game, question number 20. Name as many things that you find in the fridge on Pesach. This is a very open-ended question. What do you find in so many people's fridges on Pesach and I don't want you to say like cucumbers, because everybody has cucumbers all year round what do you find in the fridge on Pesach that you wouldn't necessarily? That would be different than normal. You know what I'm saying Like, or you might have it during the year, but on Pesach everyone has this in the fridge. Okay, what do you have in your fridge on Pesach? That's like very typical of what's inside someone's fridge on Pesach Fake brownies.

Speaker 2:

In the fridge? Yeah. Where do you put yours? Not in the fridge? Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Where do you put yours? Not in the fridge.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so maror Wine Jarosa.

Speaker 1:

Which, by the way, everyone makes too much jarosa, because you don't even eat it at the theater, You're only supposed to dip things into it and for some reason people make like tubs of jarosa, grape juice, grape juice, saltwater, milk, grape juice Grape juice. Saltwater Milk. But everyone has milk. Milk is pretty standard, always no.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's intolerant, milk.

Speaker 1:

No, why Huge long lettuce Like the type that you individually check? Yeah, Potatoes, Potatoes, Already cooked, probably for Carboss, right yeah?

Speaker 2:

Tons of veggies.

Speaker 1:

Tons of veggies. You said Eggs. What veggies? You said Eggs. What about lemons? Anyone have lemons in their fridge. Yogurt Prawns of yogurt? String cheese Hello, string cheese, anyone? Yeah, no, okay, count up how many things you said and you get a half a point for each one. And now that we finished 20 questions of our trivia game, I want you to count up all of your points from round one and round two, so you can just do all of your round two points and add them to your round one points. Count them all up, all of those points. Okay, how many points do we have? 28. 28 from the Greenfields.

Speaker 2:

Lost by one point. We got 27. Oh wow.

Speaker 1:

That was super close 28 to 27. We have a winner, and our winner is the Gebruks Girls, gebruks Girls or Gebruks Gals I'm already mixing it up Girls, gebruks Girls. I think I say it different every time. Gebruks Girls beat the Pesach Pros by one point. That was so close. But again, all people playing this game are entered to win the grand raffles, and so you guys, along with everybody who's playing at home, are going to submit your score at incrediblekidsorg. Click on where it says Pesach Trivia, fill out the little form there and be entered to win this raffle. And, of course, everyone is going to enter the raffle one time per family, and I'm so excited for you guys to get the chance to win it, so give yourselves a big round of applause. You guys are so well prepared for passover holiday. Hooray, hooray to everyone. Let me ask you guys, greenfield girls, what message do you guys want to say to all the incredible kids out there?

Speaker 1:

you can do anything you put your mind to. That is so true. You can you tell us something that you've done that you put your mind to? That is so true. Can you tell us something that you've done that you put your mind to and surprised you about yourself?

Speaker 2:

That we wanted to be on the podcast and you made it. And here you are.

Speaker 1:

We emailed you four months ago. This is true, by the way, and even though sometimes I don't get back to people right away, no message goes forgotten forever. This is true. Right, your moment can come, keherif Ayan, in the blink of an eye. Wow, you guys are so awesome. And, yes, if you want to give a shout out to somebody, you can say it now.

Speaker 2:

My cousins in Lawrence, the Greenfields, and my grandmother and my friend.

Speaker 1:

Wow, okay, shout out to all of them that's so cute that you stuck your grandmother in there too. She's pretty awesome, I met her. Shout out to my neighbor Amazing, how did you guys hear about Incredible Kids? Do you even remember Zoom?

Speaker 2:

like for, like kids, like saying to them for for our sister, and then like we went on to it, and then we did every night.

Speaker 1:

And how long ago was that? A long time ago, right.

Speaker 2:

Last year. I give a shout out to my friend who's your friend Tamar Schwartz.

Speaker 1:

Tamar Schwartz, she's a big, incredible kid. She's the girl who's always wearing incredible kid swag. Thank you everyone for joining our PSAC trivia game and I'm so excited for everybody at home to get to play along with us. I'm hoping you're having a good time, because that's the key that we're learning and having fun at the same time. Bye everybody, bye.

Speaker 2:

Nice job.

Speaker 1:

Well, everybody, thank you so much for playing with us at home as we play here live in the studio. Obviously, when we recorded this, it was a couple weeks before Pesach. Editing each of these episodes takes hours and hours and hours. Therefore, by now we know a lot more about Pesach. Hopefully you guys will score maybe even better than we did and send in those scores. Make sure to go on to incrediblekidsorg and then click Pesach Trivia. Don't email the answers. The way that you should do it is submitting it by the form and then your one per family entry will go into the grand raffle and we cannot wait to see if you win. We will contact the winners as soon as we draw the raffle.

Speaker 1:

Need more Pesach entertainment? Well, go check out all of the Incredible Kids content and videos, particularly our video called Am I a Hero and our video called Through their Eyes, both full-length films which can be watched at any time at ikfilmorg. It's a great thing to do. It's a great night activity for Chol Moed Each one is about an hour and 20 minutes long and really meaningful entertainment for every member of the family. Enjoy the rest of your Pesach and I can't wait to see you back after Pesach and Incredible Kids podcast. Bye everybody.

Speaker 2:

Are you an incredible kid? Send your story to ikidspodcast at gmailcom. Subscribe today to the Incredible Kids podcast.

Speaker 1:

Thanks for listening and remember you are all Incredible.

Speaker 2:

Kids.

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