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Remember when you went to birthday parties as a kid? Sure, you loved the cake and ice cream. You worshiped the bright decorations, earsplitting music, and being with your friends. But what in truth made going to a birthday party special was playing games. You would always end screaming with laughter and breathless on the ground.

As adults, we suppose adult birthday parties to be a little… calmer. A little toned-down. But they don’t have to be! If you’re throwing an grown-up party for grown-up friends, there’s no reason for things to be sedate. With the fun adult birthday party games below, your guests will be screaming with laughter and (if they all fall out of their chairs for the duration of the “Lap Dance” game) rolling on the ground attempting to recover. Just like being a kid again

Duck, Duck… Lap Dance!

This adult party game is easy to play… and a lot of fun. There will be lots of giggling and a few red faces as players end up in one another’s laps. Have a few drinks primary to liven up the mood. For six to ten players.

To play this party game: All guest ought to sit on chairs in a circle. Around a table is fine– just pull the chairs away from the table a bit.

As the host, it’s your occupation to ask simple yes or no questions of your guests (or you may designate this occupation to an individual else). If the answer to that question is yes, they move one seat to the right. If someone is sitting there… they have to sit in that person’s lap! If the answer to the question is “no,” that player stays in his or her seat.

Keep playing (some players may end up with three or more persons in their lap!) until an individual ends up in his or her firstborn seat. That person is the winner.

Get originative with questions– ask embarrassing or funny ones to keep your guests laughing. If possible, come up with a list of question beforehand if you’re not great at thinking them up on the spot.

The Portrait Race

Both art and laughter in a single game? You bet! This game is fun to play, hilarious to watch, and… well, interesting to see the final results. Want to see how your friends see you? This adult birthday party game is unquestionably one to play. For four or more players (six or more is best.)

To play this party game: Guests must be divided up into pairs, with one person left over. The numbers don’t work out? Divide persons nonetheless you can– it doesn’t have to be exact. The one leftover guest ought to stand in front of the teams to pose for a portrait.

Each team of two must have five minutes to draw and paint the portrait of the poser using watercolor paints, pencils (colored or regular), and crayons.

Painters will have to use all three of these tools someplace in the portrait, and each fellow member of the team must bestow to the portrait. Don’t let the better artists do all the work!

After the five minutes are up, the posing guest decides which team painted the best portrait, and another guest is chosen to pose.

It’s fun to play this at the beginning of the night and hang the portraits around the room to keep persons chuckling over them all night.


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On December 6, 1969, the Texas Longhorns battled it out with the Arkansas Razorbacks at Razorback Stadium in Fayetteville, Arkansas. The Longhorns came back from a 14-0 deficit after three quarters to win 15-14. The legendary game ultimately became known as “The Game of the Century.” Relive each stimulating moment with this ESPN® Greatest Games DVD.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #61402 in DVD
  • Size: One Size
  • Brand: ESPN
  • Model: 670645
  • Released on: 2010-01-12
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: .18 pounds
  • Running time: 143 minutes
  • “Game of the Century” and it was a battle of the titans among the unbeaten University of Texas Longhorns and the unbeaten University of Arkansas Razorbacks
  • Texas averaged 44 points a game but the Razorbacks defense had held opponents to only 6.8 points per game
  • President Richard Nixon attended the game with U.S. Representative and future President George H.W. Bush and staged the team with a plaque proclaiming them National Champions
  • UT was ranked #1 in rushing and #1 in the Associated Press Poll
  • Texas went on to win 15 to 14
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
5A view from the author of “Horns, Hogs, and Nixon Coming”
By Terry Frei
I’m the author of “Horns, Hogs, and Nixon Coming,” the 2002 book about this game and the events going on around it. Horns, Hogs, and Nixon Coming: Texas vs. Arkansas in Dixie’s Last Stand Third Down and a War to Go

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
4Texas vs. Arkansas Commentary
By Ken E. Leistner
Relative to Mr. Luck’s comments,I was fortunate to receive a copy of the full broadcast made directly from the ABC master perhaps ten years ago and the quality just isn’t “good” compared to what we have become accustomed to. However,the quality “is what it is” and other than this, Mr. Frei’s comments are accurate. His book was absolutely excellent and in-depth, covered all of the bases for the relevant materials, and remains the best of the summaries for this momentous contest. I also agree with Mr. Frei that the DVD could have included more but as an historical piece, it is deserving of purchase and thank goodness, falls more towards the “old school” manner in which college football productions were presented rather than today’s ESPN media hyped, music-accommpanied, quick-cut addled messes. Mr. Frei’s book is an absolute must for any college football fan, the DVD is a nice adjunct.
Dr. Ken Leistner
[...]

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
5THE GAME
By Larry Lively
I waited all year to see this game in 1969. Unfortunatly the US Army had other plans for me. I was shipped to Germany just one week prior to
the game. A sergeant and I listened to the game on Armed Forces radio. This video was the first time I have seen the game. Even though I knew
what the outcome of the game was, I really enjoyed watching it. Any Longhorn fan or anyone that loves great college football games should own
a copy of this game. It ranks up there with the best ever played.

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