| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Motown, jazz, punk, techno and hip-hop are among music genres that grew in this city, the largest in the state, also famed as the home of Ford, Chrysler, and GM automobiles. | Detroit | 100%
|
| On the Huron River, this city is home to University of Michigan's Wolverines. | Ann Arbor | 95%
|
| This rustbelt city has never recovered from GM's downsizing, begun in the 1960s. It's also infamous for its lead contaminated water and gets props for strong community action. | Flint | 95%
|
| Founded by the Dutch, this western Michigan city is home to the nation's longest running annual tulip festival. | Holland | 92%
|
| The capital city, hometown of basketball great Magic Johnson, is the sixth-largest in the state. | Lansing | 89%
|
| The cultural hub of western Michigan and the hometown of president Gerald Ford, this is the second-largest city in the state and goes by the nickname "River City." | Grand Rapids | 86%
|
| Name the island/city famed for bicycles and horses, fudge and taffy, a grand hotel, and a fort that's now a museum. (Yes, you should visit!) | Mackinaw | 81%
|
| This city in the upper peninsula is home to the Soo Locks which let ships pass into Lake Superior from Lake Huron. | Sault Ste. Marie | 81%
|
| This eastern Michigan festival city is the birthplace of Madonna and the namesake of a Scottish band who threw a dart at a map and called themselves the "___ ____ Rollers." | Bay City | 78%
|
| This name of this western Michigan regatta and fishing city comes from the Ottawa and means "marshy river." | Muskegon | 73%
|
| The Cherry Capital of the World, this city of 15,600 sits on a large bay in northern Michigan. | Traverse City | 68%
|
| Settled by French explorers, this is the largest city in the upper peninsula. Iron has been mined here for more than 175 years, and this city is a major shipping port. | Marquette | 57%
|