stevej84 wrote:
I bet if Geritol was sponsoring the AARP convention and approached Buzztime with a wad of cash, they would get a themed Trendalicious game too.

Ummm...that might not be such a good example.
I don't think Geritol-sponsored trivia programs have the sparkling reputation that you're looking for...
Speaking of which, 21 is also how old I was when I started playing NTN.
Pain-in-the-ass 21 year-old jacklegs who mistakenly think that they know everything just like I did are still out there.
They just spend their time at home on computers now.
BO wrote:
I started playing when I was 23. Back then there were no pop culture games to speak of and the content of such in CD/WO was <15%. Had I been 23 today, I would quickly see that BT is not a good training ground for shows like WWTBAM and Jeopardy and would rarely play. The only reason I play twice a week nowadays is because I enjoy the company of my teammates.
I suppose I could be more specific in my demographic description, the twenty-something crowd that hangs on every pop culture story will never play BT. The few twenty-something players are academic in nature, and prefer academic oriented questions.
BO
I'm guessing that those rose-colored glasses must be bi-focals.
I remember a lot, and I mean a lot, of questions about movies and music in CD games from day one. I started shoring up those two weaker areas specifically because of NTN trivia.
Your <15% seems a tad low. There were at least 3 to 5 PC questions more often than not back then. They were just older subject matter, obviously, and more in our demographic wheelhouse. It just felt like less pap. After listening to my buddy SHMEKL bitch about the music stuff after every game, it made taking his dollar even sweeter...
