Posted: June 21st, 2012, 12:32 pm
Let's just go with 183, then.happywaffle wrote:150-200, counting only people who have finished a class cycle and stayed in the game./
Everything From Nothing!
http://forum.austinimprov.com/
Let's just go with 183, then.happywaffle wrote:150-200, counting only people who have finished a class cycle and stayed in the game./
I LOVE THIS.Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell wrote:if we're truly connected onstage...there is only one improvisor.
Calm yourselves. I just blindly nabbed the figure from wikipedia: "The city is the cultural and economic center of the Austin–Round Rock–San Marcos metropolitan area, which had an estimated population 1,783,519 (2011 U.S. Census),[9] making it the 34th-largest metropolitan statistical area in the United States."Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell wrote:are we including outlying areas? given the number of improvisors who commute in from Round Rock, Bastrop and other surrounding areas, the sample population might not be constrained to the city limits or Travis County alone...Brad Hawkins wrote:WHAT THE WHAThujhax wrote:there's 1.8 million people in Austin
<checks US Census>
OK, fuck, don't do that to me. It's OK, people, there's still 790,000 people in Austin. Peter must have done his count during SXSW.
(fuck, my Census training just kicked back in...)
I feel Todd's equation is *integral* to finding our true answer.Todd wrote:Well, as a fancy math/improvisor type, I'll approach this from the other side. If a really elaborate equation is what you want, how about:
dx/dt = n(t)*g*s*c + i - o*x(t) - q*x(t)
where
x(t) = number of improvisors at time t
t = time since improv started in Austin
n(t) = number of theaters at time t
g = avg number of graduating classes per theater per year
s = avg number of students per class
c = avg percent of those students that become improvisors in town
i = number per year from out of town
o = rate that leave town per year
q = rate that stop doing improv per year
Of course, I don't know what any of those values are. I'm a mathematician - we don't deal with actual numbers.
you mean i was RIGHT? and this is how i find out? you TELL me?hujhax wrote:Calm yourselves. I just blindly nabbed the figure from wikipedia: "The city is the cultural and economic center of the Austin–Round Rock–San Marcos metropolitan area, which had an estimated population 1,783,519 (2011 U.S. Census),[9] making it the 34th-largest metropolitan statistical area in the United States."Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell wrote:are we including outlying areas? given the number of improvisors who commute in from Round Rock, Bastrop and other surrounding areas, the sample population might not be constrained to the city limits or Travis County alone...Brad Hawkins wrote: WHAT THE WHAT
<checks US Census>
OK, fuck, don't do that to me. It's OK, people, there's still 790,000 people in Austin. Peter must have done his count during SXSW.
(fuck, my Census training just kicked back in...)
--
peter rogers @ home | http://hujhax.livejournal.com
I play the accordion. In terms of thinking of it as a musical career, I think it's sort of like calling yourself an astronaut because you have a shiny suit.
-- Daniel Handler
Not 185?Marc Majcher wrote:Let's just go with 183, then.happywaffle wrote:150-200, counting only people who have finished a class cycle and stayed in the game./
Two of them moved to Chicago and LA.Mike wrote:Not 185?Marc Majcher wrote:Let's just go with 183, then.happywaffle wrote:150-200, counting only people who have finished a class cycle and stayed in the game./