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Posted: June 21st, 2012, 12:32 pm
by Marc Majcher
happywaffle wrote:150-200, counting only people who have finished a class cycle and stayed in the game./
Let's just go with 183, then.

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 1:05 pm
by trabka
I have 176 Facebook friends in common with Jastroch (of which probably 98% are improvisers, and of those 70% are probably ColdTowne based improvisers), so more than that, and probably significantly so.

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 2:40 pm
by kaci_beeler
I'm going to guess 275+ active improvisers, people living and performing in Austin.

I have around 230 mutual friends with most improvisers, though there are a lot of new people from all the different theaters that I am just now getting to know. Plus lots of New Movement people I've never met.

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 2:43 pm
by Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell
if we're truly connected onstage...there is only one improvisor.

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 3:04 pm
by EmilyBee
Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell wrote:if we're truly connected onstage...there is only one improvisor.
I LOVE THIS.

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 3:22 pm
by Jastroch
We've got (currently) 75 students
We've graduated over 150 people.
We have at least 50-60 active, non student performers.
The weekly Student/PErformer newsletter goes out to 418 people.

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 3:25 pm
by hujhax
Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell wrote:
Brad Hawkins wrote:
hujhax wrote:there's 1.8 million people in Austin
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.
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...

(fuck, my Census training just kicked back in...)
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."

:mrgreen:

--
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

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 4:10 pm
by mia
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. :)
I feel Todd's equation is *integral* to finding our true answer.

However, there is one flaw - everyone knows that the number of people per year from out of Austin-town is a very real number, not the square root of negative one!

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 4:21 pm
by Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell
hujhax wrote:
Rev. Jordan T. Maxwell wrote:
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.
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...

(fuck, my Census training just kicked back in...)
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."

:mrgreen:

--
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
you mean i was RIGHT? and this is how i find out? you TELL me?

(sorry, warming up for the quote show tonight... :P )

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 5:06 pm
by Nancy
74 groups submitted, but I'll wager there's a huge number of performers who aren't represented. Not to mention students.[/quote]

Brad Hawkins is in 74 troupes....impressive!

Posted: June 21st, 2012, 8:14 pm
by Mike
Marc Majcher wrote:
happywaffle wrote:150-200, counting only people who have finished a class cycle and stayed in the game./
Let's just go with 183, then.
Not 185?

Posted: June 22nd, 2012, 6:26 am
by HerrHerr
487.

Posted: June 22nd, 2012, 12:21 pm
by valetoile
there are 323 people in the Hey Austin Improv Community What Are You Doing Tonight? Facebook group, and I know that's not everyone. I would think around 400 is a reasonable estimate.

Posted: June 22nd, 2012, 1:05 pm
by Marc Majcher
Mike wrote:
Marc Majcher wrote:
happywaffle wrote:150-200, counting only people who have finished a class cycle and stayed in the game./
Let's just go with 183, then.
Not 185?
Two of them moved to Chicago and LA.

Posted: June 25th, 2012, 12:14 am
by beardedlamb
is there any money in the AIC budget to hire a census worker to go door to door? "Good afternoon, just wanted to check to see how many improvisers you have living in your home."

well, for OOB, we had 74 Austin groups submitting, too, and each year we have around 300 local performers in the festival. Ceej's answer is my favorite but i would like to make one small adjustment.

my guess is 487 humans, 2 dogs.