Originally Posted by
Caboose
Well, you know... selling 15,000,000 tickets to a movie in 1920 when the population was 100,000,000 is much more impressive than selling 15,000,000 tickets in 2010 when the population is 300,000,000.
Using those examples, and lets say tickets cost 1 dollars in 1920 and 8 dollars in 2010.
1920 - 15,000,000 tickets sold X $1 = $10,000,000 in sales
2010 - 15,000,000 tickets sold X $8 = $120,000,000 in sales
So, we adjust the 1920 tickets for inflation, so we multiply 15,000,000 by todays ticket prices... we find that the adjusted take for 1920 movie was $120,000,000 also. This makes the 1920 movie look roughly equivalent to the 2010 movie.
But, when we factor in population we see that the 1920 drew in 15% of the available population. The 2010 movie only drew in 5% of the available population. If we extrapolate how many tickets the 1920 movie would have sold had there been 300,000,000 million Americans at the time, it would be 45,000,000 tickets.
So adjusted for inflation AND population and the 1920 movie is up to $360,000,000. It seems like if we are gauging the value of movies this would be a better way to do it.
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