I built an LA Movie Trivia Game — using Tableau, Microsoft Copilot, Letterboxd, and YouTube music videos. 

    In the end, I crown my official Mount Rushmore of LA movie actors after finding my favorite "composite score."

    Core Data

    211 “LA” Movies grouped across three title-based categories

    • LA or Los Angeles in the Title
    • LA City, Street, Landmark, or Nickname
    • LA is central to the Plot (Act 1, 2, or 3)

    Metadata

    • Primary genre (according to IMDb)
    • Domestic Box Offices (standard and inflation adjusted)
      • 1977 onward: The Numbers
      • Pre-1977: Box Office Mojo + CPI-2024 inflation adjustment
    • Top 5 billing actors per title (with billing order)

    Why I Built This

    Every month, my company hosts a 1-hour bonding session for ~30 people. We celebrate birthdays, eat snacks, and play trivia. 

    Whenever it was my Marketing Analytics team’s turn to host…I’ve been phoning it in. No trivia — just ordering great food from Porto’s or Prime Pizza to compensate. Meanwhile, other teams were showing up with legitimately creative games.

    I needed to step up — I just didn’t have the spark yet.

    The Spark

    I remembered a note on my phone from five years ago: a list of 60+ “LA movies.” I made it after the best moviegoing experience of my life with my wife. We saw Sunset Boulevard — on Sunset Boulevard — in Hollywood at a pop-up drive-in theater. 

    I moved the list into Excel and expanded it using Copilot:

    • Missing LA-set movies
    • Genres
    • Actors and billing orders
    • Domestic box offices (standard gross and inflation-adjusted)
    • And way more metadata than any trivia game reasonably needs

    Eventually, I built a composite scoring system to crown a Mount Rushmore of LA movie actors.

    The Point (Important Context)

    This wasn’t built as an academic exercise.

    The audience was media and marketing teams at a studio — in a large boardroom with a gigantic TV that was perfect for projecting my Tableau “Story." 

    The goal wasn’t rigorous analysis — it was to:

    • Make trivia more fun
    • Show how "composite scores" work (similar to paid media metrics like impressions, clicks, conversions, etc.)
    • Prove Tableau can be used creatively for internal meetings — not just dashboards

    And honestly…it worked way better than I expected. I managed to hold my entire department’s attention for a full hour. 

    I Invite Critique

    Please feel free to:

    • Tear this apart
    • Suggest missing LA movies (or movies that you don’t think should qualify)
    • Recommend better ways to weight the composite score
    • Argue about who actually deserves LA Movie Mount Rushmore status

    by misterhombre87

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