The line graph compares how many people attendant at the cinema by their age brackets in the US between 2000 and 2011.
It is clear that, while the proportion of the 15-24 age group was consistently higher among others through the time given, the reverse is true for that of 35 and over. Additionally, all graphs showed an increase at the end of the period.
In 2000, the percentage of oldest people who attended to the cinema stood at approximately 1%, whereas the figure for those who were 15-24 years old was significantly higher (15%). The proportion of youngest people and that of 25-35 aged people stood at 10% and 4% respectively. In 2004, the percentage of 25-35 age group attending experienced a mild fluctuation, after what it decreased to 13%. The figure for 15-24, 7-14, and 35-over years old people witnessed an increase with the former numbering 32%, and the latter 10%, and 2%.
When it comes to 2008, the proportion of the youngest people’s attendance skyrocketed up to 30%. It, then, declined to again 30%, despite an increase in 2010. From 2006 to 2010, the average of 15-24 aged people experienced a wild fluctuation, before rising up to 51% in 2011. Despite a negligible fall in 2008, the percentage of 35 and over aged people rose consistently up to 13% at the end of the period. In contrast, the proportion of those 25-35 aged saw a significant increase from 19% in 2008 to 32% in 2009, before decreasing in 2010. In 2011, this figure witnessed a marginal growth up to 30%.
