The table illustrates the amount of hours of leisure time in some areas for teens, adults, and elderly people in Someland, measured by hours.
Overall, marked differences appear across the various age groups. Teenagers and people in their seventies devote by far the greatest number of hours to watching TV and videos, reaching 1,200 and 1,100 hours respectively, while all other categories record noticeably lower figures, generally ranging between 400 and 700 hours per year.
Furthermore, individuals in their thirties emerge as the leading group for socialising with four or fewer people, followed by those in their forties and fifties, who each average around 250 hours. All remaining age groups spend comparatively less time on this activity, with totals falling between 150 and 200 hours.
By comparison, socialising with larger groups reaches its highest point among people in their twenties and thirties, both at 350 hours, before plunging to only 25 hours among older adults.
Physical activities present a different trajectory: group exercise remains relatively stable in adulthood with 450-350 hours before falling sharply in later life, while individual exercise stays consistently low across all cohorts. In addition, people in their 60s and 70s spend 0 hours doing or exercising in groups, while others spend tens and hundreds of hours on this activity, especially in their teens and 20s. Finally, cinema is very common and favored by teens and those in their 20s and 70s with 100 and 75 hours respectively, while other age groups spend between 50 and 35 hours a year.
