90s & 2000s Television Trivia
From TGIF lineups and Must See TV Thursdays to the prestige cable wave and the reality TV explosion, the 90s and 2000s gave us the most-watched television of all time.
126 quizzes in TV
American Idol Trivia: Simon, Paula, Randy and Beyond
12 questions about the show that ate Wednesday and Thursday nights.
Aqua Teen Hunger Force Trivia
12 questions about the talking food anti-show.
Arrested Development Trivia: Bluth Family Pop Quiz
There's always money in the banana stand — and 12 questions in the quiz.
Battlestar Galactica Trivia: So Say We All
12 questions about the 2004 reboot that defined prestige sci-fi.
Beavis and Butt-Head Trivia: Heh Heh Heh
12 questions for couch critics and music-video connoisseurs.
Beverly Hills 90210 Trivia: Walsh Twins to Tori Spelling
12 questions about the OG zip-code teen drama.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer Trivia: The Sunnydale Final
Stake your reputation on 12 questions about Joss Whedon's monster of the week.
Caroline in the City Trivia
12 questions about the Lea Thompson NBC sitcom stuffed into Must See TV.
Charmed Trivia: Halliwell Sisters Edition
12 questions about the witchy WB hit nobody talks about enough.
Cribs Trivia: Empty Fridge Edition
12 questions about the show that proved every celebrity refrigerator is empty.
CSI Trivia: Vegas Crime Lab Pop Quiz
Put on your sunglasses — 12 questions about TV's biggest 2000s procedural.
Curb Your Enthusiasm Trivia: Pretty Pretty Pretty Good
12 questions about Larry David's HBO improvisational chaos.
About 90s & 2000s Television
The 90s and 2000s were television's last era of mass cultural agreement. Before streaming fragmented every viewer into their own algorithmic bubble, you watched what your local affiliate gave you and you watched it on a schedule. That meant tens of millions of people simultaneously losing their minds over the Ross-and-Rachel "WE WERE ON A BREAK" fight, the Sopranos cut to black, Hurley's lottery numbers on Lost, and whether Joey would ever read a book.
This category covers the four-camera sitcoms (Friends, Frasier, Seinfeld, Will & Grace), the WB and UPN teen dramas (Dawson's Creek, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Veronica Mars, Felicity, Roswell), the prestige cable wave (Sopranos, The Wire, Six Feet Under, Deadwood, Oz), the reality TV explosion (Survivor, American Idol, The Real World, The Bachelor), and the workplace mockumentaries that closed out the decade (The Office, Parks and Recreation, 30 Rock).
If you can quote a line from a TV show and have it land in any room of people aged 28 to 50, this category is for you.