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
Smallville Trivia: Pre-Cape Clark Kent
No flights, no tights — 12 questions about Tom Welling's 10-season run.
So You Think You Can Dance Trivia
12 questions about Fox's other reality dance giant.
South Park Trivia: 12 Questions for South Park Lifers
Oh my God they killed... wait. Just take the quiz.
Spin City Trivia: NYC Mayor's Office Edition
12 questions about Michael J. Fox's late-90s ABC return.
Star Trek Voyager Trivia: Captain Janeway Edition
12 questions about the 90s Trek that aged the best.
Suddenly Susan Trivia: Brooke Shields NBC Era
12 questions about the post-Friends Thursday timeslot inheritor.
TGIF Trivia: ABC's Friday Night Family Sitcom Block
12 questions about Boy Meets World, Family Matters, Step by Step, Sabrina.
That 70s Show Trivia: Point Place Edition
12 questions for everyone who watched it on weeknight reruns until 2014.
That's So Raven Trivia: Psychic Visions Edition
You go girl — 12 questions about Disney Channel's biggest 2000s sitcom.
The Amanda Show Trivia: Penelope Taynt Edition
12 questions about Amanda Bynes's pre-fame Nick sketch show.
The Apprentice Trivia: You're Fired Edition
12 questions about Trump's pre-political NBC reality vehicle.
The Bachelor Trivia: Roses, Mansions, Flights to Bali
12 questions about the 2000s' messiest love laboratory.
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.