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In St. Louis, Trivia Is No Trivial Pursuit

Husband-and-wife judges Virginia and Steve Bria (left) alongside Nick Pfister checked answers carefully during each round at last weekend's trivia night at St. Rita Catholic Church in Vinita Park, Mo. Some St. Louis-area trivia fundraisers are massive, while others such as St. Rita's attract a few hundred people.
Alan Greenblatt
/
NPR

There was barely room to walk from one end of the social hall to the other last Saturday night at St. Rita Catholic Church in Vinita Park, Mo.

The occasion wasn't a wedding, a christening or even a bingo game. It was trivia.

You can participate in trivia contests on slow nights in bars in practically any city across the country. But in the St. Louis area, trivia has evolved into a major source of revenue for nonprofit organizations.

Especially in winter, every school, camp and choir seems to be hosting its own trivia night. "For me, every Saturday through April is booked, and a couple of Fridays as well," says Dan Dillon, a writer and producer at the local CBS affiliate and regular trivia emcee.

People in other cities still seem to think trivia is something limited to Jeopardy fans and other eggheads, but in St. Louis it's turned into a major participatory sport played by plenty of folks with no specialized knowledge whatsoever.

Some trivia fundraisers are massive. This Friday, St. Patrick Center, which provides services to the homeless, will host its annual , filling the floor of a college basketball .

Most are more modest affairs, like St. Rita's — 200 to 300 people showing up to support their parish or their kids' school.

But because it costs very little to put on a trivia night, the proceeds from entrance fees and side auctions and raffles are almost pure profit. The Vinita Park church cleared about $6,500 from its game Saturday, according to organizers.

"It's generally pretty easy, considering the amount of money you get out of it," says Howard Granok, coach of the chess team at Crossroads College Preparatory School, which is hosting a trivia night this Saturday. "It beats selling cookies or candy bars."

We're Having A Party

If nonprofit groups do well giving out small prizes for trivia proficiency and auctioning off donated sports memorabilia and coupons for restaurant meals, it's still an affordable night out for the players who show up.

Entrance fees vary but generally run in the $15 to $20 range. For that, you get about three hours of play (there are almost always 10 rounds of 10 questions) and, quite often, free popcorn and beer.

Supporting good causes has become a good excuse for St. Louisans to get together with their friends, putting together a table of eight or 10 and making a party of it.

Most tables are larded with large amounts of booze and snacks — often store-bought trays and plenty of pizza. Crock Pots and blenders plugged in at the table are not uncommon.

"It's not a group of nerds," says Kevin Carbery, another regular trivia host. "It's a group of people who want to eat and drink and socialize."

The Trivia Behind Trivia

In St. Louis, getting asked to buy a seat at a trivia fundraiser for a day care center attended by a friend's niece is a routine part of the social currency. Any given weekend will see different "trivias," as some locals call the events.

Trivia nights took root in St. Louis back during the Trivial Pursuit era of the 1980s. According to a 1993 article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, a local couple, Pete and Judy Johnson, brought the idea back from Australia, where Pete had worked on an engineering project and trivia had long since migrated out of bars and into the fundraising bloodstream.

After the Johnsons organized a trivia night fundraiser for Kennerly Elementary School in St. Louis County, the idea spread throughout that district, then to local churches and on from there.

Its popularity was further promoted by high school history teacher Dave Strauss, who became known as Mr. Trivia. Strauss hosted a weekly radio trivia call-in show and was an indefatigable host of trivia nights.

"I'm kind of waiting for the other shoe to drop and for people to say, 'We've had enough trivia,' " says Bill Clevlen, who took over Strauss' . "But it's not going away. It's actually getting bigger."

Not Exported From St. Louis

As Clevlen points out, the idea of spending an evening with friends playing trivia at a fundraising event may have become a constant in St. Louis, but it's a "foreign concept" everywhere else.

"My friends who have moved — to Houston, Atlanta, Kansas City — have tried to get it started at churches or other organizations," says Carbery, the trivia host and columnist. "But people where they're trying to do it think it sounds boring, and it doesn't go any further."

In a way, it's surprising that the idea hasn't spread. It's an easy, turnkey fundraiser with little overhead. Some groups have to rent a space, but for most it's a matter of soliciting donated auction items, setting up a sound system and hiring a host.

The hosts usually charge about $200, making some nice cash on the side but turning their spouses into "trivia night widows," as Dillon says.

They put together all the questions — trivia books and the Internet are both unreliable sources, they say — and generally take the heat off the organization when some know-it-all with a smartphone questions the answer.

"It's nice to hand it off to somebody," says Karin Moody, community affairs manager for Food Outreach. "Especially if it's a fundraiser, you don't want people mad at your organization."

Moody says her group, which provides food to people living with HIV/AIDS and cancer, expects to clear $10,000 from its trivia fundraiser this Friday.

For small charities with a low profile, the trivia craze in St. Louis has proven to be a godsend.

"Our particular parish was on the ax to be closed," says Bonny Giovanni, a longtime organizer of St. Rita's trivia nights. "This has really saved our parish."

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Alan Greenblatt
Alan Greenblatt has been covering politics and government in Washington and around the country for 20 years. He came to NPR as a digital reporter in 2010, writing about a wide range of topics, including elections, housing economics, natural disasters and same-sex marriage.