Glitch: The Rise and Fall of HQ Trivia Review


Glitch: The Rise and Fall of HQ Trivia is now streaming on Max.

Do you remember HQ Trivia? For one brief, shining moment in 2018, the app looked like the future of media: A live trivia game hosted by comedian Scott Rogowsky, at its peak HQ attracted 2 million users – and soon after, it just disappeared. Director Salima Koroma’s documentary Glitch: The Rise and Fall of HQ Trivia pulls back the curtain on a seeming marketplace success that was in truth just another Silicon Valley smoke-and-mirrors flame out. Whether you played the game or not, the doc is an engaging tale of its two disparate creators, Rus Yusupov and Colin Kroll, who were too busy undercutting one another to chart a sustainable future for their creation.

Glitch opens in 2012 with the heyday of Yusupov and Kroll’s first tech success, the video app Vine. Years before TikTok, the pair essentially engineered the short video revolution and then promptly sold their creation, pre-launch, to Twitter for $30 million. Following Twitter’s controversial decision to shut down Vine, Yusupov and Kroll pivoted to HQ, and Koroma charts that progression through a variety of archival materials, news footage, slick app-like graphics, and a thorough assortment of talking-head interviews featuring the duo’s collaborators, former employees, Rogowsky, HQ superfans and tech journalists of the era including Taylor Lorenz and Kurt Wagner. It’s a relatively complete story of both the front-facing, zeitgeist success of HQ Trivia and the behind-the-scenes problems plaguing the startup. Rogowsky, in particular, provides a lot of candid and witty context regarding the absurdity of his unexpected fame, and his very weird bosses.



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