There isn’t enough information in your prompt to give specific, numeric demographics for “the crowd” you’re asking about (for example, age, gender, location, or political/interest group), and I don’t have live access to the exact event or forum thread you’re referencing right now.

However, here’s how crowd demographics for an event or gathering are typically broken down and discussed in news and forum conversations. You can use this as a structured checklist when you look at photos, videos, or reports about that crowd:

Common demographic dimensions

When people describe the demographics of a crowd, they usually mean:

  • Age distribution (e.g., mostly 18–34, mix of students and older adults).
  • Gender balance (roughly even, mostly women, etc.).
  • Race and ethnicity (visible diversity or lack of it).
  • Socioeconomic indicators (clothing, tickets/pricing, venue, city vs. rural).
  • Geography (local vs. people traveling from other regions/countries).
  • Role at the event (attendees vs. volunteers vs. organizers vs. speakers).

How demographics are usually measured

Event organizers, researchers, or journalists often rely on:

  1. Registration and ticket data
    • Age brackets, postal codes, sometimes job title, industry, or student status.
  1. Surveys and polls
    • Pre‑ or post‑event questionnaires asking about age, gender, ethnicity, profession, and motivations for attending.
  1. Social media and fanbase data
    • For concerts, rallies, or creator events, platform analytics often reveal that the largest slice is Gen Z and Millennials (for many music events, roughly two‑thirds of attendees can be 18–34).
  1. On‑site observation and sampling
    • Researchers or journalists sometimes take structured samples (e.g., quick interviews across different sections of the venue) to avoid bias.

Typical patterns by event type

While your specific crowd may differ, trends often look like this:

  • Pop concerts / K‑pop / mainstream festivals
    • Heavily Gen Z and Millennial, often skewing more female, with strong social‑media discovery and fandom culture.
  • Tech conferences / professional meetups
    • Concentration of 25–44‑year‑olds, segmented by job role (founders, engineers, marketers, etc.), often with data on industry and seniority.
  • Political rallies / protests
    • Mix of ages but often anchored by younger adults when issues are future‑oriented, and by middle‑aged/older when tied to pensions, taxation, or long‑standing partisan identities. Researchers focus heavily on gender, race/ethnicity, and socioeconomic makeup here because of representation and equity questions.
  • Community and cultural festivals
    • More family‑oriented, with broader age distributions (children, parents, older relatives), and a demographic profile closer to the local population.

Things to watch for in news or forum posts

When you read reports or forum threads about the crowd “attending X,” look for:

  • Phrases like “mostly young,” “mixed crowd,” “predominantly local,” “very international,” “mostly families,” etc.
  • Any numbers or percentages tied to age brackets, gender, or regions.
  • Mentions of “diverse” or “homogeneous” crowd, especially in terms of race/ethnicity or gender.
  • Ticket pricing or access constraints (high prices can skew toward higher‑income attendees; free or community‑based events draw a broader cross‑section).

If you tell me which specific event, concert, protest, or creator you mean (and roughly where/when it took place), I can help you interpret typical demographic patterns for that kind of crowd more precisely and in the style of a “Quick Scoop” forum breakdown.