WHCD Dinner Bingo
Watch the White House Correspondents' Dinner and mark off moments as they happen. First to complete a row wins!
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See all →What is WHCD Dinner Bingo?
WHCD Dinner Bingo is a printable card built around White House Correspondents' Dinner moments — comedian makes political joke, president tells a dad joke, mention of 'First Amendment', and celebrity outfit goes viral. Players mark squares as these classic dinner events unfold during the broadcast, turning the annual journalism gala into an interactive viewing game for watch parties.
Is WHCD Dinner Bingo good for watch parties?
Yes, WHCD Dinner Bingo works perfectly for watch parties because everyone sees the same broadcast moments simultaneously. When the host roasts a politician or a speech runs over time, the whole room marks squares together. The shared viewing experience creates natural conversation breaks and keeps casual viewers engaged through the longer speeches and award segments.
Can I customize a WHCD Dinner Bingo card for my group?
You can regenerate cards to get different clue arrangements, ensuring each player has a unique board even though all cards draw from the same pool of dinner moments like comedian references recent scandal and reporter asks tough question. The randomization prevents two people from winning simultaneously while keeping the content focused on authentic correspondents dinner traditions.
The White House Correspondents' Dinner brings together journalists, politicians, and celebrities for an evening of speeches, roasts, and plenty of camera-worthy moments. Perfect for political junkies and media enthusiasts, this card captures all the memorable happenings you'd expect from the event. Watch for the host to roast a politician with a perfectly timed zinger, catch the President telling a dad joke that lands somewhere between charming and cringe-worthy, or spot a reporter casually mentioning their "sources" during an interview. You'll also mark off squares when a celebrity outfit goes viral on social media or someone inevitably takes a selfie that'll be retweeted thousands of times. Gather your politically-minded friends for a watch party and play along on BingWow as the dinner unfolds live on television. The free online cards work beautifully for groups streaming the event together, with everyone calling out squares as speeches run over time or the camera pans to a dignitary in the audience. You can also print cards beforehand if you're hosting a larger gathering where not everyone has their phone handy. Journalism students might enjoy playing this during a class viewing, marking off squares when awards are given for journalism or someone mentions the First Amendment. Even watching solo becomes more interactive when you're tracking whether that journalist on screen is wearing glasses.