Sports arenas across the United States could soon have a new, jiggly way to measure the excitement of a game. Jell-O, the company most known for its physics-defying gelatin dessert, is introducing a device it says can calculate fan intensity in a stadium and then visually represent that data in real time as a jiggling mass of Jell-O. The rowdier the crowd gets, the more the Jell-O jiggles. The company is calling its bizarre invention the JELL-OMETER. Itâs already been used at a professional hockey game in New York and is expected to be on its way to other stadiums soon.
Anyone who has been to a sporting event has likely seen messages on the jumbotron urging fans to âGet Loudâ and cheer. Those systems typically use decibel readers to measure sound.
The JELL-OMETER takes a different approach and tries to measure fan energy instead. The company claims the device uses âproprietary plate-sensingâ technology to capture sound pressure from the crowdâs cheers. That sound pressure is then converted into mechanical motion and presented as a shaking mold of Jell-O.
The energy is measured in âjigglesâon a scale of one to 10. One jiggle is roughly equivalent to a microwave, while 10 is supposedly the same as a small earthquake rumble. No word yet on how many the small earthquakes generated at Taylor Swift concerts would be.Â
JELL-O Introduces: JELL-OMETER
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The company says that their goal is to create an âinteractive way to experience crowd intensity.â Priming fans to get up and buy a packet of the jiggly substance probably doesnât hurt either.
âAs the inventors of the jiggle more than 125 years ago, we knew we had a unique opportunity to visually measure sound in a way no one else could,â Kathryn OâBrien, the Kraft Heinz Companyâs head of marketing for desserts, said in a statement.
âWith the JELL-OMETER, weâre bringing the iconic Jell-O jiggle to sports to give the fans something theyâve long waited forâthe opportunity to secure bragging rights on who has the most passionate fanbase.âÂ
The JELL-OMETER has already seen some action. On Friday, the device was trialed at a professional hockey game between the New York Islanders and the Philadelphia Flyers. This clip posted on Instagram shows the device registering â5.8â jiggles.Â
Loud crowds can win gamesÂ
Sports fans arenât shy about getting loud. In 2014, Kansas City Chiefs fans broke the Guinness World Record for loudest crowd roar at a sports stadium, belting out an ear-blistering 142.2 decibelsâroughly equivalent to the sound of a jet taking off. That record beat the one set by Chiefs fans in 2013.
And while the rowdy fans certainly played a role, the stadium has also earned a reputation for being particularly loud, something reportedly attributed to a pair of canopies that cover a large portion of the seats. That coverage protects fans from rain, but it also serves a secondary purpose of amplifying sound.
Some particularly crafty sports teams have also been known to use a stadiumâs loudness to their advantage. The Houston Astros famously opted to keep their roof closed during the 2017 World Series, even when the weather was fine, in a deliberate attempt to amplify the crowd noise bouncing back down from the roof. They ended up winning that series four to three.

Jell-O makes it clear they arenât pulling for any one team in particular. The company said it is looking to introduce its device to more stadiums and is gathering feedback from fans to see which cities might be prime candidates.Â
âThe JELL-OMETER doesnât take sides,â OâBrien said. âIt just measures the madness.â
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