# Five Minutes to Tilt #5 – Roger Sharpe and the Shot That Saved Pinball

**Source:** Dutch Pinball Museum  
**Type:** video  
**Published:** 2026-02-24  
**Duration:** 4m 56s  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EmXhwSgUWmE

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## Analysis

Roger Sharpe, legendary pinball designer and advocate, discusses his pivotal role in legalizing pinball in New York City by proving it was a game of skill rather than chance, overturning a 35-year ban. He reflects on his journey from ignorance of pinball in Chicago (where it was illegal) through his career as a GQ magazine editor to becoming a consulting designer and industry figure, emphasizing the importance of preserving pinball history through people and stories.

### Key Claims

- [HIGH] Roger Sharpe proved that pinball is based on skill, not chance or gambling — _Sharpe states: 'I proved that and the New York City Council overturned the 35 year ban' and 'showing that the games were based on skill. not chance. Not seriously, but they're based on skill and it's not gambling.'_
- [HIGH] Sharpe's legal victory in New York City overturning the pinball ban had cascading effects that legalized pinball in Chicago and other cities worldwide — _Sharpe explains: 'The impact of that and the fact that it was in New York City actually altered the course of Chicago where I grew up where suddenly pinball is then legal uh as well as many other cities and communities around the country and the world'_
- [HIGH] Sharpe grew up in Chicago where pinball was illegal and didn't play pinball until college — _Sharpe states: 'I grew up in Chicago, Illinois where pinball was illegal. Uh, I didn't play pinball until I was in college.'_
- [HIGH] There is a movie called 'Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game' based on Sharpe's life, starring actor Dennis Bikiatis — _Sharpe says: 'there's a movie based on my life called Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game, an award-winning feature film. Uh I will say that uh the actor who plays older me who I know although now is not me. So please don't think of me as being a trained skilled um actor. It's a very talented award-winning actor by the name of Dennis Bikiatis'_
- [HIGH] Sharpe wrote a feature story for GQ magazine where he was associate editor and later managing editor — _Sharpe recalls: 'I was able to run or write a feature story for GQ magazine where at that point I was associate editor. I eventually became managing editor'_
- [MEDIUM] Pinball remains illegal in the Netherlands, where it is still considered gambling — _Museum host states: 'in the Netherlands they still think it's gambling' when discussing the ongoing challenge of educating people that pinball is not gambling_

### Notable Quotes

> "Without this guy, there wouldn't be Tim today."
> — **Dutch Pinball Museum host (Gerard implied)**, Opening
> _Establishes Sharpe's historical importance to the pinball industry_

> "I proved that and the New York City Council overturned the 35 year ban."
> — **Roger Sharpe**, Middle section
> _Direct statement of Sharpe's most significant achievement: legal proof that pinball is skill-based_

> "The problem was just the accessibility and awareness of football. [pinball]"
> — **Roger Sharpe**, Near end
> _Articulates Sharpe's perspective on why pinball was banned—lack of understanding rather than inherent illegality_

> "At the Dutch Pinball Museum, we collect stories before they are lost. Because pinball history doesn't live only in machines. It lives in people."
> — **Dutch Pinball Museum host**, Opening
> _Mission statement of the museum and rationale for the interview series_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| Roger Sharpe | person | Legendary pinball designer, advocate, and industry consultant; famous for proving pinball is a game of skill and overturning New York City's 35-year pinball ban; former GQ magazine editor; subject of documentary film 'Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game' |
| Dennis Bikiatis | person | Actor who plays older Roger Sharpe in the film 'Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game'; described by Sharpe as award-winning and talented |
| Gerard | person | Founder/director of the Dutch Pinball Museum; friend of Roger Sharpe; host conducting the interview |
| Dutch Pinball Museum | organization | Museum dedicated to preserving pinball history and stories; based in Netherlands; collecting oral histories through '5 Minutes to Tilt' interview series |
| GQ Magazine | organization | Publication where Roger Sharpe worked as associate editor and later managing editor; where he wrote feature stories about pinball |
| New York City Council | organization | Legislative body that overturned the 35-year pinball ban based on Sharpe's evidence that pinball is a game of skill |
| Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game | product | Award-winning feature film based on Roger Sharpe's life story; dramatizes his role in legalizing pinball |
| Chicago | mentioned | City where Sharpe grew up; pinball was illegal there during his childhood; legalized after NYC's ban was overturned |
| New York City | mentioned | City with 35-year pinball ban that Sharpe successfully overturned by proving pinball is skill-based rather than gambling |
| Netherlands | mentioned | Country where pinball remains restricted; still viewed as gambling by government/public; context for museum's preservation mission |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Pinball history and preservation, Legality of pinball—skill vs. gambling, Roger Sharpe's life and career, The New York City pinball ban and its overturning
- **Secondary:** Oral history and storytelling in pinball culture, Pinball regulation and legality in different countries
- **Mentioned:** 'Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game' documentary/film

### Sentiment

**Positive** (0.85) — Sharpe is respectful and reflective; the museum host is clearly in awe of Sharpe; the conversation celebrates preservation and historical contribution. Mild undercurrent of frustration about ongoing misconceptions about pinball being gambling in the Netherlands, but overall tone is celebratory and forward-looking.

### Signals

- **[event_signal]** Dutch Pinball Museum's 'Five Minutes to Tilt' oral history series documenting pinball pioneers and community figures before stories are lost (confidence: high) — Museum intro: 'At the Dutch Pinball Museum, we collect stories before they are lost. Because pinball history doesn't live only in machines. It lives in people.' Series uses 5-minute egg timer format for structured interviews.
- **[market_signal]** International pinball preservation movement and emphasis on archiving oral history and human stories, not just machines (confidence: high) — Museum host frames mission: 'Pinball history doesn't live only in machines. It lives in people. In stories that are often told once and then disappear.' Sharpe endorses need for more preservation efforts globally.
- **[licensing_signal]** Documentary/biographical film adaptation of pinball history (Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game) demonstrates pinball's cultural significance and market for pinball-focused media (confidence: high) — Sharpe references award-winning feature film based on his life with professional actor Dennis Bikiatis; indicates pinball stories have entertainment/commercial value.

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## Transcript

At the Dutch Pinball Museum, we collect stories before they are lost. Because pinball history doesn't live only in machines. It lives in people. In stories that are often told once and then disappear. 5 minutes, one egg timer. When it rings, the story ends. So, uh, welcome. We are now with a very special person. Without this guy, there wouldn't be Tim today. I'm going to set an egg timer. Then I'm going to ask you a few questions. So here's five minutes. Who are you? What are you doing in Himbo? Can you tell us an untouch story? Okay. Uh who am I? I'm Roger Sharp. Uh what do I do at Pinball? Well, what I do primarily is now consulting uh with various companies pinballs. I've been a pinball designer uh which is a uh a true gift uh for either that will express my creative vision on a number of games. So that is my role of pinball. Uh admittedly uh there's a movie based on my life called Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game, an award-winning feature film. Uh I will say that uh the actor who plays older me who I know although now is not me. So please don't think of me as being a trained skilled um actor. It's a very talented award-winning actor by the name of Dennis Bikiatis as to an interesting story. The interesting story for me is I would be sitting here with Gerard helping to celebrate what he's been able to achieve and accomplish um which has been really magnificent with u his museum and his love and preservation of of we need more people in and around the world to do this. So I'm gratified to see it
and to call him friend. But I grew up in Chicago, Illinois where pinball was illegal. Uh, I didn't play pinball until I was in college. Knew nothing about the games or anything else. And I wound up moving to New York for the start of my professional career. And lo and behold, there was no pinball. And I was in a unique position of being able to run or write a feature story for GQ magazine where at that point I was associate editor. I eventually became managing editor and I went from ignorance to feast University of Wisconsin to famine in New York to the fact that I'm sitting here now having authored that book meeting people in the industry having the impact and the influence that I have had being called upon and somehow achieving what everybody thought was some unachievable showing that the games were based on skill. not chance. Not seriously, but they're based on skill and it's not gambling. It's not chance. And I guess um the one thing that I noted for was the fact that I proved that and the New York City Council overturned the 35 year ban. The impact of that and the fact that it was in New York City actually altered the course of Chicago where I grew up where suddenly pinball is then legal uh as well as many other cities and communities around the country and the world had never had a problem. The problem was just the accessibility and awareness of football. So there you have my story. Yeah man. Wow. So uh for me uh telling people that pinball is not gambling. is my oh man I I let's take so much effort to uh explain people that dim is not gambling because in the Netherlands they still think it's gambling. Sure. It's very confusing. So we're going to wrap it up. So I'm going to grow my mustache and you are the man who saves pinball and I want to be the the other guy who is going to be the one that preserve the pinball and keeping pinball alive for a long and he's going to grow his mustache and beard. Yeah. Thanks man. Thank you. A pleasure.

_(Acquisition: youtube_auto_sub, Enrichment: v3)_

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*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: 04ba824b-b102-4698-ac29-9393ac12332b*
