The bitcoin price has sunk some 60% from its all-time high and is currently bobbing around the $6,000 mark as investors and traders await regulatory approval which could send bitcoin and cryptocurrencies higher across the board.
While much of the recent chatter around bitcoin and cryptocurrency prices has been all about exchange-traded funds (ETFs) — which could open bitcoin to a much wider investment market — many bitcoin evangelists, including bitcoin guru Andreas Antonopoulos, would rather see bitcoin adoption driving the price as people around the world choose to use cryptocurrencies over the likes of PayPal, Visa, and MasterCard.
Bitcoin being a major plot point in UK soap opera Coronation Street is a step in the right direction here.
Although the story involving bitcoin (termed whipcoin for some inexplicable reason) is about a character buying some cryptocurrency years ago only to realize its much-increased value now (this kind of get-rich-quick reason for bitcoin investment is hardly entirely positive) there will at least be millions more people out there aware of bitcoin, cryptocurrency and (to a lesser extent) the underlying blockchain technology than there were previously.
It also goes to show the depth that bitcoin awareness has, at least to some degree, already penetrated into the collective consciousness — that it could be considered a major plot point at all.
Whether it’s through a bitcoin ETF or not, there is certainly scope for far many more people buying into bitcoin as every year passes.
Here’s what actually happened on the show…
Ryan Connor, a character who has been on the Street (as it’s called) on and off since 2006, is a former drug addict, a problem gambler, and jobbing DJ. After blowing his latest gig fee at the bookies he tells his friend that he invested £50 in whipcoin some years ago.
The pair does some research and finds that his original investment is now worth some £250 million. However, Ryan — of course — cannot remember the password to his whipcoin account, a story that is fast becoming cliche in pop cryptocurrency writing.
Eventually, they track down the password, but their previous research was apparently massively out of date — the coins are now near worthless — suggesting Coronation Street’s writers have been following the altcoin price scene surprisingly closely.
source: forbes