Big Brother Goes To The Movies
"I don't know anymore
Are the neighbors watching me
Well is the mailman watching me
And I don't feel safe anymore, oh what a mess
I wonder who's watching me now?
Who?
The IRS?"
Date: 6/2/2007 2:44:47 AM ( 17 y ) ... viewed 3698 times When you go to the movies, you
can tell on people if they act up. I used to think of the theater as a place
where you can kind of hide in the dark and watch the movie instead of having
someone watch you. And, some people even play the "popcorn game" (use your
imagination if you don't know what that is; It's for couples). I think this
will lead to fights, maybe even death if you upset the wrong person.
Personally, I don't think you need to turn people in at the movies, I think the
audience generally takes care of them anyway. What happened to the days where
we had fair warning the guy with the flashlight was coming and we had to take
our feet off the seats? Is nothing sacred anymore?
Remote Control Reports Annoying
Movie Patrons
(CBS) NEW YORK
Has this happened to you? You go to a movie and someone is making too much
noise, or the picture or audio goes bad. So you have to leave the theater to
report the problem and you miss part of the film. Well, that's all about to
change with the click of a button.
Every moviegoer has his or her theater etiquette pet peeve. Whether it is a cell
phone ringing or a baby screaming, there's always something that has the
potential ruin your movie going experience.
Regal cinemas say you can now silence those interruptions with the Regal Guest
Response System -- a virtual remote control to mute that annoying patron who's
ruining your silver screen sanity.
"I get enraged, and I often want to tell them to shut up," moviegoer M. David
Levin told CBS.
Theatre employees at Battery Park Stadium now handle that duty without patrons
missing a second of film. A hand-held pager is given to a random member of the
Regal Crown Club Loyalty Program who's attending each movie.
"If any situation does arise they can just press a button which goes directly to
the pager which the manager will have and they'll signal it and they'll go right
into the theater and handle the situation," theater manager Heather Dematteis
said.
"This device can be used for more than just reporting loud patrons," Dematteis
added. "It also can be used to report problems with the picture, sound and even
piracy."
Some theater patrons love the idea, but others think it's overkill.
"I think it's a little bit too much," Alexander Sodon said. "I think people
should just go to the movies and just watch the movie and not worry about
pressing a button to solve their problems."
Regal Cinema says its never pinpoints the guest reporting the problems, and the
successful program is now being used in 114 theaters across the country.
More National News
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