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Tuesday, June 7th, 2011 04:03 pm
So, I've been seeing this thing about texting in theaters being forwarded all around, and I'm responding very negatively to it and the kind of attention it has received. I'm not exactly sure why, but it really raises my blood pressure. It feels very ugly to me. (Note, the specifics of this incident do not interest me much, as little of the commentary praising it have had any knowledge of it either. I'm addressing just the response here.)

Partly, I just can't imagine why anyone would care that much about someone texting. Particularly in a theater that serves food! If you were so concerned about avoiding distractions, why would you be there in the first place? But even besides that fact, is texting really that much more distracting than the occasional whisper or giggle? It strikes me as a weird hissy fit, to want to watch a movie in public and then get all bent out of shape when the environment is slightly out of your control. Adults should be able to deal with that. I worry that we're developing a counterpart to "family friendly" in even explicitly adult areas that is equally stiffling and restrictive, like we can barely stand to be in public at all, but if we must then it had better be micromanaged down to the smallest detail.

Partly, it reminds me of the tedious and lingering anti-cellphone populism of the turn of the century. Now it's part of a larger reaction against people being connected all the time. Which I guess annoys some people? Multitasking is a survival trait now, so get used to it. Being network connected makes me better. I'm smarter, faster at accomplishing goals, I have a better memory, I'm more social. So I take it poorly when someone wants in any way to shut that down because of vague politeness concerns. Can it be done rudely? Sure! That's no reason for a blanket ban. Maybe the lowest brightness settings on phones could stand to be even lower. Mine certainly could, and I'd welcome that change. (On my Nexus One, the Kindle app can actually take the screen darker than the system settings can. Weird.) But I'm getting really sick of seeing self-righteous complaints about "are things online really that much more interesting than real life". Well, yes, often they are, because online is THE ENTIRE REST OF THE WORLD. If the fact that ALL OF HUMAN EXPERIENCE is sometimes more interesting than making smalltalk with you, I don't think the problem here is with me. You'v

Partly, so much of the commentary is focusing on the caller's word choice. The undertones of classism are really unpleasant. And, of course, lots of misogyny coming out of the woodwork as well.

I dunno. My reaction is obviously emotional, but so is everyone else's. I'm pretty comfortable not being on the side of the "yeah, fuck that bitch!" internet patrol.
Tuesday, June 7th, 2011 11:31 pm (UTC)
People don't necessarily go to a movie theater to be with other people, much as they don't fly coach because they want to be shoulder to shoulder with them. It's just not affordable to hire the entire theater for one to see something on the big screen.

I'm actually not horribly bothered by texting, possibly because my own brain and body are more distracting to me than a lot of outside stimuli. I am more bothered by ringtones and answering of phones. A movie is largely visual, and food in the dark isn't, so I can see how a bright light would be more distracting than food to many patrons. Eating makes noise, but that's probably why the sound is so frickin' loud at most theaters.

I do not know how clear the Alamo Drafthouse was about communicating its "no texting" policy -- if they weren't clear, she certainly has a legitimate complaint. If they were clear, she should've either respected the rules of the venue or not bitched when she was caught. She comes off as stupid and bratty just for that, as well as her language.

Very few people actually are as interesting as the whole rest of the world. You actually know some exceptions. Not everyone does. It's polite to pay attention to them anyway if you are, say, on a date, or specifically getting service from them.
Wednesday, June 8th, 2011 06:26 am (UTC)
From the other post I've read on this: they (AD) tell people when they buy tickets, they run blindingly obvious short films before the main feature telling people not to do it (I saw one on YouTube - it's unambiguous), and there is a 'first warning' before you are chucked out. So that seems pretty clear to me.