The very many questions-not-worth-their-own-thread question thread XXVIII

Status
Not open for further replies.
WTH, did this really happen, America?

We actually did both, although the DoI’s Office of Saline Water (later retitled the Office for Water Research and Technology) always took a back seat. It was eventually privatized Reagan'd out of existence in the 1980s.
 
How did cinema snacking come about?

Movies used to be very very long. Enterprising businessmen saw an opportunity and started selling food from carts outside the theater that moviegoers could buy during the intermissions. Film studios (who at the time also owned the theaters themselves) did not like this so they made their own food in-house, and in various ways undercut the independent food vendors. I can't remember if they banned any outside food coming in or ran food vendors out of the general theater area. One of those two.

Anyway this is why staple foodstuffs in theaters are things like popcorn and hotdogs. They're things which can easily be made from a foodcart.
 
We actually did both, although the DoI’s Office of Saline Water (later retitled the Office for Water Research and Technology) always took a back seat. It was eventually privatized Reagan'd out of existence in the 1980s.
Huh, interesting.

Er...

Grid reference: TM 29634 34344

Is that any help?
Confirmed hits on target. Fire for effect.
 
Ah. Yes. But where was, is, and will be England?
Nigel Farage is the man to ask such a question. Meet him in any pub, as long as he can have a pint on you.
Movies used to be very very long. Enterprising businessmen saw an opportunity and started selling food from carts outside the theater that moviegoers could buy during the intermissions. Film studios (who at the time also owned the theaters themselves) did not like this so they made their own food in-house, and in various ways undercut the independent food vendors.
And then the studios lost or sold their theatres! How did the custom go on after that?
Owen Glyndwr said:
I can't remember if they banned any outside food coming in or ran food vendors out of the general theater area. One of those two.
¿Por qué no los dos? I wouldn't put it past them to try both simultaneously.
Owen Glyndwr said:
Anyway this is why staple foodstuffs in theaters are things like popcorn and hotdogs. They're things which can easily be made from a foodcart.
:ack: So there is a logical(oid) origin to popcorn after all.
 
And then the studios lost or sold their theatres! How did the custom go on after that?

Well, the theaters now need to make money somehow, and a lot of the ticket sales go to the studios so....

6 dollars for a small popcorn please.
 
When I was younger and my parents took me and my bro to the movies we always snuck in popcorn we made at home. At the least it was marginally healthier, but that's like saying Luxembourg is gigantic compared to Vatican City.
 
Well, the theaters now need to make money somehow, and a lot of the ticket sales go to the studios so....

6 dollars for a small popcorn please.

I remember when multiplexes first started. They were like concentration camps, with employees making sure no one snuck into a second movie.

:hatsoff: Then they realized that their profits came from the concession stands, not the ticket prices [which went mainly to the studios]. If customers stayed for a second or third movie, they'd get hungry and would buy more junk food. :popcorn::gold: So, now you can spend the day in a multiplex, wandering from show to show, dining on popcorn and coca cola.
 
Well, the theaters now need to make money somehow, and a lot of the ticket sales go to the studios so....

6 dollars for a small popcorn please.

That's very strange. I heard recently that the theatres make at least 50% from the ticket sales.

Where the big profits are for the Big Studios is the merchandising associated with the successful films. They make very little from the films themselves since a) they're very expensive to make and b) a lot of films are flops.
 
England does not cover the Earth, Tolni.
I was trying to relate England to TM 29634 34344
 
England does not cover the Earth, Tolni.

That's true physically.

But spiritually?

England's working on it. And seems to be gaining ground.

Look at how many people speak English! And use it for things like computing.

This may, of course, not be a good thing.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom