YES!! Lady sues Movies Theaters for commercials
<a href="http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20030220/film_nm/film_movieads_dc_1" target="_blank">Don't force me to watch commercials please</a>
[quote] In a class-action lawsuit filed in Illinois state court on behalf of all Loews patrons, the Chicago-area English teacher claims the theater circuit's policy of playing pre-film product commercials amounts to a deceptive business practice because the ads begin at the time advertised as the start of a feature movie...... <hr></blockquote>
[quote] In a class-action lawsuit filed in Illinois state court on behalf of all Loews patrons, the Chicago-area English teacher claims the theater circuit's policy of playing pre-film product commercials amounts to a deceptive business practice because the ads begin at the time advertised as the start of a feature movie...... <hr></blockquote>
Comments
However, I'm not about to sue over it. While I understand the chick's frustration, it's hardly something to get too torqued up about. Would could the commercials, all added together, possibly come out to? Two minutes? Just use it as time to get your food and drink all settled, your coat off, look around and find the nearest available exit signs, etc.
Don't SUE over it, for crying out loud. It's not as though the theater was selling Big Macs in the lobby...
[quote] 20 minutes of ads? Walk out
February 9, 2003
BY ROGER EBERT
I got a good laugh out of that AM question about ads in theaters. I happen to work for Regal as a manager. Regal is evil and greedy, but maybe not in that order. Each week we receive a list of commercials that must be onscreen. And every week, each movie has a minimum of eight to 10 commercials. The corporate office is very focused on how much revenue advertisements provide. Everything else is secondary to making sure all commercials are running--including customer complaints. Now, in coordination with RegalCinemedia, Regal Entertainment will begin implementing a pre-feature program: Twenty minutes of commercials preceding the start time of the feature--projected digitally. I wonder how well this will work. Considering that shows will have to end at least 20 minutes before the pre-feature program, this will largely limit the number of shows per day.
Name withheld
A. If I were faced with 20 minutes of paid advertising before a movie, I would simply walk out and demand my money back. Commercials are fine when they underwrite TV or subsidize newspapers, which could not exist without them. But when I pay for a ticket, I am personally subsidizing the screening, and resent being made into a captive victim. I received an avalanche of mail on this subject, and cannot understand why advertisers would want to attract hostility toward their products by deliberately offending potential customers. <hr></blockquote>
Ahh... better days.
in chicago we make sure these exits aren't chained shut as well!
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in chicago we make sure these exits aren't chained shut as well!</strong><hr></blockquote>
Don't be so sure of that. Recent night club.... In fact I have had the exit door on a theater break on me.
But anyway Ebert didn't read carefully. The movie manager said the 20 minutes were before the start time of the movie. No one can object to that.
As always I reject lawsuits to solve a problem that should be solved by ... as other suggested ... walking out.
this column was well before the lawsuit and the lawsuit is against loews and this guy works for regal. and i think the regal uses one of those slide show kinds now. loews is showing the commercials after the start time. i guess i didn't make it clear when i posted that this wasn't in reference to the lawsuit, that it was from a couple weeks ago. sorry.
I hate trailers. I'll download them if I want to see them. Just show me the damned movie I paid to see, jerk-offs.
But these days with high priced movies, mother****ing morons talking on their cell phones and showing up on time to get a very shitty seat I tend to only see movies I can't wait for on DVD.
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I'll have to rent that on DVD!
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Commercials during the lockout period at the beginning of your DVDs can't be far off.
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Commercials during the lockout period at the beginning of your DVDs can't be far off. </strong><hr></blockquote>
They are already here for some. However I have found that Fast-Forward is your friend here.
<strong>Well you know vote with your feet. There's a lot of movies these days that come out and I think, I'll have to rent that on DVD!
But these days with high priced movies, mother****ing morons talking on their cell phones and showing up on time to get a very shitty seat I tend to only see movies I can't wait for on DVD.</strong><hr></blockquote>
I only see certain very big movies in the theatre. Star Wars, LoTR, and Spiderman were must-see's. All the rest I wait for the DVD. The movie theatre is not all that special to me anymore with all the ads and such.
Exception to this being for a couple of kids movies for my son during special showings during the day....
But watching commercials, actual COMMERCIALS, for Coca-Cola, a local Jeep dealership or jeweler, a PSA on "Stop the Hate" or whatever, army recruitment spots, another Coke or Pepsi commercial, etc. just gets ridiculous.
AND I'm not talking about those static slides played because those are on constantly between showings and they don't cut into - or interfere - with the movie's start time. I'm specifically talking about when the lights go down, the projector begins and it's actual commercials, just like you'd see on TV.
Trailers and static, pre-showtime slides? Bring 'em on, I don't care. Carrot Top with his face in the screen hawking 1-800-IMANIDIOT...no thanks.
As if I don't see those 58 times a day while at home.
I guess I shouldn't bitch. With all the things Scott mentioned above, I rarely go to movies anymore as it is, so if I "voted with my feet", I'd never see anything!
Of the three, only LOTR was bearable. Why, more than bearable. It was actually GOOD! Just as the one from the previous year. Had it not been for those two movies, I don't think I would've seen ANYTHING good at the multiplex in almost two years' time!
Oddly enough, the only thing I want to see at the moment is "Old School" because it looks like it might be so silly and stupid, that I would laugh out loud (like I did in "Dumb & Dumber")...a rare thing indeed.
Most "comedies" are anything but.
[ 02-21-2003: Message edited by: pscates ]</p>
when i demand my money back i also tell them i want to talk to the manager. i've been told that the local theatre has no choice in the matter, that whatever HQ they have dictates what commercials will and will not be shown before a movie.
i also thought i'd mention that these commercials always start WHEN THE MOVIE SHOW TIME IS.
that is so ****ing as hell annoying. it pisses me off to the point that my movie going experience is ruined. the last thing i need to see is Tiger whoring out some Olds, or some stupid ass pop commercial.
UGH!
the only thing that would really make any difference though would be to find large groups of people that all live in the same area. go to a set theatre at a set time, then when they play the commercials, all walk out and demand your money back. a trickle of walkouts over time isn't as noticeable as a huge run at once, IMO.
so anyone in the minneapolis area want to get started on this?
edit: oh yeah, i also ask to talk to the manager when there aren't any commercials and thank them for it. that's when i was told they have no control over what is shown before movies.
[ 02-21-2003: Message edited by: alcimedes ]</p>