Rules are for Breaking 1 May, 2008
Posted by Drop Box Junky in Entertainment, Movies.Tags: 21, Box Office, Fools Gold, multifunctional, Pathology, students
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The films on tonight may bedesultory (21, Fools Gold, Pathology…..) but it’s busy. Very busy. On Box Office the two of us pull in high takings as the queue never dies down. Curiously, with the high traffic the management have stopped showing films after 10pm. This may be because of low attendance (except for staff) and the cost of keeping staff on site through the night.
There are lots of rules in the Box Office and how these are applied is largely down the discretion of firstly the multifunctional on the box, secondly, the manager on duty that night, and thirdly how the rule is recorded. Rules on Box Office are very important to give backbone to the authority of the Multifunctional but needs to applied with a liberal dose of common sense and consistency from the duty managers. Sadly, the latter is badly missing in this building.
The queues are long and yet customers still turn up after a film has actually started. That’s half an hour after the programme time allowing for up to 20 minutes of previews and trailors. Now everyone knows the beginning of film not only sets the scene: the plot, the characters and the mood, notably it gives the viewer basic information for the rest of the film, in particular the characters. So why on earth do people think it is okay turning up late? Company policy is very simple: turn up late and you piss off the rest of the audience so, no, you not going to be let in. After a lengthy wait this older middle class and rather short-tempered gentleman attempts to see a film that has already started and is indignent when refused. After a tour of other films on offer, unfortunately including what has already started, he storms off in a huff.
To my disbelief the dour Scottish Duty Manager then ticks us off on the radio. Yes we can let that horrible man in to a film late as long as we inform him of the times. I expect the overworked manager has backed down for a quiet life.
It seems the world is a student and aged 14 years old. The student rate is for students and if you are a student then you will have proof. Yes there is a grey area for 15-16 year olds at secondary school who are technically students but schools don’t provide ID like further education institutions do so the child is technically an adult in our view. But the point is practically every young person tries it on. And I mean almost all of them. It’s a badge of honour to the point that the young women with these have-a-goers (and they are typically young men) get very pissed off with them. The rules of the house are very simple: no ID no student rate. No Buts. No ignorant looks. No coy smiles from the girls. Well, maybe.



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