I hope so too The day I can sit back down in a theater and eat overpriced popcorn safely again will be very satisfying opcorn:I hope you're right.
I hope so too The day I can sit back down in a theater and eat overpriced popcorn safely again will be very satisfying opcorn:I hope you're right.
I need at least a year past vaccine if I'm gonna sit in a box of recirculated air for two hours.I hope so too The day I can sit back down in a theater and eat overpriced popcorn safely again will be very satisfying opcorn:
Ah, they actually backed off that today, they're accepting the FDA protocols. Inposted the article a couple pages back.No one is going to take the vaccine because the current administration is forcing a bypass of FDA protocol to have it "available" by the election in 3 weeks.
I would and still would see B&T in the theater. I haven't seen it yet.If only these theaters could also play what's on VOD as well. Some people would really opt to go to the multiplexes for Mulan, Bill & Ted 3, Ava, Sponge on the Run, etc. Wish it didn't have to be one or the other or only drive-ins in a lot of these cases.
I think one of the few upsides of all this, is that it could knock the theaters out of the catbird seat on this issue.If only these theaters could also play what's on VOD as well. Some people would really opt to go to the multiplexes for Mulan, Bill & Ted 3, Ava, Sponge on the Run, etc. Wish it didn't have to be one or the other or only drive-ins in a lot of these cases.
I haven’t seen it yet either and I was really looking forward to seeing it in the theater before everything hit the fan.I would and still would see B&T in the theater. I haven't seen it yet.
If it was B&T3 instead Tenet, I would have been there for them (on a matinee on a Tues.)I haven’t seen it yet either and I was really looking forward to seeing it in the theater before everything hit the fan.
I would and still would see B&T in the theater. I haven't seen it yet.
Dude....I haven’t seen it yet either and I was really looking forward to seeing it in the theater before everything hit the fan.
Agreed all around. The good news is (hopefully) we'll have multiple vaccines rolling out next year and therefore more options to get more people vaccinated.I think August of next year for theaters being relatively safe, personally. Assuming that we get approval of the furthest along candidate (currently Pfizer) in late Dec, supply is still going to be extremely limited. I think it'll be mid- to late-April before it starts rolling out to people past the most vulnerable population, and then you have a 2 dose schedule with a month between doses and 10+ days after your second dose until you're actually protected. That puts you at June-July at the earliest.
I'm hopeful on that too, but I don't think it'll change the timeline all that much. Approval for the others is at least a month behind, maybe more in the case of Oxford due to increased scrutiny due to the clinical pause, and they all have a similar 2 dose schedule. Johnson and Johnson is the only one that's a single dose, and it just started their phase 3 trial last week. If you have multiple vaccines available it'll edge you forward to March, maybe? And that's assuming that they all are efficacious and get approved in early 2021.Agreed all around. The good news is (hopefully) we'll have multiple vaccines rolling out next year and therefore more options to get more people vaccinated.
Oh, I meant more in the case of doses than timeline. The more options we have, theoretically that means the quicker we can get a higher percentage of the population vaccinated. Considering it *seems* like most of the vaccines will be closer to the flu vaccine's 60%-ish efficiency, the quicker we get more people vaccinated the betterI'm hopeful on that too, but I don't think it'll change the timeline all that much. Approval for the others is at least a month behind, maybe more in the case of Oxford due to increased scrutiny due to the clinical pause, and they all have a similar 2 dose schedule. Johnson and Johnson is the only one that's a single dose, and it just started their phase 3 trial last week. If you have multiple vaccines available it'll edge you forward to March, maybe? And that's assuming that they all are efficacious and get approved in early 2021.
Most theaters don’t own their space. It’s rented. As a result, changes to the ventilation systems is the responsibility of the landlord. Any tenant requests for infrastructure changes has to be approved by the landlord and, depending on the contract, the option extended to all the other tenants.Are theaters not looking into the new advanced air filtration systems being added to airplanes and cruise ships? Not sure if it's too costly.