If I Were The Owner of a Movie Theater

If I were the owner of a movie theater, my position would be the one that was sitting at the exit saying good bye, good night to all the movie goers.

If I were the person sitting at the exit, I would have let the two ladies who came 15 minutes late for the last screening time to get in, to buy their tickets even though they had missed the 10 minutes advertisements, 3 minutes of the opening credi...ts, two bites of pop corns.

A movie theater should open their ticket boot until the last movie in the theater started to run their ending credit; in fact, it should close at the same time when the person sitting at the exit finished his job greeting the last person who yawned and walked out of the theater.

I think, being rejected at the doorway inside the theater showed a serious decline of human nature. Ten to twenty projectors running inside the house with hundreds of empty seats, two people were willing to pay full to go in and watch a movie, and you wouldn't allow that? This is why I considered the position at the exit was the most important; this person should never had to listen to others' command, but based on what he or she felt what had to be done was right. This important person, was supposed to be the closest to the customers who came to the theater. He or she could see the excitement of the people who come to see a movie, and also see the effects that movies had given to them. This close-to-your-heart man should have the right to observe and make decisions based on situations like what happened tonight to those ladies who got rejected by the "MANAGER".

The decline of human nature, I can see that simply by standing inside, or not even INSIDE that cold empty theater entrance with no ticket booth but dropped-dead gates.

Go to movies people, share some tears and laughter, with strangers, with Roger (and Jessica).

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