Tag Chicago

But You Still Have To Sit Through A Crap Movie

Revisiting old BKO posts has been a source of all sorts of good material this week…here’s a post from March 2008 about an Australian entertainment company called Village Roadshow that was making plans to build a bunch of super-premium movie theaters in various locations around the United States. A $35-dollar ticket would include luxury seats, valet parking, and table service.

Well, here’s a first-hand account of what that experience is like from True/Slant blogger Piet Levy posted back in November 2009. On the plus side, the ticket price has dropped to $25, and the plush reclining seats do look awfully comfy. Levy says the food is somewhat inconsistent and pricey, although $18 for a lobster roll is about what you’d pay in any restaurant that isn’t in Maine (and even some that are) and the price of ordinary movie snacks at the multiplex these days isn’t that far behind. He gave it a B+ overall, but it sounds like he enjoyed it quite a bit.

The initial plan, as I posted in ’08, was to build 50 of these around the country, but so far there are only six: one in Pasadena, California, two in the Chicago area, two in Texas (Austin and a Dallas suburb), and one in Redmond, Washington (no doubt where all those millionaire Microsofties go to the movies).

Somewhere In East Germany, The Former Head Of The Stasi Weeps

i see it all

Proving once again that there is nothing that can’t be turned into a way to make a buck (or, in this case, a pound), a British company called Internet Eyes wants to launch a service where ordinary people are given access to the literally millions of CCTV feeds from all around the U.K. so that they can spend their time looking for people doing illegal things. The money is made by charging the people who own the closed-circuit cameras for this “service”, and the viewers are incented by a monthly £1000 prize given to the person who spots the most actual crimes being committed.

The U.K. winds hands-down for the sheer number of CCTV cameras installed all around the country, with the largest concentration being in London. You see a lot of different numbers bandied about, since there is no real accounting of them, but the consensus is that there are about 4.2 million cameras nationwide, and about 1.5 million of those in London alone. However, it turns out that the cameras do virtually nothing to prevent crime: of those 1.5 million cameras, about 10,000 are official police cameras, but a 2007 report showed that the rate of unsolved crimes in London hovered around 80% and that the cameras were not utilized in either preventing crime or solving cases.

This article in the September issue of Washington Monthly takes an in-depth look at the issue of CCTV monitoring in Britain. The author, Jamie Malanowski, found that the police look at the cameras less as a crime-fighting tool and more as yet another form of security theater — people, they say, are put at ease by the thought of the cameras watching over them, and that is more important than actually, you know, catching criminals and stuff. I think Malanowski too readily dismisses the potential for significant abuse with the argument that there’s no centralization of all these surveillance systems at the moment, because along comes this company who demonstrates EXACTLY how they can all be linked up through their business model, and even offers to “crowdsource” the necessary manpower to create a much more active and coordinated surveillance. Further, the recent revelation that CCTV cameras are being installed inside the homes of people who have been tagged with ASBOs seem to indicate a greater willingness on the part of local governments to use the threat of surveillance as a tool for manipulating behavior.

Jumping back over to our side of the pond, it turns out that the American city with the largest installation of CCTV cameras is Chicago. The Chicago Police have 1500 cameras, which is a drop in the bucket compared to London, but the linked article cites a U of I professor who says that the overall network of cameras is more like 15,000, which puts Chicago just about on par with London. Unlike Scotland Yard, however, the Chicago Police have a much more active program called (quite ominously) Operation Virtual Shield, and they claim that the network has “aided in thousands of arrests” (quote from WSJ article attributed to an unnamed, but official, Chicago Police spokesperson).

You can see where this is going. If the Internet Eyes program is the least bit successful in Britain, how long will it take for some Web 2.0 entrepreneur with a wad of VC cash to launch a similar thing in this country? And how easy would it be for a cash-strapped municipality like Chicago to turn over their surveillance system to a private enterprise? Now imagine the next phase, where the startup decides that they can take this to the next level by offering bigger and bigger cash prizes, and maybe even launching some viral marketing to promote the idea. Maybe even, say, staging bogus crimes to demonstrate the “effectiveness” of the service. Now, let’s say that really catches on big, and a year down the line a television or cable network buys in and starts producing a TV show featuring how ordinary people sitting at home are winning big money and “solving crimes”. How long do you think it would take before there was a CCTV camera in every imaginable corner of the United States, each one being watched ALL DAY by some teabagger-type self-proclaimed “vigilante” ratting out anyone and everyone he doesn’t like?

I give it about two years before that’s exactly what starts happening, just in time for the Republicans to pick it up and run with it as a “law-and-order” issue in the 2012 elections. And President Palin will be ALL OVER that shit, you betcha.

A Bucket Of Popcorn Will Require A Credit App And Two References

The Hollywood Reporter says that an Australian entertainment company called Village Roadshow is constructing the first of 50 planned multiplexes that will offer a “premium” moviegoing experience. The theater, which is being built in a suburb of Chicago, will offer valet parking, reserved seating, table service, AND a $35 ticket price…and that DOESN’T include the popcorn.

Because nothing says “exclusive” like shelling out four times as much as everybody else to see the EXACT SAME MOVIE.

Tomorrow Belongs To Me

Hitler Youth

William Ayers, a professor of education at the University of Illinois – Chicago, has co-written this article on his website that discusses a disquieting piece of information. The City of Chicago has over 10,000 students participating in Junior ROTC programs and over 1,000 students enrolled at one of five different military high schools in the city. Chicago’s public school system is the most militarized in the entire United States, but the idea of military public schools first emerged in Oakland, CA in 2000 when then-mayor Jerry Brown proposed a military magnet school. Similar programs exist in Philadelphia and Atlanta. The idea of bringing military discipline to urban high schools has been touted as a “no-nonsense” approach to restoring order into unmanageable classrooms and to provide college-preparatory-level education, but the statistics tracking college enrollment from Chicago’s military schools show rather uneven results.

Of concern to many critics is that these programs are disproportionately focused on replacing high schools that served black and immigrant neighborhoods. In the Chicago area, there are no military schools in any white community or suburb. The criticism is two-fold: one, that the use of military programs creates a de-facto two-tiered system of education based almost solely on race, and two, that the Department of Defense (which provides significant funding for the military schools and JROTC programs) is using the opportunity as a method of recruiting at a time when overall recruitment goals are not being met.

Ayers, et. al., take the criticism a step further and argue that militarized public schools are not only discriminatory, they promote a culture of obedience and conformity. Public schools, they argue, exist in a democracy to provide students with the opportunity to develop critical and independent thinking and to be exposed to a variety of ideas. The nature of military training is just the opposite — to drill cadets into compliance with orders, to act as units, and to follow strict discipline that rejects any questioning. They point out that during both WWI and WWII there was public debate about militarizing American high schools, but the idea was ultimately rejected by the federal government as unnecessary.

What goes unsaid in Professor Ayers’ article, but as subtext is loud and clear, is that this phenomenon is also part of a larger trend toward institutionalizing elements of fascism in American life. The well-known 2003 article “14 Characteristics Of Fascism” by Lawrence Britt identifies many common elements that existed in various Fascist states ranging from Nazi Germany to Suharto’s Indonesia to Pinochet’s Chile, and sadly far too many of them can be readily demonstrated as alive and well in George Bush’s America; fetishizing the military is a prime hallmark of fascist states, and since 2001 the idealization of the military has skyrocketed in our culture. Compelling young people to open identify with the active military by instilling the military’s own systems of discipline and training furthers the goal of maintaining high approval for the military establishment. Moreover, co-opting youth as ideological warriors transcends merely fascism and is a well-established mechanism of authoritarian governments of all stripes: the Hitler Youth, the Young Pioneers of the Soviet Union and the youth gangs of Mao’s Cultural Revolution were all state-sponsored groups utilizing elements of militarization to produce compliant political cadres outside of the formal militaries themselves that could be used for a variety of ideological purposes.

Proto-fascist sentiment has long been a part of the American national character, and the resurgence of extreme nationalism in the last several years, along with the constant and unchecked anti-democratic abuses of power by the Bush Administration, should give anyone but the most blindly-partisan right-wingers pause to consider how close we are to being transformed into a fascist nation. Using a variety of rationalizations for informally drafting and co-opting underprivileged members of our society into serving questionable politico-military ends should not be getting a free pass.

(Thanks to Jessica at Beacon Broadside for the link to Ayers’ article)

I Feel Safer Already

oharesecurity.jpg

I only travel by air occasionally, but just enough to have encountered a wide variety of security procedures at a number of airports in the U.S. and Europe, and by far the longest and slowest line I’ve experienced was at O’Hare Airport in Chicago (as seen above). Hundreds of people, shuffling along in their stocking feet, belts unbuckled and removed, holding their pants up with one hand while trying to manhandle their carry-on bags as they work their way up to a mere TWO checkpoints.

Meanwhile, WBBM-TV, the CBS station in Chicago, has been reporting on security problems at O’Hare and ran a report earlier this week that charges that some 3,800 security badges that permit airport employees to access all areas of the facility are missing. Their investigation also alleges that for all intents and purposes anyone can simply walk into restricted areas if they happen to look like an employee, no questions asked.

As long as they aren’t carrying knitting needles or a big bottle of shampoo, I guess.

Comments:
There’s terrorism and then there’s being terrorized. I flew to Charlotte NC this week and somewhere along the line my tooled-leather make-up bag went missing. Now I’m not saying that the TSA helped themselves, but I think a reasonable person can draw their own conclusions.
Posted by Suzette [URL] on 06/29/07

Pucker Up!

I don’t know if it was the heat or the humidity or holiday hangovers or what, but it seemed like I had a significant Asshole Encounter every single day last week. At home, at work, online, even in the parking lot of the supermarket, there was no let up from it. The jerk meter was up to 11 and I never knew where the next one might materialize.

It finally reached the point where I had to ask myself if *I* was the asshole. You know how sometimes you just don’t recognize your own unpleasantness until you just can’t escape the reality of it any more? I sat in my den last night, watching the torrents of the “This American Life” TV series I’d downloaded, and one of the episodes was about people behaving extremely badly at a hot dog stand in Chicago, and that’s when the moment struck me.

(more after the jump)
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