You know, illicit recordings are made by an unmeasurably small fraction of the moviegoing public. Most of us pay our (insanely high) ticket prices, watch the (interminable) ads, and then enjoy the film we paid for. Subjecting us all to this stupid, insulting lecture to go after a statistically insignificant percentage of infringers is unforgiveably arrogant.
I took a flash picture of this tonight in Leisceter Square and got a round of applause. I think I'll do it every time. I hope others do, too.
The Crossbones Graveyard dates back to Roman times. London Transport wants to excavate it and turn it into a car park and a tube-expansion. They've covered up the site with high wooden fences so that people won't think too hard about the millennia-old remains there. There's a car-park operating there for visitors to Burrough Market. These handbills were wheatpasted on the fence, running all the way around.
I tried BUPA, which has a weird-ass contact system. You fill in a form with your phone number and name and email, and then, like five seconds later, they ring you back (impressive!) and then ask you for your phone number, name and email (uhhh...), then hang up, and a minute later, someone else calls you.
Weird. Anyway: BUPA can't help me. BUPA only kicks in after you've seen a GP, for which I would have to pay cash. Which sux0rs. So I'm after a different species of insurance, I spose.
Well, that's weird: is it a £3 tour or a £5 tour? Acutally, it's a £4 tour, because there's a one-pound "camera fee" if you plan on taking pictures -- a weird bit of nickle-and-dimery that really raised my hackles: charging for photo-taking? Really?
The woman who admitted us after a substantial wait at the gates (don't go on Easter Monday if you want to be able to simply duck in and get the tour) was so frosty that we in the queue violated English Queue Norms and began to nervously joke about it all -- especially after she insisted repeatedly that we read over the extensive rules-sheet, warned us that we would have to present our mobile phones and demonstrate that they were indeed turned off (we were getting a break: the rules said that mobiles would be confiscated and returned at the end of the tour -- though doctors could "advise" of their on-call status and get a reprieve from this; lucky them, "journalists and other representatives of the media" were expected to "make themselves known to the person in charge" -- I was off-duty, both as a Doctor(ow) and a media-whore, so I declined), and gave us a stern lecture about the money, the money, the money.
Other signs advised of the cost to be guided to a specific grave (say, of an ancestor), with the admonishment that this "is not a tourist attraction" -- despite all appearances to the contrary!
It was a really stark contrast with our tour-guide, who was sweet as honey and even apologised for the "greeter" -- one of the people on the tour confessed that she'd been ready to turn around and leave after watching this woman do her thing. I nearly did the same thing when she sent back an American tourist girl who was wearing a moderately-sized backpack (no doubt stuffed full of hard-to-replace valuables) to set it down in the chapel because it was "too big" -- presumably, if she turned around really quickly, she might knock over a crypt.
And when it was all over, the same woman barred the way out, holding out her green bucket and virtually demanding a donation.
It was pretty off-putting, but the cemetery and the tour-guide were so breathtaking that it was all forgotten after ten minutes. I've been amusing myself by imagining the committee meetings with this old darling, tiptoeing around her pathological rigidity while trying to keep the volunteers' spirits up.