Anonymous wrote:Visited the area for the first time since during the pandemic, specifically Montgomery County. I’m a bit shocked.
New construction everywhere. Strip malls everywhere. Panera bread, everywhere.
My local movie theatre has become “Cinépolis Luxury Cinemas” and everything along 270 between The Kentlands and Bethesda Row has become a wannabe-variation of The Grove in Los Angeles.
My beef isn’t the cost of cinema tickets - that’s been universal around the world - but the sense that what I used to perceive as a pretty heterogeneous, inclusive county has become dominated by some sort of aestheticized TikTok new urbanism where everything has an accent aigu aspirationally edited into its name.
-Shivering in disorientation at Westfield Montgomery Mall as I remember the 90s and early 2000s
Anonymous wrote:Visited the area for the first time since during the pandemic, specifically Montgomery County. I’m a bit shocked.
New construction everywhere. Strip malls everywhere. Panera bread, everywhere.
My local movie theatre has become “Cinépolis Luxury Cinemas” and everything along 270 between The Kentlands and Bethesda Row has become a wannabe-variation of The Grove in Los Angeles.
My beef isn’t the cost of cinema tickets - that’s been universal around the world - but the sense that what I used to perceive as a pretty heterogeneous, inclusive county has become dominated by some sort of aestheticized TikTok new urbanism where everything has an accent aigu aspirationally edited into its name.
-Shivering in disorientation at Westfield Montgomery Mall as I remember the 90s and early 2000s
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A family member works for a company that builds these places.
Basically it’s because inflation, property values going up, tariffs, etc, everything is several times more expensive than it should be.
So to justify that higher price, you have to make it feel more luxurious. It doesn’t cost that much more to add a few upgrades.
As an example, the movie theater has to make $50-$100 a person just to keep the lights on. You can’t charge $75 for a mediocre movie experience. So you add in the reclining seats, sell slightly fancier booze, and slap an elevated name on the whole thing.
Movie theaters must hate me. Not only do I only ever go see matinees, I never buy any concessions.
Anonymous wrote:A family member works for a company that builds these places.
Basically it’s because inflation, property values going up, tariffs, etc, everything is several times more expensive than it should be.
So to justify that higher price, you have to make it feel more luxurious. It doesn’t cost that much more to add a few upgrades.
As an example, the movie theater has to make $50-$100 a person just to keep the lights on. You can’t charge $75 for a mediocre movie experience. So you add in the reclining seats, sell slightly fancier booze, and slap an elevated name on the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's reality tv, to be honest. People watch rich people whether it's Kardashians or Real Housewives or whatever - non-actors - becoming rich and having tons of stuff. Then they flaunt their stuff, whether it's new body parts, cars, jewelry, vacations, homes, etc.
So subconsciously people think "if they can, I can" and they (possibly go into debt to) get it.