Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Broadway is still requiring masks, so it seems they are in line with what their arts peers in others major cities are doing.
+1
I think the liver performance aspect of it (so someone being sick affects the whole cast, and there's no working from home), plus the fact that the performers themselves can't really mask, means that they are more cautious. Plus, theater audiences tend to skew older.
But they are not dictating what kind of mask. So its all ridiculous theater. Pun intended.
OK? So is having "rules" for lap infants on airplanes, FFS. There are all kinds of safety theater things we participate in as a society, like smoking "sections" of restaurants in some states.
But its not actually protecting anyone from Covid. So its not protecting old people from Covid. Its just fooling the ones who don't know any better.
It absolutely is protecting people from Covid. I didn't get a single illness despite working in a school masked from March 2020 to May 2022...the week I decided to unmask I got Covid. Not a coincidence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Broadway is still requiring masks, so it seems they are in line with what their arts peers in others major cities are doing.
+1
I think the liver performance aspect of it (so someone being sick affects the whole cast, and there's no working from home), plus the fact that the performers themselves can't really mask, means that they are more cautious. Plus, theater audiences tend to skew older.
But they are not dictating what kind of mask. So its all ridiculous theater. Pun intended.
OK? So is having "rules" for lap infants on airplanes, FFS. There are all kinds of safety theater things we participate in as a society, like smoking "sections" of restaurants in some states.
But its not actually protecting anyone from Covid. So its not protecting old people from Covid. Its just fooling the ones who don't know any better.
It absolutely is protecting people from Covid. I didn't get a single illness despite working in a school masked from March 2020 to May 2022...the week I decided to unmask I got Covid. Not a coincidence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Broadway is still requiring masks, so it seems they are in line with what their arts peers in others major cities are doing.
+1
I think the liver performance aspect of it (so someone being sick affects the whole cast, and there's no working from home), plus the fact that the performers themselves can't really mask, means that they are more cautious. Plus, theater audiences tend to skew older.
But they are not dictating what kind of mask. So its all ridiculous theater. Pun intended.
OK? So is having "rules" for lap infants on airplanes, FFS. There are all kinds of safety theater things we participate in as a society, like smoking "sections" of restaurants in some states.
But its not actually protecting anyone from Covid. So its not protecting old people from Covid. Its just fooling the ones who don't know any better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Broadway is still requiring masks, so it seems they are in line with what their arts peers in others major cities are doing.
+1
I think the liver performance aspect of it (so someone being sick affects the whole cast, and there's no working from home), plus the fact that the performers themselves can't really mask, means that they are more cautious. Plus, theater audiences tend to skew older.
But they are not dictating what kind of mask. So its all ridiculous theater. Pun intended.
OK? So is having "rules" for lap infants on airplanes, FFS. There are all kinds of safety theater things we participate in as a society, like smoking "sections" of restaurants in some states.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Broadway is still requiring masks, so it seems they are in line with what their arts peers in others major cities are doing.
+1
I think the liver performance aspect of it (so someone being sick affects the whole cast, and there's no working from home), plus the fact that the performers themselves can't really mask, means that they are more cautious. Plus, theater audiences tend to skew older.
But they are not dictating what kind of mask. So its all ridiculous theater. Pun intended.
Anonymous wrote:I’m seeing Hamilton this week and did not realize until I received my ‘reminder’ email that this is still a requirement. They have to be one of the only places (with the exception of hospitals/doctor’s offices) to require this!
Will really dampen the experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Broadway is still requiring masks, so it seems they are in line with what their arts peers in others major cities are doing.
+1
I think the liver performance aspect of it (so someone being sick affects the whole cast, and there's no working from home), plus the fact that the performers themselves can't really mask, means that they are more cautious. Plus, theater audiences tend to skew older.
Anonymous wrote:Broadway is still requiring masks, so it seems they are in line with what their arts peers in others major cities are doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m seeing Hamilton this week and did not realize until I received my ‘reminder’ email that this is still a requirement. They have to be one of the only places (with the exception of hospitals/doctor’s offices) to require this!
Will really dampen the experience.
Sounds like the KC knows who butters their bread - old people who are afraid of COVID.
That would be my guess. Their customer base skews older and more vulnerable. Requiring masks so that a KenCen event isn't a super-spreader seems like good customer service, really.