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Uncategorized Monday, March 26th 2012 at 12:30 pm

Could Tweet Seats In Theaters Be The New Smoking Section?

It’s become something of a mantra in the cinema and theater alike: Please turn off your cellphones before the performance begins. Depending on where you are, some of these warnings are a bit more lighthearted while others are a little more matter-of-fact, but either way it’s practically inevitable that whatever movie, musical, or play you are seeing, you’ll be asked to turn off your cellphone beforehand. Practically. A fad that bucks this trend is becoming more widely adopted. Commonly referred to as “tweet seats,” a phenomenon encouraging the use of cellphones during a performance is spreading, to mixed reviews.

The concept is simple. Much like restaurants with their increasingly rare smoking sections, some theaters are setting aside a section of seats where users can use their cellphones, ostensibly for tweeting, during a performance without disturbing less “connected patrons.” The idea has been around for a while. In 2009, the Lyric Opera in Kansas set aside 100 tweet seats during the final performance of Gilbert and Sullivan’s HMS Pinafore, and recently, tweet seats made the move to Broadway after being incorporated in the revival of the musical Godspell. The hope, it seems, is to try and get the younger generation more interested in the ancient art form that is live theater by allowing them to bring their vices with them. As a bonus, the performance the tweeters are watching is almost certain to get some free publicity.

In a way, it’s not entirely surprising. In addition to the “separate sections” bit, the smoking section analogy carries a few more parallels. Obviously, the light from cellphone usage can bother other non-using patrons a bit like smoke, but also, Twitter is decidedly one of the more addictive social networks out there, to the extent that urges to tweet may be harder to resist than urges to smoke. If people are going to be doing it anyway, you might as well just stick them in a corner and let them go at it, right? And from a publicity standpoint, the benefits of having your show tweeted about aren’t trivial, that is at least if your show is good. In fact, the largest number of tweets-per-second ever can be attributed to the televised screening of a film, during which viewers were all free to tweet about it, and tweet they did, at a rate of 25,088 tweets per second.

Of course, not everyone is going to be thrilled about this kind of thing. While tweet seats cause little damage to non-tweeters — unless there is a surplus of tweet seats and also a surplus non-tweeting patrons — something just seems a little bit off about it. Ars Technica’s Curt Hopkins takes issue on principle. “It is an operatically stupid idea,” he says in an article about the phenomenon, balking at general managers and marketing leads’ illusions that “social media is going to save theater.” If you’re just trying to fill seats, however, with minimal concerns about the integrity of an art form, tweet seats seem like a no-brainer.

Again, I find myself returning to what I think is the troubling apt analogy of the smoking section. Although tweeting doesn’t seem like a huge deal, the willingness of theaters to pull a 180 on their policy in order to hold the attention of increasingly connected youth is sort of troubling, both in the sense that they’d do it and in the sense that it might work. There’s an argument to be made that the inability not to tweet is a growing, potentially serious problem for many people. 97% of college students use their phones for social networking, 88% text in class, and 75% say their phones never leave their sides. There’s also evidence to suggest that social networking — among other things — is annihilating attention spans, not to mention the existence of things like Internet Addiction Prevention Clinics and Internet Addition Disorder. Could it be that tweet seats are a bid to accept, and even facilitate a growing, unhealthy social media dependency to make a few extra bucks? Maybe, maybe not. We’ll have to wait and see how things unfold to find out for sure.

In the meantime, I know I wouldn’t much mind some tweeters going crazy in the back of any production I go to see, as long as I don’t have to soak in the light pollution. And as long as there isn’t some jerk back there posting to Twitter with Siri.

(h/t Uproxx, image credit Shutterstock)

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  • http://twitter.com/ToscaSac T

     I like the idea. Stuffed shirt types need to let loose a little. Not because the world might be addicted to social networking. Some of us are actually excellent multitaskers.

  • Urieaal

    Stuffed shirt types… Look plain and simple we don’t also pay our ticket fees to listen to you talking, or the beeps and boops or clicks of your phone during a Theater event.

    What ever happened to Courtesy and Repsect for others. You People who tend to be kids, Live on your cell phones need to learn manners tbh.

  • A kid

    I struggled to hold my attention throughout the article and just jumped to the end. I’ll retweet it now.

  • http://lisascreativespace.wordpress.com/ Lisa

    I think it’s distracting for the tweeters as well as the non-tweeters. We go to watch a movie or a play or a concert to be immersed into the story and the music. It’s a way to escape from the outside world for a time, and enjoy the performance. Tweeting or seeing people tweet out of the corner of your eye draws you back into the “real” world and out of the story or movie. I think it would behoove the managers to *not* have a tweeting section, as it only discourages those who want to truly enjoy the moment and who are the majority that pay for the tickets.

    I am all for multi-tasking, btw. But, when you go to a movie or a concert, you miss things if your attention is taken away from the performance. I also think it is disrespectful to the performers (esp. the live performers) to not be watching them. They’ve worked very hard to master their craft and are performing for *you*. Give them the attention they deserve and turn off your cell phones. Tweet about it later.

    By the same token, I don’t like speaking to someone while their eyes are on their phone and they’re texting. It’s rude. They don’t hear half of what I’m saying, so you know the ones tweeting in theaters/theatres aren’t hearing half of what is happening on stage.

  • Shannon Toffton

    Why pay that much money for a ticket, when you could stay at home and play with your phone for free?