What did I do? Nothing, except turn red and seethe in impotent rage because it's considered dastardly in this country to even suggest that babies don't belong in movie theaters.
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I don't eat a Pizza Hut! Too many kids.Darth Wong wrote:Taking babies into a theatre is stupid; it is a venue where it is understood that you must either remain quiet or leave. Taking a baby to a restaurant, however, is perfectly reasonable unless you're one of those jack-asses who thinks that parents should be essentially locked down in house arrest for the first year of parenthood to preserve your precious dining ambience at Pizza Hut
Hey, I like my dining ambiance at Pizza Hut, thank you!Darth Wong wrote:Taking babies into a theatre is stupid; it is a venue where it is understood that you must either remain quiet or leave. Taking a baby to a restaurant, however, is perfectly reasonable unless you're one of those jack-asses who thinks that parents should be essentially locked down in house arrest for the first year of parenthood to preserve your precious dining ambience at Pizza Hut
Should have gone to the theater people and complained. They'll usually give you free tickets for stuff like that. At least the chain I go to does.Galvatron wrote:I've experienced both at the last four movies I've been to. A screaming baby sitting directly across the aisle virtually ruined X2 for me. What made it even worse is that the mother did nothing to help the situation. She went so far as to loudly pat the baby's diapered butt for a full ten minutes during the climax while giggling herself at the uber cuteness of her child's glass-shattering squeals and coos.
What did I do? Nothing, except turn red and seethe in impotent rage because it's considered dastardly in this country to even suggest that babies don't belong in movie theaters.
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That's my take on it. Obviously kids are allowed in certain restaurants, but take a kid that is obviously going to bail all night whilst at a decent restaurant is simply not on no matter how you cut it.Stormbringer wrote:Should have gone to the theater people and complained. They'll usually give you free tickets for stuff like that. At least the chain I go to does.Galvatron wrote:I've experienced both at the last four movies I've been to. A screaming baby sitting directly across the aisle virtually ruined X2 for me. What made it even worse is that the mother did nothing to help the situation. She went so far as to loudly pat the baby's diapered butt for a full ten minutes during the climax while giggling herself at the uber cuteness of her child's glass-shattering squeals and coos.
What did I do? Nothing, except turn red and seethe in impotent rage because it's considered dastardly in this country to even suggest that babies don't belong in movie theaters.
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And that said, don't take your shreeching little monsters out in public. If you kid, at any age, is going to be an impossible pain don't take them out. Get a baby sitter or something.
You'd have to be something of a loony to take a baby to a "fine-dining" (read: huge bill) restaurant anyway. Hell, my kids have grown beyond the screaming stage and we still don't go to that kind of restaurant. You wouldn't believe the cost of feeding a family of four if you've gotten used to dining by yourself. My older boy can already eat as much as some adults.RogueIce wrote:Hey, I like my dining ambiance at Pizza Hut, thank you!
Anyway, I'd have to agree on some of the resteraunt bit. Something like Mickey Ds and Pizza Hut and such. But, at one of those fancy pants resteraunts, keep 'em out. Because there, it IS about getting away from it all.
Pretty much in agreement of this thought.Darth Wong wrote:Taking babies into a theatre is stupid; it is a venue where it is understood that you must either remain quiet or leave. Taking a baby to a restaurant, however, is perfectly reasonable unless you're one of those jack-asses who thinks that parents should be essentially locked down in house arrest for the first year of parenthood to preserve your precious dining ambience at Pizza Hut
Yellowtext: You could say the same about taking a kid to the theaters, where you not only gotta pay your ticket price, but it's not like you're gonna see the movie anyway after the first loud boom. Yet people still do it.Darth Wong wrote:You'd have to be something of a loony to take a baby to a "fine-dining" (read: huge bill) restaurant anyway. Hell, my kids have grown beyond the screaming stage and we still don't go to that kind of restaurant. You wouldn't believe the cost of feeding a family of four if you've gotten used to dining by yourself. My older boy can already eat as much as some adults.
Not to mention the kids will be BORED AS FUCKING HELL at a fancy restaurant. I fucking hated restaurants when I was a kid: Just my luck my damn mom loved 'em....Darth Wong wrote:You'd have to be something of a loony to take a baby to a "fine-dining" (read: huge bill) restaurant anyway. Hell, my kids have grown beyond the screaming stage and we still don't go to that kind of restaurant. You wouldn't believe the cost of feeding a family of four if you've gotten used to dining by yourself. My older boy can already eat as much as some adults.RogueIce wrote:Hey, I like my dining ambiance at Pizza Hut, thank you!
Anyway, I'd have to agree on some of the resteraunt bit. Something like Mickey Ds and Pizza Hut and such. But, at one of those fancy pants resteraunts, keep 'em out. Because there, it IS about getting away from it all.
Who knows? Though for me, the co-ed shower scene and killing and mutilating was a pretty good draw.Arrow Mk84 wrote:Oh and Starship Troopers was really sad, as not only were the kid's parents covering his eyes, but they spend most of the film covering their own! WTF!?! Why did they even bother with the movie in the first place?
They were idiots?Arrow Mk84 wrote:Taking this thread off in another tangent, how about parents that bring their kids into R-rated movies!!!!! Come on man, Saving Private Ryan or Starship Troopers aren't kids films, ESPECIALLY if your going to spend the ENTIRE film covering your child's eyes! Sheesh.
Oh and Starship Troopers was really sad, as not only were the kid's parents covering his eyes, but they spend most of the film covering their own! WTF!?! Why did they even bother with the movie in the first place?
We have a really great restaurant here in the downtown area called "The Majestic" it is very nice and they have jazz and blues bands, great wine selection, and really are not THROUGH THE ROOF as far as price. We did see the Materdee (botched spelling) once tell a couple with a small child that they simply didn't have any high chairs or booster seats. The couple left.... I mean we're there because we want a nice dinner, decent music, conversaion, and a little wine. Not WHINE!RogueIce wrote:Yellowtext: You could say the same about taking a kid to the theaters, where you not only gotta pay your ticket price, but it's not like you're gonna see the movie anyway after the first loud boom. Yet people still do it.Darth Wong wrote:You'd have to be something of a loony to take a baby to a "fine-dining" (read: huge bill) restaurant anyway. Hell, my kids have grown beyond the screaming stage and we still don't go to that kind of restaurant. You wouldn't believe the cost of feeding a family of four if you've gotten used to dining by yourself. My older boy can already eat as much as some adults.
Still, the day I see a screaming kid in a fine dining resteraunt is the day I go to the Police Academy and rigidly enforce those noise pollution laws, or whatever I can do to stop that idiocy.
Unfortunately a lot of parents are loony. And even in Pizza Hutt or McDonalds a certain amount of behaviour on a child's part is reasonable. The same goes for anywhere really. If some one's kid can't or won't behave in public they shouldn't be allowed out.Darth Wong wrote:You'd have to be something of a loony to take a baby to a "fine-dining" (read: huge bill) restaurant anyway. Hell, my kids have grown beyond the screaming stage and we still don't go to that kind of restaurant. You wouldn't believe the cost of feeding a family of four if you've gotten used to dining by yourself. My older boy can already eat as much as some adults.
Got to start desensitizing them some day.HemlockGrey wrote:
Um, WTF?
Daycare?! What the fuck is wrong with some of these people...Ignorant_Boy wrote:Every species has its assholes.
And I remember my daycare showed us Aliens on day......