Quick question: it costs the owner of a American cell/mobile phone to receive calls?
Narrad:
Yes it does. Lovely, eh?
JSexton:
I think this would have been perfect!
I agree completely. Do these people sit in the cinema and go to the trouble of remembering a number in the middle of a film, just so they can go and call it later on? What a bunch of idiots.
I think it might say something about US moviegoers that American movies, AFAIK, are the only ones that use 555 numbers (or their equivalent). In Australia and Britain, the numbers in movies and on TV shows always seem to be just regular phone numbers, although it could be that the numbers used are not in service.
Thanks to the marvel of home video, we… I mean other people … can pause a frame, jot down the number, and call it to see where it goes. Fun, fun, fun!
Seem? Have you called one to find out? No? Then how do you know it’s a regular phone number, eh?
Not to mention the chunkylover53@aol.com email they very carefully gave out on episode. I believe the story was it went to one of the writers of the show who replied to a few of the emails sent to the addy as if he was Homer. Nice!
Here is a list of all the Internet stuff on the Simpsons:
http://www.snpp.com/guides/internet.html
Enjoy!
Ooner, why don’t you put your cellphone number here on the boards? Then you can get all sorts of cool attention from a bunch of idiots calling you at all hours, leaving stupid messages on your voicemail, running up your bill, and forcing you to get a new number. Sounds like fun!
Of course, I don’t REALLY mean for you to put your number up here on the boards. Since it won’t really be your number anyway, I’d hate for some random schlub to get that sort of hassle.
BTW, the reason the movie guy was a fucktard loser is because he went against standard movie protocol and caused a bunch of people trouble. They could have gone the Magnolia route and paid for the 800 number used in the movie, but they decided to transfer that hassle to random people.
Without going through the effort of seeing it was a legit number, yes, they are. How would you like getting calls at all hours? I would call him worse than a fucktard loser.
Hypothetical - Say the phone number they picked was oh, a Doctor on call, or some other emergency number. A number that couldn’t be changed easily and someone had to answer it every time.
Awesome! This would be a great Marketing opportunity! Hell, they could throw commercials at your for other movies from the studio while they’re at it!
Better yet, make it a 900 number. Fewer fucktards–and you make money off of them!
Plus, it’s nice and irreverent, which I assume is about all this movie has going for it anyway.
From the IMDB listing for Ghost Busters:
All the phone numbers in GTA: Vice City work as well.
(Closer to the topic) I listen to a national radio show that allows callers to tell jokes but they must give out their phone numbers if the joke is not funny. (I have never heard a funny joke, the number is always given out). I listen to the show delayed, so by the time I called her, I think the storm was over. We actually had about a 5 minute conversation, she was shocked that hundreds of people had called. Um, hello, you gave out your number on a national show?!
(On topic) Yeah, the number works with one of the area codes here in SC, not sure which one.
If anybody want to call me, I’m at 1-800-275-4277
Must…resist…urge…to…call…Bruce…
boggle
Are you nuts? I didn’t say that it would be something I’d enjoy enough to volunteer for, so I’m not about to post my number. But if by some chance my phone number DID end up in a movie or a crowded message board or anywhere else, it wouldn’t be that big a deal. It would be a wierd couple of days talking to strangers, some minor complaining, and a new number. Kind of annoying, kind of fun. Big fucking whoop.
I don’t get this thread at all
Ooner, you’re saying it’s not a big deal, but I’m ‘nuts’ for suggesting you volunteer for it. You and I and everyone else agree that it’s not something you want to happen, yet this movie forced just this situation (even worse since it’s the #1 movie in the country) on the lady in the OP.
Why shouldn’t she be angry about it, and why shouldn’t we say the movie producers are jerks? Every single time a real number is put on screen, it gets hundreds or thousands of calls. Every. Single. Time. The producers knew this would result in someone getting harassed, but they didn’t give a crap.
You’re right, I’d say you don’t either, even after spelling it out for you.
Oh well.
Don’t most cell phones have caller ID built in? I’d keep a log of the incoming numbers and call them back at odd hours to ask if *they *were God.
Even after the first 1000?
I wonder if a lot of these punks were calling the number during the movie. Wouldn’t surprise me.
For those who still don’t think this is a big deal:
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In one case, the number given out was to a cell phone. In the U.S., cell phone users are charged based on the number of minutes they use the phone, regardless if the call was incoming or outgoing. In other words, the lady with the cell phone in question could easily rack up a cell phone bill in the thousands of dollars – through absolutely no fault of her own.
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Many people have had the same phone number for decades. In many cases, their phone number is imprinted on the checks they receive from their bank, along with other important papers/financial data. Changing phone numbers isn’t a lark to these people – it involves a ton of hassle and effort. Plus, depending on when their telephone book is printed, they could have up to a year’s worth of effort explaining to people how to call them, since the number in the phone book would be incorrect once they changed it.
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It’s entirely possible that the numbers used in the film could have been assigned to a physician, a suicide hotline, a women’s shelter, or any number of businesses or services that would be extremely inconvenienced by having their lines constantly swamped by idiots dialing the number.
All this, because a screenwriter/director was too lazy and/or uncaring to use the common “555” prefix or set up a separate marketing line for the movie. (It wouldn’t even have to be an 800 number, either; idiots will actually pay money to dial these numbers.)
Sorry, you don’t get to have it both ways. Either it’s not a big deal that the number was shown in the movie, in which case you should feel perfectly comfortable giving all of us your own number; or it IS a big deal and you accept that someone’s private number - published or not - being broadcast in a widely seen motion picture is a huge invasion of privacy.