Ever thought of doing an “Ask the bank robber thread”? :eek:
In most businesses, the cashier is not right out at the sidewalk.
In most businesses, the cashier is not physically separated from the rest of the store and staff, so a call for help will be responded to almost immediately.
In most businesses, the cashier is not ringing nearly so many sales, nor of such high value.
In most businesses, the cashier can easily take a minute to run excess cash into a more secure area of the store.
Even back in olden times, when there was only one screen at the theater and a ticket cost less than the cashier earned in an hour, by the time the movie started the cashier was holding enough money that a robber could survive by hitting a movie theater every couple of weeks, so the cashier is kept physically inaccessable.
They still have tellers? I honestly couldn’t tell (ha!) you if they even have one at my local cinema. Every time I’ve been to the cinema in the past 10 years or so I have picked up my ticket from the automatic machine in the foyer.
I’d have to disagree that the glass was for security. Small town theaters had the ticket seller behind the glass even in the 30’s and 40’s. A time when crime was much rarer. People left their keys in the car, homes were unlocked. High school kids worked the ticket booth and concession stand. Robbery really wasn’t a big enough concern to install glass.
I agree with other posters that it was simply to keep the ticket seller warm in the winter and cool in the summer. Customers could see the ticket seller without him/her being exposed to the outside temps.
So when was the last time you robbed a bank?
I remember back in the olden days, the tellers were behind glass in the entrance foyer, next to the popcorn and soda counter. I imagined young’uns trying to get tickets to the adult movies and the glass was there for protection when they were turned down. If that happened to me I’d tie an onion to my belt, which was the style at the time.
You just sneaked past the booth by crouching under the teller’s line-of-sight.
Actually, that’s not correct. According to statistics crime was much higher in the past than it is today. Especially during the Great Depression.
While other places of business did not have glass, many banks in the era still had metal cages surrounding their tellers and armed guards in their lobbies. Those two are far more rare now than they were then.