out-of-home video viewing

If the big screen makes movie theaters, then movie theaters aren’t likely to prosper in the future. Movie theater screens could be much larger and much higher resolution than they are today. However, in-home television screens have been rapidly growing in size and picture quality. The binding constraint, with rapid technological progress and relatively high incomes, is probably subjective: subjective screen size and image resolution depends greatly on the viewer’s seating position (see full calculations for home theaters). Movie theaters, especially large ones, have considerable variance in seating positions. Only a few persons can have the best seating. That’s usually not a problem in the living room.

Movie theaters could offer a technically differentiated viewing experience with means other than larger screens and higher-resolution images. Mark Cuban recently observed:

The Dallas Mavericks did a live 3D broadcast of one of our games this past season that we broadcast to a local movie theater enabled with a 3D digital projector. It was a huge success, fans loved it, 3D glasses and all, and have asked for more. We have seen the same demand for other types of content as well.

Content produced for 3D-theater presentation probably could be transformed into a standard television stream and short, mobile-phone video clips at small incremental cost. Thus 3D video probably has feasible economics of multiple-screen production.

But the core value of movie theaters is probably not a technologically differentiated viewing experience but a communal viewing experience. Some years ago, my brother flew from Austin, Texas to Durham, North Carolina to watch with fellow Duke fans live video of a Duke basketball game happening on campus a few blocks away in a filled-to-capacity basketball arena. Unfortunately, the video venue was also filled to capacity, so he then flew to Chicago to watch live video with Duke fans there. Duke, as recent events have made clear, is a zone of insanity. But getting together to watch live video actually isn’t all that strange. In Pittsburgh, about 14,000 home-team hockey fans gathered in an arena to watch live video of their team playing in a distant city. Live events usually include a large video monitor which most attendees watch, because much more can be seen there than on the distant stage. Actually having the stage and the performers doesn’t seem all that important to the event experience.

Yang Ying at Planet Arlington

Deploying multiple screens with different camera feeds might be an economical way to enhance live video of events. Multiple cameras typically are used to cover live events. A director cuts between camera feeds to produce the output video. If different camera feeds were presented on different screens, attendees could do this kind of editing with their own eyes. Moreover, screen positions and camera angles could be used to organize and enhance the communal experience. Sitting on a different side of a viewing venue could favor seeing a different screen showing a different team’s favored viewing angle. Communal video viewing could thus provide better real-world experience of group rivalry.

circumstantial entrenchment of public reasoning

Requiring only young men to register for military conscription is an obvious instance of sexism in the U.S. today.  Women today are an important part of the all-volunteer U.S. military.  One out of every seven soldiers on active duty is a woman, and one out of every forty-three soldiers killed in the Iraq war has been a woman (see data notes and references).  Women are admitted to all the U.S. military academies, and the U.S. military includes female generals, female fighter pilots, and many other women doing difficult, dangerous jobs.  Even if one believes that women should be excluded from some military jobs, the military still could easily employ an equal number of men and women. Laws that compel only men to serve in the military cannot rationally withstand even a cursory examination of current facts.

This sexism attracts almost no public concern.  In 1981 in Rostker v. Goldberg, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld male-only Selective Service registration. In light of current circumstances, that decision might best be seen as following in the line of Dred Scott v. Sandford.  One can find some law professors arguing that male-only Selective Service registration discriminates against women.  Occasionally newspaper articles describe middle-aged male government workers getting fired because they failed to register for Selective Service as young men many years earlier (see, e.g. here and here). More generally, most young women probably don’t want to be legally obligated to register for compulsory military service.  While male-only Selective Service registration reflects a long, under-appreciated (at least among law professors) history of constraining and devaluing men’s lives, most young men probably think that registering is merely a bureaucratic requirement with no real implications. Heated public discussions of sexism tend to focus on issues such as the share of women holding science and engineering professorships, or the media’s treatment of female candidates for high public offices. Neither the media, nor young women and young men, nor the legal academy have much interest today in sexist Selective Service registration.

An extraordinary situation that produced a military draft would give Selective Service sexism much greater significance and make that sexism much more difficult to address. While historically normal, being forced into the military would be a life-shaping change for young men in the U.S. today. At the same time, circumstances demanding such change would not be propitious for affirming in new ways ideals of equality between women and men. In the British Commonwealth during World War I, men who did not “volunteer” to serve in the military were shamed with White Feather campaigns. Complaining about sexism in compulsory military service in the midst of a national emergency would be much more difficult for men than personally seeking to avoid military service. The latter was called cowardice, the former might be called subversion or treason.

Male-only selection service registration displays an interesting pattern of circumstantial entrenchment. Because most persons consider male-only selective service registration to be unimportant, its unreasonableness in current circumstances doesn’t matter. Circumstances that would make male-only Selective Service registration important would also make asserting its unreasonableness infeasible.

buried men

For comfort Helen seeks
out a crowd of young men.
Rows and rows of them
stout, calm, enduring
their battles long
quieted

over, over, over three
come closer, closer, closer
straw of sugar
girl, girl

She turns to her left.
Cenotaphs, still brown grass
reaching for a pale sky
maple leaves like
torn garments of paisley

She walks down the line.
Evenly spaced, waist-high
stones, windless silence

She stops and runs
her finger across a stone.
Polish still smooth
and clean to the touch.