“Many things that end up” being meaningful, writes social scientist Joseph Grenny, “have come from conference workshops, articles, or online videos that began as a chore and ended with an insight. The Gates Family Foundation also is awarding $10,000 to $30,000 grants to rural communities to purchase new digital equipment for movie theaters.Įsparza says like food and shelter, all people need the communal experience that movies provide.Ībout a year ago, I happened upon this statement about the Monitor in the Harvard Business Review – under the charming heading of “do things that don’t interest you”: New Mexico officials believe that reviving theaters in ranching towns and small cities near American Indian reservations will help create jobs in struggling downtown districts and spark excitement in entertainment deserts. The program helps refurbish buildings and gives grants for new digital projection and sound equipment. New Mexico announced two years ago that it was joining other states in pushing an initiative to revitalize downtown districts in isolated, small towns by rehabilitating aging, historic theaters.Īn economic development program, similar to efforts in Iowa and Illinois, seeks to save often-forgotten facilities like the Shuler Theater in Raton, New Mexico – a poor and rural area. Some states are encouraging local communities to take active steps to bring movies to town. He says a developer could do the same for rural areas in Kentucky, West Virginia and the Deep South, if they research the need and build complexes that give moviegoers a special experience. His next theater is being planned for North Las Vegas. Besides Delano, theaters have opened in Salinas, Bakersfield, Pittsburg, and Fresno. "Few people were investing in these communities."Įsparza is erecting megaplex movie theaters in rural Latino areas in California. But what I soon realized was that I have to become a developer, too," Esparza said. That's why Esparza began building theaters in underserved areas in 2000. Residents in rural areas often have to travel more than an hour to watch a movie. The lack of a movie theater and basic leisure like skating rinks hurts struggling regions that have seen jobs leave, said Robby Moore, mayor of Lobelville, Tenn. It'd be nice to have something so we could do something." "We have nothing out here," said Chanika Green of Shelby, Miss., a town of around 3,000 residents two hours south of Memphis, Tennessee. The group estimates about 10,000 screens could go dark soon because small independent and rural theaters can't afford to make digital upgrades that modern movies require.īeing in a rural area that may lack broadband or have spotty cell service that makes streaming services like Netflix and Hulu difficult to access, combined with the absence of a movie theater, can be isolating or just boring. The Supreme Court case that could reshape US elections However, the number of screens spiked 45 percent largely as a result of an increase in megaplex movie theaters opening in urban areas. He has vowed to do his part to change the landscape in rural America.įor years, rural communities in Appalachia, the American Southwest, and the Mississippi Delta have seen small theaters close due to the high cost of technology updates and to economic downturns that discourage investors from taking over struggling movie houses.ĭata from the National Association of Theater Owners, the trade organization that represents exhibitors, also found that the overall number of US cinema sites fell 25 percent from 1995 to 2018. Esparza, who produced the 1997 movie "Selena" and has opened up four identical theaters in poor areas in California, said poverty shouldn't sentence residents to "movie deserts" where inexpensive leisure is limited. In 1965, Delano helped spark Cesar Chavez's farm worker union movement. The $20 million project gives Delano's 53,000 residents access to recent movie releases in a high-end experience with luxury seating. That all changed in May when Moctesuma Esparza, a Latino movie producer, opened his latest Maya Cinemas theater in Delano in his ongoing effort to open theaters in poor, rural areas in the United States that lack entertainment options. For nearly 10 years, residents in a California farming community have had to drive nearly 40 miles to see the latest film, a rare trip for some in a place where a third of the population lives in poverty.
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