Thursday, March 28, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Now playing at the mall parking lot: movies, drag shows

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Aug, 2020 08:59 PM
  • Now playing at the mall parking lot: movies, drag shows

Angel Dougherty went to the mall last month — not to shop, but to watch a drive-in drag show in the parking lot.

“This year has been so anxiety filled and chaotic, I figured this experience would be something to lighten the mood,” says Dougherty, who paid to see the stars of TV's “RuPaul’s Drag Race” dance in front of hundreds of parked cars at a shopping centre in Paramus, New Jersey.

After being closed for months due to the coronavirus pandemic, malls are bringing all types of drive-in entertainment to their massive parking lots, hoping to lure people back to their properties.

A mall in upstate New York, for example, is hosting a drive-in wrestling match. Others around the country are bringing movies or magic shows that can be watched from a car.

It's a way to reintroduce people to the mall and eventually get them inside to shop, says retail consultant Kate Newlin. But that’s still a hard sell for anxious shoppers, especially with coronavirus cases spiking around the country.

“Nobody wants to go there,” Newlin says about malls. “Nobody wanted to go there before COVID.”

Malls have struggled to attract shoppers for years as more people shop online. But the pandemic has hit malls especially hard. Stores that they depend on, such as J.C. Penney, have filed for bankruptcy and are permanently closing several locations. Other mall tenants, such as the Gap, stopped paying rent while their stores were temporarily closed.

Retail consultant Jan Rogers Kniffen believes that up to half of the 1,000 malls in the U.S. will either close or be unrecognizable in the next two years. Before the pandemic, he expected only 300 to close over the next decade.

The drive-ins mean extra money for malls since production companies typically pay to rent a section of the parking lot. Details of the deals are kept private, but Newlin says renting out the parking lot won't make up for the loss of losing a major tenant like J.C. Penney.

Malls can benefit in other ways: Some deliver meals from the food court to the parking lot. Others encourage movie goers to park a couple of hours before showtime to pick up dinner inside.

Brandon Voss came up with the idea of a drive-in drag show at an Olive Garden, where his meal was brought to his parked car.

“If Olive Garden can do it, why can’t I?,” says Voss, whose company had to cancel this year's “RuPaul's Drag Race" tour, which would have been held at indoor venues around the world.

He found a willing partner in mall operator Westfield, which brought Drive N’ Drag to three of its malls, including ones in Seattle and Annapolis, Virginia.

Drive 'N Drag tickets start at $70 for two people and their car. About 300 to 400 vehicles can park at each show, a much smaller audience than Voss is used to.

“We usually play in arenas that Lady Gaga plays,” he says.

Westfield says it has been using its parking lots to draw crowds for years, with circuses, ice skating rinks and car shows. But it had to get more creative during the pandemic, hosting drive-thru high school graduations and other events where people can and socially distance in their car.

Kilburn Live, another production company, has turned five mall parking lots into drive-ins and is adding others. Cars are parked at least 8 feet way. Attendees can watch from the roof of their vehicle, outside of it or sit in an opened trunk of an SUV, as long as they stay in their designated spot.

“I’m glad they are bringing drive-ins back,” says Kimberly Shanks, a real estate agent in Lakewood, Colorado, who watched two movies from her SUV, parked near a Nordstrom at the Park Meadows mall in Lone Tree, Colorado.

Outside of malls, drive-in movie theatres have become popular again with people tired of being stuck at home with no where to go. Walmart, noticing the trend, added drive-in movies to 160 of its parking lots where people can order snacks ahead of time from the store.

Shanks, who watched “Detective Pikachu” and a “Harry Potter” movie with her son, felt it was a safer way to have a night out without being “too exposed to crowds.”

Much of what’s played in the drive-ins are older movies, such as “The Goonies” and “Ghostbusters,” since Hollywood has all but stopped releasing new films. But Kilburn has shown some new content, including concerts by country stars Garth Brooks and Blake Shelton, which were filmed just to be shown at drive-ins. And the company plans to keep things fresh by expanding into drive-in stand-up comedy and magic shows

What can be shown is also limited by the malls, which don't allow R-rated movies.

“We don’t want someone accidentally passing by to see something inappropriate,” says Michelle Snyder, chief marketing officer at Brookfield Properties, a mall operator that partnered with Kilburn.

Besides movies, Brookfield's malls have used their lots for drive-thru farmer's markets and drive-thru COVID-19 testing, a service many shopping centres around the country are offering in response to the pandemic. At Brookfield, someone has floated the idea of holding a drive-in wedding. And it’s also considering renting out parts of its parking lots to companies that want to hold drive-in meetings with their employees.

“We’re not closed to anything,” Snyder says.

MORE Life ARTICLES

Soak or drip? Watering advice for the hot season

Soak or drip? Watering advice for the hot season
August is the month for two garden W’s: weeding and watering. Regular attention to both keeps a vegetable or flower garden pretty and productive well into autumn.

Soak or drip? Watering advice for the hot season

Electronic music festival Shambhala postpones amid sexual misconduct allegations

Electronic music festival Shambhala postpones amid sexual misconduct allegations
A prominent electronic music festival in British Columbia is postponing this year's virtual event after sexual misconduct allegations were made against one of its performers.

Electronic music festival Shambhala postpones amid sexual misconduct allegations

Immigration shutdown leaves lives on hold

Immigration shutdown leaves lives on hold
John McCall's great-grandfather was born in southern Ontario some 200 years ago, and ever since the descendents of his seven children, some living in Canada, some in the U.S, have criss-crossed the border with ease.

Immigration shutdown leaves lives on hold

Wait 'til next year: Giving up on 2020, looking toward 2021

Wait 'til next year: Giving up on 2020, looking toward 2021
This was supposed to be the year of the comeback for Boysie Dikobe, a South African dancer recovering from his second hip replacement and gearing up to get back on stage when the coronavirus hit.

Wait 'til next year: Giving up on 2020, looking toward 2021

North Atlantic right whales nearing extinction

North Atlantic right whales nearing extinction
North Atlantic right whales are now considered one step away from complete eradication.

North Atlantic right whales nearing extinction

Another young actor at only 30 takes his life

Another young actor at only 30 takes his life
At only 30 Susheel Gowda who is from the South Indian film industry is no more. The exact reason for suicide is yet to be revealed. His death has sent shockwaves across his well wishers, friends, Sandalwood and television industry.

Another young actor at only 30 takes his life