Wehrenberg Theaters just started offering “$5 Movie Tuesdays.” This might be in reaction to the long-running Regal Theater chain’s $5 Wednesday movies. Wehrenberg, however, offers a bag of free popcorn for each ticket purchased, a perk not included at Regal.
Ted and I playfully wondered how the 46 oz. of popcorn would be measured. Ounces can be a solid measure of weight (16 oz. = 1 lb.) or a liquid measure (16 oz. = 1 pint). Since 46 oz. of liquid popcorn would be impossible, we assumed a measure of weight would be more likely and questioned whether the weight would be popped or unpopped corn–either being a huge amount of popcorn. To cut the theater (and its advertising editors) a break, we decided it was probably reasonable to expect a container capable of holding 46 oz. of liquid (a little less than 1.5 quarts) to be filled with popcorn.
We would never eat that much popcorn together at a sitting, never mind one serving per ticket holder. Still, imagine our surprise when we saw that the 46 oz. of free popcorn was handed to us in a bag with a volume slightly greater than that of a 12 oz. can!
I asked the server how they measured the 46 oz. and he told me that it’s a “new measurement” and is actually a “measure of value.” So theaters can now set new measurement standards? And what on earth is a “measure of value” in a food product?
Oh, well, the movie was good and that 46-ounce measure of value amount was plenty of popcorn for us to share as a snack.
Just wondering: What if this is one of those ubiquitous editing errors I keep finding, and no one at Wehrenberg noticed it was supposed to read 4 point 6 oz. of free popcorn? That certainly would have been closer to the actual measurement.