Four Digits, The Cinema, and Other Things When I was a kid, my family moved to a small town. There were lots of things to be amazed about in that small town, but the first thing that struck me as amazing was that you only needed four digits to call someone in town. That was cool. And, some of the phone lines were party lines. For the youngsters in the crowd, I'll attempt an explanation. Imagine not having cell phones. If you wanted to call someone, say someone you might have a crush on, or maybe just a friend, you either had to do it from a payphone somewhere in town, which cost money, or do it from home. And, of course, you had to hope that they were at home, because that's where the phone stayed. It plugged into the wall. With wires. No wireless. You HAD to be at home to answer the phone. Okay, got it? Good. Now, imagine calling someone, say it's someone you had a crush on, and when you call them, their phone rings a funny way, a distinctive way so that they know the phone is for their household only. This is because the same set of wires to connect their phone also went to their neighbor's house, and maybe a third neighbor somewhere down the street. They shared a phone line. So in actuality, any one of those three people could pick up the phone. Or worse, your love interested could pick up the phone and any one of the other two parties could listen in. Horrors! Well, that's the way it was. Eventually the phone company upgraded our phone system so that you had to dial all seven digits to get anyone in town. As a consequence, I still remember a lot of the four-digit numbers to friends and some of the businesses. I still remember the number to our "twin cinemas" movie theater. We were lucky to have a movie theater in our town. Some of our neighboring towns had none. And, ours was a twin! TWO movies could play at the same time! We had choices, and it was nice. Gary was the guy who ran the theater. He was a pretty cool guy. I was volunteering at the town hall across the street one day when I discovered a projection room upstairs that had been boarded up for decades. We found out that the town hall was a theater back in the 1920s. Well, I was discussing this with Gary, the twin cinema guy, and he invited me upstairs to look at a modern projection room. I learned a few of his tricks. For example, he didn't have one of the more modern setups where they could splice the film together and show it on a giant reel. He had to switch from one projector to the next right at the correct moment. Gary told me that he would put a quarter in the reel just a few minutes before the end so that the quarter would drop, making a sound to wake him up and alert him to start the next projector. Low tech at its finest. Gary also ran movies on Monday nights for the ladies. All ladies got a movie on Monday night for one dollar. The idea was, while their man was at home watching football, the ladies would have something to do. I remember standing in line one Monday night and seeing a guy from school, Mark Fisher, standing in line and wearing a dress. Gary saw him and said, "Anyone willing to dress up like that in public can get in for a buck." Is there a point to all of this? Yes. I just wanted to let you know that there is a reason any mention of the Star Wars franchise makes me think of cross-dressing. Now you know.