Pagophobia?

Last week I laughed long and hard at a post on phobias, especially aroraphobia – the fear of the Northern Lights. I laughed because I didn’t see myself as a fearful person. Then came today.

Ice, February 3, 2014. ©D.L. Ewbank

Ice, February 3, 2014. ©D.L. Ewbank

Today the local weathermen have one word for central Arkansas, ICE. Even though I’m warm and cozy and sipping a nice hot cup of lemon ginger herbal tea, I’m getting a little anxious. I see ice for what it really is – a transparent, terror-wielding monster.

Go back to Christmas 2000. I am at my mother’s home in Hot Springs preparing to enjoy the fabulous brunch at the historic Arlington Hotel when Mom says the weather is getting bad. If I don’t get home now, I might not make it back to Little Rock for a week.

I load my clothes, my Christmas goodies and my dog Oscar and strike out in my Bordeaux Pearl Red Honda Accord. Have you ever started on a path you think might be a major mistake? That’s how I feel as I turned onto Hwy 70. “I’ll just take it slowly.”

Traffic is scarce, but I drive slower than the 55 mph speed limit. I am going so slowly I might get a ticket even though there’s no minimum, but apparently law enforcement vehicles are smart enough to stay off the road in this weather.

Thirty minutes later I reach the Lonsdale Rest Area about nine miles out. I breathe a sigh of relief. Ice and snow are scary in Arkansas because few of us know how to drive on it. Even if you can control your car, you worry about others on the road who can’t. If you’ve ever been in a wreck that totaled your car or injured you, you’re aware of what a wreck can mean.

Should I keep going or turn back? Though it means driving through scarcely populated wooded areas, I keep driving. My next goal is the Interstate. Surely the Interstate will be better.

It takes three times the normal thirty minutes to reach I-30. Did I mention I am going slowly? My nerves are as tight as my clenched teeth.

Should I stay on the Interstate or get off on the access road? I am still wavering when a car ahead of me spins out of control and plunges down the grassy slope that supports the road.

The off ramp is a good decision. When cars line up behind me, I simply pull off into the first available, and hopefully graveled for increased traction, off-road space.

Miraculously, I pull into my driveway safely. It has taken four hours instead of the normal one. I am weak and shaky as I carry Oscar inside. As I unload my car, I slip and fall on top of a shoe box I am carrying. After my icy ordeal, sore ribs seem like nothing.

The ice continues. State government is shut down. 300,000-500,000 (depending on which stats you read) Arkansans, including me, are out of power for days. One day I reach my cold tolerance. “If my power isn’t on tonight, I’m renting a motel room.” What a sight it is when I spot my lit doorbell. I have power!

With a storm just two weeks earlier, this ice storm is viewed as the worst natural disaster in the history of Arkansas. Did it leave me with pagophobia, an intense, irrational fear of ice? No. But last fall I spent mega-bucks to drastically clip my gargantuan red-tip Photinias away from power lines to my home. There’s no harm in taking precautions.

Paranormal Tweets

Leaving an appointment on Sunset Boulevard about 5:30PM on October 18, 2011, I noticed long lines of people in multiple directions at the ArcLight, predominantly Hispanic. While Hispanics are 16% of the population, they are more likely to attend movies than any other ethnic group. They represented 28 percent of movie-goers in 2008 according to Pamela McClintock in her Hollywood Reporter article on January 26, 2011, The Hispanic Effect. McClintock indicates Hispanics are particularly drawn to “thrillers or horror pics with spiritual, demonic or Catholic themes.” Films McClintock cited as successful among Hispanics included The Rite, Black Swan, and Paramount’s Case 39.

Lines forming at the ArcLight.

Lines forming at the ArcLight.

The crowd was the result of Paramount Pictures September 29 launch of its first “Tweet To See It First!” campaign. The studio invited Paranormal Activity fans worldwide to tweet to determine which 20 cities worldwide would see Paranormal Activity 3 on October 18 three days before the film’s official release. The tweet read, “Dying to see Paranormal Activity 3?! Tweet To See It First! Bring it to your city!” A link directed Twitter followers to the Paranormal Activity 3 official website to “Discover how the activity began” and to tweet to vote for their city then watch the voting progress.

Green wrist bands identify those granted admittance to the first showing at the ArcLight.

Green wrist bands identify those granted admittance to the first showing at the ArcLight.

“Tweet To See It First!” follows Paramount’s successful use of Twitter to guerilla market Paranormal Activity, the horror/mystery film that used documentary style similar to the equally successful film, The Blair Witch Project. While Blair Witch drew buzz through a website that created a hoax as horrifying as Welles’ War of the Worlds to garner $250 million at the box office according to Chris Connelly, Paramount used Twitter to build an audience for Oren Peli’s low budget horror film made reportedly for $15,000. In the Twitter campaign for Paranormal Activity, Paramount asked people to “DEMAND IT” on a website. As word spread and tweets increased, Paramount promised a wide release of the film if demands reached a million. The film rose to one million demands overnight according to C. Robert Cargill. Paranormal Activity went on to gross nearly $200 million worldwide making it one of the most profitable films ever made. Following this success, Paramount created Insurge, a new division to distribute micro-budget films with a budget less than $100,000.

Through social networking, media “word-of-mouth” recommendations can be delivered quickly and to large groups through Facebook messages or Twitter tweets. They have the potential to spread exponentially in the form of reposts and retweets. This is particularly valuable since friends and followers potentially have the similar interests and likes.

Paranormal Activity 3 first showing at the ArcLight, LA.

Paranormal Activity 3 first showing at the ArcLight, LA.

And the numbers associated with social networking are potentially staggering. According to Frank Rose in The Art of Immersion: How the digital generation is remaking Hollywood, Madison Avenue, and the way we tell stories, Facebook had over 500 million users around the globe in July 2010. Twitter, launched July 15, 2006, now has 100 million active users and daily tweets of 230 million according to Tina Iaongo Hoover.

Paranormal Activity 3 merchandise was distributed via roller skates.

Paranormal Activity 3 merchandise was distributed via roller skates.

“Tweet To See It First” voting ended October 13. Winning cities announced on October 14 included Los Angeles, Houston, San Antonio, Fresno, New York, Orlando, Dallas, Chicago, Austin, Miami in the U.S. as well as cities abroad including Vancouver and Toronto, Canada; Melbourne, VIC Australia, Ciudad de Panama, Panama; Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico; Tel Aviv, Israel; Sao Paulo, Brazil; and London and Sheffield UK. Fans in these cities could RSVP to see the movie free at 10PM on October 18.

Time draws closer for the showing as the sun sets on Sunset Blvd.

Time draws closer for the showing as the sun sets on Sunset Blvd.

LA participants were occupied during the wait before the free showing with free food, giveaways ranging from t-shirts to iPad2s, and heart pumping music. The t-shirts featured the website on the front and on the back, “I saw it first. Oct 18 2011, PM 10:00:00, #TweetYourScream.” By 11:17AM on Oct. 21, 2011, Paranormal Activity 3 was trending on Twitter.

While @TweetYourScream promised, “The last 15 minutes will mess you up for life,” Twitter social networking promises potential for profits beyond wildest imaginations.