MestnyiGeroi
Giga Poster
There is something that has intrigued me at amusement parks for many years, and I’m sure I can’t be the only one, so I thought I’d ask for others’ input here.
So when you’re waiting in line, the queue is usually corralled or walled in on both sides for most of that line. But then there is that final moment when the narrow line opens up in the station and allows riders to choose a final slot, to choose a row on the coaster. So this is the point when you leave the general line and pick a mini-line of, say, 0 to 6 people, typically.
What intrigues me is that there is never a shortage of people who — with no prompting from staff — stop at this opening and wait. In doing so, they hold up the entire line (I’m not saying they delay the actual time people get on the coaster; they just stop people from moving forward). These people will stand there, either oblivious to fhe fact that they’re holding up the line, or conscious of what they’re doing but deliberately standing there. Then finally, after one to three minutes, they seem to realize they’re holding everyone back, and they move in to pick a row, allowing ten to twenty people to follow them until, inevitably, the next group stops and creates the next bottleneck.
So, has this phenomenon intrigued others here or is it just me? Sometimes I watch these people standing there for minutes, wondering what they’re thinking.
Why do you suppose these people do this?
Is it ...
A. They’re waiting for a staff member to invite them forward, and it takes them a while to realize no one is going to ask.
B. They’re self-volunteers, consciously deciding to halt the crowd in order to keep the row lines in an orderly, minimal state.
C. They’re confused by the sudden open space; it’s timidity that makes them stop.
D. They’re extremely picky about their rows, and they need everyone to wait while they think.
E. They’re not paying attention, and the sheep in front of them that they were following are gone.
F. Other
So when you’re waiting in line, the queue is usually corralled or walled in on both sides for most of that line. But then there is that final moment when the narrow line opens up in the station and allows riders to choose a final slot, to choose a row on the coaster. So this is the point when you leave the general line and pick a mini-line of, say, 0 to 6 people, typically.
What intrigues me is that there is never a shortage of people who — with no prompting from staff — stop at this opening and wait. In doing so, they hold up the entire line (I’m not saying they delay the actual time people get on the coaster; they just stop people from moving forward). These people will stand there, either oblivious to fhe fact that they’re holding up the line, or conscious of what they’re doing but deliberately standing there. Then finally, after one to three minutes, they seem to realize they’re holding everyone back, and they move in to pick a row, allowing ten to twenty people to follow them until, inevitably, the next group stops and creates the next bottleneck.
So, has this phenomenon intrigued others here or is it just me? Sometimes I watch these people standing there for minutes, wondering what they’re thinking.
Why do you suppose these people do this?
Is it ...
A. They’re waiting for a staff member to invite them forward, and it takes them a while to realize no one is going to ask.
B. They’re self-volunteers, consciously deciding to halt the crowd in order to keep the row lines in an orderly, minimal state.
C. They’re confused by the sudden open space; it’s timidity that makes them stop.
D. They’re extremely picky about their rows, and they need everyone to wait while they think.
E. They’re not paying attention, and the sheep in front of them that they were following are gone.
F. Other