Culture Fireworks Have a New Competitor: Drones - The light displays are quieter, safer and better for the environment.

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Fireworks Have a New Competitor: Drones
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Lauren Hirsch and Michael J. de la Merced
2023-07-01 12:00:04GMT

drone01.jpg
A drone light show during the concert at Windsor Castle celebrating the coronation of King Charles III.Credit...Leon Neal/Pool Photo via AP

Like many in the fireworks industry, Stephen Vitale is in the family business. He runs a fifth-generation company, Pyrotecnico, in New Castle, Pa. In October, he struck a surprising alliance with Nova Sky Stories, the drone company that Kimbal Musk acquired from Intel.

Increasingly, drones are lighting up skybound entertainment shows. Flocks of flying robots have created magical illusions everywhere from the 2020 Tokyo Olympics to the coronation of King Charles III this spring. And the global drone light show market, which was virtually nonexistent a decade ago, was valued at about $1 billion in 2021, according to Allied Market Research.

Drone shows are in some ways the newer, hipper brand of fireworks. And they’re quieter, safer and better for the environment.

Fireworks providers like Vitale face a tough decision: Invest in the expensive equipment and regulatory clearance required to get into the drone business, or believe that demand for fireworks will remain steady even as a new type of competition skyrockets.

Change is coming. Fireworks providers bring in most of their revenue around the Fourth of July. And some of the organizers of those events are shifting to drones. Places like Salt Lake City and Boulder, Colo., plan to use them instead of fireworks for Independence Day celebrations this year, citing the reduced risk of forest fires and pollution.

But not everyone is convinced the light shows will suffice as a replacement. Galveston, Texas, is reverting to fireworks after using drones in 2022. And Reddit pages about the drawbacks of drone shows bemoan the fact that drones don’t evoke the booming sounds that fireworks do.

“Drones are much more sophisticated,” said Chris Hopkins, who co-owns Celebration Fireworks and Star Flight Drone Shows. “They just don’t have the same visceral reaction.”

Pivoting is a big investment. Hopkins invested in drones last year, eager to take advantage of the creative liberties they offered. “In the past, I could have hinted at the Demogorgon,” he told DealBook, referring to a monster in the Netflix show “Stranger Things.” “Now I can have the Demogorgon.”

It was an expensive gambit: Drones cost more than $1,500 each, and he soon learned that a good show required at least 75. Then there was the hassle of filling out a nearly 200-page application to the Federal Aviation Administration for regulatory clearance and finding people skilled at flying the devices.

Some companies are sticking with fireworks. “I know there are some companies that are doing that — I guess our philosophy is we’re going to do what we do best,” Heather Gobet of Western Display, a fourth-generation fireworks company in Oregon, told DealBook.

Gobet, who bought the business from her parents about eight years ago, has decided that dealing with the expertise, certifications and expense of acquiring drones is prohibitive. Instead, she will team up with companies that offer drone shows when customers demand them.

Besides, she has other challenges to worry about: The industry is grappling with supply chain snarls, labor shortages, an aging generation of pyrotechnic experts and costly compliance.

There’s hope for industry harmony. Drones can be used for advertising in a way that fireworks cannot — say, by displaying a corporate logo above a busy road. Many shows, like a Democratic celebration of the 2020 presidential election result, feature both drones and fireworks.

But growing competition is opening up opportunities, said Rick Boss, who runs Sky Elements, a nearly three-year-old drone show company. Larger traditional fireworks companies are looking to expand or go into new realms like drones, while smaller fireworks businesses are struggling.

“There are companies that are shrinking, maybe even stepping out of it — and so that creates opportunity,” he said. “It’s a good time to be aggressive.."
 
Ignoring the lithium batteries required for them to have a flight time of several minutes max, ignoring the power required to charge them. What happens when one of these drones inevitably fails and crashes into a nearby field starting a massive fire of it's own?
 
ctrl+f "battery", 0 results
ctrl+f "crash", 0 results
They're only less polluting if they work right and don't fall out of the sky, also advertisers aren't going to be happy about limited ad-time due to battery life considerations.

edit: ninja'd :story:

Oh right, and drones do not produce that "the entire metro area is a firing range" smell that is so perfect.
 
There's some novelty to drones but the appeal of fireworks is beyond just colored lights in the sky. It's precisely because they're a little dangerous that they appeal to people. Its like a controlled lightning strike. The explosion, the flash of light , the sound you feel in your chest, the smell....it definitely triggers a little deep down primal fear but thats what makes it exciting and magic.

Drones can never replace it.
 
Part of what makes fireworks cool is that individuals can use them. You could go buy a bunch of fireworks yourself and set them off in your back yard for some celebration.

Cities or groups doing fireworks on a bigger scale can then feel like a scaled up version of a family event. You don't get that vibe with drones because no one is buying a few hundred drones to fly around their neighborhood to make a smiley face or floating dick.
 
So lets get this out of the way, where can you not have drones:
Near Large Airports
Anywhere in the DC No Fly Zone
Near easily angered armed idiots
Anywhere where it could interfere with others business
Near anywhere that it could seen as being used to stalk people

So for the most part, any large city. AKA, the type of place where these drones would actual be useful.
 
Ah, and there it is, the real reason for the sudden "environmental concerns" of fireworks: to give a state mandate to clamp down on them so that DNC-donor VC startup firms can have no competition for their overpriced fucking gimmick companies.

Tar and feathering in minecraft would be a great Independence Day activity to bring back.
 
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The explosion, the flash of light , the sound you feel in your chest, the smell....it definitely triggers a little deep down primal fear but that's what makes it exciting and magic.
It's this entirely. Fireworks aren't my thing but there's no denying the satisfaction which comes from explosives making loud bangs and (potentially) shaking the ground. There's just something about the overall experience which drones can never emulate - so naturally leftist grifters latch onto the alternative because how else are you supposed to make money with that philosophy degree?

The sooner we liquidate these midwit morons the better for everyone.
 
I've seen them live and they do look pretty cool, but there is something more timeless and real about fireworks that can't quite be replaced.
 
Drones can be used for advertising in a way that fireworks cannot — say, by displaying a corporate logo above a busy road.
Drones are neat and I use them at work but if I ever see a drone squad doing fly by ads I believe I am obligated by Allah to take potshots.
 
Nah, put a Roman candle on a drone and fly it through your neighbors fireworks.
Or a Roman candle on a drone and blowup your neighbor's expensive "climate change friendly" drone fireworks display, like the way they crashed the parade in Animal House.

Come to think of it, these chiding wokescolds are the modern day equivalent of Dean Wormer, Nedermeyer, and the Omegas...
 
I would watch a cool drone display on its own, but on the 4th, that's pretty pathetic. Then again I think we're supposed to be getting more excited for juneteenth than the 4th, so of course, let's gut the rowdiness of Independence.
Anyway, I accidentally happened upon a local fireworks display last year - the story is they had a surplus budget because of previous cancelations for covid, so they overbought the fireworks. It was fucking awesome. Just saying. Fuck all these people with nervous poodle dogs on Nextdoor complaining about it.
 
I don't mind this drone stuff, but humans like explosions and no one is gonna change that.

Also fireworks can't show ads.
 
I was OK with the drones until they mentioned that environmental shit. Now I just want to set them on fire.
 
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