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

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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.."
 
Fuck all these people with nervous poodle dogs on Nextdoor complaining about it.
I like fireworks, but they scare my poor babygirl. She was rescued from a puppy mill, and is terrified of loud noises.

I'm not gonna tell people not to set off fireworks on the 4th. But I'll be there for her, and hope nobody does it near me.
 
Unlike drones, a good fireworks is more than just the sight of the lights. There's the sounds, the smell of all the powder, and if it's big enough you can feel the heat from the fireworks. None of those are things I get with a drone show, I could just watch that from home. It's like replacing an actual fireplace with a fake one and a heater, the "fire" might look nice but the experience is nowhere near the same.

They used to do a nice one in Madison called Rhythm and Booms. It was a pain in the ass to go to, caused a big mess, and filled the entire area with drunk and rowdy assholes who'd go around pissing in people's yards. Despite all of that it was still a lot of fun to go to. Granted even if they had kept doing it, and I lived somewhere feasible to go to it, I probably wouldn't because of the continued niggerification of the city but drones don't improve on that either.
 
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...
Why use just one when you could have 24?
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You're not thinking mad science enough and need to embrace the inner Nazi madman lurking in the heart of every Kiwi.
 
I like fireworks, but they scare my poor babygirl. She was rescued from a puppy mill, and is terrified of loud noises.

I'm not gonna tell people not to set off fireworks on the 4th. But I'll be there for her, and hope nobody does it near me.
Alright alright I swear I'm not a complete asshole but won't somebody think of my suffering scrolling through the millionth post about fireworks on local social media LOL.
I don't even know what my deal is as I'm the biggest sound-karen on the block. Sound ordinance starts at 9:00 pm and I know it.
 
The leftard butthurt over fierworks never stops being annoying. This is one of the reasons why I'll never live in a blue state. No fuck you, drones are stupid, and fireworks are fun, and this is America, and if I wnat to blow a lot of money on explosive fireworks in a Walmart sized store off the interstate, I'm going to do it, because fuck you.
 
I like fireworks, but they scare my poor babygirl. She was rescued from a puppy mill, and is terrified of loud noises.

I'm not gonna tell people not to set off fireworks on the 4th. But I'll be there for her, and hope nobody does it near me.
Dogs are also afraid of thunder and vacuum cleaners. Just get a thunder jacket for your dog and stop complaining about other people having fun. I like dogs, but they aren't people.
 
It's all fun and games until someone rigs a drone with an EMP bomb.
Presto, the whole formation is now useless junk.
Drones have far more potential for being dangerous than Chinese made fireworks every will. How easy do you think it will be for the terrorists of the future to launch weapons of mass destruction if the air is already full of drones because Commiefornia tech barons decided it was a good idea for all of us? Which is more dangerous, a fucking bottle rocket or a nuke, dirty bomb or bio weapon attached to a fucking drone? Complete madness.
 
Why not both? Drones can do some cool shit, but things going boom are also fun, double up and mix the two for extra spectacle.
It's like the difference between fishing in a river and playing a fishing video game. It's a whole lot more sastisfying to light the whick of something you see explode youself instead of just programing a light show via a robot. It think the point of this article is that zoomers are babies that are afraid of everything.
 
fireworks are just a very pretty weapon of war we don't aim at people or buildings on purpose, if it can't kill because you pointed it the wrong way it's not as fun
 
It's like the difference between fishing in a river and playing a fishing video game. It's a whole lot more sastisfying to light the whick of something you see explode youself instead of just programing a light show via a robot. It think the point of this article is that zoomers are babies that are afraid of everything.
If I'm setting them off, of course I'd go with fireworks, but hear me out. Imagine going to a show on July 4th where the drones make troops from the British and American lines and then the explosions of the cannons are done through perspective with fire works to paint a really cool display using both.

That or something simpler like starting the show with drones and slower music that crescendos into the fire works so that it has more of a ramp up and payoff.
 
The leftard butthurt over fierworks never stops being annoying. This is one of the reasons why I'll never live in a blue state. No fuck you, drones are stupid, and fireworks are fun, and this is America, and if I wnat to blow a lot of money on explosive fireworks in a Walmart sized store off the interstate, I'm going to do it, because fuck you.
Even in blue states, remember how they said "no fireworks because of the mysterious virus unrelated to China! Celebrating independance spreads the virus while nigger riots are safe!" What happened in fucking Los Angeles of all places?

 
IIRC the whole point of fireworks on Independence day was to remind us that we fought a fucking war for our freedom hence why shit needs to blow up. What part of "bombs bursting in air" do they not understand?
 
They used to do a nice one in Madison called Rhythm and Booms. It was a pain in the ass to go to, caused a big mess, and filled the entire area with drunk and rowdy assholes who'd go around pissing in people's yards. Despite all of that it was still a lot of fun to go to. Granted even if they had kept doing it, and I lived somewhere feasible to go to it, I probably wouldn't because of the continued niggerification of the city but drones don't improve on that either.
And it was killed due to fun-hating environmentalists who couldn't even prove that the fireworks damaged the environment:
Kelly says the fireworks show "made Madison one of the few cities on the map with a show of this kind." And, he adds, "it's always been free." That was a key ingredient for Kelly, who says he's gotten a lot of joy over the years from bringing "family fun" to all, regardless of ability to pay. The future of the event, he says, depends on continued community support in the form of enthusiasm, publicity and funding.

But Jim Carrier, founding member of Wild Warner, is ready to see Rhythm & Booms end. "The discussion around this has been that the fireworks on the Fourth of July are a given, but do they have to be? Do we have to have fireworks? Do we have to have them here?"

Fireworks' fallout

Wild Warner has documented 135 bird species in the park and fears park habitat continues to be degraded by the annual fireworks show. In addition to the event-day disruptions, the group is also concerned about the fireworks' fallout, including contamination from chemicals used in the explosives. The group has pushed for moving the show out of the park, or at least out of the wetlands. It's also pushed for steps to mitigate the pollution.

Madison likes to tout its green cred, so it's no surprise that everyone from city staff to the event organizers themselves profess a desire to make Rhythm & Booms better for the environment. But finding consensus on how to do that is proving difficult.

For starters, there is disagreement over just what 20 years of shooting fireworks over the Warner Park lagoon has done to the wetland.

The city's Committee on the Environment, with the help of city staff, conducted a baseline study last year to try to come up with some data. It tested the water, sediments and vegetation before and after last year's Rhythm & Booms. The results showed a spike in perchlorate in both the water and vegetation after the show. Perchlorate is a chemical used as a propellant in rocket fuel and fireworks. It is known to interfere with thyroid function, especially in vulnerable populations including pregnant women and infants. The Environmental Protection Agency is currently developing drinking-water regulations for the chemical.

But the perchlorate levels found in the water were lower than what has been found elsewhere to cause problems in fish, says Brynn Bemis, city hydrogeologist and author of the water portion of the study.
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