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Post by Wormopolis on May 10, 2009 18:00:42 GMT -8
are you typing the whole address in there or JUST the #name part? right now.. its showing a full address in there and it shouldnt be...
should JUST be [ url=#start]text[/url]
none of the http: stuff.. none of your board URL.. JUST a "#" and the anchor name...
right now its showing the link in there as having a full URL... if you arent putting that in there.. I have to make a line mod to the code...
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deadend123
Junior Member
testing custom title
Posts: 68
deadend123 said 0 great things
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Post by deadend123 on May 10, 2009 20:09:22 GMT -8
It works. Thank you!
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Post by Wormopolis on Feb 22, 2011 19:55:28 GMT -8
Regal Theatres (testing multiple ankhomes)
[ankHome=home1]
[ankHome=home2]
[ankHome=home3]
[ankL=spot1,Testing spot 1,home1]When all three chains went into bankruptcy, investor Philip Anschutz bought substantial investments in all three companies, becoming majority owner. In March 2002, Anschutz announced plans to consolidate all three of his theatre holdings under a new parent company, Regal Entertainment Group. [ankL=spot2,Testing spot 2,home1]Regal's Mike Campbell and UA's Kurt Hall were named co-CEOs, with Campbell overseeing the theatre operations from Regal Cinemas' headquarters in Knoxville, and Kurt Hall heading up a new subsidiary, Regal Cinemedia, from the UA offices in Centennial, Colorado. The Edwards corporate offices were closed.
[ankL=spot3,Testing spot 3,home1]Regal and United Artists had attempted to merge before, in 1998, using a similar method. Investment firms Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst announced plans to acquire Regal, then merge it with UA (which would be bought by Hicks, Muse) and Act III (controlled by KKR), with the new company using the Regal Cinemas name. UA eventually dropped out of the merger, but the merger between Regal and Act III went through. A Regal Cinemas location in suburban Pennsylvania
[ankL=spot4,Testing spot 4,home2]As Regal consolidated the three chains, CineMedia began work on a new digital distribution system to provide a new "preshow", replacing the slides and film advertisements with digital content. NBC and Turner were among the first to sign on to provide content for the venture, and the preshow, dubbed "The 2wenty", went online in February 2003; this pre-film preshow is now known as "Regal FirstLook". The new distribution system was also meant to be used for special events such as concerts. [ankL=spot5,Testing spot 5,home2]Regal CineMedia merged with AMC Theatres' National Cinema Network in 2005 to form National CineMedia. In effect, this was a takeover of NCN by Regal CineMedia, as Kurt Hall stayed on as CEO and AMC adopted Regal's preshow. Regal owned 50% of the new company before it went public.
[ankL=spot6,Testing spot 6,home2]Since the 2002 formation of REG, it has acquired several smaller chains. In April 2005, Eastern Federal, which was a fairly prominent theatre company in the Southeastern United States, was brought into the Regal family. It acquired San Ramon, California-based Signature Theatres from Phil Harris on September 30, 2004, and took over the US assets of Hoyts Cinemas in 2004. Unlike the merger with UA and Edwards, Regal has rebranded all of these theatres as Regal Cinemas.
[ankL=spot7,Testing spot 7,home3]In 2007, REG opened its first all digital projection theatre in Henderson, NV, the Fiesta Henderson Stadium 12.
Regal Entertainment Group completed acquisition of Consolidated Theatres on May 1, 2008[5]. In the transaction, Regal acquired Consolidated's 28 theaters and 400 screens for $210 million. Consolidated's concentrations of theatres in the Mid-Atlantic states of Maryland, Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia and North and South Carolina overlapped in some places with Regal's. [ankL=spot8,Testing spot 8,home3]As of a condition of approval of the merger, the United States Department of Justice required that Regal divest itself of several theaters in areas where it would have a monopoly. Regal agreed to sell off 4 theaters in the Asheville, Charlotte and Raleigh, North Carolina markets.
On May 18, 2009, Regal Entertainment Group signed a deal with Sony to install all of its theaters with 4k digital projection over the next three to five years.
[ankL=spot9,Testing spot 9,home3]On April 8, 2010, Regal Entertainment Group announced the launch of a new giant screen all-digital format called the Regal Premium Experience (RPX), a custom-built premium environment featuring elegant and luxurious seats with high-back headrests, a giant 60-foot screen illuminated by high-quality digital projectors and completed with a state-of-the-art sound system. There are currently 7 theatres with this format, with additional theatres to add on the RPX in 2011.
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