Became a father for the fourth time at age 40 when his wife Ryan Hawke gave birth to their daughter Indiana Hawke on July 23, Stepson of David Weiss. Former stepson of Patrick Powers. He later admitted to regretting turning it down due to the valuable career opportunities it could have led to. Brad Pitt was cast instead. Sign In. Ethan Hawke Trivia Proposed to ex-wife Uma Thurman twice before she said yes.
Parking meters and fees for surface lots are in effect for the other six months. Surface lots are available throughout the city and serve the beach and boardwalk area, the downtown retail district and other spots in town.
Some lots include parking meters, and some are free. Click on image above for an interactive map of all lots in Ocean City. Payment can be made by cash or credit card.
Time limits range from one to eight hours. Payment can be made by coins, credit card or through a new smartphone app. The pop-up drive-in movie series at Demarest Farms is a hit. Photo courtesy the farm. Delsea Drive-In Theatre Vineland. New Jersey's only permanent drive-in movie theater hosts showings Fridays and Saturdays.
See the website for a current lineup. All tickets and concession items are sold online. Masks must be worn for trips to the restroom and for food pickup.
This New Jersey farm and garden center transforms into a drive-in theater for alfresco flicks all summer long. Reservations must be made online in advance. Billian Legion Park hosts summer movie nights, complete with themes, giveaways, and refreshments. The movies are free, but registration is required. You are welcome to bring chairs and sit outside your vehicle.
Head to the Barnegat Public Dock for a night at the drive-in. Tuesdays bring "Tuesday Toons," while more family-friendly flicks play on other nights. Places featured in this article: Map All Locations. List All Location Details. Beach across from Jenkinson's LaGrande Park It's been the Target department store for more than a decade.
But back in the mids, there once was a magical event at that took center stage once a week at that very spot where the infamous UA sat. We called it the Thursday Midnight Movie. If, back then, you could be out or sneak out at ungodly hours of the night and you knew someone who worked there, you got to sit in on the "test run" of the films.
The test-run was done after the regular screening hours, and was not for the general public's entertainment. It was to make sure the film ran smoothly in the projectors, offering the management the opportunity to fix frayed or broken reels.
Because this was considered a maintenance function, the viewing was free. I had two connections: both my brother John and my friend Justin briefly worked there. And "briefly" seemed to be the tenure all employees "enjoyed" there.
Taken in by the promise of all the movies you could see and all the popcorn you could secretly slip into your pockets, all for a paycheck, it would have seemed the ideal job — were it not for the working part. It's funny how even these perks could be unbearable when paired with obnoxious patrons, upper management that doesn't understand, and the unwritten truth that, even though you had nothing to do with the Arnold Schwarzenegger flick being so bad, your role as an esteemed employee of the theater made it all your fault.
But these patrons were not there at the Thursday Midnight Movie. Neither was the concessions crew. But the lack of a concession flunkie to pour overpriced fake butter over our pricey popcorn was never a problem. Instead, our motley band of cineastes trooped over to the QuikCheck, just to the right of the theater, to quench our movie munchies thirst. For a fraction of a large soda's price we returned with bags of Doritos, satchels of Reese's peanut butter cups, submarine sandwiches the size of an eleven-year-old child's arm, the biggest cups of coffee available to us and, if I'm not mistaken, on one occasion John had an extra large container of French onion soup.
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