Video Wall: Difference between revisions
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The Video Walls bear a resemblance to the large TV screen featured on the [[Circles of Light]] stage, and may or may not be the same model.
== Early Concepts / Predecessors (1987-2002) ==
An idea of a video wall put into Chuck E. Cheese's restaurants first originated back in 1987. In pages 14 and 15 of the 1987 ShowBiz Pizza Time, Inc. Project Status Report (Entertainment '87), it discusses an idea for a video wall. Part of a project titled "Surprises", the 1987 video wall concept consisted of a bank of 9 to 26 inch video monitors which would play tape footage or a live camera.<ref>https://showbizpizza.com/info/documents/spt/spt_87entertainment.pdf</ref> The cost of a prototype would've been $41,000, which would be around $112,001.46 today in 2024. This would've reduced prominence to the [[Cyberamics]] that SPT was installing in Chuck E. Cheese's restaurants at the time. This would be the first time that CEC would not put the spotlight on animatronics as the main entertainment. But the 1987 video wall concept seemed to have not gone past the planning stages, because it was never installed in an actual operating location.
The video wall concept would be revisited in 1996, and would be visually integrated into the short-lived [[Awesome Adventure Machine]] test show at the [[Dallas, TX (13125 Montfort Dr)|Montfort Dr]] location in Dallas, Texas, with the design of two large video monitors and the left and right stages. This was the first time a video wall-like setup was integrated onto a CEC stage. But the AAM test show was scrapped by late 1997.
In 2002, the [[Studio C Cappa Prototype|Small-Town Studio C Buffet]] test stage would be installed at three locations as part of a new "Small-Town CEC" idea conceptualized by CEC Entertainment. This stage had a bluescreen and three video monitors above. While not a full video wall, it is similar by having one or more monitors on the wall. This test stage also eliminated the stage where the Chuck E. Cheese animatronic would perform, being one of the earliest examples of CEC eliminating animatronics in new stages. Unlike the 1987 video wall concept or the 1997 Awesome Adventure Machine test show, the Small-Town Studio C Buffet was installed in more than one location. It was installed in Waco, Texas in June 2002 (stage removed in 2003), Lake Jackson, Texas in October 2002 (stage removed between 2005 and 2006), and finally in Dover, Delaware in December 2002 (stage removed in 2005). The Studio C Buffet eventually become the [[Studio C Cappa]] in 2003.
== Now (2021-present) ==
Finally, in March 2021, the 2.0 video wall made its proper debut at the remodeled [[Manassas, VA (7730 Stream Walk Ln)|Manassas, VA]] location, after 34 years of early ideas and predecessors.
When 2.0 Remodels started being installed, the only TV's in the store were the 6 small TV's mounted on the ceiling directly above the Dance Floor. This would change in 2021 when 2.0 Remodels were updated to include a large screen embedded into the wall where the character biographies are seen.
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|2021 Model
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|[[Worcester, MA (50
| October 2021
|2021 Model
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|2021 Model
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| [[Howard Beach, NY (133-35
|January 31st, 2022
|2019 Model
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|[[Hialeah, FL (3805 W 20th Ave
| January 2022
|2021 Model
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|January 2022
|2021 Model
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|[[Evansville, IN (559 N Green River Rd)]]
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|March 23, 2022
|2021 Model
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|[[Florence, KY (7635 Mall Rd)]]
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|2021 Model
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|[[Madison, TN (2070 Gallatin Pike
|April 2022
|2021 Model
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|[[Philadelphia, PA (9 Snyder Ave)]]
|July 19th, 2022
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|[[Anchorage, AK (308 E Northern Lights Blvd)]]
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|[[Raleigh, NC (3501-131 Capital Blvd)]]
|August 2022
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|-
|[[Vancouver, WA (7721 NE Vancouver Plaza Dr)]]
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|2021 Model
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|[[Chicago, IL
|August 2022
|2021 Model
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|[[Jacksonville, FL (9820 Atlantic Blvd)]]
| November 19th, 2022
|2021 Model
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|[[Douglasville, GA (6890 Douglas Blvd)]]
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|2021 Model
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|[[Deptford, NJ (1500 Almonesson Rd)]]
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|2021 Model
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|[[Phoenix, AZ (8039 North 35th Ave)]]
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|2021 Model
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| December 2022
|2021 Model
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|March 2023
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|[[Concord, NC (7970 Lyles Lane NW)]]
|March 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Yuma, AZ (1348 Yuma Palms Pkwy)]]
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|[[Huntsville, AL (1220 Jordan Lane)]]
|March 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Conyers, GA (1530 Dogwood Dr)]]
|March 2023
|2021 Model
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|May 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Cerritos, CA (11231 183rd St)]]
|May 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Murfreesboro, TN (1720 Old Fort Pkwy)]]
|June 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Darien, IL (7409 Cass Ave)]]
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|July 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Whitehall, PA (1000 Lehigh Valley Mall)]]
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|[[Dover, DE (1275 N DuPont Hwy)]]
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|2021 Model
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|[[Ventura, CA (4714 Telephone Rd)]]
|October 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Bell, CA (5089 E Florence Ave)]]
|October 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Kensington, MD (5238 Nicholson Ln)]]
|November 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Covina, CA (601 Azusa Ave)]]
|December 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Laguna Hills, CA (26538-H Moulton Pkwy)]]
|December 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Hemet, CA (2375 West Florida Ave)]]
|December 2023
|2021 Model
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|[[Elk Grove, CA (9161 E Stockton Blvd)]]
|January 17, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Roseville, CA (9601 Fairway Dr)]]
|January 19, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Citrus Heights, CA (6251 Sunrise Blvd)]]
|January 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[San Bernardino, CA (777 E Hospitality Lane)]]
|January 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[North Las Vegas, NV (755 W. Craig Rd Suite 144)]]
|January 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Valley Stream, NY (750 Sunrise Highway Suite 105)]]
|February 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Sheik Zayed City (Royal Mall), Egypt]]
|February 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Visalia, CA (4345 W Noble Ave)]]
|February 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Costa Mesa, CA (2300 Harbor Blvd)]]
|February 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[San Diego / Mira Mesa, CA (9840 Hibert St)]]
|February 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Fresno, CA (7809 N Blackstone Ave)]]
|February 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Norwalk, CA (10949 Firestone Blvd)]]
|February 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Dublin, CA (7448 Amador Valley Blvd)]]
|March 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Metairie, LA (7008 Veterans Blvd)]]
|March 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Pico Rivera, CA (6005 Rosemead Blvd)]]
|April 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Cincinnati, OH (4394 Eastgate Square Dr)]]
|April 10th, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Charleston, WV (2846 Mountaineer Blvd)]]
|April 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Harlingen, TX (2815 W Expressway 83)]]
|April 23, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Canton, OH (6370 Strip Ave)]]
|April 29, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Warren, OH (2082 Niles Cortland Rd SE)]]
|May 6, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Tallahassee, FL (2810 Sharer Rd)]]
|May 8, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Altoona, PA (3415 Pleasant Valley Blvd)]]
|May 12, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Mays Landing, NJ (4215 Black Horse Pike)]]
|May 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Parma, OH (7601 W Ridgewood Rd)]]
|May 13, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Catonsville, MD (5912 Baltimore National Pike)]]
|May 2024
|2021 Model
|-
|[[Mays Landing, NJ (4215 Black Horse Pike)]]
|May 2024
|2021 Model
|-
|[[Charlotte, NC (5612 Albemarle Rd)]]
|June 4, 2024
|2021 Model
|-
|[[Princeton, NJ (520 Nassau Park Blvd)]]
|June 4, 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[Middletown, NJ (1107 Route 35)]]
|June 2024 (awaiting installation)
|2021 Model
|-
|[[Charlotte, NC (7701 Pineville-Matthews Rd)]]
|June 13th, 2024
|2021 Model
|-
|[[Springfield, IL (2369 McArthur Ave)]]
|June 2024 (awaiting installation)
|2021 Model
|-
|[[Bloomington, IL (1701 E Empire St)]]
|June 2024
|2021 Model
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|[[West Islip, NY (155 Sunrise Hwy)]]
|July 2, 2024
|2021 Model
|}
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Latest revision as of 11:31, 4 July 2024
The Video Wall (Also known as the Jumbotron by some.) is an entertainment option found at Chuck E. Cheese restaurants. It was first installed in March 2021 at the Manassas, VA (7730 Stream Walk Ln) location.
The Video Walls are installed in present day 2.0 Remodels alongside the 2021 Model Dance Floor (some stores receive 2019 Dance Floors instead), with some stores (like Howard Beach, New York, which did not open with one, as they were planning to open in 2020, before 2021 2.0's started being installed & Kennewick, Washington which was the first 2018 2.0 to receive a Video Wall and kept the old big red piece which would house the TVs; which has 12 TVs throughout the store instead of the usual 9 {Including Video Wall} for 2021 2.0s), later receiving one.
The Video Walls bear a resemblance to the large TV screen featured on the Circles of Light stage, and may or may not be the same model.
Early Concepts / Predecessors (1987-2002)
An idea of a video wall put into Chuck E. Cheese's restaurants first originated back in 1987. In pages 14 and 15 of the 1987 ShowBiz Pizza Time, Inc. Project Status Report (Entertainment '87), it discusses an idea for a video wall. Part of a project titled "Surprises", the 1987 video wall concept consisted of a bank of 9 to 26 inch video monitors which would play tape footage or a live camera.[1] The cost of a prototype would've been $41,000, which would be around $112,001.46 today in 2024. This would've reduced prominence to the Cyberamics that SPT was installing in Chuck E. Cheese's restaurants at the time. This would be the first time that CEC would not put the spotlight on animatronics as the main entertainment. But the 1987 video wall concept seemed to have not gone past the planning stages, because it was never installed in an actual operating location.
The video wall concept would be revisited in 1996, and would be visually integrated into the short-lived Awesome Adventure Machine test show at the Montfort Dr location in Dallas, Texas, with the design of two large video monitors and the left and right stages. This was the first time a video wall-like setup was integrated onto a CEC stage. But the AAM test show was scrapped by late 1997.
In 2002, the Small-Town Studio C Buffet test stage would be installed at three locations as part of a new "Small-Town CEC" idea conceptualized by CEC Entertainment. This stage had a bluescreen and three video monitors above. While not a full video wall, it is similar by having one or more monitors on the wall. This test stage also eliminated the stage where the Chuck E. Cheese animatronic would perform, being one of the earliest examples of CEC eliminating animatronics in new stages. Unlike the 1987 video wall concept or the 1997 Awesome Adventure Machine test show, the Small-Town Studio C Buffet was installed in more than one location. It was installed in Waco, Texas in June 2002 (stage removed in 2003), Lake Jackson, Texas in October 2002 (stage removed between 2005 and 2006), and finally in Dover, Delaware in December 2002 (stage removed in 2005). The Studio C Buffet eventually become the Studio C Cappa in 2003.
Now (2021-present)
Finally, in March 2021, the 2.0 video wall made its proper debut at the remodeled Manassas, VA location, after 34 years of early ideas and predecessors.
When 2.0 Remodels started being installed, the only TV's in the store were the 6 small TV's mounted on the ceiling directly above the Dance Floor. This would change in 2021 when 2.0 Remodels were updated to include a large screen embedded into the wall where the character biographies are seen.