Should Movie Theaters Be Required to Advertise Actual Start Times?
Under a proposed bill, theaters could be fined for making moviegoers guess.
In July 2020, a class-action lawsuit was filed against the heating oil company HOP Energy for allegedly misleadingly advertising its CAPPED plan as one in which consumers’ “home heating oil price follows the market but doesn’t go above your CAP rate” when, according to plaintiffs, the company used a fake and inflated retail price instead of the market price resulting in customers being overcharged. Later in the month, the case was transferred from state court to federal court. (Callery et al v. HOP Energy, LLC and DDM Energy, Case No. 20-cv-3652, E.D. Penn.)
Under a proposed bill, theaters could be fined for making moviegoers guess.
Money-back guarantee comes up woefully short of advertised percentage.
Is it still a guarantee if it has strings attached?
Lawsuits allege “100%” marketing on front label is misleading.
TINA.org reader was charged a lot more than the advertised price. He’s not alone.