Why is it in Hollywood movies every time there is a vent or AC unit someone has fixed little ribbons on it? Is that a thing americans do? Why?
The vent in this movie is close to the floor in the toilets of a train. This implies someone got on all fours ON THE FLOOR OF A TRAIN'S BATHROOM to stick those ribbons there for a reason i can't even begin to comprehend.
Actually in this movie it doesn't matter. Something has been hidden behind that vent which the protagonist is about to findbout in a second.We will never come back to that bathroom.
I often see them in offices. People who are working 8 hours in an environment where thy don't control the AC will often want proof that it is or is not working effectively. As there are potentially multiple vents along a duct these ribbons are a handy way to see how much the duct pressure varies across the room.
I am fairly well traveled. I know mostly countries in Europe, Latin America and Africa, and I never noticed anyone doing this in any hotel, public building, private house or plane or train...
Never been to the US though, so I wondered if it was real thing people do.
Idk, usually I can just tell when I get hot or cold if the central air isn’t working myself.
It’s a thing for commercial buildings with stuff high up snd you can’t feel the draft from without a ladder, but not in houses or trains or anywhere else Hollywood slaps them. It’s not a thing, why are so many people trying to claim it is? Lol
Let’s see yours on your vents if it’s a thing then.
Ribbons (or visual indicators in general) wouldn't have been stuck on there by a member of the public. It would have been placed there by technicians or maintenance guys to help with their tasks. Not common at home for obvious reasons, but not uncommon in commercial / public spaces.
Hollywood took an existing practice and made it ubiquitous because it was a convenient visual shortcut.
The practice is only used when the vents are hard to reach, Hollywood puts them eveyrwhere, like OP said behind a toilet, where the technician can easily verify by hand or with the actual tool to measure airflow so they have an actual metric to see if it’s deteriorating.
We don't hose our streets down every night either, it just works better for movies because any stains or dogpiss puddles get evened out and reflecting lights bring out the perspective, and are pretty.
Chances are, you've seen lots of HVAC vents without ribbons in Hollywood movies without noticing them, because whether they were blowing wasn't important to the scene.
Whether the air is blowing or not is strictly irrelevant to this scene. something has been hidden inside the vent which the protagonist is about to find out when the picture was taken. We will never come back to this bathroom later.
As a matter of fact it would have made sense if the ribbons were not floating and the object was big enough to obstruct the vent, but this is not the case here.
When I posted in this topic there were no other responses, so I gave you the answer. It's literally the only reason any one ever does this and it's done in movies to show the air moving if it directly affects the plot.
Because when people are hot, they think the air conditioning isn't working, and the little ribbons are visual indicator that yes the air conditioning is actually running!
The answer in movies is the same as IRL: it's to visually indicate that air is moving through the vent. In a movie this can be hard to tell the audience without a possibly annoying sound. In real life you might see this on vents that are difficult to access, probably so an HVAC technician can tell if the vent is working.
Whether the air is running or not is irrelevant to this scene, die example. So that is why I wondered whether it wasbrrue that there were ribbons everywhere on vents in the US.