I've had great luck with AMC here in Texas. They set the headset the right
way all the time.
One note, though -- most of the time the headphones on these systems are not
the best. Many of the receiver boxes use a standard headphone jack, so you
can bring your own higher quality headphones. I've found this improves the
sound quality a lot.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jfw [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf Of Richard Holloway
> Sent: Friday, April 04, 2014 9:43 PM
> To: The Jaws for Windows support list.
> Subject: Re: Movies for the blind
> 
> This site (below) tracks current releases of DVD's with Audio
> Description as well as TV schedules for many described programs on TV
> and helps to explain how to access the alternative audio on these
> broadcasts:
> http://www.acb.org/adp/ad.html
> 
> This site (also below) tracks movies in theaters showing with Audio
> Description and various captioning options. As the name would imply,
> their original focus was apparently for hearing impaired individuals,
> so you will need to be certain to select the "Descriptive Video"
> filter, or you'll get a mixture of results with both DVS and for the
> hearing impaired (some movies have both at once). The hearing impaired
> solutions vary from headphones that make things louder, to open
> captions which all sighted guests can see, to rear displayed captions
> where sighted moviegoers can put a mirror into a cup holder and read
> the captions from the back wall (they are shown in reverse and the
> mirror fixes that.) As a general rule, Regal theaters offers the vast
> majority of their films with DVS- probably more than 90%:
> http://www.captionfish.com
> 
> The big shift at Regal happened when they went all-digital. Since
> movies all come over the internet, there is no hassle with sending
> along the DVS. AMC used (may still use) an older system where they have
> to send a CD or DVD with the DVS and any captioning on it, and then
> they have to load the right disk with the movie, and it was rarely
> offered and then hardly ever worked correctly. This was back when most
> theaters still showed actual films. I had assumed AMC would be the
> first to use the digital DVS system, but so far, I am only aware of the
> strong DVS offering by Regal and a few of their affiliated companies.
> 
> If you are new to this, briefly, for DVD's you select an alternative
> language in the setup menu, just like selecting French, Spanish, etc.,
> On television broadcasts, you do likewise, but the odd part is there is
> place where DVS is listed in some systems, and that is not where the
> audio description tends to run. You will most often find it under
> "Spanish", though one network- I think it was TBS, tends to show only
> actual Spanish under Spanish, and uses another language- I think it was
> Portuguese (?) for English DVS.
> 
> What you get on DVD, and with Broadcast TV is description in quieter
> parts of a show or over music (rarely over dialogue) and they tend to
> "dip" (make quieter) the background audio as they speak when possible.
> In a theater, they cannot dip the background audio, but you wear
> headphones tied to a receiver that plays ONLY the description in the
> same quieter places in the show and you listen to the movie (apart from
> the description) along with everyone else in the theater.
> 
> One important note. The Regal theaters use the same headsets for
> hearing impaired and blind patrons. The select a specific channel for
> the theater where you will watch, and they have to select if it us for
> hearing impaired or blind. Hearing impaired seems to be more common,
> and often they set things incorrectly. The hearing impaired assistance,
> in this case, it to let you play the sound louder- that's it. We have
> found they do not run preview audio through the headset for DVS, so the
> headphones won't do anything until the movie starts. If you're hearing
> coming attraction audio over the headset, go to customer service and
> have them fix the setting.
> 
> Do not assume that your white cane will clue them in at all. About 2/3
> of the time, when they bring the headset to us (in three different
> theaters where we have attended, in two different states) they
> generally have the thing set wrong, so when they bring the headset,
> your better off to just ask again- did you set this for AUDIO
> DESCRIPTION? NOT TO JUST MAKE THE SHOW LOUDER? More often than not, we
> get an embarrassed groan and an apology, with a quick adjustment, and
> an "Enjoy the show!"
> 
> Sorry if that is TMI, but I hope that helps.
> 
> 
> 
> On Apr 4, 2014, at 5:31 PM, Sharon <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> > Samnet
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Jfw [mailto:[email protected]]
> > On Behalf Of John Chan
> > Sent: Friday, April 04, 2014 3:06 PM
> > To: Jaws Mailing List
> > Subject: Movies for the blind
> >
> > Where cn i find movies fo the blind?Sent from my iPhone
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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> >
> >
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> 
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