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Can you film a movie in an airport?

All filming within the gate areas, concessions or other leased spaces is not allowed without the permission of the leaseholders. TSA Public Affairs must approve any filming of the TSA checkpoints in advance. U.S. Customs and Border Protection must approve any filming within customs areas in advance.



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vs. Lee (1992) the U.S. Supreme Court determined that airports are a nonpublic forum because they exist for air travel, not for expressive activity.

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If you are flying an aircraft for pleasure, it is certainly allowed to take photos. There is no rule against it. A good pilot does not allow anything to distract them when the right thing to be doing at a particular moment is aviating, navigating, or communicating.

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In the past, older models of X-ray scanners were even more damaging to film, particularly high ISO films. However, most current machines used for carry-on luggage scanning use a very mild dose of X-rays that is unlikely to cause any damage to your film if it's under 800 ISO.

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Practically speaking, security officials won't allow you to walk through the metal detector with metal, and that includes recording media. Unlike magnetic media, X-ray will most certainly ruin undeveloped film.

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However, they are positioned in such a way that they can see only the sink-area, and not the urinals, or inside the cubicles.

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The sky over Disneyland in Anaheim and Walt Disney World in Orlando is national defense airspace. Intentionally violating Mickey and Minnie's airspace, the alerts warn, could result in interception, interrogation and federal prosecution.

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