Till the digital onslaught dealt a deadly blow to the good old analogue arc-illumined projectors, their operators, called the ‘projectionists’, were able to earn their living. For long spells of time, they were deeply dedicated to those machines that beamed entertaining stories, songs, dances and dialogues on the silver screens in front of audiences in dark auditoria. This blow was aided and abetted by the real estate boom of the 1990s, the not-so-conducive government laws for single-screen cinema houses and, more recently, the pandemic with its paralytic effect. In the Analogue Age, every single-screen cinema house had two 35-mm projectors for an uninterrupted run of a film and, generally, each had at least three or four projectionists employed for two shifts. They did the multi-tasking of physically cleaning, maintaining, threading, winding, rewinding, loading, checking and changing reels, checking the carbon arc for proper illumination and synchronising sounds and images once the Talkie era dawned in the early 1930s. Threading involved the proper placing of the film over the sprockets and through the guides and paths of a projector before it was put into operation.