<p>It might be the unlikeliest instructional video ever, but footage of two Japanese amusement park executives demonstrating how to "scream inside your heart" to avoid spreading Covid-19 while on a rollercoaster has been a roaring success.</p>.<p>"Now our customers stay silent while riding on rollercoasters," a spokeswoman for amusement park operator Fujikyuko told AFP, after the video on riding etiquette for the coronavirus era went viral.</p>.<p>The video features the executives, one in a full suit and tie, the other in a shirt and bowtie, sitting stiff-backed and straightfaced in silence, with only the only sounds coming from the whipping of the wind and the grinding of the rollercoaster.</p>.<p>As they plunge downwards, one executive serenely readjusts his hair, and his facemask, but both otherwise remain stoically silent, even as they sway violently in the coaster car.</p>.<p>At the end of the ride, one man lifts his hands off the seat handles, visibly trembling. A black screen follows featuring advice that some social media users have dubbed a slogan for 2020: "scream inside your heart."</p>.<p><span><span><span><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-tamil-nadu-extends-suspension-of-bus-services-till-july-31-as-state-reports-4328-new-covid-19-cases-860261.html" target="_blank"><strong><span><span>Follow live updates on the coronavirus here</span></span></strong></a></span></span></span></p>.<p>The video was first posted last month, as coronavirus restrictions eased and reopening theme parks asked visitors to avoid screaming and keep social distance.</p>.<p>"Even though the amusement park association's guidelines ask you to 'refrain from speaking loudly' we have received complaints it is 'difficult' or 'impossible', so Fujikyu Highland offers a good example," the operator said on its website with the video.</p>.<p>It promised customers who could keep their screams silent would get a discount on photos taken of them on the park's signature Fujiyama coaster, which plunges riders from a height of more than 71 metres.</p>.<p>On Twitter, the footage delighted viewers in Japan and around the world.</p>.<p>"This video is great fun," one Japanese user wrote. Others lauded the theme park for inadvertently summarising the way many have felt after months of the coronavirus pandemic.</p>.<p>"Literally the best description of 2020 I've ever read: please scream inside your heart," one Twitter user wrote.</p>
<p>It might be the unlikeliest instructional video ever, but footage of two Japanese amusement park executives demonstrating how to "scream inside your heart" to avoid spreading Covid-19 while on a rollercoaster has been a roaring success.</p>.<p>"Now our customers stay silent while riding on rollercoasters," a spokeswoman for amusement park operator Fujikyuko told AFP, after the video on riding etiquette for the coronavirus era went viral.</p>.<p>The video features the executives, one in a full suit and tie, the other in a shirt and bowtie, sitting stiff-backed and straightfaced in silence, with only the only sounds coming from the whipping of the wind and the grinding of the rollercoaster.</p>.<p>As they plunge downwards, one executive serenely readjusts his hair, and his facemask, but both otherwise remain stoically silent, even as they sway violently in the coaster car.</p>.<p>At the end of the ride, one man lifts his hands off the seat handles, visibly trembling. A black screen follows featuring advice that some social media users have dubbed a slogan for 2020: "scream inside your heart."</p>.<p><span><span><span><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-tamil-nadu-extends-suspension-of-bus-services-till-july-31-as-state-reports-4328-new-covid-19-cases-860261.html" target="_blank"><strong><span><span>Follow live updates on the coronavirus here</span></span></strong></a></span></span></span></p>.<p>The video was first posted last month, as coronavirus restrictions eased and reopening theme parks asked visitors to avoid screaming and keep social distance.</p>.<p>"Even though the amusement park association's guidelines ask you to 'refrain from speaking loudly' we have received complaints it is 'difficult' or 'impossible', so Fujikyu Highland offers a good example," the operator said on its website with the video.</p>.<p>It promised customers who could keep their screams silent would get a discount on photos taken of them on the park's signature Fujiyama coaster, which plunges riders from a height of more than 71 metres.</p>.<p>On Twitter, the footage delighted viewers in Japan and around the world.</p>.<p>"This video is great fun," one Japanese user wrote. Others lauded the theme park for inadvertently summarising the way many have felt after months of the coronavirus pandemic.</p>.<p>"Literally the best description of 2020 I've ever read: please scream inside your heart," one Twitter user wrote.</p>