25 JULY 2024
Well, we've done it; we've completed our first full day of Comic-Con. Before everything even began, the media agreed that "Comic-Con is back!" in terms of panels, guests, offsites, general pageantry, etc. But now that we're here and assessing it all with our judgmental eyes - is it?
I would say, yes. Mostly. A mix of my and others' opinions holds that:
~ The Exhibit Hall shopping is good. I spent much more than anticipated.
~ The offsites are on par. So often they sound better in their press release than the reality and that was the case today. But some people were thrilled.
~ The cosplay I've seen in the Gaslamp has been of limited quantity - it's Thursday - but some of it is really good.
~ The panels are decent so far, the few that people have seen. I attended one that seemed a blatant advertisement for the panelist's business and a great one from NASA.
~ The line and flow management has been typical. Some people are saying it's worse than ever but I find it on par.
~ The Deadpool Wolverine event was magic for those who got in and an outrage for everyone who didn't.
First-Timers
Just as I observed what felt like an unusual number of first-timers leading up to the Con, I seem to be running into them everywhere. They are, by turns, impressed, curious, and confounded by some of our practices, including the SDCC "move this way, go down that hall, no, the other hall, swipe out, go outside, come back in and swipe again" directives. It's hard to get them to accept the unavoidable amount of WTF that is baked into, and then sprinkled on top of, every Con.
And hard for me, sometimes. I whined childishly about Mattel selling out of the Batmobile Hot Wheels set at 11:30 this morning. What's the point of winning the exclusives lottery and then waiting in line when so many items are already gone less than 2 hours into the Con? Other people contacted me to tell me it got much worse throughout the day. My take: the people who work there probably haven't much control over the stock, but they could at least let people in line know what is sold out so they don't waste (more of) their time.
The first-timers I've talked to say that:
1) They were not adequately briefed on where things were. One group repeated an observation from different first-timers last year - they wandered around the Exhibit Hall without understanding where the panels and events were. They didn't know to go pick up their bag and guide. They just showed up and expected a clear map and directive that frankly, would never be possible with an event of this size.
2) They are stunned at the ignorance and conflicting advice from "staff." To them, all volunteers, security guards, and staffers are one homogenous mass and they expect them to know everything when in fact, they barely know anything. They also complain of rudeness.
3) They feel that buying a badge entitles them to entrance to every booth, offsite, party, and panel and any barriers therein are unjust. Tantamount to robbery, even. "I'm going to ask for a partial refund."
My suggestion: a lot of this is unavoidable - but I do think CCI could do a better job prepping newcomers to our shores. They could trigger something on Member ID accounts to indicate a first-time badge and send out a nurture campaign that walks first-timers through the basics in the months going up to the Con. They could create a series of video tutorials. They do this for badge sales and other processes, but I think they need to address the culture and experience of SDCC as well.
Offsites
The Lodge was a pretty cool offsite and we were lucky enough to get pizza, drinks, a trip through the Ghosts apothecary, and a photo op, but the Star Treks t-shirts, tattoo parlor, and money pit were capped. What struck me was that the worker cheerfully told us to just go get in the standby line or come back Friday or Saturday and maybe they'd have shirts then. He seemed genuinely unaware of how obscenely long the standby line was and that it was impossible to just go get tickets. This is a good lesson in why people should stop worshiping at the feet of these offsites - they can be fun but they're hardly guaranteed to deliver. Are they really worth waiting in the sun for 4+ hours?
I'm hearing mixed reports on Exploding Kittens and the Chariot Races, good reports on Hulu Animayhem, and okay reports on Abbott Elementary. The FX offsite seemed to please people, but not if they waited a long time. I didn't do any of these so I can't report directly. On the whole, Thursday lines were the shortest we'll see, so be really sure you're ready to invest hours for these experiences.
Deadpool Wolverine and lines in general
This is something else I did not experience directly. My friends got in. The line was horrific. I thought there the matter lay until I heard that people without tickets were getting in by flashing scans of winner emails from social media and then that they were just processing people through without checking anything at all as the time got short.
In the end, some people who legitimately were picked for this did not make it in. Given the enormous emotional importance this event held for attendees, this really was an epic shitshow on a par with the fake wristband scandal of ... 2017? Somewhere around there. And this was worse because it could have been avoided in several ways:
~ They could have moved some Thursday Hall H events to Sunday (or moved the schedule around in general) and left more time to clear and then fill the room.
~ They could have passed out wristbands throughout the day.
~ They could have randomly assigned seats and boarding groups on the winning emails.
~ They could have assigned more people to manage the line. I've heard that some volunteers didn't show up for their shift and I've also heard Disney blamed. Who knows the real story.
I know I am not a logistics or line management expert and I'm sure I'm wildly simplifying the whole thing - but I also know that much bigger events manage to handle this stuff without this level of disaster.
Lines in general have been messy so far, but what I hear people complaining the most about are security and staff. I actually noticed this at the first post-pandemic Con - it seemed like a lot of inexperienced people had taken the reins. My friend had to get his prop weapon checked; he asked at E and they sent him to H, who sent him back to E, who confirmed on radio that he needed to go to H, and he bounced back and forth about 4 times before getting it sorted. Other staff seemed to have zero training at all on basic questions like where to pick up bags and badges or where the ADA line.
How is this so difficult? We live in a golden age of communication. Every person should have a physical cheat sheet or a device where they can quickly get answers to attendee questions. It's like 1993 out there.
And some staff seemed to have no idea what they were in for. A guy at a Mattel booth showed his exclusives email to some staffer and politely asked where he could go to pick up an exclusive. I listened in because I was in the same boat. The staffer said, "How would I know? You signed up for it, don't you know?" There's no call for that kind of pissy attitude (and this was on Thursday - I would love to see that staffer by Saturday afternoon).
I hate to pull this card but ultimately attendees make this show happen. We pay the money to go, we pour the money into bars and restaurants and vendor booths, and without us, nothing happens. We deserve basic respect and courtesy.
Attendees
On that note... it's time for the annual lament of the changing face of Comic-Con. Preview Night, I was fortunate enough to meet a comic book writer who's been coming here since the 1980s. He let loose with all of his complaints about how the show is run and the failure of TPTB to implement his suggestions and he also criticized the attendee demographics as well. (Yes, Twilight was mentioned.) I agreed with every single thing he said and it was a lovely moment of two kindred souls remembering days gone by. But also a confirmation of how little comic talent there is at SDCC these days. The Daniel Clowes event on Saturday really stood out this year in that regard. I remember those years when the schedule was peppered with that kind of panel. Okay, I'm done.
I'm off to a luscious Friday of good things; I hope you are too. I'll check in later and see where we are. Right now - where are you? How is your Con going?
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