Fan
conventions (or “cons”) are a thrill for many, with people from across the globe
coming together to celebrate their hobbies and beloved films, TV shows, video
games, anime, books, websites, you name it. I attend conventions every now and
again, both professionally run and operated by fan communities; my favourite
being 2016’s “Summer of Sonic”, and my least favourite being my time at the
London Film & Comic Con a few years back, due to a lack of information,
and, well, ironically, crowds. I still believe hosting LFCC in Olympia, where
there are only three elevators and one staircase up to each floor, is a poor
place to hold such a large event.
But, not
every con goes well, for a number of reasons. It can be due to mismanagement by
the organizers and managers, a lack of finances, chaos on part of the
attendees, or in some cases, outright lies and manipulation in order to make a
quick buck. Let’s go through some of the most infamous conventions in history,
or in other words, the worst of the worst.
New York Star Trek ‘76
Held at the New York Hilton, organizer Lisa Boynton seemed dedicated to undermining other Star Trek conventions occurring in the area, particularly the Schuster Star Trek Convention, which had occurred mere weeks earlier. This move was seen as intentional, to cut into the finances and attendance of Al Schuster’s convention. Fans were put off by Boynton’s priority to make money rather than celebrate Star Trek. Most notably, the convention was the first to pay special guests to attend the event.
Needless to
say, the press and fans themselves labelled the con as a disaster (or
“DisasterCon”). Up to 30,000 fans attended, and the convention oversold, with
some having to be turned away when the hotel grew overcrowded. This can be a
problem in some cons, and Lisa Boynton’s convention is a textbook example of
how not to run such an event. William Shatner, making one of his first
appearances at a convention, had a pie thrown at him whilst giving a panel
onstage.
Tentmoot
This fan convention is a little different, as it never actually happened, and is just a part of a much darker, disturbing series of events. Tentmoot was a promoted convention celebrating The Lord of the Rings, run by one Andrew Blake, a disturbed, controlling man who took on many aliases. Blake began his shenanigans under the alias of “Victoria Bitter”, founding a website and alleged charity group called “Bit of Earth”. Blake is a man of many personalities and counts of criminal acts, including multiple cases of assault and domestic abuse, a history of fraud, cult building, etc. Blake also claimed he channelled the souls of fictional characters and actors from The Lord of the Rings.
Blake
adopted the alias of “Jordan Wood”, claiming he shared his body with Elijah
Wood’s soul, that he was even the actor’s cousin, and that Wood’s family was
involved in the IRA. He later claimed to possess Orlando Bloom’s soul too. Bit
of Earth launched “Project Eleanor”, the sole positive thing the group actually
did, creating a children’s reading garden for the Riggs Institute in Beaverton.
The volunteering effort was a success, with Sean Astin (aka Samwise Gamgee
himself) attending to create the garden, which still stands outside the
institute til this day. Allegedly, the charity money raised at a screening for
The Two Towers would go to Reading Is Fundamental, a non-profit children’s
literacy organization. The money instead either was used for Project Eleanor’s supplies,
or simply disappeared, likely into Blake’s pockets.
Blake then
announced Tentmoot, a five-day event celebrating Middle-Earth, to be hosted in
Portland. Blake, thanks to his many aliases, caused chaos and confusion with many
people, including the police, Middle-Earth related cast and crew, their agents,
public relations people, and those who had volunteered to run both Bit of Earth
and the imaginary convention. Jed Brophy, Paul Randall, and Brian Sergeant
arrived at LAX expecting to attend Tentmoot, but learnt it wasn’t going to
happen. Lawrence Makoare never made it out of New Zealand thankfully. According to Blake,
a deal he had made with New Zealand airlines to fly the celebrities to the
convention fell through. Blake asked friends to donate to ensure guests could
travel to Portland. But, as it turns out, he never made any arrangements with
airlines to begin with. Just one of many lies he had wove to cheat people out
of their money.
Las Pegasus Unicon
The Brony
community who make up the My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic fanbase, is one
of the more dignified ones online, a welcoming and closely-knitted phenomenon
that reached its cultural peak around 2012. A documentary, produced by actor
John de Lancie, focused on the Brony community and the 2012 Bronycon,
highlighting the artistic talents, and integral sense of unity between the fans,
never discriminating or isolating anyone from joining the “herd”. Pony
conventions were popping up across the United States, and things were looking
good for the fanbase.
But, the 2013
Las Pegasus Unicon in Las Vegas nearly destroyed the future of the Bronies’
conventions, and their relationship with the cast and crew of MLP. Needless to
say, the convention was a disaster. Held in the Riviera Hotel Convention
Centre, the con was such a colossal train wreck, that some feared it was the
end for Brony conventions as a whole. The main problem seemed to come down to
mismanagement, a lack of expected attendees, and the financial panic that
followed. Funds were overextended, actors could not be paid, and some attendees
were even kicked out of their hotel rooms, and left with enormous bills for
travel expenses. Voice actresses like Nicole Oliver and Tara Strong were left
stuck at the airport without transport, and had to make their own way to
the convention.
In the end,
the Everfree Network, the Brony community’s radio channel, stepped in and
organized a donation to raise money for the unpaid guests. The event’s lone
organizer, Sandi Haas, had no prior experience running a con, and disappeared
during the second day, allegedly with most of the money. It goes to show that
poor management and mishandling of money can lead to disaster. However, Las
Pegasus did not kill the MLP convention circuit, as many have been held since, and better organized.
Rainfurrest 2015
In some
cases, it is the attendees themselves that cause havoc. Rainfurrest
was a convention for and by the furry community, which ran from 2005 to 2015.
The final event marked the death knell for this unusual convention. Mere hours
after Rainfurrest 2015 began, there were multiple arrests, guests got seriously hammered, and went on a rampage, and caused much damage to the hotel. Toilets were
deliberately flooded, some guests disabled their hotel room’s fire alarm to get
high, sabotaged a hot tub, and the swimming pool was closed because some fool decided to do their business within. There were also fans walking around
wearing nappies on their heads, or throwing them out windows and leaving them
in the halls and rooms, harassing other guests, and causing anarchy. The
response from the hotel was swift, warning other hotels in Seattle to not play
host to any future Rainfurrest conventions.
Fyre Fest
Fyre Fest was a music festival in 2017, set on Great Exuma in the Bahamas. The event was organized (and orchestrated) by Billy McFarland and rapper Ja Rule. The idea for the music event sprung from merely viewing the island by flying over it in McFarland’s private plane. Having no experience running a music event, McFarland contacted other, more experienced companies for advice. He was astonished that these gigs cost between $5-12 million to run. Believing it would cost far less, McFarland and his Fyre Fest team continued under this assumption. Tickets were pricey, but the marketing promised a private tropical island called Fyre Cay, with meals prepared by celebrity chefs, a line-up of popular bands and singers, and being a paradise for all who came. Boy, was that a lie!
Fyre Fest
was a total wash out, and like a mass recreation of Cast Away. Guests found out that Fyre Cay did not exist, and instead
flew to a dump on Exuma Island. There was no sense of security or order, none
of the scheduled musical acts showed up, and there were no luxurious villas and
gourmet food, just grubby tents on a gravel site, and cheap, pre-prepared food.
There was no communication between the staff members (no walkie talkies), the only toilets were portaloos, and McFarland and Ja Rule were nowhere in sight. Guests didn’t receive water, but rather free tequila, and lockers were provided by no one told guests they needed to bring their own locks. Eventually, things were so chaotic that the Bahaman government stepped in to close down the festival.
There was no communication between the staff members (no walkie talkies), the only toilets were portaloos, and McFarland and Ja Rule were nowhere in sight. Guests didn’t receive water, but rather free tequila, and lockers were provided by no one told guests they needed to bring their own locks. Eventually, things were so chaotic that the Bahaman government stepped in to close down the festival.
The exodus
from the island was just as messy, with guests stuck at the airport for an
extended period of time. Strangely, the security guards locked the passengers
in the airport terminal with no access to food and water, leading to one person
fainting. People were understandably angry, having paid thousands of dollars to
stay in a dump. Ja Rule released an official apology, but took no blame for
what went down.
Fyre Fest’s
organizers did offer refunds for all, but also the absurd invitation to get
tickets for the imaginary Fyre Fest 2018. As for McFarland, he claimed that,
get this, a storm had somehow changed the digital marketing into exaggerated lies. Yes,
a storm. Can rain, wind, and thunder somehow edit a website? Then, eight
different lawsuits were thrown against Fyre Festival, on various counts of
fraud and other criminal charges, one seeking more than $100 million in
damages. Then the feds got involved, arresting McFarland for one count of wire
fraud. He ended up confessing to two different counts of wire fraud towards
investors and a ticket vendor. McFarland was sentenced to jail for six years
for his actions, and hopefully will never be allowed to plan a convention ever again.
Dashcon
And finally, we have Dashcon 2014, perhaps the most infamous doomed convention. A fan convention “for Tumblr fans, by Tumblr fans”, Dashcon may have been created with good intentions, but was an unmitigated disaster. Within a weekend, the organizers took $17,000 from the attendees as part of an emergency fundraiser to pay off the hotel bill, were unable to pay for or even accommodate guests (or chose not to), and disappointed ticket buyers were offered hotel mints and an extra hour in the pathetic children’s ball pit as compensation. The convention was originally named “TumblrCon”, but had to rename itself since it was unaffiliated with the website.
On the
first day of the convention, organizers found themselves overwhelmed, and the
entire convention would be booted out of the hotel that night, unless $17,000 was paid to
the hotel. Dashcon’s organizers claimed hotel
management didn’t like the people attending the event – in direct contrast to
the hotel, who publicly welcomed the convention. Attendees agreed to pay for this “con”
directly from their wallets, not really stopping to think if the organizers were
pulling their legs. The vendors couldn’t make any profit because the attendees
had just given all of their cash away to the desperate planners.
Other
guests, the Sherlock podcast group, the "Baker Street Babes", quit the convention
on day two, and were forced to pay for their own hotel rooms. When Night Vale
were announced to have bailed, the organizers pathetically offered an “extra
hour in the ball pit” as compensation. Yes, really. The headline panel was
cancelled on the fault of the organizers who attempted to pin blame on Welcome
to Night Vale, who they had invited and offered to pay for, and then couldn’t
due to their own incompetence. The reward was an extra in the ball
pit, which was about the size that a six-year old could fit in. And even after
that, it deflated, and someone apparently urinated in it.
Oh, and
during the wait for Night Vale, the organizers sneakily altered their website,
so that they would not be offering any refunds to the attendees. Pathetic. Utterly
pathetic. And there was also Dashcon’s claim that it was in a partnership with
the charity Random Acts, but RA responded that they had no such affiliation with
the convention.
So,
what went wrong? It appears to be a mix of the organizers not anticipating the
responsibility and finances needed to run a convention, and the amount of
attendees was shorter than expected. Asking the guests to pay for the
convention’s finances pretty much killed it, leaving vendors and attendees
unable to spend money, as there was nothing to spend. The organizers literally
blamed everyone but themselves. There were rumours that the whole operation was
a scam. Whether or not it was, Dashcon is without a doubt one of the worst
planned conventions in history, and could be used in classrooms on how not to
run a business!
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