Bert2theSpark
TS Member
So I've been thinking about this a fair bit recently. I've been a theme park enthusiast for nearly 10 years now. I've always felt in some regards, a bit of an outsider to the theme park community something about the community always felt a bit weird to still be a part of, but I have a massive continued interest in theme parks.
I love the concept of theme parks and the rides, environments and spaces they represent and the operational complexity that comes within them. As a child I've always loved stuff like science books and TV shows such as Blue Peter that always presented the next whacky thing. I'm also a massive Social Sciences nerd, my best subject at school was easily Geography, where I'd get full-marks without having to do any revision because all the contextual information I already understood. From the physical elements, to the interaction between economic and political events, as well as the diversity of environments that they represent.
However, I don't find myself being a credit hunter or even regularly visiting theme parks at the moment. I feel like that phase felt very limiting in that sense of being an enthusiast that I don't really identify with. Some of the more public aspects of visiting theme parks I really do cringe at a little bit, and I wouldn't really want theme parks to be my defining trait about me. Whereas others in the community seem to make it their entire identity. I also don't really care about the minute details that occur with the micro elements of what makes up a good theme park experience. I feel like I prefer the macro 'VIBES' element of being a part of the community, I'm not really bothered about the specific details of everything.
I have a lot of interests beyond theme parks, which are all equally interesting to me, although the physical aspect and dimensionality of the interest having a physical space somehow makes it feel more prominent within my life. Something about this hobby really draws me in on a day-to-day basis, but more of a passing interest, whereas other interests seem to ebb and flow a lot more with a lot more intensity. I know there's always going to be a backlash in any community when things change because of nostalgia, but when nostalgic things change for me, as long as it's not a massive downgrade from before I'm usually fine with it. This is something I've noticed in other enthusiast circles, and I've definitely picked up of the heuristics of criticism. However, I admit I'm fairly self-aware when I look back to some of my older forum posts, or what people would think of me when I say I passively follow the developments of a theme park that I'd likely never visit and rollercoasters that I'd never ride (RIP Ka, in particular),
I've found that following the theme park scene for the past 10 years has provided a lot of anecdotal experience within the realms of the day-to-day and coming across other enthusiast communities. The drama, the events, the memes. All of which I've certainly noticed in an anecdotal sense of pattern recognition. Although one thing that I think the community really lacks is a relative sense of deep and critical thinking overall. There are always a few good forum posts on here and a few pockets elsewhere, but more widely, it's quite common to see the same "influencers" (and subsequently other enthusiasts) with the same opinions and don't really have an interesting informed perspective or 'take' on developments.
Something that has only occurred recently is that is specifically because of the interaction between different elements of the theme park industry that have peaked my interest at different times, I've developed my own distinct taste around my relationship with theme parks. I've seen theme parks from so many different perspectives now that my perspective on theme parks has matured and evolved past what I was interested in 10 years ago, and it will probably evolve further. I wonder whether if I started visiting theme parks nowadays if I'd still develop the same interest in theme parks and how my perspective would differ.
I'd be really interested in seeing how everyone else here feels about when examining their own relationship with theme parks and the wider theme park community. So, how has your relationship with theme parks changed since you first became an enthusiast?
I love the concept of theme parks and the rides, environments and spaces they represent and the operational complexity that comes within them. As a child I've always loved stuff like science books and TV shows such as Blue Peter that always presented the next whacky thing. I'm also a massive Social Sciences nerd, my best subject at school was easily Geography, where I'd get full-marks without having to do any revision because all the contextual information I already understood. From the physical elements, to the interaction between economic and political events, as well as the diversity of environments that they represent.
However, I don't find myself being a credit hunter or even regularly visiting theme parks at the moment. I feel like that phase felt very limiting in that sense of being an enthusiast that I don't really identify with. Some of the more public aspects of visiting theme parks I really do cringe at a little bit, and I wouldn't really want theme parks to be my defining trait about me. Whereas others in the community seem to make it their entire identity. I also don't really care about the minute details that occur with the micro elements of what makes up a good theme park experience. I feel like I prefer the macro 'VIBES' element of being a part of the community, I'm not really bothered about the specific details of everything.
I have a lot of interests beyond theme parks, which are all equally interesting to me, although the physical aspect and dimensionality of the interest having a physical space somehow makes it feel more prominent within my life. Something about this hobby really draws me in on a day-to-day basis, but more of a passing interest, whereas other interests seem to ebb and flow a lot more with a lot more intensity. I know there's always going to be a backlash in any community when things change because of nostalgia, but when nostalgic things change for me, as long as it's not a massive downgrade from before I'm usually fine with it. This is something I've noticed in other enthusiast circles, and I've definitely picked up of the heuristics of criticism. However, I admit I'm fairly self-aware when I look back to some of my older forum posts, or what people would think of me when I say I passively follow the developments of a theme park that I'd likely never visit and rollercoasters that I'd never ride (RIP Ka, in particular),
I've found that following the theme park scene for the past 10 years has provided a lot of anecdotal experience within the realms of the day-to-day and coming across other enthusiast communities. The drama, the events, the memes. All of which I've certainly noticed in an anecdotal sense of pattern recognition. Although one thing that I think the community really lacks is a relative sense of deep and critical thinking overall. There are always a few good forum posts on here and a few pockets elsewhere, but more widely, it's quite common to see the same "influencers" (and subsequently other enthusiasts) with the same opinions and don't really have an interesting informed perspective or 'take' on developments.
Something that has only occurred recently is that is specifically because of the interaction between different elements of the theme park industry that have peaked my interest at different times, I've developed my own distinct taste around my relationship with theme parks. I've seen theme parks from so many different perspectives now that my perspective on theme parks has matured and evolved past what I was interested in 10 years ago, and it will probably evolve further. I wonder whether if I started visiting theme parks nowadays if I'd still develop the same interest in theme parks and how my perspective would differ.
I'd be really interested in seeing how everyone else here feels about when examining their own relationship with theme parks and the wider theme park community. So, how has your relationship with theme parks changed since you first became an enthusiast?