It is bad though for the staff who go assaulted. These are serious crimes that the victims will never forget. A lot of the scare actors are young people who want a career in acting. Most of them are incredibly excited when they get the part. They’re getting paid to act! I’ve seen a lot of comments online saying things like, “It’s Thorpe Park, what do people expect?”. Clearly the actors didn’t expect to get attacked and sexually assaulted or they wouldn’t have signed up for it.
These people are soft targets. Unlike permanent attractions, temporary scare mazes don’t normally have CCTV. The staff are on zero hour contracts and un-unionised. The criminal justice system is in disarray after a decade of austerity. Their employer is keen to protect its brand and doesn’t want the cost and hassle of dealing with the assaults, nor do they want to acknowledge a problem and face calls to stop selling alcohol etc. These are noisy environments with a lot of screaming, so it’s hard for the actors to get help. Opportunists think they can assault staff and if they do get caught, claim they jumped because they were scared. They can say they didn’t mean to punch the actor or grab the girl’s breasts.
Quite frankly I think it is as bad as it sounds and probably worse. In another topic there was a lot of criticism about a vlogger with a Youtube channel, because people didn’t think he did enough to protect girls from predators and support the victims. Here we’re talking about a multi-billion pound corporation with deep pockets. It’s not like this is the first year they’ve done Fright Nights. This happens every year.
Merlin have dished up a bland PR statement about taking these kinds of incidents seriously. How many staff were assaulted and what are they doing about it?