So far as I can tell, cute dolls with a vaguely creepy facial expression.What in Walt's small world is a Labobo?
No KSF is Thursday-SundayWe're getting sprinkles now in coastal San Diego, and should get a quarter inch of rain by late afternoon. That's unheard of for the middle of October! Even for November.
I see on the weather that Anaheim has already received about an inch of rain today, and it's currently raining now. Knott's Berry Farm has a habit of cancelling the entire day and staying closed in this kind of rainy weather, but it's almost always in January through March.
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What do they do for Knott's Scary Farm where folks have already bought tickets and the season is sold out by now?!? I imagine they are forced to go on with the show and deal with water damage and suspended operations. But still, what a mess to have this much rain so early in the season! And 20 degrees below normal temps, to boot!
Was there supposed to be a Knott's Scary Farm tonight?
No KSF is Thursday-Sunday
The Hanging is definitely taste specific and invariably there are references to a ton of things that I either never knew about or simply no longer remember. I'm not going to say it was an A+ show, but I liked it more than the one during the 50th.As for KSF, the screamsters were on their A game all night, the zones were all great and the mazes were too not a single dud, the screamsters were aggressive. The new mazes didn’t really stand out this year (even the zoo after dark) they were solid but not amazing. That distinction went to Cinema Slasher, Widows, Mesmer (really sad to see that one go) and Calico. The Hanging wasn’t really funny (definitely an off year) but the fire dancer was a great addition to the Carnival show. The Mine Ride also for some reason wasn’t decorated this year (other then the rubber spider in the station.)
The mazes are all in warehouses and stay up all year. Even Mesmer under Excellerator stays up. Whatever they replace it with will be available from the train. The Scarezones might not have sliders but no reason monsters can't wonder around in the rain.Oh, phew!
I know the Knott's Scary Farm Ops team must work their behinds off this time of year to put on such a great show. When the rain started falling here in SD, a few minutes later I thought of the various theme park Ops teams in OC and LA who have big Halloween shows to produce.
They'll probably have a mess to clean up, but they'll get it done by Thursday I'm sure. Showmanship!
Wait, this is new and insightful to me. The mazes are up all year? Even like, Cinema Slasher?The mazes are all in warehouses and stay up all year. Even Mesmer under Excellerator stays up. Whatever they replace it with will be available from the train. The Scarezones might not have sliders but no reason monsters can't wonder around in the rain.
It's in the building that they don't use the rest of the year. The only one that comes down is Origins because they use the Red Barn for Santa Claus.Wait, this is new and insightful to me. The mazes are up all year? Even like, Cinema Slasher?
Except there is no mystery lodge show. I don't think the back half of the arcade where the VR thing was is used anymore. I think room 13 stays up. I don't see them taking down Widows, Bloody Mary or any of the backstage barns. If you look quickly you could see the Wax Works facade in years pass.I do think the props and everything get removed and put into storage after each season, but the physical buildings remain each year.
Cinema Slasher and Origins definitely come down completely, as those are used during the year. Parts of Grimoire also get removed because of the Mystery Lodge show. I'd be interested in how much they can reasonably leave up of Room 13 given its location, but maybe that lower part of the building is unused otherwise.
I don't know if I agree with you. I did it last night with the lights off. The line moves just as fast with or without the flash lights. Recycling the flash lights is quick because the entrance and exit are right next to each other. The line still moves quickly regardless of the posted wait says. It said 90 minutes last night and we got in after 20 minutes. Haunt is really pushing people through the ques. The flash lights are so dim that shining it in a scare actor's face is not going to hurt. You do miss the wide detail but reveling something as you walk by is scarier.Looks like The Zoo is officially lights out ONLY for the remainder of the season, which to me is a massive downgrade. It's devaluing one of the two new houses of the event in favor of a gimmick.
I wish I could tell you my impression of The Zoo; alas, I only got to go through once during my previous visit and tonight it was lights out even from second one of the Boofet early entry. So ultimately I can't really judge it one way or another, and that frustrates me.
I'm sure some people are pumped for this move, and I completely understand it logistically. But it really represents to me a failure on both a park level and a guest experience level.
It's a failure on a park level because for whatever reason they did not foresee that the lights off version would be dramatically more popular, something that presumably any child or teenager could have told them had they been asked. The only other lights off maze I'm aware of with SF (and I'm sure there were several) was Trick or Treat, which was already an established maze that was past its prime when it pivoted to the gimmick. Doing this during the first year a maze opens is just asking for trouble IMO. Reportedly there were evenings when the wait for the maze was an hour at 1 or 2 AM, which shocks me a lot less than it apparently did the Knott's team.
It's a failure on the guest experience level because this is a prime example of giving people what they think they want, but at the end of the day everyone ends up with a worse experience. It's a pitch that writes itself: Go through a maze with the lights off?!?!? COOL! Except:
1.) Now the line moves much slower because there are only so many flashlights, and guests will move slower through the maze because they have to work harder to see where they're going.
2.) The performers now have to deal with flashlights in their eyes all night, which will happen even if the guests aren't intentionally trying to shine their light in the wrong places.
3.) You can't as easily appreciate the design and detail that went into the maze because it's wasted on you in the dark. Even if you do catch something, you can't appreciate it in as much detail or for as long as you could have if the maze was lit appropriately.
When one of the two new mazes underwhelms and the other one is The Zoo, it doesn't really reflect all that well on Scary Farm.
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