Trekonderoga is now a corporate run abomination of its former fan driven self. What a disappointment. After driving 5+ hours to fully indulge in an experience that was exemplary last year, I expected the same and even more this year. So confident was I that this would be a fun romp for my father, who introduced me to Trek at a young age, that we arrived as early as possible. Upon arrival, eager to bask in the ambience and sets of the Enterprise, we were halted at the entrance for badge inspection. Patrick Cawley interposes himself and declares that he has no idea when the next tour will start. OK, we wait while another female fan inquires if we can go through as many times as we want. Oh no, she is chastised, your badge only entitles you to attending the event and to 1, yes 1 walkthrough. Any subsequent tours are now $20 each and every time! Patrick clumsily snatches our badges and marks an X as an indication that we have expended our single tour pass. Then proceeds to demand that those there for photo ops identify themselves. I offer my badge for another seal of approval and ask if my father and I can be in the same shot for the captain's chair photo. At first he is vehement that it is not possible, lest they lose out on another $20 from us, then relents and reluctantly authorizes it.
I think back to last year, prior to the official partnership with CBS, when fans were roaming about and encouraged to walk about and take as many photos as we wanted-even in the Captain's chair, all the while partaking in vendor wares and speaking to the actors and writers. I must stress that there was previously NO LIMIT to the amount of times an attendee could go through the sets with a tour group. Now it is a museum and you are charged accordingly each and every time, which is not explicitly noted on the Trekonderoga website.
The tour itself was brisk and we were ushered along hastily with snide commentary, "can't stand on the bridge all day, next tour is coming through" "Think you took enough photos?" No we did not, and could not as 2 of the actor guests were chatting at the helm/nav console with a pet dog hindering shots from that vantage point and of the actual console and not one staff member requested they kindly vacate for our paying tour group. My father and I were not shelling out another $20 for more brusque treatment. Even when I was speaking to a colleague afterwards for a few minutes in the open area with Roddenberry's desk replica, sans typewriter, a volunteer looks us over and scowls, "I know him, but not sure why those two are there." Excuse me, but I am a paying fan who felt ripped off not only in terms of money but also in the overall experience. As we were hustled through, our guide comments that the thrum of Engineering could be heard and felt last year. No more, everything is muted not a sound effect heard as one is escorted through, save for the random red alert. Why not enliven the illusion of being on the ship with the commercially available sound effects on some loudspeakers? Spock's scanner light off, bridge carpet fraying in places, paint needing touch up in some of the sets, areas in various states of construction. For now $20 per walkthrough, one would expect more care to be invested in the presentation of this now monetary driven "enterprise." Our guide even lamented how awesome it was to view TOS episodes on the bridge at one time. Yes, I can attest to that myself having screened "Trouble With Tribbles" and "Mirror, Mirror" last year, but a pity for those Trekonderoga attendees who will never be party to that.
The photo op was an illogical debacle with the photographer standing by a camera set for shots, yet we were instructed to come back at 5:00 at the prescheduled time. Why not do it right after the tour is concluded with that particular group? Instead, one has to schedule it in and remember to return, since one dare not mill about too long on the grounds of this CBS "attraction." My father and I did not return for day 2 and I felt compelled to apologize to him for aggrandizing the experience of last year, only to have been subjected to the slings and arrows of this year's "con." 5+ hours of travel for approx. 20 min in the studio-cum-museum. I commend those fans who would be willing make the trek for such an abrupt and brief set tour bereft of any panache. Just know that your partnership with CBS has robbed the fans of experiencing the best fan run convention I had ever attended last year. I suspect that your CBS deal will be lucrative for a time, but in the end it pales so much in comparison with the feeling of walking about leisurely on the Starship Enterprise with a tight knit group of fans passionate about Star Trek as it was once upon a time. All good things...
I think back to last year, prior to the official partnership with CBS, when fans were roaming about and encouraged to walk about and take as many photos as we wanted-even in the Captain's chair, all the while partaking in vendor wares and speaking to the actors and writers. I must stress that there was previously NO LIMIT to the amount of times an attendee could go through the sets with a tour group. Now it is a museum and you are charged accordingly each and every time, which is not explicitly noted on the Trekonderoga website.
The tour itself was brisk and we were ushered along hastily with snide commentary, "can't stand on the bridge all day, next tour is coming through" "Think you took enough photos?" No we did not, and could not as 2 of the actor guests were chatting at the helm/nav console with a pet dog hindering shots from that vantage point and of the actual console and not one staff member requested they kindly vacate for our paying tour group. My father and I were not shelling out another $20 for more brusque treatment. Even when I was speaking to a colleague afterwards for a few minutes in the open area with Roddenberry's desk replica, sans typewriter, a volunteer looks us over and scowls, "I know him, but not sure why those two are there." Excuse me, but I am a paying fan who felt ripped off not only in terms of money but also in the overall experience. As we were hustled through, our guide comments that the thrum of Engineering could be heard and felt last year. No more, everything is muted not a sound effect heard as one is escorted through, save for the random red alert. Why not enliven the illusion of being on the ship with the commercially available sound effects on some loudspeakers? Spock's scanner light off, bridge carpet fraying in places, paint needing touch up in some of the sets, areas in various states of construction. For now $20 per walkthrough, one would expect more care to be invested in the presentation of this now monetary driven "enterprise." Our guide even lamented how awesome it was to view TOS episodes on the bridge at one time. Yes, I can attest to that myself having screened "Trouble With Tribbles" and "Mirror, Mirror" last year, but a pity for those Trekonderoga attendees who will never be party to that.
The photo op was an illogical debacle with the photographer standing by a camera set for shots, yet we were instructed to come back at 5:00 at the prescheduled time. Why not do it right after the tour is concluded with that particular group? Instead, one has to schedule it in and remember to return, since one dare not mill about too long on the grounds of this CBS "attraction." My father and I did not return for day 2 and I felt compelled to apologize to him for aggrandizing the experience of last year, only to have been subjected to the slings and arrows of this year's "con." 5+ hours of travel for approx. 20 min in the studio-cum-museum. I commend those fans who would be willing make the trek for such an abrupt and brief set tour bereft of any panache. Just know that your partnership with CBS has robbed the fans of experiencing the best fan run convention I had ever attended last year. I suspect that your CBS deal will be lucrative for a time, but in the end it pales so much in comparison with the feeling of walking about leisurely on the Starship Enterprise with a tight knit group of fans passionate about Star Trek as it was once upon a time. All good things...