SLCC is another new (to us) convention! This is the second year of the con; last year made records as the biggest year for a debut convention ever! Pretty impressive!
We arrived in Salt Lake City on Thursday, staying at a hotel next to the convention center with a great view from our room! On our way to the hotel, we saw the line going into the convention center, and figured that we would relax a bit and have dinner, and let the crowd dissipate so that we could waltz right in and check out the exhibit hall for a while. So we checked into our hotel, had a nice dinner at Red Rock Brewery down the street, and then went over. The line was still long, but there were two separate ones, one for for regular attendees and the other for people with gold passes, which we had. For some reason that no one could really explain, they stopped the Gold Pass line, while continuing with the regular attendee line - for like 2 hours. A guy in line behind us actually got out of our line, went into the regular line, and got through before we had even started moving again. It was totally ridiculous and a sour start to the weekend. We did eventually get through the line and got our passes, but by then the exhibit hall had closed, so we didn't get to do anything.
A real live owl! |
Saturday! The last day of the show, unlike most cons that also have Sunday. I guess it's the lord's day, and this is probably the lord's town, so no sinful cons on Sundays!
Upstairs from the exhibit hall, they had an area dedicated to a few rows of arcade games! We played Captain America and the Avengers until we beat the final boss. I played Iron Man and hit those buttons until my fingers were sore!
Later, we went to a panel featuring Simon Helberg from Big Bang Theory. This panel was more of a traditional moderated one with Q&A. Most of which, to be totally honest, sucked. I guess they didn't take a page from San Diego Comic Con, and didn't screen the questions before they were asked, leading to a lot of annoying 'Can I have a hug?" questions, questions that had already been asked, and questions that were just plain lame. I'm gonna be harsh for a second and say that the audiences in SLCC seemed to be a bit less... savvy... about how things work. Like, someone asked if Simon could have Howard and Bernadette have a baby on the show - as if the actors just show up and make things up themselves. These kinds of questions make for an awkward moment (and wasted time) as the actor then has to explain how writers and actors and television works. Also, there were a ton of questions from little kids. Is TBBT really a show for small children?? You know, it's cute maybe once, but when every other question is a small child, it gets old fast. SLCC definitely needs to step up it's game, Q&A-wise.
Clearly I needed a drink after all that, so we hit up Bourbon House for some bourbon, and some delish bacon wrapped jalapeno tator tots! We then bar hopped over to The Red Door, which had some very clever Comic Con themed cocktails!
All in all, Salt Lake Comic Con was a decent show. It definitely has some growing pains, and some improvements to make. Does it compare to San Diego Comic Con, though? No, it doesn't, and they should stop saying that it does, and that SLCC is for quote-unquote real fans. Can't we all just get along? Hopefully, they will take a page from SDCC and learn from mistakes year-over-year. SDCC makes a huge effort to do that, and it is always noticeable that when something isn't working one year, they do something to improve upon that the next. Hopefully, SLCC comes back next year bigger and better (maybe not bigger; it's already pretty huge).
Some goodies I purchased |
I am Balloon Groot. |
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