ext_110927 ([identity profile] donnad.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] arisia2008-01-21 12:14 pm

Arisia needs an attitude adjustment.

I am sure this will offend many people, and if it does I apologize, but I feel it has to be said.

I am disgusted and appalled at the rudeness and sense of entitlement I encountered from many of this year's staff members. And I am not the only person who noticed this.


An example...
I got up early on Sunday and went down to the staff den, I was there about 15 minutes before it was supposed to open, but the lovely staff den ladies let me in anyway. I told them I needed food so I could take some meds, but I could see they weren't quite ready yet and asked what I could do to help them get stuff put out. They gave me a couple things to do (and a danish so I could take my meds) and I went off to help. At 8:02AM a person walked in, I was just plugging in the kettle to heat water, sie wanted tea so I told hir it would be a few minutes while the water heated that I had just plugged it in. Hir response was very snobbishly "What do you mean the water is not hot yet?" I looked at hir and said well, you weren't here 10 minutes ago to plug it in. You want it faster, then feel free to come in early and help. These ladies were up just as late as the rest of us, they are doing their best." and I walked away.
Sure sie hadn't had hir morning caffiene yet, but that was no excuse to jump all over me because the kettle isn't hot. Sie had a coffee maker in hir room, there was nothing preventing hir from using it. This is just one instance I personally encountered in the den, I witnessed many more acts of rudeness directed at the ladies running the den and other staff members in the den, during my visits there. (I was not den staff, I was just helping out while waiting for the food to be ready.)

In general many staff members were surly, rude, and just basically snappish, many came across with the "I'm staff, I'm better than you" or the I'm staff therefore I'm entitled to [...] ahead of you" attitude.

In my opinion, If you want to be involved in Arisia, and deal with hundreds of fans and random people all weekend and can't keep a pleasant attitude, no matter how stressed you get, or how tired or overworked you are, perhaps you shouldn't be doing that job. It's like any job that involves dealing with the customer, you have to keep it all to yourself so as to not take it out on the unsuspecting and not offend. I was personally offended by many of the attitudes I encountered during the weekend by staff members I did not know and who didn't know me. There are places to let it all out, you shouldn't be snapping and rude to the attendees or they will stop coming and we cant have an Arisia without them.

I have a whole essay/rant about Arisia and it's changing dynamic as of late, How I feel it's strayed from it's original mission to be all inclusive and such, how it's more of a fannish lifestyle and polyamory based con now instead of Science Fiction and Fantasy based as originally intended, and how it really needs to be able to encompass all things equally*, but I will likely not subject people to it.

Personally with the next Arisia being the 20th, I would love to see the theme be "Back to Basics" or "Back to our Roots." But since I am just a lowly staff member, costumer and artist (who BTW has worked at every Arisia in some capacity to the point of never having to purchase a membership to Arisia yet) and really do not want any other responsibility right now, who am I to say what should happen?


*Of the panels offered pre-con, 47 "fannish lifestyle" panels this year and only 12 art, 12 filk, and 8 costume panels is not treating all things equally.

[personal profile] cheshyre 2008-01-22 12:54 am (UTC)(link)
And how crowded were they?

[I attended one of the panels and it seemed packed.]

[personal profile] ron_newman 2008-01-22 01:26 am (UTC)(link)
All were reasonably popular, though obviously Monday's was less so.

[personal profile] cheshyre 2008-01-22 07:02 pm (UTC)(link)
If sessions are crowded (and I went to the Sunday one on community) that suggests that the panels are a good match for the audience.

After all, if attendees really aren't interested in a panel, there's plenty of other things to do with that time.

Some of the comments in this thread regarding panels feel like the old canard about restaurants: "the food stinks -- and the portions are so small!"

Only in this case, it's "the panels suck, and they're so crowded!"

If the latter is true, that says more about the tastes of the person complaining rather than the panels themselves.

[identity profile] surrealestate.livejournal.com 2008-01-22 07:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I think that is an interesting rationale and one I discussed with people a bit this weekend.

Speaking as someone who is involved in various non-SF topics represented at Arisia (including, obviously, LJ), I started to feel like there were just too many of them. I think keeping them outside the core panel times is a good way to go, so that they don't take over slots that perhaps ought to go to items that are at least kinda related to SF/F.

The thing about attendance... say there was a "panel" that was just "hot chicks in skimpy outfits". I think that would be quite well-attended. As is most everything sex-related. But I don't think that in itself means a panel belongs. Many people watched the Pats game in various spaces (including me, when I wasn't running events), but that doesn't mean that should be an official program item that takes up space another panel could otherwise use, either.