Is it time to give up on the Lakeshore?
I don’t mean move the parade from the Lakeshore, absolutely,
Carnival belongs on city streets the same as ALL other parades. But we know
that no downtown BIA (business improvement association) wants US on THEIR street,
thus, it’s not happening.
We are trying to secure a huge stretch of hi-way and it’s
pointless. We can’t lock the fences together for safety reasons, we don’t have
the budget to put cops along the entire route, and the people who are storming
are determined to circumvent any control.
I think the FMC and TMBA have accepted this and are in the
process of giving up on the Lakeshore.
What was the point of
the wristbands?
In the heat of the afternoon when the masses wake up, and
reach downtown, and decide they are going to storm the route, everyone knows
that you can’t stop them. We spend hundreds of thousands of dollars erecting
fences that they just open and walk through. Is it pointless? Not exactly,
there are lots of people who stay behind the fence, but then again, those
people would be inclined to stand orderly on the sidewalk even if there was no
fence. They understand it’s a parade.
I think management decided they are going to control what
they can: the Exhibition grounds. The EX is already setup to be locked down.
There are easily defendable boarders with only a few points in and out. They
can charge admission, to get some much needed revenue and it’s owned by the
city.
So, you have to let masqueraders, media, volunteers, big pappys
and band entourages in for free … then you can charge everyone else. How does
the gateman tell who belongs to these free groups? We’ll give them a wrist
band.
This works well, you can have a nice controlled environment
where masqueraders can go un-molested and photographers can take decent pics
someplace other than the judging point (see our picture improvement over last year?
(It wasn't because Tony showed me how to use my camera) :)
Big mas isn’t trampled, we can set up fancy cabanas for the
well heeled, we can make some money and the mas bands can drastically curtail
their security budget. Did you notice the reduction in paid band security and
the absence of ropes or plastic fencing?
And for the masqueraders who feel they can hold their own
with the sweaty masses, they are free to leave the confines of the CNE and
continue down the Lakeshore. There is no more Hamilton or Barrie, so who cares
if your $500 frontline costume gets crushed? What were you going to do, hang it
on your bedroom wall?, take it to Miami? (tongue planted firmly in cheek)
Allyuh, don’t get me wrong, I’m actually not criticizing
management. If you can’t control the Lakeshore and the PEOPLE want a giant
blocko, then give it to them. Carnival is a fluid thing that morphs to reflect the
society it is portraying. It’s not Trinidad, Barbados, Brazil or even 1980’s
Toronto. We have to recognize the new reality. We have hundreds of thousands of
visitors and 2nd or 3rd generation Canadians who have no
understanding of, or interest in playing mas or spectating. They want to party
on the road.
It’s not just me
getting old and crotchety, shaking my fist at the youn’uns. In the days
following the parade there was this facebook group that formed about bringing a
change to the parade. They have gotten about 300 members in 3 days and it is largely
made of masqueraders who were not satisfied with their road experience.
I don’t pretend to speak for the group or take credit for
their ideas. A lot of them liked the CNE experience and the longer route within
its walls. If we could make this longer and spend more time there, perhaps make
another circle, I think that would go over well. You could also expand the
entertainment at the bandshell to occupy the masqueraders who don’t want to
continue onto the Lakeshore and to entice more paying spectators into the CNE.
Once the parade within the Exhibition grounds is over, the
music trucks could proceed down the Lakeshore along with any masqueraders who
want to join them and let the street party begin.
Whether you want to see it or not, that is what is happening
after 3 or 4 pm anyway.
The bands can decide whether they want to send their
big mas down the road. They just have to send the music trucks, and a few hard
core winer girls, that will keep the crowds satisfied.
I heard that 5 bands didn’t make it onto the Lakeshore this
year. It’s not really as bad as it was in previous years, they didn’t miss
much. In the past, not making it onto the road meant you were standing around
all day and never got to parade. This year, they paraded and were judged in the
CNE and didn’t get to be overrun on the Lakeshore.
If we can make the EX jump up, into a 3 or 4 hour circuit
maybe that is enough. At the end you have some entertainment in the CNE or you
can go continue on the Lakeshore. Turn the CNE into a smaller more intimate
experience, dare I say more like what Barrie was before they ran into an
unwelcoming city council. At the same time, the masses who we still want to
attend, can be entertained on the Lakeshore by music trucks and all the food
vendors.
There may not even be any need for all that fencing on the
Lakeshore, we can take the money that is going to the fence company and use it
to secure the CNE and add to the entertainment lineup.
As we can get more people paying to enter the CNE, we can
drop the prices, as $20 is really too high. I understand that not that many
people are paying yet, but when we start to get a crowd we will need to reduce that
price. We really are not trying to separate the people based on finances, we are
looking to segregate based on intentions. Especially for the youth the price
has to be minimal.
We want the people
who will watch the mas in the EX, and the people who insist on crowding the bands
to stay on the Lakeshore.