In December 2020, the organisers of the LA Comic Con want to open the doors of the Los Angeles Convention Center and allow thousands of people in for a nerd show. Thatâs in less than three months! What the hell!
Despite every other major (and minor show) across the planet deciding to simply take the year off and reconvene when there isnât a risk of illness and death, LA Comic Con is bored of this whole thing and would like to get back to normal, regardless of whether things are actually normal or not.
âOver the past six months, weâve been struggling with a very important question: âShould we even ATTEMPT to have L.A. Comic Con in 2020?â Chris DeMoulin, general manager of the con, told Los Angeles Daily News
âSince March, weâve been living in some version of a âLockdown/Safer at Homeâ world, trying hard to stay safe, hoping and praying for the health and safety of ourselves, our family, friends, neighbors and all of our fellow human beings. Weâre wearing masks, keeping socially distant, and remaining thankful for frontline workers, hospital personnel and everyone working hard to make a difference.
âAnd yet, we all yearn for just a little bit of normality, to reclaim some aspects of our lives pre-COVID.â
Chris, thatâs not how this works! You canât just make like the President of the United States and yearn all this away. Covid is still infecting millions of Americans and killing thousands.
Wearing cosplay for a weekend and getting some prints signed is absolutely not worth the risk of someone getting sick (and carrying severe symptoms for potentially months, if not the rest of their lives), getting their loved ones sick, and maybe even someone dying
For what itâs worth, the con is trying to sell this with a series of Covid-safe measures, like the fact theyâve rented the entire LA Convention Center space instead of the regular half, are selling half the number of tickets than usual (last yearâs event drew 100,000 people), and will spread out stalls and activities.
But this is an indoor con that is still aiming to attract 50,000 people, and no amount of precautions can make that sound like a safe idea, let alone a good one.