Wizard World Whiplash
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The Good
Wizard World packed in some star power this year with guests such as Dexter's Jennifer Carpenter, Vampire Diaries' Ian Somerhalder, Star Trek's Nichelle Nichols, Sean Gunn and Michael Rooker from Guardians of the Galaxy and The Weasley Twins from Harry Potter, James and Oliver Phelps to name just a few.
Overall the show was super kid friendly with magicians, balloon artists, face painting, and meet and greets with Disney characters and superheroes. In fact there was an entire Kids Zone designated for kids programming during the entirety of the con.
The cosplay was on point. I saw everything from The Princess Bride, to Star Wars, to favorite DC and Marvel Superheroes and even caught a glimpse of the Sanderson sisters from Hocus Pocus. The cosplayers came out to have fun and were always happy to snap a photo with you.
The Bad
Numbers overall were down this year. Friday afternoon seemed like a ghost town compared to previous cons. On the plus side, it meant short wait times for autographs during that time. Things picked up on Saturday, but the general feel of the con wasn't the same electric energy it's been in the past.
The Ugly
There were some huge missteps this year. Half the guest list canceled and the lineup wasn't finalized until a day or two before the con. Fans were left confused about reimbursements and having to repurchase photo ops and autographs because of the constant changing guest list. It was enough to give participants whiplash.
The vendor floor was about a quarter of what it has been in the past. There were some amazing artists and even classic TV and movie vehicles to see as well as authors selling books. However, there was a distinct lack of merchandise in general. There were only a couple comic vendors and one or two t-shirt booths. There wasn't much to look at on the show floor. After an hour or two, I'd seen the whole floor twice over and was sick of it.
The number of panels was also down from previous years, so there was limited choices on what to attend. This was due in part to the small number of celebrities in attendance as well as fewer panels on fandom, popular TV shows/movies and other nerd culture that's typically explored.