Difference between revisions of "Ticket"
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A '''''ticket''''' is something you do not buy to attend a [[convention]]. A [[fan]] pays for a ''[[membership]]'' in an [[sf convention]] to help cover its costs, because the [[fannish]] way is to be an active participant in the [[sf community]], not a passive consumer of entertainment. (A ticket gets you into a show as audience; cons are not shows and their members are not audience.) | A '''''ticket''''' is something you do not buy to attend a [[convention]]. A [[fan]] pays for a ''[[membership]]'' in an [[sf convention]] to help cover its costs, because the [[fannish]] way is to be an active participant in the [[sf community]], not a passive consumer of entertainment. (A ticket gets you into a show as audience; cons are not shows and their members are not audience.) | ||
− | '''"Tickets? We don't need no stinking tickets!"''' a [[fannish]] catchphrase, reflects this philosophy, although [[fans]]' use of this misquote from the 1927 novel ''The Treasure of the Sierra Madre'' by B. Traven, and subsequent, 1948 film, stems from an unappreciated effort to control [[masquerade]] seating at a [[Worldcon]]. | + | '''"Tickets? We don't need no stinking tickets!"''' a [[fannish]] [[catchphrase]], reflects this philosophy, although [[fans]]' use of this misquote from the 1927 novel ''The Treasure of the Sierra Madre'' by B. Traven, and subsequent, 1948 film, stems from an unappreciated effort to control [[masquerade]] seating at a [[Worldcon]]. |
{{conrunning}} | {{conrunning}} | ||
[[Category:abomination]] | [[Category:abomination]] |
Revision as of 16:39, 28 July 2020
A ticket is something you do not buy to attend a convention. A fan pays for a membership in an sf convention to help cover its costs, because the fannish way is to be an active participant in the sf community, not a passive consumer of entertainment. (A ticket gets you into a show as audience; cons are not shows and their members are not audience.)
"Tickets? We don't need no stinking tickets!" a fannish catchphrase, reflects this philosophy, although fans' use of this misquote from the 1927 novel The Treasure of the Sierra Madre by B. Traven, and subsequent, 1948 film, stems from an unappreciated effort to control masquerade seating at a Worldcon.
Conrunning |
This is a conrunning page. |