Re: 150th Anniversary Cycle, and how it might impact our end of the Hobby
Just as a clarification, that sounds perfectly fine to me. Like I said in my earlier message, do what you love and it will all turn out fine. In any case, I don't suggest that people go to mega-events to convert the unwashed. I do suggest that a certain percentage of those who start at mega-events will want to step up. So the more people that go to those, the more will eventually end up at events with higher authenticity levels.
I make that statement because most fellows I know who go to more authentic events started with units that focus on the less authentic. And many of those folks continue with their original units.
If you eliminated all the "p/c/h" reenactors who started with a "mainstream" unit or remain with one, you would have just about enough people left to fill the standard exhibit case in the Smithsonian. So I don't rue the existence of mainstream units or events.
Again as a clarification of my posts and not as an argument with anything you've said -- I do rue posts that have more to do with hobby ideology than history. When I look at the numbers on this Forum and see 6,600 members, 2,400 of them "active," I suspect that the reason a good-sized p/c/h event would consider itself lucky to get a tenth of those has something to do with those kinds of posts.
Many of the 2,400 come here for good information and to see whether they would like to go to some of the advertised events. Maybe it's my rosy view of humanity in general, but I don't think most are holding back because they're posers, chicken, or insufficiently in love with history. Some of them at least are holding back because they have to deal with officious, opinionated people on their day jobs, and who needs that on the weekend?
The "mean campaigner" may be a myth in the field, but not on internet fora. Of course, that tells us something, too.
Originally posted by Pvt_Sullivan
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I make that statement because most fellows I know who go to more authentic events started with units that focus on the less authentic. And many of those folks continue with their original units.
If you eliminated all the "p/c/h" reenactors who started with a "mainstream" unit or remain with one, you would have just about enough people left to fill the standard exhibit case in the Smithsonian. So I don't rue the existence of mainstream units or events.
Again as a clarification of my posts and not as an argument with anything you've said -- I do rue posts that have more to do with hobby ideology than history. When I look at the numbers on this Forum and see 6,600 members, 2,400 of them "active," I suspect that the reason a good-sized p/c/h event would consider itself lucky to get a tenth of those has something to do with those kinds of posts.
Many of the 2,400 come here for good information and to see whether they would like to go to some of the advertised events. Maybe it's my rosy view of humanity in general, but I don't think most are holding back because they're posers, chicken, or insufficiently in love with history. Some of them at least are holding back because they have to deal with officious, opinionated people on their day jobs, and who needs that on the weekend?
The "mean campaigner" may be a myth in the field, but not on internet fora. Of course, that tells us something, too.
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