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Press & Articles
Bats Day in the Fun Park has been covered by newspapers, magazines websites, radio and tv. This event that only started back in 1999,
it has grown that it is known all over the world. All press inquiries should be directed to press@batsday.net
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Kindred Spirits? (Karen Tapia-Andersen
/ LAT)
Los Angeles Time - August 25th, 2003
Getting in Touch With Their
Dark Sides -- in a Happy Way
At Bats Day in the Fun Park, nearly 1,000 Goth
devotees take to Disneyland, mixing their subculture and family life.
By Claire Luna, Times Staff Writer
It really must be the happiest place on Earth,
when even Goths can't stop smiling.
In what has become an annual ritual, nearly 1,000
black-clad, death-rocker types from around the country invaded Disneyland
on Sunday for what organizers officially bill as Bats Day in the Fun
Park.
Attendees simply call it Goth Day. The event
started five years ago with about 90 people going to Disneyland for
the simple irony - a morose crowd in a place best known for making people
happy.
Now, with so many Goths having children or just
wanting to embrace their inner child, the annual gathering has taken
off in an overlap of the subculture and family life.
For the clueless, or those who mistakenly think
being Goth means wearing trench coats and worshiping the devil, a crash
course on the subculture, which originated in the 1980s: Gothness is
about appreciating darkness - whether in music, literature, clothing
or a theme park ride.
The sweltering August day
produced bizarre scenes:
o In the parking lot, shiny hearses peeking
out from the rows of minivans.
o Six Goth men and women lining up to take
pictures with Mary Poppins, then trotting to Pinocchio's Daring
Adventure. Watching the black-clad cluster approach, one wide-eyed
little girl looked at her mom. "I didn't know this was supposed
to be a scary ride," she said. "Goodie."
o Santa Monica hair salon manager Ven Faiz,
23, plopping a set of Mickey Mouse ears over her purplish-black
bob without a hint of irony.
o In the restroom near New Orleans Square,
a woman in a black, patent-leather cat suit gushing over Lyn Harton's
fuchsia dreadlocks as tourists in bright-colored T-shirts and
shorts waited in line. Half an hour later, Harton, 32, and friend
Jennifer Frey, 29, rode down Main Street in a red carriage, waving
with beauty queen precision.
The event is held now because the park
has longer hours in summer and the last Sunday in August is the
first non-blackout day for season ticket holders. And you'd be
surprised how many Southern California Goths have annual passes,
said San Diego Web designer Joey Large, 33.
"Most of the Goths I hang out with are
not dreary people," she said. "They're pretty perky."
Large brought her 7-year-old daughter,
Zoe. The freckled, blue-eyed girl had her dyed-red hair in pigtails
just like Mommy's, along with a black shirt and skirt trimmed
with patent leather.
The disconnect between Goths and Disney isn't
as great as one might think, Large said, adding that Disney has a lot
of evil - think Pirates of the Caribbean, the "Nightmare Before Christmas"
movie or Maleficent, Sleeping Beauty's nemesis.
But Sunday, Goth-filled boats floated through
the kitschy "It's a Small World," and there were black blurs on the
spinning teacups.
On Sunday, at least, Disneyland was a Goth world
after all.
Copyright 2003 Los Angeles Times |
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Having Fun (Karen
Tapia-Andersen / LAT) |

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