If you have ever thought “The one thing that would improve Montreal is more people in Starfleet uniforms,” you would have been mightily pleased by this year’s Worldcon. Possibly the funniest thing about the con was that it was held in a really staid part of town, at a convention centre that normally hosts business and professional conferences; I think I must have had a sign on my back that said “Normal-looking guy,” because I can’t count how many locals stopped me to ask just what the heck was going on.
Now, my experience with cons is limited, but I can tell you this: compared to the big comic conventions, Worldcon is very low-key. There’s certainly no Hollywood presence, no movie premieres of sneak previews, nobody who’s famous outside the field and no booth babes (there was a woman dressed up as Psylocke at one booth, but since I later saw her still in costume in the subway I’m pretty sure she was there of her own volition.) In fact, costumes on the whole were fairly scarce, and most of them turned out to belong to people who were participants in the Masquerade (though many of those wore their costumes for the rest of the con as well.) The Masquerade was interesting because almost all of the costumes were drawn from comics, TV, video games and anime, none of which had any presence at the con at all — the focus was almost entirely on written SF, which made the Klingon guys seem a little out of place.
Costumes aside, there are a number of identifiable con “looks”:
Dressed for comfort: shorts, T-shirts and either sneakers or sandals were definitely the most common look. “Dress like you’re at home” was this crowd’s motto (or in a few cases, “Dress like you’re at the beach”) and in a few cases people seemed to actively reject the idea that other people will see what you wear. To be fair, it’s a long con — four days if you go to the whole thing — and the temperature at the convention centre never dropped much below “uncomfortably warm.”
Dressed up: a fair number of the attendees, mostly ambitious semi-pros like me, were treating the con as a business opportunity and dressed accordingly. Of course given the overall level of formality, “dressing up” meant pretty much what “business casual” would anywhere else — a buttoned shirt, chinos and shoes, the first two preferably recently ironed. This had the drawback of being extremely hot at times but had the advantage of letting you feel superior to people around you.
Hawaiian shirt: if there is a single definitive Worldcon uniform, it is the Hawaiian shirt. This was most common among pros who had nothing to prove, and its advantages are obvious: you can wear something comfortable and colourful without looking shleppy. It beats dressing up as a way of getting into the fan aesthetic (a good Hawaiian shirt is halfway to a costume) but allows you to get away with wearing sandals if you absolutely have to.
In terms of content, Worldcon is about equal parts programming and parties. The programming, while often interesting, suffers a bit from the unusually high number of pros and semi-pros relative to pure fans, so during panels the aspiring writers get annoyed at the amount of time that’s spent fielding fan questions and the fans get annoyed at the time spent on writing questions. There’s entertainment programming as well, but aside from the Masquerade it’s pretty much roll-your-own stuff: small screenings of movies, staged readings of plays and radio dramas as well as filking, which sounds like a disgusting sexual perversion but in fact is.
From my perspective as a Worldcon newbie, the most surprising thing was definitely the degree to which people are there to party. It’s sort of like an SF fan’s dream of high school: parties every night where everybody wants to talk about science fiction. (You certainly get the sense that there are some people for whom conventions are their main arena for socializing.) I can’t deny the appeal of that: for two nights and three days, this nerd was at home.
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I was at the Chicago Comic Con this past weekend. I spent $900 in comics and figures, took pictures of various people in costume and got to shake Chris Yost’s hand.
It was fun and I’m greatly looking forward to Chicago TARDIS in November.
Worldcon varies depending on the host city, my understanding is that Anticipation was relatively small and the facilities spread out. Denvention suffered from the same problem. Also, when people have to fly out you’re likely to have fewer costumes overall.
I was bummed to have to miss it, and won’t be able to make it to Australia either. But Worldcon is generally great fun and I can’t wait for Reno in 2011.
Well, given that the title says you didn’t see Neil Gaiman, you missed when I got him to wear a (non-black) Hawaiian shirt during my interview of him.
Yes, there were pictures, which you can find by doing the obvious web searches.
I have found that for dressing to look good in hot weather, nothing beats linen. A good pair of linen pants and a short-sleeved linen button-up shirt will keep you about as cool as a tank top and cargo pants will, but you will look infinitely swankier.
Also, I have decided that when I rule the world, unless you have less than 5% body fat, it will be illegal for any male to tuck his shirt into his shorts, because it makes you look a) fatter and b) like a tool. No fines or anything, but violators will be subject to immediate untucking and a penalty wedgie for repeat offenses.
Anyone wearing socks with sandals will have the offending limbs amputated; anyone wearing dark socks with shorts will be summarily executed for crimes against fashion.
I think this pretty much perpetually.
Tom, I tried the obvious Google Image searches but didn’t see it; care to post a link?
Speaking as one of the chief offenders in the “pros in Hawaiian shirts and sandals” department, erm, yes. Bang on!
k2: Hey, piss off. The reason I wear socks with sandals is because they’re easier to put on in a hurry then any other shoe.
Hawaiian shirts are pretty much standard shleppy. It’s better than sweats and flip-flops, but it’s hard to look spiffy in a Hawaiian shirt.
Another source for feelings of superiority: calling them “Chinos” instead of khakis. I mean, hey, it works for Armani suits, right?
Tom: I didn’t see that, and I’m sorry I did. As I said, I think Hawaiian shirts make good con attire for a number of reasons, and a black one for Neil is perfect. (PS, did you participate in “Win Rob Sawyer’s Money”? I seem to remember you being a trivia maven in the rac.misc days…)
K2: I was wearing linen two of the three days, but it was still hot.
HitTheTargets: I assume you caught the note of self-mockery in that section, though any connotation with “chinos” was unintentional — that’s just what I hear them called. (Perhaps a Canadianism?)
Jay: Maybe next year you can have an exhibit next to David Hartwell’s ties…
@mjohnson – It’s been discussed. Seriously.
[…] How I spent three days at Worldcon and never saw Neil Gaiman — I draw your attention to this remark by the Mighty God King: If there is a single definitive Worldcon uniform, it is the Hawaiian shirt. This was most common among pros who had nothing to prove Hahahahah. (Thanks to the_flea_king.) […]
Yep, too many bloggers now.
Hmm, I certainly wouldn’t characterize the convention as being too warm…hell, I kept my hoodie with me at all times and never would have considered shorts! That might have something to do with acclimatization to highs here in Dallas being in the upper 30s, right now…
Anyway, I wore jeans or cargo pants and t-shirts at the convention. For the parties I might throw on a button down as an overshirt. Oh, and I was in my Asha’man coat a couple of times, but I wear that around anyway.
For me, the convention is mostly about the panels. I love it. It’s like attending an intensive SF training course at an elite SF university. My panel reports are all going up on <a href="http://skwidly.livejournal.com/"my LJ, for the curious. The parties have their moments, but, well…I’m used to something a bit livelier. Usually with music, and dancing, and possibly fire-spinning.
Gah, forgive my omission of the closing HTML, there. My Panel Reports. Which get posted two-a-day or so, and should be done with sometime next week.