Bad Idea #3 - Under The Rainbow Fest
Apr. 28th, 2008 09:10 amI like to read LiveJournal first thing in the morning, before I'm really functionally awake. In part, this is so I can muzzily blow past posts about things I'm not interested in, and not feel too bad about it, but in larger part, this is so that I can be inspired by the weird stuff you guys post before my internal bad-idea detection module has booted up. This way, I can generate a lot of support for a bad idea before the brain's censor shuts it down.
So anyway, today I was looking at
jackbabalon_23's pictures of the Inman Park Parade in Atlanta. You know how I love a parade. And this one somehow, miraculously, features people in fetishwear, giant bunnies, people carrying signs reading "God Bless Our Crackhouse", and what looks like middle school marching bands. So I was thinking, "My gods, what kind of organization puts this thing on? How do they talk all of these different people into being in the parade together?". I don't know the answer, but my brain took that line of reasoning, attempted to adapt it to my own city, and came up with something a little different.
So here's the thing. You think "Kansas City", and you think "Ah, yes, barbecue, the Chiefs, the Royals, jazz and blues, and a lot of cornfed whitebread types who are ten years behind the rest of the country." Or at least I did, when I moved here. I thought, well, I'll have a job, but I'll be bored shitless most of the time, good thing I have the internet.
Of course, in Real Life, Kansas City is a lot more interesting than I thought it would be. Now that I've lived here 7 years, I've discovered that we have a thriving pagan community, a Buddhist temple, a gay rodeo, 4 roller derby teams, at least a dozen community theater companies, at least two burlesque troupes (and one burlesque school), an organic food circle, scads of good local bands, enough rockabillies to support a radio program and a hair salon, at least two BDSM societies, a chapter of Friends of Jung, a tribe of burners, car clubs, chess clubs, a house rabbit society, an OTO oasis, a swingers' club, a science fiction writers' group, two or three tribal dance studios, a club for people who convert gas cars to electric motors... and so on and so forth. In short, there's a lot of stuff to do here, but a lot of it is sort of under the radar. You have to look for it. You have to know where to go.
So I was thinking it would be cool to put together a weekend festival, say in Theis Park, that would answer the question "What is there to do in Kansas City besides eat barbecue and watch the Royals lose?". We'd get all of those organizations mentioned above to come out and have a table, talk to people about what they do and how people could come and do it with them. Anybody who had an activity to promote could come, provided that the activity was participatory, wasn't already massively sponsored and promoted, and didn't involve violence against people who didn't consent to violence against them (because I want the BDSM'ers and the roller derby!). Anybody who had a club, a society, a class, or suchlike would be welcome. I'm thinking even if your activity was "come hang out at my house and play Rock Band" or "join the Pirate v. Ninja Olympics", that would be okay. Selling stuff from your space would be okay, but primarily it would be to promote things that you do. Volunteer-based organizations could come and promote their volunteer opportunities, because that's something to do, right?
What do you think?
So anyway, today I was looking at
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
So here's the thing. You think "Kansas City", and you think "Ah, yes, barbecue, the Chiefs, the Royals, jazz and blues, and a lot of cornfed whitebread types who are ten years behind the rest of the country." Or at least I did, when I moved here. I thought, well, I'll have a job, but I'll be bored shitless most of the time, good thing I have the internet.
Of course, in Real Life, Kansas City is a lot more interesting than I thought it would be. Now that I've lived here 7 years, I've discovered that we have a thriving pagan community, a Buddhist temple, a gay rodeo, 4 roller derby teams, at least a dozen community theater companies, at least two burlesque troupes (and one burlesque school), an organic food circle, scads of good local bands, enough rockabillies to support a radio program and a hair salon, at least two BDSM societies, a chapter of Friends of Jung, a tribe of burners, car clubs, chess clubs, a house rabbit society, an OTO oasis, a swingers' club, a science fiction writers' group, two or three tribal dance studios, a club for people who convert gas cars to electric motors... and so on and so forth. In short, there's a lot of stuff to do here, but a lot of it is sort of under the radar. You have to look for it. You have to know where to go.
So I was thinking it would be cool to put together a weekend festival, say in Theis Park, that would answer the question "What is there to do in Kansas City besides eat barbecue and watch the Royals lose?". We'd get all of those organizations mentioned above to come out and have a table, talk to people about what they do and how people could come and do it with them. Anybody who had an activity to promote could come, provided that the activity was participatory, wasn't already massively sponsored and promoted, and didn't involve violence against people who didn't consent to violence against them (because I want the BDSM'ers and the roller derby!). Anybody who had a club, a society, a class, or suchlike would be welcome. I'm thinking even if your activity was "come hang out at my house and play Rock Band" or "join the Pirate v. Ninja Olympics", that would be okay. Selling stuff from your space would be okay, but primarily it would be to promote things that you do. Volunteer-based organizations could come and promote their volunteer opportunities, because that's something to do, right?
What do you think?