Jump to content

Inferno

Members
  • Posts

    565
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    23

Blog Entries posted by Inferno

  1. Inferno

    Remembering series
    As we approach the start of the 2022 season, I thought I'd do a few blog post ramblings on some nostalgic Thorpe memories I have.
     
    Let's start off with Dr Pepper Sun Scream!
     

     
    Launching way back in 2009 when Saw opened, Sun Scream ran every year for many summers at the park, bringing live music, silent discos, stunt displays, beatboxing, sideshows and festival vibes.
     
    In reality, Sun Scream wasn't much in terms of an event, starting off as simply a stunt show and some yellow t-shirts for the rides staff, it evolved as the years went on and new things were tried, but I do have a lot of good memories from my annual mid-summer visits in the sunny weather!
     
     
    The amazing Stunt Show
     
    The standout feature of Sun Scream for me was the incredible stunt show in the Arena in the centre of the park.
    This was one of the few times during the season that the Arena was actually used, but it was used well!
    I remember sitting in the stands watching the Red Bull Stuntriders going over jumps and performing in the small area, and it was very impressive! I do remember one year one of the riders came off his motorbike during one of the performances, and was luckily ok, but the show was very good and (other than fright nights and Thorpe Blast) was probably the best 'show' the park has ever put on in my opinion, even in later years when it was replaced by a BMX display team.
     
     
    Other activities
     
    There were some less than ideal 'activities' as part of Sun Scream..
    I distinctly remember a silent disco was tried one year in the Colossus queue line.
    At a point early in the queue, everyone was offered a pair of wireless headphones which played music for everyone to jam to in the queue.
    The thing is, in a typically British fashion, very few people actually took the headphones, and even fewer took part in the disco.
    A nice idea, but didn't really work in reality.
    I also remember several performances, like a beatboxer one year.. Again, nice idea, but the crowd in front of the stage (in front of X) never really grew to more than about 10 people at any time despite the best efforts of the staff pulling people in.
     
     
    Late opening
     
    One of the great things about Sun Scream was the 8PM closing time.
    Being summer, this didn't really allow for night rides, but it was 'dusk' at least towards the end, and on the warm summer evenings it was great to stay late in the park after the crowds left.
    This no doubt paved the way for the Summer Nights event that followed years later.
     
     
    That 'Thorpe Park feeling' was at its strongest
     
    I'm not sure about what it was about Thorpe in the 2009 - 2012 period, but for me that was when Thorpe was at its absolute best.
    I always remember driving home from Thorpe, especially in the summer, with "that Thorpe Park feeling".
    I can't describe it, but it's the feeling you get when you've had a great day, you're knackered, aching and have a fuzzy head, your hair is a mess, and you stink... But you can't wait to go back and do it all again, preferably tomorrow.
    Sun Scream brought this feeling more than ever - it was such a positive and lively event, the sun was nearly always shining, the staff were lively and happy, and the park was always on top form.
    We also had a new ride in Saw, and The Swarm was under construction. The park was alive in this period and at its best.
     
     
    Dr Pepper
     
    Dr Pepper was the sponsor for Sun Scream, and as such during the event the staff handed out free little Dr Pepper cans.
    Because of this, I always associate the taste and smell of Dr Pepper with Thorpe Park, and every time I have it even all these years later, it takes me right back to "the good days" at Thorpe.
     
     
    __________
     
    Does anyone have any memories of Sun Scream?
  2. Inferno
    As we approach the start of the 2022 season, I thought I'd do a few blog post ramblings on some nostalgic Thorpe memories I have.
     
    I started off with Dr Pepper Sun Scream, now it's time for Brave it Alone back when it opened in 2013...
     
    I have hazy memories about this, but recently I found an old post I made after I experienced it and thought I'd spruce it up a bit and share!
     
    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
     
    We did Cabin in the Woods way back on Sunday 13th October 2013, when the experience was brand new (and in my opinion at its best!)

    So... Here's what happened!

    After park closing at 10 pm, we met the Director, his assistant, and some park managers along with the other 'brave-it-aloners' at the bar area in Clypso BBQ, where we were read a very long and elaborate warning speech while having a drink.
    We then had to sign an agreement that stated that 'you are prepared for anything to happen' and that 'TP takes no responsibility for anything', blah blah...

    After around 20 minutes, when the guests had all left the park, the 10 or so of us were then given one of the classic "Don't wet yourself" ponchos to protect clothes from fake blood, dirt, facepaint and bodily fluids (yep, really).

    We were then split up and were walked with a park manager to our chosen mazes, where we were asked further questions such as "are you aware that literally anything could happen in here", and "please you must tell us now if you have any reason to not experience this"... 
    At this point the nerves were setting in - why did these warnings keep coming up? What on earth was going to happen inside?

    After waiting outside the cabin door for a few moments listening to the actors inside, I stepped in to the cabin's first room, the one with the 4 doors, which was brightly lit. I was alone. Suddenly the lights turn off for a second, then back on, but now there are 2 actors standing right in my face!
    Do any of you remember the guy who played Les Coogan back in 2011/2012? Well I had asked him if he's still known as Les Coogan earlier in the day, But I'll come back to that in a minute.
    'Les' pushed me backwards in to a chair in the corner of the room, where I was screamed at and told of the horrors I was about to see. The chair was then tipped backwards and I was led on my back!
    This was amazingly intense. The interrogation continued.
    The actors were hillbillies of some sort, so there was... Umm... dribble.... lol!
    I was then told to crawl in to the next room.

    Here I was left alone with a single actor who after a while forced me to 'kiss the moose' on the wall, similar to the film. Interrogation went on for a couple of minutes, lights flashed on and off, the actor started getting crazy bouncing off the walls, when my friend crawled in to the room with an actor riding on his back! (I did laugh at this!) I snuck out in to the next room at this point...

    This room had a person in a plain white mask, and was one of the most surreal parts. She forced me against a wall and slithered around me... very odd! The lights then went out, flashed back on, revealing her mask right up in my face. This happened a few times with her appearing and disappearing at different points.

    I was then grabbed by another actor who looked panicked, saying "don't look, just get over here". He stood facing me and grabbed me by the shoulders, then pushed backwards (quite fast!) through several flaps and doors until my back banged against a wall!!

    I was then pushed (very violently) back down on to the floor by a different actor, and told to continue onwards.

    This next part is a blur to be honest, but I did a lot of walking, crawling, being pulled and pushed around, had lots of jump scares, until I reached the spinning tunnel, which had 2 female clowns inside...
    Both clowns had 'penis shaped' balloons which they, errm, 'rubbed' me with in various ways... Yeah I'll leave that to your imagination...
    They then taunted me with them and popped them in my ears.
    One of the clowns then got behind me, wrapped herself around me and held me still, while the other licked my face and neck while the other laughed in my ear. This was very uncomfortable and weird!!! CLOWNS!?! All of this while the tunnel was spinning around me!

    I can't remember what happened between here and the final room., however when I did reach the final room, the actor who played Les Coogan in previous years (remember from earlier?) stormed up to me, with about 5 other actors in tow! They each took hold of one of my limbs, picked me up and put me flat on my back on the floor.... 'Les' then completely went crazy!! They were dragging me around, and Les's final words to me were "DON'T YOU ****ING DARE CALL ME LES COOGAN AGAIN BOY. GET OUT OF HERE NOW." I was then pretty much forced to apologise to 'Les', and literally thrown in to a door leading out of the maze!

    The look on the faces of the park staff was hilarious when I came out!  I particularly remember one of the managers looking genuinely worried!

    It was absolutely fantastic and much more intense than I could have imagined. The whole experience lasted around 10 minutes. Worth every penny of the £15! Bargain.

    I have probably missed bits here, and probably haven't done it justice, but you get the basic idea.

    We then all made our way back from the various mazes and met back at the 'bar' in the BBQ, where we all had a good chat about it!
    Some of the other guests had done Asylum, which was totally mad apparently. They were all drenched in fake blood, and said that many of the asylum patients were completely naked. Lots of 'adult' themes going on in there, including a performance in the bed scene which I'm not sure would hold up today.
    Some of the others had done Saw Alive which was apparently amazing as well.
     
    I can't describe how good Brave it Alone was in its first year! Genuinely terrifying to have literally ALL of the actors focusing on you the entire time.
  3. Inferno

    Theme Parks
    This is something that's been playing on my mind for the past 3 years or so.
     
    Whenever I visit a theme park these days, there's usually one or two moments throughout the day where I feel like the odd one out.  At 30 years of age, I feel old.
     
    I look round me when stood in a queue, and most of the other guests are teenagers or adults with kids.  Yes, there are a few couples or older groups etc who visit, but they're a rare sight.
     
    Usually the feeling passes after a moment, and I brush it off with my usual "who cares, I love theme parks!" take on the situation.
     
    But this year at Fright Nights, it really hit me. For most of the day, the feeling stuck with me. I know it wasn't the case, but I felt like the oldest person on the entire park. Nearly everyone queueing around me was in their teens (except my theme park buddy who is a year younger than me), and going through the mazes with a group of young teenagers did make me feel like an old man, reminiscing about mazes from over 10 years ago, when many of the other guests would have been toddlers.
     
    As we head towards next weekend, me and Mrs Inferno are heading to the fireworks at Alton Towers, and I have a very faint feeling of dread building - am I getting too old for all this stuff?
     
    I've always been a firm believer in just going for it, and if anyone ever asked me the question "am I too old to go to a theme park", I would say absolutely not!  But just lately, I'm beginning to understand why people might feel that way.
     
    I'd love to know if anyone else ever feels similar, and what your take is on being "too old for theme parks"?
×
×
  • Create New...