şÚÁϲť´ňěČ Note: We need a national campaign to decry Cedar Fairâs parks display of a number of outrageous, extremely stigmatizing âattractionsâ that defame our dignity and community!
- Last night, CFâs Knottâs Berry Farm unveiled âFear VRâ, which was described by an LA Times reporter as follows: âafter checking into the mythical Meadowbrook Institute, visitors are strapped into a wheelchair in the psychiatric hospitalâs exam roomâ and offered a virtual reality experience that âfollows a demonically possessed patient named Katie, who unleashes chaos throughout the hospital and takes mental control of the medical staff.â (see ).
- Cedar Fairsâ Six Flags New England is hosting its âPsycho-Path Haunted Asylumâ, in which âmaniacal inmates yell out from their bloodstained rooms and deranged guards wander the corridors in search of those who have escaped.â
Join a fast growing national coalition that is bringing together family, consumer and recovery and rights advocates to take action today: stay tuned for information as to how to best direct our outrage to Cedar Fair executives to take down these exhibits!
Mental Health Advocates Express âOutrageâ Over New Knottâs Attraction
By Tracy Wood and Nick Gerda Voice of Orange County September 22, 2016
A new Halloween horror attraction that opened Thursday at Knottâs Berry Farm has drawn criticism from mental health advocates, who say it includes offensive and dehumanizing depictions of mental health patients.
Knottâs responded Thursday by changing its website to remove references to mental health from the attractionâs name.
Since the attraction was announced a little over two weeks ago, the virtual-reality experience had been promoted as âFearVR: 5150,â as part of the theme parkâs âKnottâs Scary Farmâ season.
It takes place in a mental hospital where a possessed patient âunleashes chaos throughout the hospital,â according to an LA Times preview article. â5150â refers to a section of California law used to hold someone for 72 hours at a psychiatric facility if he or she is considered a danger to themselves or others.
Local mental health advocates emailed a strongly-worded letter to Knottâs parent company Wednesday objecting to using mental illness as scary entertainment.
The attraction âadds to the hurtful, dehumanizing, discriminatory, prejudicial, insensitive, offensive and stigmatizing of mental illness,â wrote John Leyerle, president of the Orange County chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), in his letter to Cedar Fair Entertainment President and CEO Mathew Quimet.
âNAMI-OC believes it is in the poorest taste that mental illness stereotypes are being used by entertainment sources for commercial gain,â the letter adds.
Leyerle expressed âa sense of outrage,â as well as hope that âKnottâs will act to stop this unintentionally negative affront to the Orange County community and its residents.â
Neither Knottâs nor Cedar Fair Entertainment returned Voice of OCâs calls Thursday for comment.
But following the letter from advocates, the website for the Knottâs attraction was taken down Thursday and replaced with a re-worked page that removes the â5150â reference.
In a statement to advocates Thursday evening, the theme park said they didnât intend âto be disrespectful to any individual or group.â
âThe virtual reality experience is actually built around paranormal, zombie-like activity in a medical hospital setting,â the statement says.
âCedar Fair recognizes that the press depiction of our experience, while inaccurate, has raised concerns around the insensitivity to the stigmas surrounding mental health. Part of the confusion stems from the use of the code 5150 in the experienceâs original name. For that reason, the name has been changed to FearVR.â
Mentally ill human beings should not be used for entertainment, said Ron Thomas, father of Kelly Thomas, who had serious mental disabilities and was beaten and suffocated to death in 2011 by Fullerton police officers.
âYou can have ghouls and goblins and things, but theyâre not real,â Ron Thomas said. Individuals with mental illnesses are âreal people and you canât use them like this.â
The Halloween event opened to the public Thursday and runs through Oct. 31 at Knottâs Berry Farm in Buena Park, the Californiaâs Great America park in Santa Clara and the Canadaâs Wonderland park near Toronto.
As part of its promotion of the attraction, Knottâs allowed reporters to preview the ride.
âAfter checking into the mythical Meadowbrook Institute, visitors are strapped into a wheelchair in the psychiatric hospitalâs exam room and fitted with a Samsung VR headset and headphones,â the Times reported in its Sept. 6 article.
âThe VR experience follows a demonically possessed patient named Katie, who unleashes chaos throughout the hospital and takes mental control of the medical staff. A panic button attached to the wheelchair is available if the action becomes too intense.â
The Orange County Register, in its Sept. 6 review, reported that âthe VR headset puts you in the middle of the action inside the hospital.
âOne patient seems agitated and attempts to get up from a bed. Security officers try to subdue him. A nurse gives you a shot (which you will feel), knocking you out. When you wake up in the next scene, all hell has broken loose.â
Matt Holzmann, a local advocate who volunteers with NAMI-OC, said in a telephone interview that the use of mental illness to scare people is âhighly offensive to those with mental illness and their families. Itâs terrible.â
He said as word of the ride spread through social media and other contacts, NAMI has received support from groups in şÚÁϲť´ňěČ, Washington, D.C., San Francisco and Los Angeles County.
âThere are a lot of people who are deeply offended,â he said, adding that Knottâs move to change the name doesnât go far enough.
âThe Fear VR 5150 attraction was marketed heavily and I believe hasnât changed a bit in content. The publicity has gone national,â Holzmann said in a follow-up email.
âThis stigmatization of individuals living with a mental illness is wholly inappropriate and puts our efforts at de-stigmatization back years.â
A promotional image for the attraction posted on the Knott’s Scary Farm Twitter feed.
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