Actually, luxury items sales are up. Just saying.... Things are rough all over but this still needs to be explored. Once we got a dollar figure on prices, people could work toward it, or start saving for the next one. (Said the lady with two-and-a-half-jobs and too much month left at the end of my money.) Just because everyone can't go doesn't mean no one should.
In all fairness though, a MuppetFest wouldn't be a "luxury item" that one purchases and owns - it's a major all-encompassing expense...
- Cost of ticket. Just getting in the door to begin with. Remember Disney owns the Muppets now - any prices associated with the event would at the very least be three times as much as the original - Disney wouldn't care about making things affordable, they'd price gouge the stuffing out of anything and everything.
- Stuff to buy at the fest - again Disney will go way overboard at making anyone attend want to buy as much extra as possible and they'll charge an arm and a leg for a whatnot eyeball.
- Travel expenses. Gas costs four to five times as much as it did in 2001. Kermit may have sang "Getting there is half the fun" in Muppet Movie, but many people wouldn't be able to get halfway TO the fun (not to mention the trip BACK)
- Lodging. Unless you're fortunate enough to be local, you'll have to pay for a hotel stay.
...At today's prices, you're already looking at four figures. And that's just considering the money going OUT - on the flip side there's also the money NOT coming IN...in a day and age where most people are barely scraping by living paycheck to paycheck, missing work can be problematic enough when one's sick much less taking a vacation.
I'm not saying another Fest should never happen but there's a time and place for such things and at a time where the middle class (and all the lower classes underneath) is being squeezed out of existence, this is not the time...and speaking of place -
- Hold it on the West coast and people will complain the last one was done there too. Yet if it's done on the East coast, then you get into a situation where it's mostly convenient for the same group that's already benefitted from a large number of multiple recent official and unofficial fan events - from the various Jim Henson Legacy shows to Tough Pigs Vaults. If it's all the same people that have already been gathering for meets and events anyway, what's the point?
Just because everyone can't go doesn't mean no one should.
True, just because of multiple variables, even in the best of times 100% of the people who would want to go ultimately wouldn't be able to do so in the end - but the more important thing to keep in mind are the ratios - if too much of the people such an event would even be FOR in the first place would find the costs/logistics in actually attending prohibitive, then you have the very definition of a Bad Idea. Let's also not forget part of what makes such a con a success and desirable is the abililty to meet and share the experience with other fans. If too many of the people who SHOULD be there CAN'T, it's a bit like attending a family reunion where you're stuck with only the mother-in-laws.
I look forward to the day when the economy and the country's in a better place and such excursions are more easily doable for most of such an event's target audience. But now's not that time. Better to be patient and wait for when circumstances are better. In the meantime, there's better options such as the touring Jim Henson's Fantastic World - where the event comes to YOU rather than the other way around. When it's in your area, you can enjoy everything on a smaller more localized scale and those who aren't so financially challenged can enjoy seeing it in different places, meeting more people and taking advantage of the unique features associated with each leg.