Happy Friday bookish people! I hope you are all having a good day today.
One May 26th 2023 I went to MCM London Comic con, I went originally because they announced Sebastien de Castell would be there however they didn’t reveal the timetable until really late and it was too late for me to cancel but he was only going to be there 4-5 and I already had to be on the train home by the because Plymouth is far away from London so that was annoying but while I was at the Comic Con I realised that the accessibility was something that definitely needed to be addressed.
First of all, once you get to the site there is a long tunnel way you have to walk through and there are no clear signs telling you where you need to go and which direction so there were people walking every which way which is horrible to navigate for me as a disabled person.
Then once we did finally find the accessible queue to get in it got even worse. The disabled queue was the same queue as press and content creators and the organization was terrible. Once you had your bag checked you had to queue to get your disabled stickers and passes and there were no clear lines for queues or where you had to go, the staff were shouting at people because they didn’t know where they had to go, but worst of all is these queues were barely moving, it took over an hour and a half to get our passes and this is not good for a disabled person who cannot be standing for long. I saw so many people struggling to stand and nobody would help them.
After I got into the venue halls it became clear that in the corridor by the Costa there were no disabled toilets, there were male and female ones which were down sets of stairs but no disabled ones, so I asked a staff member where they were and they directed me towards the stairs. This is ridiculous because I am visually Impaired and I can’t use the stairs. So, I go in the main room of the comic con, there looks to be two disabled toilets along the back wall, good that is where we head first, in the first one there was a toilet luckily but the size was tiny, I didn’t take my guide dog with me but I might have dine and there would not have been room in this toilet for her and it definitely wasn’t big enough to fit a wheelchair in it. so later we decided to try the other toilet and see if it had enough space, only to find that to reach the toilet you had to use the lift or the stairs and the lift wasn’t even working! Another person at the con told me later that none of the lifts were working which is unacceptable.
I can’t discuss any of the ‘priority’ options that are there for disabled because by this point I was already angry and exhausted so we left early and only really looked around some of the stalls. I would not attend this event again because you don’t feel like you get treated as a human, you are treated as an inconveniance.
Have you experienced this or anything else?