20 Aralık 2012 Perşembe

Holiday World's sudden loss

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As a young man, Will Koch set his sights on a serious business. Computer-science and engineering degrees in hand from the universities of Notre Dame and Southern California, he moved to Los Angeles to take a job designing weapons systems for a defense contractor.But it wasn't long before Koch, known for his "goofy" laugh as well as his brains, returned to his rural Southern Indiana home to take over the family business, an obscure amusement park in a town called Santa Claus.Advertisement
Click here to find out more!There, at Holiday World, he found fulfillment and success, over the next two decades helping to design rides, tripling the number of visitors and winning worldwide acclaim among roller-coaster enthusiasts.Koch died unexpectedly this week at the age of 48. He had suffered from Type I diabetes since the 1980s, said Paula Werne, Holiday World's longtime spokeswoman. Koch's wife and children found him late Sunday upon returning from Louisville, Ky., where they'd watched a movie.On Monday, the amusement park bustled as usual and Pat Koch greeted guests, as she often does, despite her son's death only hours earlier.William Albert Koch Jr., was a descendant of a prominent Southern Indiana family whose 19th-century metal shop grew into a major installer of painting systems in factories worldwide.Koch was the third generation to lead Holiday World, which was founded in 1946 by his grandfather as Santa Claus Land, one of the nation's first theme parks. (Disneyland came nine years later.) The name was changed to Holiday World in 1984.After taking over the enterprise in 1990, Koch quickly set about expanding it, adding new rides and attractions. He built a water park, Splashin' Safari, which soon was outdrawing the older rides.In 1995, Koch attracted international attention with the Raven, a wooden roller coaster he helped design in harmony with the area's rolling, wooded terrain."Will hated to cut down a tree," Werne said.The Raven "wasn't the largest roller coaster, but it was fresh," said Tim Baldwin, of the trade journal Amusement Today.

Andrew Sarris Harshes on 'Casino Royale' and 'Barefoot in the Park

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"CASINO ROYALE" is said to be doing spectacular business despite moderately unfavorable reviews. Most of the proceedings were too esoteric for this reviewer. At times, it seemed that the only joke in the film was the impunity with which the name of James Bond was bandied about. Bond is more than a sociological artifact: he is a fiduciary property. And it's funny to see more than one set of producers with their claws in him. As funny as Johnny Carson regaling his studio audiences with jokes about his successful raid on NBC. Or Jackie Gleason being expansive about his stature in Miami. People seem to laugh at these things nowadays without the slightest trace of resentment. Power, success, money, even conceitedness seem to be their own justification. Dean Martin doesn't make five million a year because he's great. He's great because he makes five million a year. This public attitude can be attributed partly to the low-pressure realism of television, and partly to an ominous swing to the right.
Popular complicity with power and success tends to stifle feelings of injustice. If Bond and Carson and Gleason and Martin deserve to be where they are, then Negroes and migrant farm workers and poor people generally are somehow to blame for their own plight. Not that America has ever been an egalitarian society. It is just that I can't think of a folk hero in human history with fewer redeeming qualities than James Bond. He's not even a human being, but just a department store dummy going bang-bang. And he is beyond criticism or spoofing.
"Casino Royale" tries to capitalize both on the James Bond name and the "What's New, Pussycat?" art nouveau nuttiness. I liked "Pussycat," but I don't like "Casino Royale," particularly when John Huston is flaunting the hardened arteries of David Niven and Deborah Kerr in a Scottish castle. Things pick up a little bit when Orson Welles, Peter Sellers, and Woody Allen stumble into the scene, but the total experience remains boringly incoherent. Also, this is one of the most sexless movies ever made. Of course, this reviewer is too wise in the ways of brainwashing to believe that any of his readers will believe him. So see it for yourself, but don't blame me, like the song says.
"BAREFOOT IN THE PARK" (at the Radio City Music Hall) contains a good opening sequence that was not in the play. Jane Fonda and Robert Redford make an attractively sexy couple of newlyweds. Mildred Natwick delivers two funny lines. Charles Boyer is miscast as a grotesque continental type. Gene Saks directs his first film so clumsily that he even muffs Mike Nichol's exploitation of the climbing the stairs gag that kept Neil Simon's feeble farce running for 79 years on Broadway. The movie is full of physical details that I found impossible to believe. The skylight, for example, with the hole in it.Over a bed during the winter snowstorm. The hero lies there with the snow coming down. Anything for a laugh. As for the hero walking barefoot in the park to prove that he is not a stuffed shirt, let us just say that this kind of Broadway philosophizing is a quaint sample of pre-hippie humor...

World's best theme Park

To contact us Click HERE

Amusement park or Theme park is the general word for a compilation of rides and other amusement attractions assemble for the purpose of amusing a large collection of populace. An amusement playing field is more complicated than a easy city park or playing field, more often than not provided that attractions meant to cater to children, teenagers, and adults. A theme park is a type of enjoyment park which has been built around one or more themes, such as an American West subject matter, or Atlantis. Today, the terms amusement parks and theme parks are often used interchangeably.  Busch Gardens is a festivity of civilization both old and new—from the exquisite charm of European villages to the high-tech enthusiasm of out of this world coasters. Coaster enthusiasts who make a custom of riding the optimum and most exciting coasters in the world determination come across some of the most memorable right here similar to the 205foot, 70 mph, 90-degree drop you’ll experience on Griffon. Busch Gardens is situated in 2 seats. One is in Williamsburg, VA. And the other is in Tampa,FL.
                                                                                                                                                   
Cedar Point - It's the number-one rated enjoyment park on the earth. It is located in Sandusky, Oh. It's also the subsequent oldest amusement park in North America. With a the past dating back to 1870, the typical enjoyment park/resort on the shore of Lake Erie has seen its share of rides, roller coasters, trends and history. The park has more 15 roller coasters 68 rides than any other park in the world.


Discovery Cove in Orlando, FL. Discovery Cove is intended the way that theme parks be supposed to be, with no manifestation and unfinished go-ahead. It also represents a new breed of theme park. Only 1,000 populace are allowed at a time into the park, which is built as a series of lagoons, coral reefs, rivers and white sand beaches. The main magnetism of Discovery Cove is communication with natural world. visitors can swim and play with bottlenose dolphins, snorkel through coral reefs and snorkel past 4-foot-wide stingrays. In one lagoon, sharks and barracudas are kept behind a clear acrylic dividing wall so you feel as if you're swimming with them. Guests can also bound into the river and go in swimming past the park's aviary    










7 Aralık 2012 Cuma

Coasters race like Dale Earnhardt

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The Harry Potter theme park may be grabbing a lot of attention lately, but the amusement park industry has other tricks up its sleeve this year. Across North America new and “re-themed” amusement parks have opened, and standout rides at established venues are drawing crowds. Whether you’re drawn to the two thrilling roller coasters named for the NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt, who was known as the Intimidator, or are more inclined toward a junior coaster piloted by Sesame Street’s Grover, you’ll most likely find something in this sampler of new attractions that’s just your speed.ADVENTURE MOUNTAIN AT DOLLYWOOD Pigeon Forge, Tenn.More and more amusement parks are unveiling attractions that physically test parkgoers rather than simply offer a passive experience, according to the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions, and this 2-acre hillside challenge course, which opened in March, is a prime example. Parkgoers strap on harnesses and make their way along rope trails, clamber up net ladders, sway on swinging bridges and are blasted by geysers. A steel framework — designed to look like the stone-and-timber buildings constructed in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the adjacent Great Smoky Mountains National Park — supports the course, which offers varying levels of difficulty. If skirting a narrow rock ledge on a cliff 25 feet off the ground is too daunting, you can proceed on a stable wooden boardwalk, or stick to the scaled-down course, for children ages 2 to 6, at the base of the hill.Fee is included in the general admission of $55.90, $44.70 for ages 4 to 11; dollywood.com.INTIMIDATOR AT CAROWINDS Charlotte. Named after Dale Earnhardt and designed to evoke the racecar driver’s No. 3 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, the Intimidator, which opened in March at Carowinds, offers eight hills and plenty of “airtime” (when riders lift out of their seats). “It’s based on the idea of the old wooden coaster,” said Lance Hart, editor of Screamscape.com, an online guide to theme parks, “with no loops but up and down the whole way through.” Manufactured by the Swiss company Bollinger & Mabillard, the ride has open-sided red, black and white train cars with T-bar restraints, a peak of 232 feet and a mile-long track. Cars zoom down the 211-foot first drop at a 74-degree angle and reach speeds of up to 80 mph.Fee is included in admission of $49.99; $22.99 for those under 48 inches, or age 62 and up; carowinds.com.INTIMIDATOR 305 AT KINGS DOMINION Doswell, Va. The second nod to Dale Earnhardt this summer is the Intimidator 305, by the Swiss company Intamin, which is 305 feet tall at its peak and has a first drop of 300 feet. Those measurements put the ride in the family of ultra-high coasters known as giga coasters. The first drop comes at an 85-degree angle, after which riders in open-sided black train cars with red overhead lap bars and shoulder straps race at speeds of up to 92 mph through a course of mostly low-to-the-ground extreme twists and turns. If you’re the sort of enthusiast who likes high speeds and sudden changes in direction, this one’s for you.Fee is included in admission of $46.99; $33.99 for ages 62 and up or those under 48 inches; Intimidator305.com.KING KONG 360 3-D AT UNIVERSAL STUDIOS HOLLYWOOD Universal City, Calif.A fire in 2008 destroyed the original King Kong attraction on Universal Studio’s Hollywood Studio Tour. But on July 1, the big ape will be back, this time in a 3-D version created by Peter Jackson, director of the 2005 King Kong movie. Guests on tour trams will don 3-D glasses and travel through a tunnel to a darkened soundstage. Two seamless compound curve screens, each 187 feet wide and 40 feet high, completely encircle the tram cars, putting guests at the center of the action projected on what is the equivalent of 16 movie-theater screens. “It’s like an IMAX screen all the way around,” said Robert Niles, editor ofThemeParkInsider.com. The featured scene is from Skull Island. Velociraptors appear to snap at the tram, dinosaurs attack, then battle with Kong. Tram cars rock and shudder, simulating impact, and the air stirs as if the creatures are really rushing by. Watch out for that dinosaur “slobber”!Fee is included in admission of $69; $59 for those shorter than 48 inches; universalstudioshollywood.com.SESAME STREET SAFARI OF FUN AT BUSCH GARDENS Tampa, Fla. Ernie wears a pith helmet and safari jacket. Elmo sports beaded, embroidered neckwear. Along with other Muppets characters in African-inspired costumes, they belt out “Hot, Hot, Hot” at this new 2.5-acre Sesame Street-themed play area. The rides are amusement-park staples — roller coaster, carousel, spinning swings and a flume ride — all named for Sesame Street characters and scaled down for the pre-K set.Fee is included in general admission of $74.95; children, ages 3 to 9, $64.95; plus tax; buschgardenstampabay.com.LUNA PARK Coney Island, Brooklyn The first Luna Park at Coney Island — the legendary pleasure grounds that opened in 1903 and were so brightly illuminated at night that they gave rise to the expression “lit up like Luna Park” — is widely regarded as a forerunner of the modern-day amusement park. Though the original park burned down in 1944, a new Luna Park has just been built on three New York City-owned acres where Astroland, another defunct amusement park, once stood. The new park has 19 rides created by the Italian manufacturer Zamperla (though only 15 were running over the Memorial Day weekend opening). In Air Race, an aerial simulator, parkgoers in fighter jets can corkscrew around a central control tower with up to 4 G’s of force. The Tickler, a roller coaster, is named after one of the original Luna Park rides.Visitors use debit cards to pay as they go, with rides costing $3 to $5 each; a four-hour wristband for unlimited rides is $26 during the week, $30 on weekendsLEGOLAND WATER PARK Carlsbad, Calif. Many water parks are sprawling affairs geared to teenagers. But this 5.5-acre play area tucked at the north end of the amusement park Legoland California, a shrine to primary-colored plastic building bricks, a half-hour from San Diego, is designed expressly for the 2-to-12-year-old set. The water park centers on a 45-foot tower that has four slides snaking from it. Another tower gushes 350 gallons of water into a wading pool where children can aim water cannons at one another. In keeping with Legoland’s hands-on ethos, children can attach soft, oversize Lego bricks to inner tubes before floating down a lazy river, or turn wheels on a large-scale Duplo polar bear, elephant and alligator to spray water from the animals’ mouths.Fee is $10, besides the Legoland California admission of $67; $57 for ages 3 to 12 and seniors; legolandwaterpark.com.WILDEBEEST AT HOLIDAY WORLD Santa Claus, Ind. This cross between a roller coaster and a water slide is the latest addition to Holiday World, a small, family-owned park in the Ohio River Valley known for its three outstanding wooden roller coasters. The new ride, manufactured by ProSlide Technology of Canada, employs linear induction motor technology ordinarily used only in roller coasters. Rather than mount slide-tower stairs to launch, which is how you get started on most water slides, Wildebeest riders climb into four-person toboggan-style rafts at the bottom of the course. Each raft has a 200-pound sheet of steel inside that responds to the magnetic pull exerted by linear induction motors beneath the surface. After riding up the lift hill to a 38-foot first drop, the ride continues on its one-third-of-a-mile course, twisting and turning through two tunnels and over seven more hills with magnetic force taking the rafts up the hills and gravity pulling them down.Fee is included in general admission of $41.95; $31.95 for those under 54 inches or age 60 and older; holidayworld.com.

Holiday World's sudden loss

To contact us Click HERE

As a young man, Will Koch set his sights on a serious business. Computer-science and engineering degrees in hand from the universities of Notre Dame and Southern California, he moved to Los Angeles to take a job designing weapons systems for a defense contractor.But it wasn't long before Koch, known for his "goofy" laugh as well as his brains, returned to his rural Southern Indiana home to take over the family business, an obscure amusement park in a town called Santa Claus.Advertisement
Click here to find out more!There, at Holiday World, he found fulfillment and success, over the next two decades helping to design rides, tripling the number of visitors and winning worldwide acclaim among roller-coaster enthusiasts.Koch died unexpectedly this week at the age of 48. He had suffered from Type I diabetes since the 1980s, said Paula Werne, Holiday World's longtime spokeswoman. Koch's wife and children found him late Sunday upon returning from Louisville, Ky., where they'd watched a movie.On Monday, the amusement park bustled as usual and Pat Koch greeted guests, as she often does, despite her son's death only hours earlier.William Albert Koch Jr., was a descendant of a prominent Southern Indiana family whose 19th-century metal shop grew into a major installer of painting systems in factories worldwide.Koch was the third generation to lead Holiday World, which was founded in 1946 by his grandfather as Santa Claus Land, one of the nation's first theme parks. (Disneyland came nine years later.) The name was changed to Holiday World in 1984.After taking over the enterprise in 1990, Koch quickly set about expanding it, adding new rides and attractions. He built a water park, Splashin' Safari, which soon was outdrawing the older rides.In 1995, Koch attracted international attention with the Raven, a wooden roller coaster he helped design in harmony with the area's rolling, wooded terrain."Will hated to cut down a tree," Werne said.The Raven "wasn't the largest roller coaster, but it was fresh," said Tim Baldwin, of the trade journal Amusement Today.

Andrew Sarris Harshes on 'Casino Royale' and 'Barefoot in the Park

To contact us Click HERE
"CASINO ROYALE" is said to be doing spectacular business despite moderately unfavorable reviews. Most of the proceedings were too esoteric for this reviewer. At times, it seemed that the only joke in the film was the impunity with which the name of James Bond was bandied about. Bond is more than a sociological artifact: he is a fiduciary property. And it's funny to see more than one set of producers with their claws in him. As funny as Johnny Carson regaling his studio audiences with jokes about his successful raid on NBC. Or Jackie Gleason being expansive about his stature in Miami. People seem to laugh at these things nowadays without the slightest trace of resentment. Power, success, money, even conceitedness seem to be their own justification. Dean Martin doesn't make five million a year because he's great. He's great because he makes five million a year. This public attitude can be attributed partly to the low-pressure realism of television, and partly to an ominous swing to the right.
Popular complicity with power and success tends to stifle feelings of injustice. If Bond and Carson and Gleason and Martin deserve to be where they are, then Negroes and migrant farm workers and poor people generally are somehow to blame for their own plight. Not that America has ever been an egalitarian society. It is just that I can't think of a folk hero in human history with fewer redeeming qualities than James Bond. He's not even a human being, but just a department store dummy going bang-bang. And he is beyond criticism or spoofing.
"Casino Royale" tries to capitalize both on the James Bond name and the "What's New, Pussycat?" art nouveau nuttiness. I liked "Pussycat," but I don't like "Casino Royale," particularly when John Huston is flaunting the hardened arteries of David Niven and Deborah Kerr in a Scottish castle. Things pick up a little bit when Orson Welles, Peter Sellers, and Woody Allen stumble into the scene, but the total experience remains boringly incoherent. Also, this is one of the most sexless movies ever made. Of course, this reviewer is too wise in the ways of brainwashing to believe that any of his readers will believe him. So see it for yourself, but don't blame me, like the song says.
"BAREFOOT IN THE PARK" (at the Radio City Music Hall) contains a good opening sequence that was not in the play. Jane Fonda and Robert Redford make an attractively sexy couple of newlyweds. Mildred Natwick delivers two funny lines. Charles Boyer is miscast as a grotesque continental type. Gene Saks directs his first film so clumsily that he even muffs Mike Nichol's exploitation of the climbing the stairs gag that kept Neil Simon's feeble farce running for 79 years on Broadway. The movie is full of physical details that I found impossible to believe. The skylight, for example, with the hole in it.Over a bed during the winter snowstorm. The hero lies there with the snow coming down. Anything for a laugh. As for the hero walking barefoot in the park to prove that he is not a stuffed shirt, let us just say that this kind of Broadway philosophizing is a quaint sample of pre-hippie humor...

World's best theme Park

To contact us Click HERE

Amusement park or Theme park is the general word for a compilation of rides and other amusement attractions assemble for the purpose of amusing a large collection of populace. An amusement playing field is more complicated than a easy city park or playing field, more often than not provided that attractions meant to cater to children, teenagers, and adults. A theme park is a type of enjoyment park which has been built around one or more themes, such as an American West subject matter, or Atlantis. Today, the terms amusement parks and theme parks are often used interchangeably.  Busch Gardens is a festivity of civilization both old and new—from the exquisite charm of European villages to the high-tech enthusiasm of out of this world coasters. Coaster enthusiasts who make a custom of riding the optimum and most exciting coasters in the world determination come across some of the most memorable right here similar to the 205foot, 70 mph, 90-degree drop you’ll experience on Griffon. Busch Gardens is situated in 2 seats. One is in Williamsburg, VA. And the other is in Tampa,FL.
                                                                                                                                                   
Cedar Point - It's the number-one rated enjoyment park on the earth. It is located in Sandusky, Oh. It's also the subsequent oldest amusement park in North America. With a the past dating back to 1870, the typical enjoyment park/resort on the shore of Lake Erie has seen its share of rides, roller coasters, trends and history. The park has more 15 roller coasters 68 rides than any other park in the world.


Discovery Cove in Orlando, FL. Discovery Cove is intended the way that theme parks be supposed to be, with no manifestation and unfinished go-ahead. It also represents a new breed of theme park. Only 1,000 populace are allowed at a time into the park, which is built as a series of lagoons, coral reefs, rivers and white sand beaches. The main magnetism of Discovery Cove is communication with natural world. visitors can swim and play with bottlenose dolphins, snorkel through coral reefs and snorkel past 4-foot-wide stingrays. In one lagoon, sharks and barracudas are kept behind a clear acrylic dividing wall so you feel as if you're swimming with them. Guests can also bound into the river and go in swimming past the park's aviary