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  • JoCo Cruise Crazy II was a lovely indulgent vacation. I am probably a little too much of an introvert for it to work for me by myself (despite the nerds there all being my people), but with a little mob (me and [livejournal.com profile] harrock and [livejournal.com profile] shumashi and [livejournal.com profile] mjperson and [livejournal.com profile] jcatelli) to mini-socialize with in addition to the larger group, it was great. Mike reports that towards the end, about five different people on ship staff told him that we were so much nicer than the usual passengers, which makes me both happy and sad, because while I like being thought of as nice, I hate that that is apparently the outlier.
  • (Many thank yous to [livejournal.com profile] chenoameg for taking us to the airport, and [livejournal.com profile] tirinian and [livejournal.com profile] ringrose for dealing with when the van sulked about having been driven by strangers again (okay, I think we have finally figured out the problem, though it will of course have to wait to be playtested) and more [livejournal.com profile] tirinian for coming to get us very late at night...)
  • My, hmm, fangirl tendencies did get kind of played up on the cruise. I mean, I don't squee or bounce, but I am kind of ridiculously impressed by famous people. (One of the memorable highlights of my career was when Sir Tim Berners-Lee came in to change his password! Or setting up a temporary guest account for Scott McCloud to get on the MIT network; I was tempted to ask him to sign my cleavage, but figured surely by then someone would already have made that joke, and plus it seemed crazily unprofessional). I was very proud of myself for speaking to four Famous People, and I am still taking stun damage from the "Wait, the famous Perl guy was our cruise photographer last time?" revelation from [livejournal.com profile] shumashi.

Date: 2012-03-01 09:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] firstfrost.livejournal.com
The JoCo part included a nightly concert (or talk or story read or whatever), and also some morning get-togethers like a Q-and-A which was to a large part being entertained by the group of entertainers joking and teasing each other and generally playing off each other very amusingly. But in addition to that, the famous people mostly tried to be accessible and friendly, so they'd hang out by the pool in the afternoon or play games or chat or incite people to make shapes in the ocean. Mike played poker with Wil Wheaton. Then there was the game room, which tons of people brought games to, and was the official meeting place. One group ran a puzzle hunt across the week (Marleigh did that; we helped). There were D&D sessions in the Crow's Nest and a Dominion tournament and lots and lots of pickup games and an iPhone Handbell Choir and two dance parties in the nightclub with John Flansbergh (They Might Be Giants) as the DJ and JoCo karaoke and non-JoCo karaoke and an open mike night and a Drink and Draw with several webcartoonists. (One flaw is that the group was big enough that we just didn't all fit in the smaller lounge used for things like kareoke night; that was unfortunate.) One evening we all descended on one of the cruise ship musicians and listened to him play (at the suggestion of one of the JoCo musicians), which kind of floored him - the usual passenger is retired and not likely to sing along to Moxy Fruvous. There was a Moustache Formal with Mandatory Moustaches and Optional Fezzes with a number of very impressive fezzes and some very impressive moustaches (one was clockwork. Many were tentacular. Some hung from glasses). One fez looked like a Dalek and another like a Tardis. The fezzes really confused the muggles - we were clearly some sort of Shriner Hippie group.

Date: 2012-03-02 12:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] firstfrost.livejournal.com
Here's one of the cartoonists posting about the Drink And Draw: http://hijinksensue.com/2012/02/28/joco-cruise-crazy-2-fancy-sketchphoto-hybrid-comic-part-2/

Note in the background the guy wearing the scarf in what does not really resemble winter? He brought a bunch of scarves, in all the Hogwarts colors, and a Doctor Who scarf, and so on, which he had knitted himself. I got credit for complimenting him on his Watson scarf the first night, which is apparently one of the less recognizable ones. http://www.etsy.com/listing/89011979/dr-watsons-scarf-sherlock-holmes-2. It's a knitter thing. :) The knitters mostly met in the Piano Bar (because as per above, "bar" is code for "cozy space where you can hang out forever, and they will also supply you with drinks if you want.)

Date: 2012-03-04 02:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merastra.livejournal.com
Oh wait. I think I just realized that the JoCo part was a small subgroup in the cruise. Or am I confused again?

I also didn't realize the amount of gaming you guys had available. WOW! And playing poker with Wil Wheaton is Too Cool. ;-)

Date: 2012-03-04 02:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] firstfrost.livejournal.com
Yeah, we were just a subgroup of the cruise. The first cruise was about 250 people, this one was 500-something, out of a total passenger set of more like 1500. The main thing about cruise ships is that they're not designed to have everyone in one place, ever - there's two seatings in the main dining hall (plus the buffet), there's two identical shows in the main hall (which a lot of people skip anyway), so I think we were close to the maximum that we could, as limited by the big hall (but which was too many for the little hall where things like karaoke were). So being all the people on the ship would probably have to have different logistics, more like a conference where everyone isn't expected to be at anything specifically.

Holland America is apparently the Retired Folks cruise line (as opposed to say, Carnival, which is the young party-boat line or Disney, for families with kids), so we were different than the average passenger. (Apparently also much nicer than the average passenger, which surprised us. Not that we're not nice, but I have to admit that "the *nice* people" is not part of the nerd archetype; we're supposed to be socially awkward and weird. Not that there weren't any of that subspecies. :) )

Date: 2012-03-05 05:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tirinian.livejournal.com
I think we are socially awkward and weird to *friends*, which is different from being socially awkward and weird to *staff*.

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