From Cincinnati Enquirer: ‘Bodies’ breaks record
Or does it?
Morris Tsai, a Taiwanese-American and a Bodies protester since the show opened, says the attendance figures are misleading, pointing out that the Vatican drew its 186,000 in 120 days and it has taken 141 days for Bodies, so it’s not a record-setter. “Clearly, Bodies’ attendance is trailing the Vatican. It took three weeks longer to match the Vatican.”
Yes, I did the research on this last night and am quoted in this article. So, now I am quoting myself! In any case, the Cincinnati Museum Center would have you believe that this exhibit is an overwhelming success, but a closer look at the numbers shows the possibility that this show is not doing as well they had hoped.
With unprecedented advertising constantly on tv, billboards, buses, and newspapers, this exhibit has drawn people much more slowly than the Vatican exhibit, Saint Peter and the Vatican: The Legacy of the Popes.
Compare the two:
Saint Peter and the Vatican: The Legacy of the Popes- 186,000
visitors- reached this number in 120 days.
December 20, 2003- April 18, 2004
Bodies the Exhibition- 186,000 visitors. Reached this number in 140 days.
February 1, 2008- June 19, 2008
The article also provides with one more bit of information:
The Bodies controversy got the show off to a roaring start – its first month attracted 53,000 visitors, compared to 27,000 for the Vatican
So, if Bodies the Exhibition drew 53,000 in the first month, the attendance since then has dropped tremendously in recent months.
It’s clear from all their statements before the show got here, that the Cincinnati Museum Center expected Bodies the Exhibition to be the blockbuster that ends all blockbusters. While it’s hard to classify a show that has reached 186,000 people as a failure, I believe that the show is under-performing their expectations by reaching this record, 3 weeks slower than their previous biggest show.
UPDATE 1: Milwaukee’s Body Worlds 1 show did 338,500 in nearly the same time frame. From January 1, 2008 through June 1, 2008 (152 days). That’s nearly twice the rate of the Bodies the Exhibition here at the Cincinnati Museum Center. Body Worlds 1 is the original exhibition that Bodies the Exhibition knocked off. The main difference is that Body Worlds 1 claims to use donor bodies, though there is some controversy swirling that exhibit too. But, could using donated bodies with consent bodies make that big of a difference? It seems like it may be so.
One quote that I noticed in McDonald’s statements in the articles was this:
I can tell you we’re working on bringing one in now that will be bigger than Bodies, but that’s all I can say for the time being.
I’ve spent some time looking for traveling exhibits that would be bigger than Bodies, and so far all I have found is Body Worlds. Could the Cincinnati Museum Center turn around and bring Body Worlds here next year after all this controversy? It seems unbelievable to me, but I haven’t seen any other exhibits that are bigger.
UPDATE 2: It’s not the first time the Cincinnati Museum Center has missed projections for a show.
“Real Pirates,” June 20, 2007-Jan. 6, 2008 (189 days), drew 105,900
The exhibit was developed by John Norman, who set a Museum Center attendance record by drawing 185,000 people to “Saint Peter and the Vatican: The Legacy of the Popes,” an exhibit of art and historical objects collected over centuries by the Roman Catholic church. Norman said today that he thinks the pirate exhibit will draw bigger crowds than the Vatican show.
“We wouldn’t have come here if I didn’t anticipate it doing at least 150,000,” said Norman, president and CEO of a Cleveland-area company, Arts & Exhibition International. “I’m very comfortable debuting it here.”
So, Real Pirates ended up drawing only 2/3 of their expectations.