Having ducked out of posting on Zoochat a few months back, I hope i will be permitted to add my two penn'orth to this fascinating debate.
I write as someone who, like most on this forum, has an unusual interest in zoos, and therefore a greater desire to see different species of genet or mongoose than perhaps is seen in the average member of the public. But I also write as a father of four young children, and as a teacher who has taken groups of children to various different zoos. i also write as someone who, today, saw london Zoo's new 'Animal Adventure' for the first time... and there was a thing.
It is my opinion that zoos should be serious places. If 'fun' means running around whooping loudly, paying little attention to the animals on show, learning very little - then, no thank you. Why is that art museums and other such cultural instituions appeal to millions - including milliosn of families with young children - without the need for being crazy, wacky, all-singing, all-dancing bundles of hyperactive 'fun'? My idea of fun is something which is done well, which is done professionally, which is done with integrity. I don't dislike the idea of theme parks et al, but i do not think they should be mixed with zoos. If I want to go to a theme park, i'll do so. if I want to go to a zoo, i'll do so.
This calls to mind what has happened with public libraries in this country. Books have been taken away, and replaced with cafes, computers and, erm, fun. I recently turned up at my local library with my children - to get some books, funnily enough - to be asked if I was there for the 'Baby Boogie'. I wanted to kill someone.
But maybe I'm wrong. maybe the small minority of us who are more interested in mongooses than rollercoasters should accept that we are swimming against the tide. Maybe the views posited by ANyhuis above represent the only forward.
But I don't think so, and I'll throw out several pieces of evidence ot suggest why this is so...
In Europe, zoos which see themselves as serious places, which welcome children and families but which do not pander to the lowest common denominator, regularly attract very high crowds. I'm thinking especially of zoos in Germany, Switzerland, Holland. Zurich Zoo, for example, is a place which is very 'fun', but the fun comes from the brilliant animals, brilliantly presented. Not from something which feels like a children's birthday party after the Ritalin has run out (which was rather the feeling I got at ZSL's frankly pretty tacky 'fun' animal area today).
David Simon, who made The Wire - without doubt the greatest TV series ever made, in my opinion (although i'm guessing it's probably not the sort of thing which ANyhuis would like!) - was asked why he had not felt the need to kertow to the 'average viewer', with easier storylines and a greater sense of redemption and all the things which we might expect in more formulaic TV fare. his answer: "f**k the avergae viewer". His point: be true to yourself, do what you know is right, and don't worry about focus groups and popular opinion, and the results will probably be better.
Of course families and young children should be accommodated. it's very nice that Edinburgh has a 'family loo' at its entrance. The playground opposite the gorillas at Rotterdam is brilliant. No-one would begrudge the monorail at Chester. But none of these detracts from the animal collections at all. When things do - when the 'fun' of the playground is more important than the brilliance of the Nile monitor, then that is bad, bad news.
woo!, your back, you have no idea how much we've missed you!