Matsuricon

Matsuricon is a three-day anime convention held during August in Columbus, Ohio, at the Hyatt Regency Columbus and Greater Columbus Convention Center. The convention is family friendly.[3]

Matsuricon
StatusActive
GenreAnime, Manga, Video Games, and popular culture.[1][2]
VenueHyatt Regency Columbus
Greater Columbus Convention Center
Location(s)Columbus, Ohio
CountryUnited States
Inaugurated2006
Attendance4,500 in 2014
Websitehttp://www.matsuricon.org/

Programming

The convention typically offers an artist alley, cosplay contest, dealers room, formal ball, gaming (arcade, board, video), karaoke, masquerade, and a video contest.[1][3][4] The Carolina Manga Library provided the conventions manga library in 2014.[4][5] Matsuricon's 2014 charity fundraisers raised $13,916 and benefited Pelotonia.[4]

History

In 2012 the convention hosted the Distant Worlds concert, led by Arnie Roth.[2][6] The concert was followed up with a meet and greet event with composer Nobuo Uematsu for VIP ticket holders.[2][6] Matsuricon in 2018 shared convention center space with an Ohio GOP dinner that featured as a speaker President Donald Trump.[7][8][9] Matsuricon 2020 was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[10][11]

Event history

DatesLocationAtten.Guests
April 20–23, 2006 Comfort Inn North
Columbus, Ohio
400Johnny Yong Bosch, Joanna Estep, Eyeshine, Gakidomo, Michael Gould, Alex Kolesar, Joe Kovell, Christy Lijewski, Tristan MacAvery, William Sebree, Patrick Seitz, Mindy Timpone, Harlan Watkins, Mariah Watkins, and Where's the Buffet?.[12]
September 7–9, 2007 Columbus Marriott Northwest
Dublin, Ohio
450Alex Kolesar, Joe Kovell, Tristan MacAvery, So Be It, Harlan Watkins, Mariah Watkins, and Where's the Buffet?.[13]
August 22–24, 2008 Holiday Inn Columbus-Worthington
Worthington, Ohio[14]
702Robert Axelrod, Alex Kolesar, Joe Kovell, Tristan MacAvery, Jeremy Mauney, Mindy Timpone, Harlan Watkins, Mariah Watkins, and E. K. Weaver.[15]
August 28–30, 2009 Holiday Inn Columbus-Worthington
Worthington, Ohio
850Jamal Ard, Robert Axelrod, Juliet Cesario, Trevor Devall, Caitlin Glass, Kyle Hebert, Steve Horton, Chris Hoskins, Brandon Johnson, Alex Kolesar, Joe Kovell, Tristan MacAvery, Chris Martin, Kevin McKeever, Tyler Patrick, Mindy Timpone, Xenogenesis, and Stephanie Young.[16]
August 13–15, 2010 Doubletree Hotel Columbus/Worthington
Columbus, Ohio
1,550Jamal Ard, David Brehm, Scott Freeman, Hilary Hatch, Kyle Hebert, Chris Hoskins, Brandon Johnson, Alex Kolesar, Joe Kovell, Kevin McKeever, Jacob Newell, Brina Palencia, Michael Poe, Micah Solusod, Sonny Strait, Mindy Timpone, Eric Vale, Doug Walker, Julie Wright, and Stephanie Young.[17]
August 17–19, 2011 Hyatt Regency Columbus
Columbus, Ohio
2,700Kevin Bolk, David Brehm, Scott Freeman, Josh Grelle, Jennifer Hale, Clarine Harp, James Hatton, Kyle Hebert, Taliesin Jaffe, Alex Kolesar, Joe Kovell, Cherami Leigh, Kevin McKeever, Steve "Warky" Nunez, Brina Palencia, Ian Sinclair, Micah Solusod, Sonny Strait, Eric Stuart, Veronica Taylor, Mindy Timpone, Alexis Tipton, Eric Vale, Doug Walker, and Stephanie Young.[18]
August 24–26, 2012 Hyatt Regency Columbus
Columbus, Ohio
3,000Madison Bartholemew, David Brehm, Chris Cason, Daniel Coglan, Scott Freeman, Todd Haberkorn, James Hatton, Alex Kolesar, Joe Kovell, Cherami Leigh, Kevin McKeever, Scott McNeil, Tony Oliver, Brina Palencia, Chris Sabat, Ayu Sakata, Ian Sinclair, Micah Solusod, Sonny Strait, Mindy Timpone, Nobuo Uematsu, Doug Walker, Cathy Weseluck, and Stephanie Young.[19]
August 23–25, 2013 Hyatt Regency Columbus
Columbus, Ohio
4,400Scott Freeman, James Hatton, Kyle Hebert, Chuck Huber, Alex Kolesar, Joe Kovel, Lauren Landa, Scott McNeil, Ayu Sakata, Ian Sinclair, Micah Solusod, John Swasey, J. Michael Tatum, David Vincent, Lisle Wilkerson, Travis Willingham, and Stephanie Young.[20]
August 22–24, 2014 Hyatt Regency Columbus
Columbus, Ohio
4,500Kevin Bolk, Johnny Yong Bosch, David Brehm, Christine Marie Cabanos, Daniel Coglan, Jillian Coglan, Eyeshine, Scott Freeman, Josh Grelle, Darrel Guilbeau, James Hatton, Chuck Huber, Erik Scott Kimerer, Lauren Landa, Scott McNeil, Danielle McRae, Erica Mendez, Matthew Mercer, Trina Nishimura, Professor Shyguy, Ayu Sakata, Ian Sinclair, Micah Solusod, Brad Swaile, Symphonic Anime Orchestra, Sarah Williams, Stephanie Young.[21]
August 14–16, 2015 Hyatt Regency Columbus
Greater Columbus Convention Center[3]
Crowne Plaza[3]
Columbus, Ohio
5,500Kevin Bolk, David Brehm, Jessica Calvello, Daniel Coglan, Jillian Coglan, Kyle Hebert, Bridget Hoffman, Alex Kolesar, Joe Kovell, Lauren Landa, Cherami Leigh, Scott McNeil, Erica Mendez, Matthew Mercer, Tony Oliver, Jake Paque, Professor Shyguy, Patrick Seitz, Kieran Strange, Karen Strassman, John Swasey, Eric Vale, Cristina Vee, Lisle Wilkerson, and Stephanie Young.[22]
August 19–21, 2016 Hyatt Regency Columbus
Columbus, Ohio
5,300Kevin Bolk, Colleen Clinkenbeard, Daniel Coglan, Jillian Coglan, Richard Epcar, Lydia Mackay, Mike McFarland, Lisa Ortiz, Brina Palencia, Professor Shyguy, Chris Sabat, Tara Sands, Patrick Seitz, Ian Sinclair, Mike Sinterniklaas, Paul St. Peter, Sonny Strait, Kieran Strange, John Swasey, and Eric Vale.[23]
August 25–27, 2017 Hyatt Regency Columbus
Columbus, Ohio
5,700Zach Aguilar, Christine Marie Cabanos, Jennifer Cihi, Robbie Daymond, Sandy Fox, Erika Harlacher, Kyle Hebert, Xanthe Huynh, Kazha, Lauren Landa, Lex Lang, Erica Lindbeck, Julie Maddalena, Kyle McCarley, Erica Mendez, Tony Oliver, and Spike Spencer.[24]
August 24-26, 2018 Hyatt Regency Columbus
Greater Columbus Convention Center
Columbus, Ohio
6,500Ray Chase, Daniel Coglan, Jillian Coglan, Ben Diskin, Todd Haberkorn, Erika Harlacher, Caleb Hyles, Mela Lee, Cherami Leigh, Erica Lindbeck, Kyle McCarley, Tony Oliver, Bryce Papenbrook, Jamieson Price, Professor Shyguy, Kaiji Tang, TeddyLoid, and Kari Wahlgren.[25]
August 16-18, 2019 Hyatt Regency Columbus
Greater Columbus Convention Center
Columbus, Ohio
Kevin Bolk, Justin Briner, Ray Chase, Luci Christian, Robbie Daymond, Quinton Flynn, Caitlin Glass, Josh Grelle, Joel McDonald, Brandon McInnis, Erica Mendez, Jez Roth, Ian Sinclair, John Swasey, J. Michael Tatum, Toshifumi Yoshida, and Ryan Zanfei.[26]
gollark: Basically, osmarksunnecessaryIRCserver™ receives connections from clients, for purposes. They are not actually considered registered until they set a nickname. So I currently have it loop and receive messages until it gets `NICK bees` or whatever, at which point it sends the welcome messages, write-locks the global state struct™, writes in the new client connection, and adds the nick to the in-use map.
gollark: Yes, but that would be annoying.
gollark: Hmm. It looks like I need software transactional memory or something, but ææææææ there are not really any good libraries for that?
gollark: What of Haskell 2010's 1274128946128946187461876481648 extensions?
gollark: IRC servers have rather a lot of global state and I have no idea how to manage it nicely.

References

  1. "Matsuricon 2012 Event to Draw Anime Fans". Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved 2013-09-08.
  2. "Matsuricon Announces Distant Worlds Concert with Nobou Uematsu in Attendance". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2013-08-08.
  3. Ward, Allison (August 13, 2015). "Matsuricon lures talent from worlds of anime, games". The Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved 29 September 2015.
  4. Ulm, J. J. (September 3, 2014). "Matsuricon 2014 Rocks Columbus". Columbus Free Press. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  5. Dong, Bamboo (April 16, 2014). "South Carolina Non-Profit Provides Manga Library for Local Cons". Anime News Network. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  6. Mayr, Bill (2012-08-23). "Singers to join Orchestra to play to fans of video games". Columbus Dispatch. Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved 2013-09-08.
  7. Pelzer, Jeremy (August 26, 2018). "Donald Trump rallies Ohio Republicans in Columbus". cleveland.com. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
  8. Starcher, Cody (24 August 2018). "5 Things Trump Can do at Matsuricon". Columbus Underground. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
  9. "Trump To Appear At Convention Center During Anime Convention". The Libertarian Republic. August 23, 2018. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
  10. "Matsuricon 2020 Cancellation FAQ". Matsuricon. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  11. "Matsuricon 2020 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  12. "Matsuricon 2006 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
  13. "Matsuricon 2007 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2018-09-10.
  14. Brenner, Robin (2007). Understanding Manga and Anime. Libraries Unlimited. p. 210. ISBN 1591583322.
  15. "Matsuricon 2008 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
  16. "Matsuricon 2009 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2018-09-10.
  17. "Matsuricon 2010 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
  18. "Matsuricon 2011 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
  19. "Matsuricon 2012 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2018-09-10.
  20. "Matsuricon 2013 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
  21. "Matsuricon 2014 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2018-09-10.
  22. "Matsuricon 2015 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2018-09-10.
  23. "Matsuricon 2016 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2018-09-10.
  24. "Matsuricon 2017 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2018-09-10.
  25. "Matsuricon 2018 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2018-09-10.
  26. "Matsuricon 2019 Information". AnimeCons.com. Retrieved 2019-09-10.

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