Shoot the Freak

Shoot the Freak was an attraction on the Riegelmann Boardwalk at Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York that operated from 2000 until its demolition in 2010.[1] The game was located on West Boardwalk in Coney Island. The game was considered one of the distinctive attractions of Coney Island.[2] A successor, called Shoot the Clown, opened in a different location on the Boardwalk in 2013.

Signage for the attraction, from 2010

Game play

The game consisted of a raised platform above a yard filled with obstacles and other objects. A high concrete wall defined the back end of the yard; the walls of adjacent buildings defined the side boundaries. A carnival barker would draw passersby to play the game. Players would fire paintball rifles from the platform at human targets in the yard below. Playing the game required purchase of ammunition from the proprietor. The targets (the "freaks") were unarmed, wore plastic armor, and would taunt and insult the players while dodging paintball fire. No prizes were awarded and there was no scoring system.[3]

Demolition

As part of its contract with the New York City government to reconstruct and modernize Coney Island and create a new park called Luna Park, the Italian firm Zamperla tried to coerce several existing Coney Island boardwalk attractions to close or relocate, and Shoot the Freak was among those that refused. Over the 2010 winter holidays, Shoot the Freak was bulldozed without proper permits[4] and sealed off. The owner and operator of Shoot the Freak was Anthony Berlingieri, who also owned Beer Island, another Boardwalk business that had been threatened with eviction by Zamperla.[5] Berlingieri had been battling Zamperla in court and had been formally served eviction papers on November 1, 2010, but the eviction had been stayed on appeal and court hearings were not yet under way. Zamperla was fined for the illegal action.[6]

Shoot the Clown

After Superstorm Sandy decimated Coney Island in October 2012, proprietors scrambled to replace the attractions that had been destroyed for the following spring. The old Derby Racer space, on Bowery Street in Coney Island, became the site of Shoot the Clown. The rules, layout and setup of Shoot the Clown are identical to those of Shoot the Freak. The proprietor of Shoot the Clown is Caesar, the operator of a number of other attractions.[7]

  • A band based in Brooklyn is named Shoot The Freak.[8]
  • In the game Grand Theft Auto IV, a non-playable storefront in Firefly Island in Broker is called "Shoot Em Down." The sign is in the same style as Shoot the Freak's sign.[9]
gollark: I think its JSON library once used `recover` a bit internally, i.e. exception-based error handling, essentially.
gollark: For example, the magic `select` thing, `make`/`new`, its horrible monotonic times hack...
gollark: It's actually complicated and relies heavily on magic like Python.
gollark: WRONG!
gollark: Generally, Go's attitude seems to be:- don't trust the programmer to do anything right but use magic all over the place internally- stop abstraction at all costs and make everything explicit- ignore all modern innovations in language design- bodge everything into being mostly right but not actually correct

References

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