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The future of Scottish tourism What do death, gam...
Thursday, August 26 02:38:05 AM 2004

The future of Scottish tourism


What do death, gambling, and homosexuality have in common? According to scotsman.com, they are the future of tourism in Scotland. This article talks about both John Lennon and Howard Hughes, so it's got to be good:
FORGET golf, whisky and genealogy. Tourism in Scotland is to be boosted by death, homosexuality and gambling.

Niche markets such as dark tourism - interest in graveyards, gruesome ghost tours and battlefields - are to be targeted in an effort to attract more visitors. Industry figures will also hear of the benefits of so-called pink tourism and casino tourism at a series of lectures organised by VisitScotland.

Income from gay visitors and amusement attractions such as Glasgows casinos is put at more than £100 million annually.

The new niche areas add to existing Scottish tourism themes, including extreme sports, culture, whisky, golf and genealogy. Tens of thousands come to Scotland every year to trace their family history.

A spokesman for VisitScotland said: "Targeting specific areas such as dark tourism and pink tourism are among the ways we can encourage more tourists to Scotland.

Professor John Lennon, of the Moffat Centre at Glasgow Caledonian University, a world expert on dark tourism, will speak about "ghosts, murder and religion".

He said: "Scotland has a rich and evocative history and there is scope for expanding the range and quality of attractions in terms of what is on offer. "But tourism agencies have to walk a tightrope in terms of taste. Some dark tourism is more sinister, such as the interest in going to see Auschwitz, Lockerbie or Ground Zero. It is a similar phenomenon to the desire to slow down and look at accident scenes on the motorway. "

There are more suitable opportunities. The Glasgow Necropolis is a fascinating place to visit but it doesnt get as much attention as perhaps some of the graveyards in Edinburgh which are on ghost tours."

VisitScotland is already appealing to gay travellers, whose higher disposable income - dubbed the pink pound - is worth an estimated £72 million a year to Scotlands hotels, restaurants and bars. A current promotional campaign in glossy magazines with a high gay readership is aimed at reversing the negative publicity earlier this year when Tom Forrest, a Highland B&B owner, turned away gay guests, describing them as "deviants".

VisitScotland is also hosting a series of visits to Scotland by United States tour operators that specialise in the gay market.

Professor Howard Hughes, of Manchester Metropolitan University, will next month talk about marketing to attract the pink pound.

Lady Penelope Cobham, chairman of the British Casino Association (BCA), will deliver a talk in November entitled Casino Tourism - What Lies Ahead?

Glasgows growth as a business conference destination is being helped by its high-profile casinos. The first of Glasgows new "super casinos" will open next month in Glassford Street. Run by Gala, the firm which manages four of the citys five existing casinos, it will stay open 18 hours a day.

The creator of Sun City, South Africas gaming and entertainment resort, is also hoping to spend £162 million creating a casino and hotel complex near the SECC, while one of the giants of the Las Vegas strip, Las Vegas MGM Mirage, has promised "a complete day and night-time experience at a proposed casino at the Glasgow Harbour development.

Death, gambling and the pink pound - is this tourism's future?

I say they should just combine all of this stuff--build a casino in the Glasgow Necropolis (what a cool name for a casino) and have a gay nightclub as an attraction. You could even call the club the "Pink Pound" just to make it crystal clear. To maintain links with other popular activities, the casino could also have a scotch whisky bar/lounge, golf course, and genealogical research center.

Everywhere, it seems, gambling is being touted as THE ANSWER. It will fund property tax relief in Pennsylania, prop up the budget in California, and bring droves of tourists to Scotland.

It's interesting that, in spite of governments around the world embracing gambling, it's still seen as something of a fringe tourism product, like graveyard tours.


Source: Casino [ptz]


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