Sorry, I only donate to the "Send Castor to JACON" fundCastor Troy wrote:The "send castor to akon" contest charges $50 bucks to enter. The more money you send, the better chance you have of winning!

NDK is my home con. The $5 charge is something of a tariff. The staff views the AMV contest as something for the attendees to enter, and not necessarily a contest that should be encouraging anyone to just send things to if they aren't attending. Most people not attending the con will see the $5 charge and not enter, as a result those attending the con and entering the contest have a better chance of getting into the competion without having to worry about as many people who just send their videos out to every convention.Hitori wrote:Nan Desu Kan charges a $5 entry fee if you are not going to be there in person. They hand out awards. They push for people who enter to attend the con as well. I couldn't attend so I sent in my fee and guess what... One of my videos got something!I'm going this year to see how they run that amv contest.
![]()
Don't most cons do that anyways? Push people to attend the con itself? 8)
Serious question: How would they know if someone who sends in an AMV does or doesn't actually attend the con? Checking the AMV submitters against the pre-registrations list is the only way I can think of to verify that they're intending to come to the con (at the time of the AMV submission deadline, anyway). Suppose they don't pre-reg for the con, or don't attend after they do pre-reg?earthcurrent wrote:The staff views the AMV contest as something for the attendees to enter, and not necessarily a contest that should be encouraging anyone to just send things to if they aren't attending. Most people not attending the con will see the $5 charge and not enter, as a result those attending the con and entering the contest have a better chance of getting into the competion
They have a pretty good computer record system for keep track of attendance. If they haven't pre-registered by the time of the cut off date for video entries then they have to pay $5, regardless to whether they are coming to the con or not. In 2001, the con fell just a few weeks after the whole 9-11 thing and we had a lot of cancellations from people who decided they just didn't want to travel to the con, even though they had preregistered. If you preregistered but do not attend the convention they will mail you your award if you win. They check to see if you are in attendance, and if you are just not in the audience they are pretty good at tracking you down.Cybermat wrote:Serious question: How would they know if someone who sends in an AMV does or doesn't actually attend the con? Checking the AMV submitters against the pre-registrations list is the only way I can think of to verify that they're intending to come to the con (at the time of the AMV submission deadline, anyway). Suppose they don't pre-reg for the con, or don't attend after they do pre-reg?earthcurrent wrote:The staff views the AMV contest as something for the attendees to enter, and not necessarily a contest that should be encouraging anyone to just send things to if they aren't attending. Most people not attending the con will see the $5 charge and not enter, as a result those attending the con and entering the contest have a better chance of getting into the competion