Access All Areas June 2020 | Page 31

JUNE | OPINION “Most incidents of earth-shattering, history-defining news come pre-packaged with a villain. Covid-19 is different.” would not be banned. The paper laid blame at the organisers’ feet, and said the Festival should not have gone ahead. For context, on 13 March the Mail ran a story with the headline “more than 70,000 racegoers brave Cheltenham”. Heroes become villains very quickly, when they’re needed to. I asked Cheltenham organisers The Jockey Club to comment but they politely declined, saying they were “not giving any further interviews or statements regarding this year’s Cheltenham Festival.” I understand their desire to lay low, and it does seem to have worked - although other outlets including the BBC picked up the story, it has since quietly faded into the background. In the long run, though, I don’t think we’ll be able to lie low and wait out this story. Events are beginning to return, and with them the inevitable risk of re-infection. For some, this is a necessity rather than a privilege. Addressing the problem directly is the only way to get ahead of it. Anyone thinking of holding a socially distanced event in 2020 will need to go out of their way to shout about their use of hand sanitiser, distancing, temperature checks and more. They will need contingency plans for if infections do occur, and they will also need at least some kind of media strategy if they find themselves getting the “prof lockdown” treatment. We need to ensure that our first priority is the safety of those in attendance at any future festival or live event. In other words, the events industry can’t get caught with its pants down, thinking with its (ahem) wallet instead of its brain. Based on the levels of creativity I have seen across the outdoor events industry in imagining new, safe kinds of events, I don’t doubt our ability to do it. Whether it is German football restarting with cardboard cut-outs instead of fans (see p37), or festival organisers pivoting to drive-in events with waiters on rollerskates (see cover feature) – the ideas and the experience are there. Let’s make sure the story that gets told is the Captain Tom story, about resilience in the face of uncertainty, rather than the “pants around your ankles” one. 31