When were you there? They’ve been dumping a lot of money into both the MPNHP and Bradbury museum. “Bradbury” is the name of the second Director of the Laboratory, who came on after Oppenheimer.
Tripler
All of the “good” stuff is behind fences on Lab property.
We took a family vacation to Mammoth Cave when I was a kid. We went through part of Mammoth Cave and a few of the smaller caves nearby which honestly were cooler than Mammoth Cave. We also inexplicably decided to stop at this place: Cave City, KY - Mammoth Cave Wax Museum (Closed). The first, last, and only time I’ve ever been to a wax museum. One of the reviews says it hadn’t been updated since the days of Reagan. I was there not too long after Reagan and it was bad then. I’m not surprised it closed, only that it lasted as long as it did.
I went to one back when they had one next to Disneyland in Anaheim. It was filled with literal random crap, including mummied dung, ancient condoms, and for some reason a fake tunnel with fake jewels embedded in the fake walls, but you still had to squeeze through the fake tunnel to actually progress through the museum. It had no rhyme or reason, probably entirely based on “We own a few storage units that need emptying, quick send everything here!”
I think comedian Jim Norton said it best upon visiting a local Ripley’s Believe It Or Not, “It’s a waste of time, I believed everything!”
I’ve been waiting for someone brave enough to go through the Noah’s Ark “museum” (I won’t link but it’s called Ark Encounter).
Can someone “take one for the team” and visit? It looks fairly expensive so maybe we need to pool some resources for our person willing to waste the time and visit.
Oh dear. I totally forgot about this one! Some of the online reviews indicate it could be a contender for one of the worst museums visited.
However, I was more surprised by how many people actually visit and love the place.
I don’t think I could set foot in such a spectacle.
The true believers give it three thumbs up. Everyone else will say “why the fuck did I just spent several hundred dollars on this crap?” And of course, only the true believers will spend the money to experience it so it’s gonna have skewed reviews (who amongst the believers wants to admit it is garbage?).
I know who Bradbury was but the typical tourist visiting Los Alamos looking for a museum about the Manhattan Project doesn’t. They would naturally go to the Los Alamos portion of the MPNHP which, as I said is (well, was in 2024) just a bunch of empty early 20th Century buildings repurposed from a boy’s camp. I gather the portions in Hanford and Oak Ridge are more impressive. The Bradbury is funded by the lab. The MPNHP is funded by the Federal government and there is little or no reference to the other at either site.
There are a LOT of “witch” museums in Salem. I’m sorry that you were disappointed in the Witch History Museum – it pretty much gets its facts straight, which is more than you can say for a lot of the other ones.
There’s another museum in Cooperstown that isn’t terrible (at least I didn’t think so). The Farmer’s Museum is a reconstructed 19th century village with buildings from the period, and people enacting the roles of townfolk from the mid-1800s. (Much like Sturbridge Village in Massachusetts). They also have the original Cardiff Giant, which is the main reason I wanted to see the place. Worth a detour.
I’ve been reading this thread, trying to come up with a really bad museum, and failing. I guess I have lower standards than most people. I’ve been to some really small museums (the Cibola County History Museum anyone?), but even those were interesting, and I’m willing to give a pass to small-town museums.
Then I remembered.
The World of Coca Cola in Atlanta, at Coca Cola’s headquarters. When I went, I was expecting to see displays on how Coke was made - the amazing bottling plants, the vast network of suppliers, the environmental devastation caused by sugar production. But no - all there is (all five floors, as I recall) is devoted to showing how Coke is marketed. That’s all they care to display - how this huge company advertises sugar water to kids.
Bleccch.
The Ark Encounter became a bucket-list item for me after seeing the Roadside America article in 2017. My interest was further piqued after watching the Independent Lens documentary We Believe In Dinosaurs on PBS.
I finally made it there in 2023 and I have to agree with Roadside America’s “the best” rating. Sure it’s expensive and the creationist theme may be off-putting to potential visitors, but those shouldn’t be factors for dedicated roadside attraction enthusiasts. For me the sheer scale, immersiveness and generally excellent craftsmanship of the displays made it well worth visiting. My only tip would be to get there when it opens, the crowds inside The Ark can be overwhelming late in the day.
In the same camp (but Mormon rather than creationist) is the Polynesian Cultural Center on Oahu. They do everything to hide the fact that the Center is a wholly owned enterprise of the LDS Church until you get inside.
When I was a teenager (1977) we took a road trip from MN to CA. We had an aunt and uncle that lived close to Anaheim. We did Disney, Universal, the beach, etc. Then they took us to a Date Museum. That’s date as in the fruit. They talked up the delicious date shakes that the museum was noted for. The museum had a little gift shop, a counter where you’d get the famous date shakes, and a little dark room where you could watch a film about the sex life of a date tree while you enjoyed your shake. The aunt and uncle were quite disappointed that none of us kids wanted to try a date shake (there were no other flavors). We were pretty disappointed too.