Bay Area amusement park closes ride amid charges of stereotyping

A Halloween attraction at two California amusement parks, including one in the San Francisco Bay Area, has been closed amid accusations that it was offensive to the mentally ill.|

BUENA PARK - A Halloween attraction at two California amusement parks, including one in the San Francisco Bay Area, has been closed amid accusations that it was offensive to the mentally ill.

KABC-TV reports the virtual reality attraction at California's Great America in Santa Clara and Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park was originally called FearVR: 5150. The 5150 refers to California's state code for an involuntary psychiatric hold. The story line of the attraction focused on a patient in a hospital.

Among those criticizing the ride was pastor Rick Warren, who said it "stereotyped & stigmatized" mental illness. KTVU-TV reports National Alliance on Mental Illness-San Francisco Executive Director Anne Fischer called the attraction "incredibly damaging" for reinforcing a stereotype.

Park owner Cedar Fair says the attraction wasn't meant to offend and has been pulled from its California parks and one in Canada.

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