Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Where is the tourist attraction after Princess Diana’s car accident? Why did Princess Diana’s car accident become a tourist attraction?

Where is the tourist attraction after Princess Diana’s car accident? Why did Princess Diana’s car accident become a tourist attraction?

Everyone should have seen the news today about Princess Diana’s car accident and becoming a tourist attraction. In fact, this incident seems quite disturbing. Everyone wants to see some beautiful scenery when traveling, so attractions built to make money really have nothing to see. Related News

The American "National Enquirer

Live" magazine recently made Princess Diana's fatal car accident the latest attraction in the theme park. The person in charge repeatedly emphasized that there was no evil intention, and it was just a recreation of the car accident. Address + What's Going On

Since last week, attractions at Princess Diana's new theme park (National Enquirer

Live) have attracted a lot of coverage.

Rick Laney, a spokesman for the 20,000-square-foot National Enquirer Live Museum in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, which opened on Friday, told USA TODAY Said that the museum does contain elements of Princess Diana, but "first and foremost, there are no Princess Diana attractions here."

The new National Enquirer Live Museum in Pigeon Forge (National Enquirer Live Museum) ) is a $15 million, 20,000-square-foot project by FrontPage

Attractions that brings the long-running American tabloid to life through interactive exhibits, games and confessions from journalists.

The Daily Beast’s exclusive report sparked curiosity about Princess Diana’s death. It was erroneously reported that the attraction was a theme park and was involved in a fiery fatal crash, Laney said, though he clarified the Crown's record: The feature in question was simply a map locating the path to the car she was driving the night she died.

The attraction includes 15 galleries that visitors can walk through, one of which is dedicated to the royal family and is called the Royal Wardrobe. It features sliding doors and shelves with interactive walls you can touch. At the back of the gallery is a three-foot-tall kiosk with a 3D map of Paris.

On August 31, 1997, Princess Diana was killed in a limousine collision with her boyfriend Dodi Fayed in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel in Paris after leaving the Ritz Hotel in Paris. Her death has been the subject of many conspiracy theories. A voiceover tells visitors what happened to Diana, and the map lights up, showing their route from the hotel.

“It’s a positive approach,” Robin Turner, one of the project’s lead investors, told the Daily Beast . "This draws attention to the issues behind the different theories that The Enquirer has reported over the years. The most sensitive question is, do you think she is carrying Dodi's child?"

Lanny didn't To think that this attraction would attract so much attention. Another location will open in Branson, Missouri, in June of this year. Laney could not confirm whether a close-up of Princess Diana would also appear there.

"Since we opened Pigeon Forge, we've had a direct line," Lanny said, adding that when it opened on Friday, there were about 300 people in line and the line continued. to the parking lot, but he guessed most people were there not because of Princess Diana but because the attraction was in a tourist town.

According to the Knoxville News Sentinel, the museum also features a selfie station for Kim

Kardashian, Michael Jackson ) room, etc.