A man dressed like a World War II pilot hurriedly collected his gear in the parking lot below the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Hornet on Saturday morning in Alameda. 

Is the famous warship being recalled to active duty? Did he overshoot the runway and end up in the parking lot? 

CarrierCon 2023
Tony Abrams, of Vallejo, part of a USS Hornet reenactment group at CarrierCon 2023. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

“We’re representing October 10, 1944, which is where we actually celebrate the 1,000th arrested landing on the ship,” explained Tony Abrams, of Vallejo, part of a Hornet reenactment group. “So it’s just coming out for a living ship day.” 

Living ship is great way to put it, with more than 1,500 people on the Hornet, attending CarrierCon at what’s officially known as the USS Hornet Sea, Air and Space Museum.  

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The R2D2 owned by Larry Schroeder, of the Sacramento R2-D2 Builders Club, entertains the attendees of CarrierCon 2023. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

It was a convention celebrating cosplay, tabletop gaming, and Western and Japanese pop culture media. 

Abrams was dressed as Commander William Taylor, a real pilot on the second version of the Hornet, commissioned toward the end of World War II. The first Hornet was sunk during the Guadalcanal campaign in 1942, after launching the famous Doolittle Raid on Tokyo and besting the Japanese at the Battle of Midway. 

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(L-R) Naoto Shirogane (shsl_cipher) and Andre Nguyen (shioppacos) make a photo from the fantail of the USS Hornet. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

Russell Moore, the Hornet’s marketing manager dressed in a bright blue replica “Star Trek” shirt, said it was the first CarrierCon since COVID-19. Moore said it was a great double bill, with the fantasy cosplay crowd the icing for the Hornet’s historical cake.  

“It’s just a great way of bringing people out,” said Moore, who said Saturday was probably the fifth CarrierCon.” I mean, it’s double dipping in a way, essentially. I think what the cosplayers like as well is the ship looks like there’s an old science fiction ship if you’re taking pictures and playing ‘Star Wars’ games.”  

CarrierCon 2023
Hadwei Tang makes a sale of his artwork at CarrierCon 2023. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

The mix was eclectic, from the booth of Star Wars replica robot makers to about 45 artists repping Japanese anime and other kinds of games. While a Teletubby roamed the flight deck above, inside the cavernous hangar below was everything from Darth Vader escorting Emperor Palpatine through the crowd, to Marvel superheroes, to characters representing much newer online games. 

“They offer it all in one place: games, anime cosplay,” said Antonio Gutierrez, from Alameda. “This is different than like a Comic-Con; that seems to be a lot of TV and movie stuff. This kind of doubles up on the attraction, because it’s not really common to have a con in a World War Ii aircraft carrier. People get to explore the ship.”

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Attendees walk up the gangplank to CarrierCon 2023 on the USS Hornet Sea, Air and Space Museum. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

The Hornet hosted then-President Richard Nixon when it retrieved the Apollo 11 astronauts from the Pacific after landing on the moon in 1969. The Hornet is full of planes and memorabilia, including one of the test capsules used in Apollo 11 training. 

Samuel Pena drove two-and-a-half hours from Madera in the Central Valley to see the Hornet again. He lived in Alameda before the pandemic and the Hornet was frequently a destination for his family for special events like Fourth of July fireworks and Halloween. 

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Samuel Pena of Madera, plays at the Extreme Battle table at CarrierCon 2023. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

“I own my own little esports club, so I wanted to host (a tournament here) but unfortunately it was too late, but hopefully next year,” Pena said. “I’m also here for the ‘Yu-Gi-Oh’ (TV show trading cards) and just to see the vendors what they got. They always have nice stuff here. I’m glad to be back.” 

Belowdecks “Dungeons and Dragons” tournaments were happening at tables in the former Chief Petty Officers Lounge. A specific version of the game was written for CarrierCon by local player Robbie Pleasant called “The Ghost Ship’s Sting.” 

“This is the first year for CarrierCon that they’re doing ‘Dungeons and Dragons'”

Brian Green

Green, from Hayward, is a member of a local D&D group recruited to help organize the tournament (which includes handing out promo posters for the upcoming Chris Pine film “Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves.”) 

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Robbie Pleasant (right with bow tie) plays ‘The Ghost Ship’s Sting,’ a game he wrote for CarrierCon. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

“That’s not the only game; there’s a bunch of games being scheduled throughout the day,” Green said. “We’re sort of running three different adventures. We have the whole gamut, from level one to level four.”  

Back in the hangar deck, next to the Mandalorian Mercs Costume Club, the non-profit Bay Area R2 builders were showing off their “Star Wars” droids they take to schools, hospitals and various charity events, including the R2-D2 that was rolling cruising around the ship, seemingly unsupervised and taking in the scenery. 

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(L-R) Robert Stevenson and Jessica Janice of Bay Area R2 builders at CarrierCon 2023. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

“There’s no selling for profit; it’s really about love of ‘Star Wars,’ love of building, love of learning and tinkering,” said builder Robert Stevenson. “We all build them differently: some of them do full dome rotation or panels open and close and have servos.” 

One participant wasn’t quite as futuristic. Berkeley resident Steven Head was dressed as Union Civil War General Ambrose Everett Burnside, also known for popularizing what we call sideburns. Burnside’s – and Head’s – extended from near the ears into a fluffy mustache. 

CarrierCon 2023
Steven Head of Berkeley, as Union Civil War General Ambrose Everett Burnside, attends CarrierCon 2023. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

Head said he’s not into much of the anime and games shown off at CarrierCon, but is partial to World War II history, especially the Pacific campaign.  

“I’m mostly just here for, let’s be truthful, to get out of my shell,” Head said. “I’m not very big around crowds.” 

CarrierCon 2023
(C) Andrea Reeves of Sunnyvale, as a Mandalorian at CarrierCon 2023. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)