The thing is, a football season pass will cost considerably more than a theme park pass, but there's a reason which Gavin points out. A football game is different each time and the entertainment value to the football team fan is very high. It's not the just the act of watching the game that is enticing, it's the competition against other teams.
I think in terms of locale, you'll find that pass holders and season ticket holders are similar though. If you love a park/team and live near your local park/stadium then you'll get your yearly pass. When we first delved into the MAP thing, it was a no brainer. We were clocking up at least one visit a year to Alton and for the cost of another visit, we could go as many times as we wanted plus the other Tussauds parks.
Getting it on Tesco makes it an even better deal.
Living less than 20 miles from Alton, it's close enough to pop over for a day or afternoon to get the family out of the house. A lot of pass holders are like this, it's just convenient for them.
However, most Man U supporters (seeing as they're abroad or south of the Watford gap
) won't buy a Man U season ticket for home games, it's too much effort. In the same way our members here wouldn't buy an Alton AP when they live ten miles from Thorpe (kudos to them though for not bothering with Thorpe and considering Alton
).
So yeah, it's just not comparable at all as Gavin pointed out, no matter how many APs Merlin flog - it covers a lot of parks around and the pay back (especially if you're around London) is massive.
See a football fan doesn't just go to home games, or watch their team play. They enjoy football a lot of the time no matter who is playing. They enjoy the sport, not just the team. It's a bit like suggesting that every MAP holder also only watches Roller Coaster documentaries and films that have theme parks in them. They get their friends around to play "spot the Six Flags/Cedar Fair park" in Spy Kids 2.
Football is an encompassing social past time that happens very regularly over the year. The same with cinema, eating out, etc. Theme parks are a special day out, for most people a heavily organised yearly treat. Nothing else really compares to it, not even zoo/aquarium/national trust kind of trips. A trip to a theme park is seen as an expensive proposition (as Marc points out above) in a way that no other yearly outing is seen. It's not just entrance, it's the constant attempts to take your cash from you (I'm looking at YOU Camelot
). As it's a yearly treat, people tend to just suck it up and pay out.
I really don't think there's anything quite on the same level as theme parks for this kind of comparison at all. You can't pretend it's educational for the kids. It's simply an excuse to have fun for an entire day and there's nothing comes close.
We'll also ignore things like the fact a new film can cost £200,000,000 to make so the cost of cinema tickets reflects this, footballers on £100,000 a week need paying for, etc, etc, etc... Deeply complicated issue and the end result is "if they're turning a profit, then they're doing alright"