In the eyes of the locals things are going so badly in fact, that a group planning theatrical protests over the America's Cup and Larry Ellison, who seems to be painted as a Bond villain in San Francisco, have called off the show out of pity for the billionaire.
That's right. The San Francisco Institute of Possibility, which had planned a series of stunts to mock the America's Cup, announced on Monday they weren't going to bother. A board member for the group, Joshua Marker, said that while the race initially provided ample opportunity for satire, it eventually began satirising itself.
"There are so many levels of comedy and pathos here. So many bad decisions, on top of bad decisions - we just couldn't keep up," said Marker. "I said 'How do you parody that?' at our last meeting, and everybody just shrugged. So we're done."
Among the hijinks the group said they had been planning were:
Dressing as 19th-century commodores and shouting fake nautical commentary to one another during races.
Posting a large electronic sign at each race to count the amount of money the city was losing per second.
Installing a kissing booth that would be hosted by a man dressed as Ellison and patronised by a line of people dressed as the city's mayor, Ed Lee.
Having Ellison look-a-likes walk through the crowd at races asking spectators for spare change and public development rights.
All of which would have made a fine production, but given that Kiwi fans seem to outnumber the locals 3-1 at the America's Cup village, a lot of the gags may have been lost on the visitors.
Besides, the only show they want to see is Dean Barker lifting the Auld Mug.