Having been in the middle of this jet stuff for a while the biggest problem I see is that airshows in general don't understand that the right vintage jet will actually put paying airshow patrons on their ramp.
I have met many people who heard that the F-4 or A-4 would be at an airshow ,flying a demo, and they have driven many miles and hours just to see the airplanes one more time.
If it wasn't well received by the crowd do you think the USAF would have gone to the effort to include drones in the Heritage Flight ? Adding the F-4 is an unprecedented move for the USAF. They've never tried to put up a vintage flight like BBMF but the F-4 Heritage may be as close as you'll ever see. Yes they are drones and have a primary mission and they will eventually be expended but for now they are out there getting in front of the airshow public. It does make getting ours out there more difficult. However the drone F-4s are limited in the number of shows they can attend and the same goes for us. But, if you are an airshow organizer which would you take, a free F-4, or one that you have to help offset operating expenses. Any DoD entity is bound by law NOT to compete when a civilian entity is out there and can provide a service, in some instances I have literally seen them hang their collective hats on this statute. However it doesn't seem to bother them on this particular issue.
We have been trying to get the airshow organizers to understand that these jets are not second tier acts. With the expenses involved to bring these aircraft to the public, they simply aren't an act you can afford to use a backfill for a days flying schedule. We believe that they are a premium first tier act and if you want one you need to budget them first and then add more acts as the budget allows. It is very difficult for an airshow organizer to book 5 whoop de doo acts and then find the money to add a fast jet or evn multiple warbirds. I say this not to denigrate the aerobatic guys but many folks believe that the airshow crowd gets bored when too many small aircraft aerobatic acts are booked for one show.
The F-4 will give the airshow about a 15 minute show in the air and an additional 30 minutes on the ground if it is positioned correctly where the crowd can see exactly what it takes to launch and recover a jet of this complexity and vintage. It is not really a 1 man launch process. It's certainly not the old "kick the tires, light the fires". This process keeps the crowd engaged. I have seen people whoop and holler when the F-4 makes its low level drag pass with it whistling and screaming all the way down the runway as well as a pass made that's bumping 500 knots and making vapor. We've had more than one vet come up to us and thank us for keeping her in the air. These weren't pilots or maint guys, these were former grunts on the ground who believe that if it weren't for the work of some unknown Phantom that they wouldn't be here today.
The A-4 brings out the same type of emotions but a lot cheaper. We can also take it to shows at airports with shorter runways that may not be eligble for any other jets, especially ACC jets as they require a minimum of 8000 ft.
Oh yeah, one thing we don't suffer with is that our jets,
MAKE REAL LOUD JET NOISE !!!
