Another problematic approach that communities often adopt toward cultural tourism involves developing theme parks in which every aspect of a place relates to a general theme. Small towns become Paul Bunyanland or New Olde Country with a special ethnic character. Events and attractions are sometimes created with little or no basis in historical reality. Very often, these theme parks and ancillary facilities like hotels and restaurants depend on local residents who work at low-paying service jobs or execute traditional arts and crafts disconnected from their cultural contexts. In another related vein, some communities like Colonial Williamsburg have become living museums in which everyone reenacts community life at a given historic time, as if its culture had frozen at that instant. Many communities that have become dependent upon these approaches to cultural tourism are now rethinking their strategy.