Just wondering, was it Kodak that forced Disney to change the Imagination Ride, or did Disney do it to try to appease Kodak for another reason?
In 1997,
Fujifilm, (Kodak's biggest rival at the time) came to
Disney with an offer: make
Journey into Imagination into a thrill ride that had nothing to do with imagination. Kodak's sponsorship contract was almost up, and Fujifilm knew that when the contract ran out, Disney would need someone to sponsor the building. Kodak, however, wished to stay with Disney and continue the contract. Kodak realized that in order to compete with Fujifilm, they too must come up with a new attraction to go into the building. Their proposal was to make
Journey Into Imagination, already an E-Ticket attraction, into something more scientific. The ride would also be shorter and have cheaper special effects. At the time,
Journey Into Imagination was the most expensive ride in Epcot to keep running, despite the fact that it got more visitors in a day than Epcot's flagship ride
Spaceship Earth. The guests made it all worthwhile for Disney to keep it running, but Disney still wasn't satisfied with it. It was the most technologically advanced
dark ride in history. A roller coaster would mean much more money to build and keep running, and they feared it wouldn't be nearly as popular as
Journey Into Imagination. Therefore, by the end of
1997, Disney accepted Kodak's idea.
you can read about this here