brideck
Well-Known Member
I think that answer is already known.
I'm not sure we actually hear from a lot of 8-year olds on this forum. Just seems like a bunch of people over thirty shaking their fists at the sky and wishing for the good old days.
I think that answer is already known.
I visited WDW for the first time when I was 29. Then went back for another 50+ visits.Sound reasoning to greenlight remakes.
Come on, they’re not Teslas!
I didn’t visit WDW until I was 29. I don’t think a ton of my classmates went back in the 70’s to mid-80’s, either - even fewer repeatedly. We mostly stuck to the Jersey Shore.
Growing up with Disney on one of our 13 channels once or twice a week, with few alternatives (like Muppets, which they now own) seems to have done the trick.
That all may be why I don’t mind IP in the parks. The IP always came first for me.
That may be an argument for Disney+ helping things along. With something like 120 million subscribers, often multiple children per subscriber household, who knows?
I'm not sure we actually hear from a lot of 8-year olds on this forum. Just seems like a bunch of people over thirty shaking their fists at the sky and wishing for the good old days.
I think two things:I think it shows that people still care about Star Wars.
What like "old Yeller?"The management at LFL should be “retired” right now
Too soon.What like "old Yeller?"
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I've given Grogu stuff by relatives because it is the only thing available at retail.Indeed. Regardless of nitpicking the sequels longevity (I don’t know!), it’s a bit hard to ignore Grogu’s merchandise penetration.
That one isn’t 50 year old men driving that.
That movie was made 68 years ago! Spoilers!Too soon.![]()
Grogu merch was being driven by everyone really. A big chunk was definitely people who really don't care about star wars at all. My youngest (4 at the time) thought baby yoda was adorable, still does, but has no real connection to star wars. It became a thing outside of, being star wars. But the og fans, like myself, leaned more into the mando and grogu stuff. I know I have a couple shirts, lego sets, hot wheels with them. And @Phroobar is right on. I have a 18" grogu and many other things gifted to me. So while that demo wasn't driving it directly, they still made up a good chunk I believe.it’s a bit hard to ignore Grogu’s merchandise penetration.
That one isn’t 50 year old men driving that.
Grogu merch was being driven by everyone really. A big chunk was definitely people who really don't care about star wars at all. My youngest (4 at the time) thought baby yoda was adorable, still does, but has no real connection to star wars. It became a thing outside of, being star wars. But the og fans, like myself, leaned more into the mando and grogu stuff. I know I have a couple shirts, lego sets, hot wheels with them. And @Phroobar is right on. I have a 18" grogu and many other things gifted to me. So while that demo wasn't driving it directly, they still made up a good chunk I believe.
To a Star Wars fan being gifted a Grogu is like getting a rock for Halloween.
I now question if you actually grew up in the 70s and 80s, some kids were getting these as presents and loving them -To a Star Wars fan being gifted a Grogu is like getting a rock for Halloween.
What like "old Yeller?"
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Too soon.![]()
Still a sad ending even today.That movie was made 68 years ago! Spoilers!
I'm not sure we actually hear from a lot of 8-year olds on this forum. Just seems like a bunch of people over thirty shaking their fists at the sky and wishing for the good old days.
Them not knowing Rogue One kinda tells me they checked out long before Disney ever got its hands on SW.But some of us have families and work in professions where we interact with younger people. Outside of Reddit and some YouTube channels, no one is fond of the sequels. We can look at all the reasons the prequels had fans, none exist in the sequels. They'll hollow shells of films.
This is anecdotal, so I am aware means nothing. A few days ago I was making small talk with someone I barely know and they asked about my weekend. I mentioned I was going to see Revenge of the Sith. They then brought up how bad the sequels were. I asked if they're watching Andor and they had no clue what that was. They didn't even know what Rogue One was.
Anyways, in about 5ish years we'll see if the ST starts being looked at differently. As it was about 15ish years after Phantom Menace was released that I started to see the PT being spoke about positively which was before Force Awakens was released.
My guess is as time goes on they are seen as flawed but overall acceptable SW films. I know some here will disagree with that, but we're talking about kids that were 5-10 years old at the time the ST started coming out. They'll be in the 20s by then and that is what they'll look back on as "their" SW.If you were betting money, which way would you go?
The why of how the prequels are liked and the many spin-offs that existed in the years after that were successful. Novels, cartoon shows, comics, toys and so forth. Just isn't there with the sequels. Even the actors trash them.
I visited WDW for the first time when I was 29. Then went back for another 50+ visits.
Started out taking our parents, now we take our kids and grandkids.
We loved the all-inclusive feel of WDW. There’s less of that every visit now.
We still enjoy it but have branched out to cruising so we go less often now. If our kids had to pay, they would choose a less expensive vacation.

I now question if you actually grew up in the 70s and 80s, some kids were getting these as presents and loving them -
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