CaptJackSparrow
Active Member
Drink warm hose water or stop complaining!We use the bottle filling stations at the parks.
Drink warm hose water or stop complaining!We use the bottle filling stations at the parks.
Don't forget a $6.25 mickey bar and a 8 buck pretzelHello, can I interest you in a $4 bottle of water or a $5.50 Coca Cola?
But those costs are controlled by Disney, which is why we’re discussing it. If Josh wasn’t so intent on defending their pricing strategies, then we wouldn’t be so annoyed. I know how to control my own costs.Not sure what you're arguing here. The conversation is about affordability. A baseline WDW vacation is hotel and ticket costs. You can't control those.
Food and transportation are things you can control. When I think affordability I think of how to minimize cost just so you can access the entertainment at a minimum level. Thinks like better accomodations, ride skipping access, souvenirs are all extra.
Of course I do, but there aren’t too many other vacation destinations where you’re so locked in to the “bubble”. Ignoring the price increases beyond park tickets and lodging is impossible. Disney knows exactly what they’re doing though.Do you not have transportation or food costs when you visit other places or even at home?
You don't actually want to talk affordability, because you explicitly want to leave out the components that were previous bundled in the cost of a stay at a Disney Resort that Disney now either charges for or no longer offers (FastPass, Magical Express, MagicBands, etc.). If you want to compare apples to apples when it comes to affordability from 2018 and 2019, then the price of those unbundled components should be factored in. That means including the price of Lightning Lane, MagicBand+, and transportation to/from the airport and a Disney Resort in those calculations. However, that also means you would lose the argument because Disney is demonstrably less affordable than it was in 2018 and 2019.Not sure what you're arguing here. The conversation is about affordability. A baseline WDW vacation is hotel and ticket costs. You can't control those.
Food and transportation are things you can control. When I think affordability I think of how to minimize cost just so you can access the entertainment at a minimum level. Thinks like better accomodations, ride skipping access, souvenirs are all extra.
I know it’s got everywhere in August m
But Highs of 98, lows of 84 and 80% RH?
…the cape doesn’t feel like that. It’s next level
The cape is more expensive than DisneyI know it’s got everywhere in August m
But Highs of 98, lows of 84 and 80% RH?
…the cape doesn’t feel like that. It’s next level
More knobs and levers, baby!You don't actually want to talk affordability, because you explicitly want to leave out the components that were previous bundled in the cost of a stay at a Disney Resort that Disney now either charges for or no longer offers (FastPass, Magical Express, MagicBands, etc.). If you want to compare apples to apples when it comes to affordability from 2018 and 2019, then the price of those unbundled components should be factored in. That means including the price of Lightning Lane, MagicBand+, and transportation to/from the airport and a Disney Resort in those calculations. However, that also means you would lose the argument because Disney is demonstrably less affordable than it was in 2018 and 2019.
Instead, you'll say, "Well, Disney considered those components to be 'free', so their unbundling doesn't affect the price of the room or ticket." If there were true, then why are people now paying for the previously free components? The answer is because Disney figured out they were components people would pay for and unbundled them as a result.
I concede Disney's choice of bundling those components is Disney's right, but they cannot then turn around and claim "affordability" by pointing to a dwindling number of days when the lowest ticket prices are offered or the dwindling number of hotel rooms available at the lowest rates as proof.
At the end of the day, everyone's family is balancing their three basic resources: time, money, and effort. Time and effort can be related back to money, though. If your time is more valuable to you than the cost of Lightning Lane, then of course it makes sense for you to spend your money to save time. If your effort to go to Orlando Premium Outlets is less valuable to you than the cost of a Disney souvenir sold at the parks, then of course it makes sense for you to spend your effort to save money.
But do not for a second believe that they're not all interrelated and what you might think of as "saving money" is actually costing you more in time or effort than it would cost in money. Something is truly a "deal" if the amount it would cost in one resource is less than the amount it would cost in another. The problem is people are bad at math and substitute their feelings in place of mathematical value. Disney (and every company) tries to take advantage of this and they've clearly suckered people into believing it's better to pay more of one resource instead of another by calling it "choice".
Who's complaining?Drink warm hose water or stop complaining!
You don't actually want to talk affordability, because you explicitly want to leave out the components that were previous bundled in the cost of a stay at a Disney Resort that Disney now either charges for or no longer offers (FastPass, Magical Express, MagicBands, etc.). If you want to compare apples to apples when it comes to affordability from 2018 and 2019, then the price of those unbundled components should be factored in. That means including the price of Lightning Lane, MagicBand+, and transportation to/from the airport and a Disney Resort in those calculations. However, that also means you would lose the argument because Disney is demonstrably less affordable than it was in 2018 and 2019.
Instead, you'll say, "Well, Disney considered those components to be 'free', so their unbundling doesn't affect the price of the room or ticket." If there were true, then why are people now paying for the previously free components? The answer is because Disney figured out they were components people would pay for and unbundled them as a result.
I concede Disney's choice of bundling those components is Disney's right, but they cannot then turn around and claim "affordability" by pointing to a dwindling number of days when the lowest ticket prices are offered or the dwindling number of hotel rooms available at the lowest rates as proof.
At the end of the day, everyone's family is balancing their three basic resources: time, money, and effort. Time and effort can be related back to money, though. If your time is more valuable to you than the cost of Lightning Lane, then of course it makes sense for you to spend your money to save time. If your effort to go to Orlando Premium Outlets is less valuable to you than the cost of a Disney souvenir sold at the parks, then of course it makes sense for you to spend your effort to save money.
But do not for a second believe that they're not all interrelated and what you might think of as "saving money" is actually costing you more in time or effort than it would cost in money. Something is truly a "deal" if the amount it would cost in one resource is less than the amount it would cost in another. The problem is people are bad at math and substitute their feelings in place of mathematical value. Disney (and every company) tries to take advantage of this and they've clearly suckered people into believing it's better to pay more of one resource instead of another by calling it "choice".
True, although ballparks prices are worse than Disney. Even other amusement park food prices are worse than Disney for QS, but that's another conversation. Disney is on par food price wise for most vacation spots, witn exceptions.Also, other entertainment options really aren't something where you eat all of your meals contained in the high price bubble for many days. Like if you eat a hot dog at the ball park, you aren't also eating breakfast and lunch at the ball park. You are probably eating much cheaper the other meals.
If you complain then do something about it , it’s not that hard. Filler up at the water filling stations.Filling a water bottle isn't a requirement for complaining about prices.
Seems like a bunch of excuses. There are options to save money which requires effort.Please give it up, you’re the one sounding ridiculous here. Of course everyone can find ways to save on their vacation. For most families though that doesn’t move the needle when it comes to affordability.
Plus you’re only proving our point on the value argument.
The ones we filled up was cold water but the ones who complain about $4 water and don’t take advantage of the free water , no sympathy for them.Drink warm hose water or stop complaining!
You yourself tolerate it by feeding the Mouse by continuing going on vacation at WDW. FL tourism thanks all of us by supporting a key driver in the FL economy.Every consumer should be offended when a company tells you what their opinion is of their “value”
And it’s been tolerated when the emperor and his sock puppets have thrown it around for 10 years (and there’s a key part of history along those lines missing there as well)
They don’t determine their value. They have no say and no right to speak on it. The customer determines that. And they have gotten more and more frequency of negative business/travel press on that “metric”. It has accelerated in the last 5 years - for sure
If I feel the criticism is over the top, I’ll do it.I just love seeing people defend big corporations. Don't understand it one little bit.
This. ^I don’t disagree the pricing is out of hand, but people keep booking. Heck, bookings are up for YoY and look to be trending up the rest of the year as well. The customer is shouting that they don’t care about the price. Is it sustainable? I’m not sure, but the train keeps plowing on.
As regular August visitors (teacher here) this take always confuses me. We're from MA and it hardly ever feels hotter in Florida in August than it does in Ma in August. Summer is hot everywhere. Disney has so much AC and indoor options that it's much more pleasant than a day at 6 flags up here. I think because summer is already hot, it just doesn't feel that dramatic.
Not everyone can afford it, and that’s a bummer, but not everyone can afford a whole lot of things in this world.
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