easyrowrdw
Well-Known Member
What do you suppose the reason is? Just curiousThere’s a reason the park hasn’t replaced all of its lost dining capacity. It’s clearly not a good reason. The same is true with attractions.
What do you suppose the reason is? Just curiousThere’s a reason the park hasn’t replaced all of its lost dining capacity. It’s clearly not a good reason. The same is true with attractions.
There are people in other threads who insist that attendance has decreased so much that the parks and restaurants are empty.What do you suppose the reason is? Just curious
What do you suppose the reason is? Just curious
People just accept the crowding and waits. It’s the same with attractions. They’ve successfully driven down expectations how much you can do in a day. Disney’s goal is no longer to make you happy with your experience but the right amount of miserable.What do you suppose the reason is? Just curious
Saying attendance is down relative to 2019 (especially in the summer time) is not the same as saying it has not increased since the early 1990's.There are people in other threads who insist that attendance has decreased so much that the parks and restaurants are empty.
I don't always agree with you, but we're at 100% agreement here.A lot of posters are desperate to constrain their thinking along the false lines Disney is pushing. Here are some key truths:
Disney has enormous amounts of control over where guests go.
Disney World has huge amounts of available space.
If Disney World removes an attraction to build a new one, it is because Disney WANTS to remove the attraction.
Expanding capacity without removing capacity is the best way to have more capacity.
The Florida parks are full of ABANDONED spaces that are detrimental to the experience of the park.
Theme parks NEED “underutilized” space.
Theme park rides ARE IPs.
The attractions that built Disney Resorts’ popularity and made it an integral part of the zeitgeist were park-original IPs.
Business executives are not omniscient. They are not even wise.
These statements are all truth. Disney and certain posters would like to spin and gaslight them away. Don’t let them.
Adventureland Verandah, Aunt Polly’s. Diamond Horseshoe, and Tortuga Tavern.What’s been lost in dining? I know Tomorrowland Terrace but that’s been the way it is forever.
Is it really so difficult to believe that so many are going along with it simply because they are okay with the change? It’s not some grand conspiracy of turning the other way.There is an incredibly powerful impulse among humans - and it is amplified in Americans - to imagine that everything is and always will be “normal” and that change never happens. Therefore, if something is happening, it must be OK simply by virtue of it happening. Even if a few years and a lot of gradual changes ago the thing would have been unthinkable, even if it would have once caused fury or despair, even if the individual specifically condemned the unthinkable thing. And since everything is always normal, anyone who says it isn’t is clearly crazy and possibly nefarious.
I am talking, of course, about Disney removing Muppets and Rivers of America.
That makes sense. Though I do wonder if bringing food has become more common. If it has, that hurts Disney’s bottom line too. Anecdotally, I've seen more people in recent years with big ole cooler backpacks.They obviously feel they don't need it. Disney has a pretty captive audience, so if someone can't find a place to eat at MK for example, they will likely eat somewhere else on property. Disney only losses out when someone decides to eat off property.
That makes sense. Though I do wonder if bringing food has become more common. If it has, that hurts Disney’s bottom line too. Anecdotally, I've seen more people in recent years with big ole cooler backpacks.
Personally, we stay on property and don't leave. But we do bring food and snacks to the park and also eat in the room. Part of that is due to the cost of dining (we skip pretty much any fixed-price restaurant) and some of it is due to quality (QS) and wait times for food.
I’m sure cost is a big factor. Like I said, it is part of it for us. We eat Disney food and it usually winds up fine, but there is a level of annoyance and frustration that comes with it. Costs, availability, wait times, and options or lack thereof all add up to degrade the overall experience.I would wonder whether people brining food is more a result of rising costs then dining availability.
They lose a little bit when they chose 3rd party run restaurants like Space 220, Yak & Yeti, Morimoto Asia, etc.They obviously feel they don't need it. Disney has a pretty captive audience, so if someone can't find a place to eat at MK for example, they will likely eat somewhere else on property. Disney only losses out when someone decides to eat off property.
Despite that, Disney has convinced themselves it is not needed. People keep assuming some deeply rational, just business basis that does not exist.
But they’re insisting the parks and restaurants are empty.Saying attendance is down relative to 2019 (especially in the summer time) is not the same as saying it has not increased since the early 1990's.
I agree but if people aren’t using them for a brief mental reprieve or to avoid overstimulation there’s only so much Disney can do.I wish Disney would have found a way to convert the now unused Aunt Polly's space into a DVC lounge of some kind instead of the Shooting Gallery. There are all kinds of creative ways Disney could have increased Guest traffic over there if that were an issue but they'd never implement them.
Making sure children and parents leave with shopping bags full of Cars crap is more important than a brief mental reprieve from the park's insanity or allowing the kiddos a chance to explore and play with something other than a screen. Spaces like these are slowly disappearing all over the parks, which are designed these days to keep you overstimulated, stressed or never let you forget about the next thing releasing on Disney+ or in theatres.
I’m sure cost is a big factor. Like I said, it is part of it for us. We eat Disney food and it usually winds up fine, but there is a level of annoyance and frustration that comes with it. Costs, availability, wait times, and options or lack thereof all add up to degrade the overall experience.
... People may not want to hear it but the pace of life has changed from when the parks were designed.
Mindlessly?All the more reason to continue to offer spaces that aren't a reflection of the world in which we live, imho.
Of course I know there is nothing I can do to change Disney's mind or that of those who will flock mindlessly to the sounds of Tow Mater's "Git-r-done!". Just a sad observation is all.
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