PhotoDave219
Well-Known Member
I see the same trolls for four years ago are still here....
Awww can’t take some humor?
I’ll circle back in a couple days with whatever films I know are in development. Aside from anything I’m actively working on I don’t exactly track production status in my free time. But I’ll pass along some titles in a bit.
Here in the Florida Keys, 6.5 hours south of WDW. Tourism is done. All we get are people from Miami on the weekends. It was reported that over 100 business electric accounts in Key West were switched off and turned on in the landlords name. Every few days another restaurant closes for good. Most people do not want to get on a plane, so all you get are visitors from 8 hours away or less. WDW and Key West can not survive without people who fly in, and stay for a week.
When I saw photos of CM with both masks and face shields, and plastic dividers in the Jungle Cruise, I did not see it as looking like they are going above and beyond for safety. It just looks scary. Like some horror movie.
My family has been going to WDW for 24 years. We have lots of great memories. What makes it magical is how so much never changes, and you enjoy it the same way you did 20 years ago. There is no way I am going to WDW to wear a mask, use hand sanitizer every hour, only go to one park, no Trader Sam's, and try to keep distanced from a bunch of bratty kids. That's not a vacation.
I get not wanting to turn this into a covid thread, but its very hard to not mention covid when looking at the economic impact that covid has had, especially in a thread about the economic troubles disney is currently facing. Really we won't see our economy salvaged until we have control over covid. And its all intertwined. The food market, travel market, schools, jobs, everything. Food prices have gone wayyy up,and the stock is becoming more scarce due to covid. That would definitely impact Disneys selection of shipments. Airlines are beginning to fly at or near the level they were in April, cancelling thousands of flights once again. Right now a lot of people are getting unemployment, some probably use that to go to wdw. When that money runs out Friday, I think disney will see even less bookings. When school is back in session, online or in person, there will be less time for families to take summer trips.Again, no Covid or politics. Thank you.
OK I get no politics but Covid is the reason for the decline. Almost all businesses are suffering from the pandemic, with the exception of PPE. Now if you mean arguing over what’s right and wrong with the strategies of how to handle the pandemic, then I agree with you. This isn’t the thread for that.Again, no Covid or politics. Thank you.
It been that long???I see the same trolls for four years ago are still here....
That is not correct. Most people ARE NOT ALLOWED to get on a plane. International travel is literally impossible and domestic travel from your big source states of tourists requires a 14 day quarantine when you enter the state and a 14 day quarantine when you get home.Most people do not want to get on a plane, so all you get are visitors from 8 hours away or less.
The German breakfast spreads included in your room rate are incredible. The Berlin Hampton Inn breakfast bar is about 3x linear distance of Crystal Palace.It can be a lot cheaper if you plan it right and don't splurge.
Pre Covid, I've seen MIA-LIS and MIA-CGN for $300-ish RT. So Lisbon or Cologne, both excellent cities.
You can find 3-star hotels for $60-70/nt through hotwire/priceline (and a European 3-star IME is equivalent to a 3.5-4 start in the US), and if you do it right, for under $100/day you can have 3 good meals, drink a fair bit, and get around the city you go to.
Doesn’t matter Bob, no ones going anyway for awhile.I was considering decreasing our ticket prices by $0.99 next year, but if @Mouse Trap and @WDW Pro keep arguing there will be a price increase instead. Watch out!
I was considering decreasing our ticket prices by $0.99 next year, but if @Mouse Trap and @WDW Pro keep arguing there will be a price increase instead. Watch out!
That's why I was thinking about lowering the prices. I was hoping to lure in some new guests, but to make up for the lower prices I was going to increase our food and drink prices!![]()
I read an article about that today. Very sad. Our “local” airport has been a bloodbath over the last year - Thomas Cook, FlyBe and all Virgins 747s littered the apron.
In the short term, though, are there really enough people who can/are willing to travel longer distances to stay at a WDW resort? I agree that slashing rates to rock bottom is likely to create more issues than it solves. For the time being, though, I struggle to see what they can do to attract the usual resort guests to travel to Florida in the midst of a pandemic. It seems more a matter of waiting until the situation improves. As the pent-up demand hasn't materialised by now, allowing in more APs who may at least buy a soda while they're there is one of the few options they have to generate extra revenue.From my view, Disney needs to work harder to figure out how to make things more appealing for the resort guest. Shifting availability to tightwad APs isn't going to help, and it might just frighten off the few folks that are currently willing to pay top dollar for their low attendance trip. Figure out a way to leverage all those folks that have been paying for VIPs tours all these years and made DSA such a huge area of expansion.
Kids.. kids!
Based on my experiences in the parks so far, they don't have the staffing level to handle an increase in attendance smoothly. So it becomes a balancing act of ing off the folks that are paying with longer lines and more stressful interactions just for the low spend guest.In the short term, though, are there really enough people who can/are willing to travel longer distances to stay at a WDW resort? I agree that slashing rates to rock bottom is likely to create more issues than it solves. For the time being, though, I struggle to see what they can do to attract the usual high-paying resort guests to travel to Florida in the midst of a pandemic. It seems more a matter of waiting until the situation improves. As the pent-up demand hasn't materialised by now, allowing in more APs who may at least buy a soda while they're there is one of the few options they have to generate extra revenue.
That is not correct. Most people ARE NOT ALLOWED to get on a plane. International travel is literally impossible and domestic travel from your big source states of tourists requires a 14 day quarantine when you enter the state and a 14 day quarantine when you get home.
Full reopening or stay closed.
I suspect Disney can't really weaken their policy on masks at this point even if they wanted to because of the attention it would attract and, based on the coverage of their opening, it would be almost all negative. So, they're kind of stuck with the regulations they way they are until the situation with the pandemic significantly changes.They need to pick a lane. People who scoff at the pandemic won't go with a mask mandate and people afraid of the pandemic won't go no matter what, so Disney is appealing to literally nobody. They never should have half-*** reopened, it was doomed to fail from the beginning. Full reopening or stay closed.
Anecdotally, I hear WAY more "I'm not going if I have to wear a mask" than I am "I'm not going because I'm afraid of the virus."
The insiders are saying that attendance is way below what they were expecting with the current level of staffing, so theoretically they should be able to handle a relatively small bump in attendance by allowing APs in. If they can't, then it honestly seems like opening the parks at present is completely untenable.Based on my experiences in the parks so far, they don't have the staffing level to handle an increase in attendance smoothly. So it becomes a balancing act of ****ing off the folks that are paying with longer lines and more stressful interactions just for the low spend guest.
Actually its just restarted. A close relative works for a big production studio here in the UK and Netflix, Uni and Disney have all ramped up to full production both here and at their sister US locations.If COVID acts like the flu it will significantly extend the time we take to adjust, including economically. Live action filming is essentially dead at the moment.
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