The parks are less pleasant when they're super-crowded, and I'd bet that Bob Iger is not creating the park experience he'd most enjoy as a guest. Maybe Iger prefers the parks be as crowded as possible every day (while also maximizing ticket/AP revenue), because more people spend more on food.
BUT maybe in the long run the parks would earn even more money if all but the most expensive APs had ltd. #s of visits,
with options for more visits, block out days, parking, discounts, etc.
If almost all passes only allowed 4 or 6 visits a year, people might appreciate the less crowded parks far more
and maybe far more people would buy APs & be more likely to get them every year.
Of course, people who want to
My daughter & I were once in DCA for the rope drop when the park was opening and a grouchy guy started complaining to me, really upset about some things that seemed petty ot me, and I'm a Disney park perfectionist. He mentioned that he goes EVERY weekend. Passes with limited #s of visits would make it less likely that guests like this would contribute to park clogging by visiting 50 times a year. And this guy might then enjoy life more with visits to beaches, museums, the mountains, Wally World, etc.
I do like that the parks are priced differently on days depending on projected crowd size. . .
(Off topic alert!!!) . . . although as a former teacher I don't like parents pulling kids out of school for Disney parks, especially when kids are in high school and grades determine college options. I remember some parents pulling a girl out to take her to
Hawaii, and this brought her A- down to a B+. Not a big difference, but it could've kept her out of her dream college.
After an Orange County Register (a CA newspaper), article there were some ignorant comments that all Walt cared about was money. I've read a lot about Walt, and I think of him as a highly motivated artist. Steve Jobs admired Walt a lot, and I think they shared a love of creating mind-blowing, excellent, innovative products. THAT was their primary focus, and they were then rewarded with profits that let them create more dream projects.
That's not to say that Jobs & Walt are the only kind of people who've used capitalism to better their worlds.
Bill Gates & Andrew Carnegie seemed more focused on market share, but then used their enormous fortunes to become inspired philanthropists.