SteveAZee
Premium Member
I agree.I agree with your premise for the most part. Let me premise my comments with the fact that I can comfortably afford the price increases and extras for cutting the line. It still feels inequitable tho. I personally am not one of those folks who feels if I give more green to Disney, that I should get an unfair advantage. I agree that offering different price points for similar products is a good and actually, essential part of the consumer product and entertainment industry for the exact reasons you state. The issue many are having with these recent changes is more about, today those of lesser means are paying considerably more than yesterday, and getting considerably less meaning they are literally paying much more to get through the gates, and are now waiting longer for the product, and due to the longer waits, getting less of the product for the higher prices.
As many have said, the better solution was for Disney to add more product first, and then add the pay for privilege to have to wait less. If there were more attractions to absorb the masses, even with skip-the-line systems, people would have a reasonable wait in the standby queue. The problem is that Disney is getting some people to pay considerably more to get just a little bit more product than they used to get, and those who don't pay get a lot less. I completely agree that this is ultimately on Disney being an incredibly greedy company in recent years. The only way that stops is if the masses don't flock to the parks, therefore making G+ less of a necessity, and then Disney's hand is forced to spend money on new attractions to get the crowds back. In that way, the unhappy guests are to blame for supporting a company whose product you're unhappy with. If they're not unhappy enough to no longer consume the product, then don't complain is my opinion. I haven't been back to the parks for many years for a multitude of reasons that I've been unhappy with the product. At least I'm backing up my talk with my wallet and spending those dollars elsewhere. I'm very lonely in that approach though.
In most cases in a free market economy, there's competition for a product or service, so features get added and/or prices remain in check (or, gasp, drop). Disney really doesn't have that much competition... the brand remains strong and they've purchased tons of IP to leverage and expand on. I think Universal's new park (Epic Universe) may have some impact on them, so I'm not sure if the current push to milk every last dollar out of guests is because they feel invincible, or if they sense the threat from Universal and are building a war chest of profits to later push back against the competition. Either way, I hope Epic Universe is a real threat to WDW since it will force Disney to actually compete.