Omnispace
Well-Known Member
Indeed, back then they didn't have FP+ and they had less attendance.
More likely thay had fewer attractions, and multiple breakdowns since everything was cutting edge technology.
Indeed, back then they didn't have FP+ and they had less attendance.
Nah, back in 1989 they had Horizons and WoM. Everything was bigger and better and darn it, people were happier!More likely thay had fewer attractions, and multiple breakdowns since everything was cutting edge technology.
So true....universal doesn't need to compete with the magic kingdom....they just need to compete with the rest. To bring down a castle start with the weakest tower.
I'm about 150 pages behind on this thread so I know Tomorrowland is old news, apologies, but I had to post my thoughts as they tie in to one or two common topics here.
I loved the movie. It needs a polish, and a reworked third act, for sure, but I've seen so much worse, and it definitely should be rating higher than 50%. I'll get the Blu-Ray on the first day.
The superficial fanboy touches were lovely - the opening Space Mountain logo was wonderful, the World's Fair sequence made me feel like a kid again - that sense of wonder at the World's Fair was me at EPCOT in the early 90s - and the spirit of EPCOT was strong enough to make me sad that there are clearly people at Disney who 'get it', and yet seem so afraid to speak up when the reality is so far removed from the fantasy and ideals the movie emboldens. In many ways it carries the message of the Doom and Gloomers but in a way that the Pixie Dusters don't seem to notice.
When they refer to Tomorrowland visions as being advertisements filled with magic and dreams but reality being a crumbling shell of that vision... well, yeah that's WDW all over.
I've just returned from a (nowadays rare) visit to WDW (more later) but what was most striking was there were *no* Tomorrowland pins on sale anywhere. Nothing. Sure, the movie didn't do well, and I was visiting a couple of weeks after release, but I can't see anyone who liked it even a little not wanting one of those babies so was expecting them everywhere. Did Disney really have so little faith in the movie that they didn't even try to make any merchandise? If after being burned by lack of Frozen preparation they still didn't produce anything, they must really have decided this was one to bury quickly well in advance.
Nah, back in 1989 they had Horizons and WoM. Everything was bigger and better and darn it, people were happier!
Boy, if I ran a company where someone had just visited then said they wouldn't be back, and had gone to the trouble of clicking a link to reply to a survey, I'd be dying to know what their reasons were, not shutting them off without any interest in what they had to say. What a waste of an opportunity. I really don't understand the mindset of TWDC sometimes.
Loved the movie too, but wish they would have actually shown more of Tomorrowland itself.
I was hoping to pick up a pin too on our next drive over. What a bummer!
Excuse me, but don't use my research to advance your own agenda.
I'm trying to prove a point that Disney's lack of investment in the secondary parks is resulting in little growth over the long term and you're trying to twist my words to advance your own agenda.
I guess I wasn't following closely enough because are those mutually exclusive ideas, really?
Yes, the MK is teflon-coated, I think we all accept that. It sucks out loud, but we accept it. And, say what you will about how bloated the costs for NFL were, and the fiasco that is BoG, but...it's a better Fantasyland now than we had, at least - I mean, ours was embarrassing before.
NFL was some decent place making, and don't forget what Darth Iger did - at least we got 7DMT instead of Pixie Freakin' Hollow - though overall yes I think the whole venture took a ridiculously long time. Plus when you have the HM in great shape, Pirates doing OK, etc. - things could be worse in the MK. They could be so much better...but again, I see why it has few worries at the moment. And the point is, no, no Universal Park is ever going to be MK.
But that's the crazy part, you would think that they would see that as an opportunity to beef up those other parks, like you said - to draw even more. I think if we had the bean counters brains to pick, I'd assume that their "projections don't state that building commensurately in the other parks will increase overall spending or time spent at the resort". That's what I bet the key is right there: they believe they have maxxed out on how long people are going to make WDW vacations for, are content with the MK as the "Weenie" of the whole resort, and we are back to the original "saturated market" nonsense.
But Universal had other plans. They were only a 2-day "resort" trip really anyway, but now they can be 3...and can extend to 4. They are pretty close to being a destination where you can spend as much time as you can on a Disney vacation, when you include the fact that most people who stay at Universal are mobile, and can also do Sea World, or one of the other zillions of things to do in Orlando.
If you notice, Orlando area attractions atrophied for a long while in the 90's and 00's when Disney became "destination" and not even just "home base" anymore, but now that Universal has folks out and about again - there is some neat stuff out there and more on the horizon. This is what Disney is screwing up right now. They insulated themselves right out of the Orlando market with all the "you must stay on site a week or you are a loser" mentality, and the captive audience factor. Disney is the premium way to do Orlando still, but it's not the only way anymore - and for awhile there, it was getting pretty close to that.
So while all this brought a decade or so of really record profits because folks did the "destination" thing (i.e. the Disney Moms era) since Disney made it so easy and cost-effective to do (a 4 day vacation vs. 7 day vacation, priced out at WDW website is close enough that you feel stupid spending all that money and not going for 7). The piper is getting paid right now, because the very things that built that walled garden are now keeping them out of the "other things to do in Orlando" market which because of Universal, is increasingly a viable option. Before, I would have smacked someone who said they spent a week in Orlando and didn't do Disney - now, I talk to more people who don't than do.
TL;DR - Your data supports your theory, of course, but it also is the sword that Disney is falling on by letting Universal out WOW them so consistently that folks want to spend more and more time there.
Boy, if I ran a company where someone had just visited then said they wouldn't be back, and had gone to the trouble of clicking a link to reply to a survey, I'd be dying to know what their reasons were, not shutting them off without any interest in what they had to say. What a waste of an opportunity. I really don't understand the mindset of TWDC sometimes.
The thought of giving more space (or even really any space since there isn't some) to the "Disney Villains" has been a serious conversation for the last decade (or more). There has been massive success with "Halloween Events" featuring the villains. There were several concepts (BlueSky) that focused on villains. There was even a Heros/villians concept.
My hope is that the acquisition of "the Dark Side" will put the fire back into exploiting the other side of Disney's storys. Disney can still have the Villain's plan foiled at the end of the attraction if that is the foible with the idea. I can imagine a series of attractions focused on the telling of each villains story. Heck, they made a TV show out of the compelling nature of evil.
*1023*
My mega dream is a villains magic kingdom or even just a villains fantasy land, with very similar rides, only featuring the baddiesSaid it before and I'll say it again...
Villains are more fun.
My mega dream is a villains magic kingdom or even just a villains fantasy land, with very similar rides, only featuring the baddies
I've just returned from a (nowadays rare) visit to WDW (more later) but what was most striking was there were *no* Tomorrowland pins on sale anywhere. Nothing. Sure, the movie didn't do well, and I was visiting a couple of weeks after release, but I can't see anyone who liked it even a little not wanting one of those babies so was expecting them everywhere. Did Disney really have so little faith in the movie that they didn't even try to make any merchandise? If after being burned by lack of Frozen preparation they still didn't produce anything, they must really have decided this was one to bury quickly well in advance.
Again... A boutique park themed around Heroes vs. Villains is what is required for proper development of the thought. If you don't think this has floated around.......
*1023*
BTW: I thought the acquisition of Star Wars and Marvel would be a natural sequitur for this.
Great post. To the bolded, even if it didn't increase the time spent in one trip, consistently building new attractions might actually turn someone into a repeat customer. That one trip becomes two and possibly more.I guess I wasn't following closely enough because are those mutually exclusive ideas, really?
Yes, the MK is teflon-coated, I think we all accept that. It sucks out loud, but we accept it. And, say what you will about how bloated the costs for NFL were, and the fiasco that is BoG, but...it's a better Fantasyland now than we had, at least - I mean, ours was embarrassing before.
NFL was some decent place making, and don't forget what Darth Iger did - at least we got 7DMT instead of Pixie Freakin' Hollow - though overall yes I think the whole venture took a ridiculously long time. Plus when you have the HM in great shape, Pirates doing OK, etc. - things could be worse in the MK. They could be so much better...but again, I see why it has few worries at the moment. And the point is, no, no Universal Park is ever going to be MK.
But that's the crazy part, you would think that they would see that as an opportunity to beef up those other parks, like you said - to draw even more. I think if we had the bean counters brains to pick, I'd assume that their "projections don't state that building commensurately in the other parks will increase overall spending or time spent at the resort". That's what I bet the key is right there: they believe they have maxxed out on how long people are going to make WDW vacations for, are content with the MK as the "Weenie" of the whole resort, and we are back to the original "saturated market" nonsense.
But Universal had other plans. They were only a 2-day "resort" trip really anyway, but now they can be 3...and can extend to 4. They are pretty close to being a destination where you can spend as much time as you can on a Disney vacation, when you include the fact that most people who stay at Universal are mobile, and can also do Sea World, or one of the other zillions of things to do in Orlando.
If you notice, Orlando area attractions atrophied for a long while in the 90's and 00's when Disney became "destination" and not even just "home base" anymore, but now that Universal has folks out and about again - there is some neat stuff out there and more on the horizon. This is what Disney is screwing up right now. They insulated themselves right out of the Orlando market with all the "you must stay on site a week or you are a loser" mentality, and the captive audience factor. Disney is the premium way to do Orlando still, but it's not the only way anymore - and for awhile there, it was getting pretty close to that.
So while all this brought a decade or so of really record profits because folks did the "destination" thing (i.e. the Disney Moms era) since Disney made it so easy and cost-effective to do (a 4 day vacation vs. 7 day vacation, priced out at WDW website is close enough that you feel stupid spending all that money and not going for 7). The piper is getting paid right now, because the very things that built that walled garden are now keeping them out of the "other things to do in Orlando" market which because of Universal, is increasingly a viable option. Before, I would have smacked someone who said they spent a week in Orlando and didn't do Disney - now, I talk to more people who don't than do.
TL;DR - Your data supports your theory, of course, but it also is the sword that Disney is falling on by letting Universal out WOW them so consistently that folks want to spend more and more time there.
Like I said in that thread, I'll remain skeptical until it's proven. Would be amazing if true though.Here's a thread about plans for the Magic Kingdom's 50th Anniversary in 2021.
http://forums.wdwmagic.com/threads/magic-kingdom-50th-anniversary-plans.900622/#post-6745617
Sorry to derail your numerous derailings but ...
Finally had a chance to see Dr. Blondie/Cupcake up close and in person today. As long as she wears that same skin-tight dress she had on at 7 am on a Saturday, she's welcome to use her social media PhD to Twitter all over my Facebook any time she wants.
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