"In a Disney park, everything must work. Poor maintenance is poor show" - Marty Sklar
Almost like they’d have some spare cash to fix things.“ Disney posted record profits/dividends. Revenue and Operating Income were up across all segments with the exception of the troubled domestic television units”
-Bloomberg
If you believe what Disney claims - that all rides are really “stories” and that their commitment to quality is timeless...
Then how can that ride not be judged as a failure?
Do you trust the horses mouth?
When they're not building their CEO a new cash vault...Almost like they’d have some spare cash to fix things.
This is not "poor maintenance" this is massively failed imagineering/ engineering. There is a difference. This isn't a case of there weren't enough people available to grease it. This isn't poor show, this is poor performance of people paid mega bucks to do it right the first time."In a Disney park, everything must work. Poor maintenance is poor show" - Marty Sklar
You summed up my feelings about the Yeti. Would it be awesome if it was moving? Yeah. But the cost benefit ratio doesn't just look bad for rebuilding the attraction, its pretty horrible. They basically have to REBUILD THE ENTIRE ATTRACTION. People are riding it and enjoying it, it makes n9 kinds of sense to tear it down to rebuild the structure just to make the Yeti move. It's a bad waste of money that would have to come out of new attraction budget to get done. Some years down the road when its ready for a full refurb and they want to put in a new attraction, maybe then they could rebuild it they way it should have been and maybe some newer tech will be implemented at the same time. Think along the lines of how Star Tours was and is today.I know this one has some strong feelings from some people, and I have to admit I'm a little bemused by some of it, and figure I must be missing somethings. Especially after I saw a couple of people attack Iger on the thread about him as if he's directly responsible for it and it's a high crime to not have fixed the Yeti.
We all know the issue- the Yeti on Expedition Everest used to move. Now he doesn't, and instead has a strobe light effect projected onto him. The reason seems to be that the figure itself broke at some point, or it was causing structural issues with the mountain itself and they shut it down. Or both. From what I've seen the only way to fix it is to close the ride for months, actually have to remove the top of the mountain, lift the figure out for repairs, and also do some work on the mountain itself so that it can properly support the moving Yeti. And to do so is going to cost tens of millions of dollars. Do I have that basically right?
So a ton of money and downtime for something that nominally affects the ride, at best. I rode it before it opened, and over the course of the 5 years I worked there- starting about the time they opened the ride- and other visits, I've been on it plenty. The impact difference of moving yeti vs strobe yeti is small- small enough that I doubt most people would even notice it.
I don't understand thinking it's necessary to spend millions on a moment that lasts maybe a second. What return on their investment would they get that would make it worth it to spend that much money. An advertising campaign? "Look, the Yeti moves!"
I'm sure there is someone here who will be happy to put my ignorant self in place and explain how this one thing ruins their whole entire vacation at Disney, or how Disney would make billions if they fixed it, or something like that. But I don't get it.
To your point how do the hairbands fit in ? Seeking a way to tame the unruly tuffs of hair that are the bane of the Yeti's existence, intrepid adventurers launch streams of hair restraints in the hope that they will be used someday by the creatures.
You’re right. I’ll take my quote to Space Mountain. And Tower of Terror. And...This is not "poor maintenance" this is massively failed imagineering/ engineering. There is a difference. This isn't a case of there weren't enough people available to grease it. This isn't poor show, this is poor performance of people paid mega bucks to do it right the first time.
I’m sure there’s a ladder...somebody would just need to climb up it daily with a garbage bag and some
Rubber gloves
Exactly. Because of OSHA it is a two person job with extra safety equipment requirements. Could have been done with a back pack vacuum. It was pretty clean when I was there at the beginning of the month. There were only a couple compared to previous trips.It is that simple, yet again its not that simple due to OSHA regulations.
Because it was a very noble and energetic thing to strive for. If they had been able to pull it off it would have been one of the most spectacular thing to accomplish probably ever. It didn't work. sad but hardly the end of the world.
Running a business is not unlike running your private home. You may want something, but, you find out that your life is just as good without it. You don't throw money away. It was a noble effort, but, not worth spending more money on.
My point was that they overlooked it when they designed it to begin with. They never factored in how cold it actually got in Florida or they would have used a different material to begin with.
But to your point... Disney has an obligation to the shareholders and it would be irresponsible to spend tens of millions of dollars to simply insure that a animatronic yeti moved on a ride where the majority of the people don't care. Yes Disney has enough money to do it, the also have enough money to do all sorts of ridiculous things, but it would be silly to do it simply because a few people remember it when worked.
And if you don't understand ROI then I would hope you keep your investments in funds that are managed by people that do. As for what ROI means it is just exactly what it stands for "return on investment'... Most companies will always have more projects and business opportunities available to them than they have the funds to undertake. If you were given a two different opportunities but only had enough money to pursue one of them how would you make the decision? Would it be based on which opportunity made you the most money as a percent of you investment or would you rather invest in the one that had a cooler name or used nifty technology? Businesses go by the numbers and the ROI is just a way that they can easily compare all those opportunities to each other using a common measurement.
If a company is know to ignore ROI and just do what they think is cool it is a company that most investors will shun like the plague.
This is not "poor maintenance" this is massively failed imagineering/ engineering. There is a difference. This isn't a case of there weren't enough people available to grease it. This isn't poor show, this is poor performance of people paid mega bucks to do it right the first time.
"I will fix the Yeti"
- Joe Rhode
It is that simple, yet again its not that simple due to OSHA regulations.
Exactly. Because of OSHA it is a two person job with extra safety equipment requirements. Could have been done with a back pack vacuum. It was pretty clean when I was there at the beginning of the month. There were only a couple compared to previous trips.
Hardline...but I like it.Pretty simple really. It's poor show and the ride should be 101 until it is repaired.
...I can’t...When they're not building their CEO a new cash vault...
Here's what I expect to see... they move the spitting camel from Aladdin's Carpets to replace the yeti, and change the name of the ride to Expedition Effervesce.
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