eliza61nyc
Well-Known Member
The question is whether we are grasping at a nostalgia of better days that never were or whether things have truly gone down hill.
Both things are entirely possible.
Maytag used to have washers that would last 20+ years. They were high quality.
Then Whirlpool bought them and just slapped the Maytag name on Whirpool washers and quality plummeted as Whirpool level washers only last 5 years.
****
Vaccum cleaners. The greedy Vacuum Corps made billions off the vaccuum cleaner bags while providing crappy service.
Then a man called Dyson(who was fed up with the greedy Corps) came along and with a superior services crushed the greedy Vaccuum Corps.
another agree, I always allow for the real reality that for long time visitors things have gone downhill. but you're last sentence points to a difference, right now Disney is still king, that is pretty evident from the visitors to the parks. Is it sustainable? who knows but I'll go out on a limb, for the next 5 years??? yeah they are sitting pretty as long as the entire economy does not crash. also again the age thing. more and more of those who remember are dropping off.
but along with the washing machine analogy and Disney, John q public bears some responsibility. Americans (and I'll just use us for example) stopped demanding quality. We wanted fast, cheap, renewable junk. I remember when Walmart first opened up, didn't they use to pride themselves on only purchasing quality American goods?? I have a friend who is a small business women and I went with her to her interview with walmart when she tried to get her product on it's shelf. the entire interview went basically "can you manufacture it a lot cheaper, are you willing to move production out of the country".
I'm not sure if dyson has 'crushed" the vacuum industry, there is a price point that some consumers just won't go over, lol I'm one. I'm never ever going to pay 500 bucks for a vacuum and they do have some cheaper entry level offerings but that cute little dyson animal that is suposed to be great if you have pets? 499.00. never gonna happen, which is pretty interesting since I will shell out 2K for a pocketbook. go figure. though I don't think Dyson is worried about the lower end consumer, they are not trying to get the guy who wants a vacuum for 89 bucks.
anyhoo back to the consumer, now you know my mantra, I stopped saying it because folks here get mad. If you find a product/service has deteriorated and the company is no longer operating under principles you feel strongly about... the logical answer is to stop supporting that product. Right now that has not happened so I'm sort of confused about what we think is going to change?
But to the point of Iger giving his explanation on the parks pricing? doesn't surprise me and not sure how important he feels the parks are to the overall health of the company. I don't think wall street cares where the profit comes from, as long as it comes.
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