I guess I just don’t see that.
DCA = money well spent.
Galaxy’s edge(s) = money well spent.
Pandora = money well spent.
Shanghai = money well spent
DL Paris improvements = money well spent
Hong Kong DL improvements = money well spent
Not saying I’d have done everything the same but it’s not like he’s leaving us with bad parks like Eisner did with DCA, HS, AK, DL Paris, and HKDL that all needed billion dollar investments by the next CEO to survive. Epcot is the only park that will need major investments and is already a work in progress
What is the measure of money being well spent?
Disney’s California Adventure investment was pushed by the City of Anaheim which was threatening to make changes to the Anaheim Resort District. The project had notable wastes such as The Little Mermaid and Luigi’s Flying Tires.
Galaxy’s Edge cost $1 billion each for a couple of rides. Huge chunks were cut to keep it on that huge budget. Despite that plus the few hundred million dollars spent on Toy Story Land and Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway, the capacity of Disney’s Hollywood Studios didn’t really increase and the park is likely stuck as the least visited at Walt Disney World.
Pandora was a temperamental reaction to the success of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter. It too cost nearly $1 billion and couldn’t deliver its third attraction and had its C-ticket reduced in scope.
Shanghai Disneyland was all about doing what Eisner could not and even then the deal didn’t include the distribution guarantees that kept Eisner from going forward. Nearly half a billion had to be spent to get the project back on track.
Hong Kong Disneyland was expanded to make up to the government and (keep Shanghai negotiations afloat) who were still upset at the initial park and under performance. Iger was COO when Disney decided to reduce the size of the park for “cultural” reasons.
At Epcot great expense was to be undertaken for a fancy starchitect building that’s purpose was to be a fancy starchitect building just like Mike used to build.
Then there are all of the basic design issues that will be incredibly difficult to fix/improve. The late Eisner parks had issues but we’re also cheap. Even a park like Disney’s California Adventure had decent bones such that a large chunk of even Buena Vist Street has been there since 2001.