-you see a character riding the attraction with a guest
This happens much more than you think - usually the first ride of the day.
-you see a character riding the attraction with a guest
I have seen characters riding the Carrousel!
Also, the chef ALWAYS comes out and talks to me because I have food allergies. One walked me around the buffet at 1900 PF and offered to make me literally anything I wanted. I felt too embarassed to take him up on it.
I was actually shocked when I first went to WDW and you had to wait in line at specific places to see characters. I had seen all of the commericials with just random interactions, so I wwas disappointed to realize that Mickey doesn't just walk around randomly.
I understand why they can't do that with major characters, though.
I have been chased by the Queen of hearts just walking in fantasyland one day, and had some random interactions during MNSSHP
Isn't this a chicken and the egg kinda thing? It could also be that the random interactions were so great, word got out, and demand started to increase. Eventually you would have reached a point where the characters would have a mob of people with line-cutting and hurt feelings around them when they were trying to roam... hence the queue system that we have now. Have you been to a character meal? Even in a situation where every character is virtually guaranteed to visit your table, people will still chase the characters around the restaurant and crowd around.They used to. In the 80's. I remember running into space suit Minnie near SSE, for instance. I don't recall waiting for anyone else in line besides Mickey and Minnie, and I had a full autograph book. There was also exactly one character meal - at the Empress Lilly, not even in a park!
Then, like a lot of things - word gets out, people get obsessed, and Disney realizes that they can "entertain" people much more cheaply by making them stand in a line for 1/2 hour while a character getting $11 an hour and a host getting $9 an hour than spending millions on attractions to increase capacity.
It's so rare to see the random interactions anymore, but it is very special occasionally when they do.
Isn't this a chicken and the egg kinda thing? It could also be that the random interactions were so great, word got out, and demand started to increase. Eventually you would have reached a point where the characters would have a mob of people with line-cutting and hurt feelings around them when they were trying to roam... hence the queue system that we have now. Have you been to a character meal? Even in a situation where every character is virtually guaranteed to visit your table, people will still chase the characters around the restaurant and crowd around.
Not that I think Disney minds the queuing for characters system, but I don't think it's their "fault" necessarily.
It's funny you should say the Queen doesn't jump people from behind when I had Frollo do it to me a few years back. It was quite funny actually, and me my brother and everyone around us got a good kick out of it. These kind of things happen quite often, but from what little experience I have it mostly happens when the parks are a ghost town. Any other way and you're just asking for trouble - Either a kid complains the character didn't notice him, the character accidentally touches someone in the wrong place at the wrong time, people crowd and jam the character etc... It's just too much worry over nothing.
I used to be friends with several fuzzy and face characters, and the one thing that would improve everyone's experience with the characters immeasurably would be a ban on autograph books.
In my exhaustive and totally scientific field trials, autograph books did absolutely nothing but provide a hastily scribbled souvenir lacking uniqueness and substance. A guest without an autograph book was like an oasis within a set -when you're not flipping some giant photo-holding overpriced monstrosity around with one or both hands, you're freed up for hugs, games, conversation -you know, MEMORIES. When was the last time you were in a magical moment thread and someone gushed, "Oh I just can't believe it!! DD was so excited - MICKEY SIGNED HER BOOK! We couldn't believe it! You should see the pictures! It was so magical! Walt would have puked a rainbow!!!"
You don't hear that, because it's not magical, it's mundane. The character is reduced to a task (Gotta catch 'em all!) and the child's penchant for creativity (if they had any to begin with, which sadly, most children, thanks to the proliferation of media, do not in 2011) is quashed in pursuit of the almighty signature.
I can't tell you how many children didn't get to spend quality time with "my friends" because their parents insisted on the books. Coincidentally, it's never the children, it's always the parents. ("I paid 25 bucks for these things and you're gonna fill 'em up dammit!") But the parents who truly stepped back and let their children meet me unfettered, got rewarded with magical experiences, even in a lined-up M&G situation. Those were the times when I felt like Walt would have been proud of my work. I never felt like Walt would be proud of me being an autograph factory; it's impersonal and distinctly unmagical. In fact, one night, I got to roam on Main Street in a thick crowd of people and who should I come across? Mr. Iger himself, who watched me interact with several children and adults. He smiled as he did; I'd like to think he was proud too.
I miss the job, but every time I return to the parks I notice how much more industrialized characters have become. It's sad, and it defeats the purpose. I was impressed with their attempts, albeit misguided, to incorporate meaningful and elaborate interactions within the new Fantasyland. It's too bad the Cinderella effect in particular won't be seen, but an attraction is a better money spend. The easiest solution that will never be enacted because it affects merch sales would be a book ban. It sure would change the atmosphere though, and would give guests a far superior experience.
does anyone have a link to a video of this commercial? I haven't seen it
*watches commerical* They had a show like that?
I've also seen characters ride with guests, eg. Alice & the White Rabbit on the tea cups.
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