whylightbulb
Well-Known Member
My response to this will probably come across as rude but I truly don't mean to be. From your post you come across as a genuine and intelligent person so please don't take this personally.This is disheartening, but I have a few thoughts.
I work in a building with only 60 adults, and you would hear similar attitudes from a few of our people as well. Most of us, and most people I've worked with at different jobs, actually do care about people, product and have some pride. So am I surprised you heard that comment? Nope, not at all. I am not naive enough to believe that with 150,000 employees that some won't have these attitude. It's also been my experience that people who feel this way about their work, tend to be the loudmouths in the company. I don't believe the sky is falling or this is the prevailing sentiment. This attitude very rarely, if ever, represents the feelings of the majority.
Further, I feel that had you been working for or around WDI 20 years ago, you could have heard this. There have always been people who have no pride, passion or simply don't care at all places of employ. I doubt even all the Disney employees in the early days cared. After the strike of 1941, Walt was content that several hundred of those animators who didn't care were gone. Yep, always been people who try to dish out sub standard crap.
How does this affect me? well, some will argue that all the people with this poor attitude ensure that all we get at WDW is subpar; at least until there are changes in upper management. I disagree. On this point, there will be a very wide variety of opinions, but that's irrelevant. All that matters is, as spacemt354 noted, is the microexperience. My vacations at WDW involve experiencing the world from my point of view. I interact with CMs, eat at restaurants, partake in recreation, stay at resorts and visit parks. If what I experience is subpar imho, I'll talk to guest relations, write a letter, or simply vacation elsewhere. I've never had that experience yet. During my visit 3 months ago, doing parks daily and spending 9 nights on property, I saw about 5 minor things wrong and a million (slight hyperbole) that I was happy with. The executives you've overheard did not cause anything that I noticed. Perhaps they have little influence.
If you experienced a vacuous, cheap ride called Journey Into Your Imagination instead of a wonderous, imaginative ride-through attraction that inspired you and made you want to ride again than you were affected by these executives. If you rode through a warehouse with extremely minimal themeing instead of a fully themed thrill adventure that left you in awe after disembarking (or at least left an impression similar to this rides' cousins, Journey to the Center Of The Earth and Radiator Springs Racers) than you were affected by the mediocrity mentality so prevalent in upper management today. If you heard Albert Brooks shout, "Nemo Nemo...where are you" a million times with cheap tapestry and bare mimimal scenery than you have been affected again. If you boarded a gravitron in a pavillion that is one step above a carnival in yet another simulator, this time via a storyline about riding a simulator, than you have been affected yet again. If you climbed aboard a "Time Rover" through very dark scenes that had to be dark to hide the fact that there is very little to see than...well you know. What about Philarmagic - the 4D show that takes 10 steps back from MuppetVision and Bug having about 10% of the immersive effects and is basically a Disney movie commercial? Unimaginative merchandise? Lower and lower quality food choices but higher prices...all this comes to you courtesy of those same idiots.
Of course I could go on and on (as I've done in previous posts) but you get the idea. Have you been to Tokyo? Those executives get it. It seems Anaheim is starting to get it again.
Back when Eisner was putting his cronies in positions of power we saw the writing on the wall but didn't know just how bad it would get. The most disheartening thing though is that through their marketing savvy they are able to convince many that this is the best they can give us. The bottom line is I still have yet to meet anyone that has been to Tokyo that feels the way you do. Until you have something to compare the WDW of today, either WDW pre-1996 or Tokyo, you will continue to put up with whatever they tell you is magical.