....from my childhood perspective, this was keeping me from going on rides. My parents loved it, and they always wanted to see it on our first day at the parks.
I'm sure if I watched our home movies (my dad recorded EVERY moment of EVERY attraction on one trip with his giant shoulder-mounted betamax VCR camera), the segment with the Diamond Horseshoe probably inadvertently captured glimpses of bored, fidgeting kids, and complaints of "Can we go on Big Thunder Mountain NOW?"You too!?
HAHAHA.... I wonder how many more of us are out there.
I remember reading, way back when, that they originally stopped the show when they opened Hoop D Doo because that theater show was a larger, more elaborate, more EXPENSIVE version of the same experience. Now, however, many years later, I think it’s really that they don’t need the expense because people eat at the Horseshoe anyway.
Me as well. Good show and all but I wanted to do other stuff. It was not until I was older that I appreciated it.You too!?
HAHAHA.... I wonder how many more of us are out there.
That is my take on itI haven't seen either show since I was a kid, but I recall the Diamond Horseshoe Revue being more Music Hall/Vaudeville, whereas the Hoop D Doo seemed more like a wild west hoe down. But my memory on that may not be accurate.
Hoop opened in 1974. The horseshoe operated daily until 2003. When it closed it was a much smaller show, it couldn’t have been that expensive to operate,
It's not that expensive to do the Country Bear Christmas either, but when you run Disney World like a mall where everything must turn a profit and drive growth by an arbitrary % every quarter, nothing is seen as "inexpensive". It's usually the cheap, easy things that get cut because management thinks nobody will miss them like the Sword in the Stone ceremony.
So true. And the wonderful Banjo Brothers and Bob. - I had always hoped they would let banjo brothers perform in the saloon like they had billy hill in California for a while. That would have been nice.
And when Disney Commando fans say they never stopped to watch the show anyway (which is their right, tbh), those are the comments the Disney team pulls to justify the cuts.It's not that expensive to do the Country Bear Christmas either, but when you run Disney World like a mall where everything must turn a profit and drive growth by an arbitrary % every quarter, nothing is seen as "inexpensive". It's usually the cheap, easy things that get cut because management thinks nobody will miss them like the Sword in the Stone ceremony.
It was a double whammy as people would camp out to see the show, order the minimum, and the tables wouldn’t turn.The budget for the show specifically came from the food services purse. The show was supposed to pay for itself with the restaurant profits, but the venue was too small to generate enough revenue. It didn't help that plenty of people, like my penny-pinching parents, only ordered the bare minimum.
The Diamond Horseshoe was unique in this matter.
It seemed that you always needed reservations (but this is based on my memory as a kid). On our first day at the Magic Kingdom, my dad always went straight to Town Hall on Main Street to make reservations. See above for more on my childhood frustrations at all the valuable park time that was spent on this show instead of going on rides.did the diamond horseshoe always operate with reservations and table service until it closed? Or was it ever like modern day Disneyland where you just wander in and out and order at the “bar”?
It seemed that you always needed reservations (but this is based on my memory as a kid). On our first day at the Magic Kingdom, my dad always went straight to Town Hall on Main Street to make reservations. See above for more on my childhood frustrations all the valuable park time that was spent on this instead of going on rides.
It was a double whammy as people would camp out to see the show, order the minimum, and the tables wouldn’t turn.
Without a show the tables turn regularly and no entertainment cost. You can only imagine with today’s AP mindset (especially at DL) what it would look like today if they tried to do a full show. It would have to be a $50pp charge to have it make sense.
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