"El Gran Magnifico"
Mr Flibble is Very Cross.
Just a quickee question on this latest money grab idea by WDW Co "Not Going Out of Business Tomorrow, But Damn It Sure Looks Like It!" ... but how many posts on this 20-page thread are excusing Disney or thinking it's a good idea?
When people look back and write about the destruction of WDW and what exactly caused it one of the top reasons will be the rise of social media where every idiot with an opinion can spread it and companies can use them.
But, hey, I am just back in FL after three months in Europe and see a media campaign basically reBRANDING TPFKaTD-MGMS as The Star Wars Park ... even if there's very little to back up that assertion. One might even say there is less SW product at WDW today than during a typical Star Wars Weekend (remember those?) But rubes will still go ... and George Kalogridis sits in the jacuzzi with Andy looking at spreadsheets that show how cutting boat service at DD or telling CMs to go home after they hit 32 hours (regardless of how they need the hours and how Guests need the staffing) or adding premium parking or cupcake parties will help Bob Iger and Chappie get that bottom line to look like they want and make up for the debacle in Shanghai and the loss of ESPN subscribers etc.
It just all makes me feel sad. Sad for what was lost. Sad for what could be. And sad for the fact that posters on forums like this and the DIS and in the Disney Twit community are used to justify things like this.
Has @WDWFigment weighed in here? He is very negative, with good reason, toward resort fees. I wonder if he'd tell his blog followers that they shouldn't stay at any WDW resort, or hotel in general, that has these. I doubt it, but It's the only way you'll get rid of them. Funny ... I've never paid one in Asia or Europe. I guess the USA is just special.
It's neither a good idea nor a bad one. It's just reality. There really is no justification needed. The ancillary fad has swept the North American Travel Industry (predominately in the U.S.). It impacts every vertical, it does not grant exclusivity on the hotel sector. Nearly every major hotel in Vegas has adopted the Resort Fee. Nearly every major destination in the US has as well. (No. Not all of them..but a majority of the ones that bill themselves as Resorts, and/or are fortunate enough to occupy land in high demand locations).
The airline industry started this ball rolling with the ancillary mechanism we see today with additional charges for baggage, priority check in, WiFi, charges for seats etc. They did it because they were going bankrupt. Delta and AA both restructured under Chapter 11, and others that were not as fortunate went out of business altogether and were absorbed by larger carriers (Northwest, Continental, United, and US Airways). There is actually a bill introduced today by the Senators of Mass. and Conn. seeking to limit the fees airlines can charge for checked bags, changes, and cancellations. It doesn't address all the ancillary fees, and it is specific to the airline industry, but hey at least there is some attention being given. You have to start somewhere.
The Cruise Industry who has long billed itself as an all-inclusive vacation isn't all that all-inclusive when you factor in money being charged for port excursions, alcohol, the mandatory pre-paid gratuities, and "premium" dining options.
Disney is not doing anything groundbreaking here. They are not the trendsetter. In fact, I'd argue they are playing catch up. To allude to social media being amongst the root causes of Disney's decision to institute a Resort Fee is absolutely incorrect. A contributing factor? Yes. That I can agree with. But the ancillary train left the station long before Social Media had any impact at all.