I love how people think Walt showed some kind of restraint and left IP out of the parks, as if there is some inherent value in that.
The reason there wasn’t more IP in DL on opening day was because there wasn’t that much IP owned by WD yet.
Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, Peter Pan, Dumbo…what big IP did he leave out in some big display of creativity? I’m guessing if there was no attraction (Bambi) there was still some representation.
A man who slapped his name on everything wouldn’t have used his hard-fought IP wins in a park named after himself? A man who went on TV to promote his films and his park (synergy before it was synergy) would then not want to further promote within the park?
What % of his IP did he use?
DL was a snapshot of his mind and the culture at the time, and how the former interpreted the latter. It was a combination of the practical and the branding.
If you think he wouldn’t have been over-the-moon proud of The Lion King and The Little Mermaid and wouldn’t have wanted to feature them in the park(s) then you don’t understand ambitious businessmen.
This narrative some go on about wherein there is great virtue in using a Country Bear vs. Winnie the Pooh just because one is well-known is bonkers. It’s just calling back to the nostalgia for a time when non-IP attractions were made out of practical necessity to fill the space because there wasn’t enough IP to do so.