Eddie Sotto
Premium Member
Seems only fitting, for the kind of designer you've turned out to be.
Having a lack of formal educational training forced you to be more resourceful in finding what you needed. It required you to think outside the box to become who you are. These are the lifetime experiences which define us as problem solvers, deliberately putting ourselves in those MacGyver moments and seeing what sticks and what doesn't.
I doubt you would have become such an imaginative and unorthodox Imagineer had there been a degree path specifically tailored for theme park design.
True, in that prescribed courses can turn out formulaic students. I could just draw good enough to visualize an idea, and fortunately could also "sell" the vision as a pitchman. Not everyone has both skills, but being a Washer Salesman at Sears was valuable experience! Ya gotta love the "Lady Kenmore" with dual action agitator.
As a rule, I like doing things differently. My wife says that I don't listen as much as I "interpret". Meaning that things come out of my head differently than they go in! So its hard for me to just copy something verbatim. That's why Main Street was such a drag and they made a huge mistake putting a guy like me on it. They wanted a carbon copy and I could not do that. Not in me. Tony knew that, but fueled me evolving it as much as possible. The trick was making it look like you were copying while you were actually changing the whole thing!
I think persistence has something to do with it too. When everyone says "No" you have to get up and knock on a different door. Disney said "go away" to me more than once, so you bide your time someplace else gaining experience. Knott's was receptive but was a means to an end, then Goddard gave me a shot at Jules Verne. Then they see that work and call you because it looks like what they want, and in this case it was Tony! He got it. Thanks to his faith in my potential, I'm here today.
Last edited: