Ok, here's post 205...
But you, the guest, filled in the story based on what you're experiencing.
Now, you are being TOLD a story based on what Barbossa is yelling out to the soldiers firing back at him from the fort.
There are two very different forms of storytelling right there. The WED-era experience-based "storytelling" and the WDI-era explicit narrative-based "storytelling"
It went from this:
"We don't have a story, with a beginning, an end, or a plot. It's more of a series of experiences building up to a climax. I call them experience rides."
- Marc Davis, 1969
To this:
"We’re adding a layer of storytelling from the films to the attraction [ . . . ]."
- Tom Fitzgerald, on the 2006 Pirates of the Caribbean enhancements
I don't agree with that you can make that leap of "from this to this". The Jungle Cruise, Haunted Mansion, COP, Flight to the Moon, Monorail, Steam Trains, Mark Twain and Storybookland, all WED creations and all had some form of explicit narrations. The HM describes just about everything you are looking at. Your host rides with you. Just because Marc said that, and I personally agree with his definition of how story should be approached (especially in the design of a land), does not mean that it changed post Walt. I think there are examples of both and they are case by case based on the story.