Eddie Sotto
Premium Member
The one thing I had to reluctantly face up to, was that these attractions we design and their "opening day" purity is not forever. The story begins to erode the day you walk out of that show and it's in the public's hands as they vote with their wallets and the hands of those whom it's passed on to. You have to face the fact that it is and never was "yours". The operators will "sand off one corner" and others that maintain it may change the color for the sake of it. Merchandise and food will envy it's location and want to convert the show areas into something that makes more money. If what you worked on stinks, it's usually gone and deserves to. But in any event, the creative authenticity and richness in most of the lands, from Main Street to New Orleans Square does erode over time. They may have evolved to be as, if not more popular with guests as that is to an extent what drives change, but they sometimes lose their point of view and focus. The project can end up being a big "why for?".
Mansion survived pretty intact for 40 years. A tribute to it's quality. Believe it or not, I think whomever did the queue project did it with all their best intentions and even thought by putting in the obscure references in that they were going to do something that truly would be appreciated on all levels, superfan and casual guest.
Mansion survived pretty intact for 40 years. A tribute to it's quality. Believe it or not, I think whomever did the queue project did it with all their best intentions and even thought by putting in the obscure references in that they were going to do something that truly would be appreciated on all levels, superfan and casual guest.