IanDLBZF
Well-Known Member
And I'm pretty sure the last good Power Rangers season produced by Disney was SPD. After that it all went downhill from Mystic Force to RPM (which RPM sucked).I am fully aware how Disney screwed up Power Rangers.
And I'm pretty sure the last good Power Rangers season produced by Disney was SPD. After that it all went downhill from Mystic Force to RPM (which RPM sucked).I am fully aware how Disney screwed up Power Rangers.
Time will tell if anything on the horizon actually turns out great. Under Iger amazing concept art has come out but the end results have never matched what was pitched. Its champagne concepts on a Miller High Life budget.Plus we got Art of Animation, a number of resort refurbs and expansions, and a lot on the horizon.
Personally I left during Dino Thunder. Though I felt Ninja Storm was stupid. I have heard good things about RPM but have never actually seen it so....And I'm pretty sure the last good Power Rangers season produced by Disney was SPD. After that it all went downhill from Mystic Force to RPM (which RPM sucked).
I'd argue the only thing on my list that was decent is Toy Story. Art of Animation is nice, but most of the hotel expansion came under Eisner.Plus we got Art of Animation, a number of resort refurbs and expansions, and a lot on the horizon.
Yea, and when Eisner was there I bought a new car for around 6K. Things change all the time. The year that WDW opened I bought a brand new Buick for $3200.00.Well all I can say is that I can't afford to go to Disney anymore and my last trip left me in financial distress so I have no problems saying where this crook can go!! Half my favorite attractions are gone and the price is just not worth it. With Eisner I could spend 3 days in the parks for 150+ tax. I spent 400 this year including tax.
Inflation killsYea, and when Eisner was there I bought a new car for around 6K. Things change all the time. The year that WDW opened I bought a brand new Buick for $3200.00.
Yea, and when Eisner was there I bought a new car for around 6K. Things change all the time. The year that WDW opened I bought a brand new Buick for $3200.00.
Inflation kills
When in real time has Disney ever given a "special" tag along rate for parents and grandparents. Disney has always been a family park, Walt insisted on that. It was for the whole family to partake in, not tag along with. If that ever really happened is was a very well kept secret and it didn't last for very long. Everything you could care to mention has never been more expensive. I'm not sure what you mean by less acceptable. If that means that not everyone can go because of cost, that was true in 1955 as well when minimum wage was $.75 per hour.Disney admission prices haven’t just kept pace with inflation.
When the Magic Kingdom opened in 1971, an 11 Adventure Book—the most expensive admission you could buy short of guided tour—cost $5.75. In 2015 dollars, that equates to $33.60.
In 1981, the most expensive one-day ticket you could buy (A 12 Adventure Book) cost $11. That’s $28.70 in 2015 dollars. (Surprisingly, slightly less than the 1971 price!)
By 1991, the concept of individual ride tickets had been done away with, so a One Day Ticket was now “all you could ride”. The price was $33—$57.40 in 2015 dollars.
Yet another decade later, a One Day ticket had risen to $48—$64.20.
So even in inflation adjusted dollars, the price of a one-day admission didn’t reach even half of 2017’s adult peak season ticket price until 2000. That also doesn’t account for the fact that in the early days, parents and grandparents could tag along on a less expensive general admission ticket that didn’t include rides.
You can make arguments about today’s Magic Kingdom offering more than it did decades ago—that’s a separate issue. But unquestionably, even taking inflation into account. Walt Disney World has never been more expensive or less accessible.
It is not a necessity of life and has no reason to "stay in line with inflation". It is a what the public will bear, type of commodity. Hell, even the cost of gasoline isn't factored in with inflation. It is more like necessities, food, housing and a few other things that are used to measure it.
When in real time has Disney ever given a "special" tag along rate for parents and grandparents.
Disney, as it has been stated since time began, does not come under any part of inflation figuring. It is a luxury item and not factored in anyplace. Anymore then a Cadillac is compared to a Ford Focus. It is not a necessity of life and has no reason to "stay in line with inflation".
Walt Disney was a great man. I think one of the most impressive people that ever lived. I have read a lot of books and done a lot of research on the man. One of a kind. However, that said, I don't have any idea what would motivate him at this point in time and neither do you. He never missed an opportunity to make whatever money he could on anything he did. Disneyland was a dream that through "profits" and ingenuity he was able to build. With the proceeds from that, and other things, he was able to acquire the land in Florida. (He didn't have enough money to actually build it without corporate support.)Today, the price of a Magic Kingdom admission ticket includes all of rides within the park, but through the early ’80s, that wasn’t the case. In the early days, you paid a modest general admission charge to get into the park, then you paid extra for tickets to get on the rides. Therefore, if Mom and Dad or Grandma and Grandpa didn’t plan on riding any rides, they could just buy the cheaper general admission ticket, stroll around the park, and take in the parades, musical shows, etc. Not so today: An elderly woman who rides no rides at all pays the same admission as a twenty-something who rides Space Mountain ten times in a row.
I don’t think anyone is disputing that Disney is a private enterprise with the full right to charge whatever price it can get away with. You’re correct in that Disney doesn’t have any responsibility to keep ticket prices low.
But that said, I don’t think Uncle Walt—champion of capitalism and private enterprise that he was—ever intended Disneyland or Disney World to be a “luxury”.
In fact, circling back to the topic at hand, here’s my outsider take on Disney, Eisner, and Iger.
I see Walt Disney as a dreamer and visionary who saw making money as being incidental to realizing his dreams. Walt certainly didn’t want to lose money, and he had business-minded brother Roy around to keep the corporate ship on course. Walt would say “Here’s the dream, Roy. Can we do it?” And Roy would figure out how to make Walt’s dream make money.
By the Eisner era, that was reversed: Making money came first; the dream was secondary—if it ever came along at all. And simply making money wasn’t good enough. Making the most money was the new prerequisite. That worldview may be logical, sensible, and pleasing to the shareholders, but I don’t think it will ever allow a dollars and cents CEO inspire creative people and drive them to follow with the fanatical devotion that Walt commanded.
If stuff like that were to be included inflation rate would be double digit. It is not, at least no as figured by the government. And it still doesn't matter at all. It is a what the public will bear type of business, NO ONE has to go to Disney. It is strictly voluntary and no one has to pay anything, they just don't go. It is not figured into the Cost Of LIVING! That is the cost of playing!This is false.
The primary measure of reported inflation in the U.S. is the Consumer Price Index. The CPI includes gasoline. Furthermore, one of the categories measured is recreation. The CPI has nothing to do with "necessities of life".
If stuff like that were to be included inflation rate would be double digit. It is not, at least no as figured by the government. And it still doesn't matter at all. It is a what the public will bear type of business, NO ONE has to go to Disney. It is strictly voluntary and no one has to pay anything, they just don't go. It is not figured into the Cost Of LIVING! That is the cost of playing!
I read Disney War on my trip summer of 2013. Awesome book. Eisner eventually just got to narcissistic or something..Sold out for Wall Street value. I found myself admiring him and then despising him all the way through. In the end I felt a little sorry for him...There are some books that talk about save Disney and all the issues in the late 90s.can someone tell me those books?
If I want moral advice I will talk to someone that actually knows something about morality. No one has to believe anything I put up here and I can assure you that whether or not you do will not cause me any loss of sleep. You don't qualify or have any right to judge me or my motivation. I'm so sick of the "inflation" BS. that I could scream. It just plain isn't relative to the amount they charge or how much higher it is now then it was 40 plus years ago. It just doesn't matter.So whenever you're ready to apologize to the guy that you jumped on (it was only his second post ever, by the way) and admit that you have no idea what you're talking about regarding inflation, feel free to use that link.
No one has to believe anything I put up here
It was obvious from context that the poster was referring to gate admission being cheap and separate from attraction ticketing. This was pointed out and consequently ignored.When in real time has Disney ever given a "special" tag along rate for parents and grandparents. Disney has always been a family park, Walt insisted on that. It was for the whole family to partake in, not tag along with. If that ever really happened is was a very well kept secret and it didn't last for very long.
This is patently false and was pointed out but he stuck by his statement.Hell, even the cost of gasoline isn't factored in with inflation.
This is patently false and was pointed out but he stuck by his statement.It is more like necessities, food, housing and a few other things that are used to measure it.
This was never suggested by anyone and is merely a strawman that he likes to rail against.The Disney Company does not owe anyone, you, me or the Pope, anything other then an entertainment venue that exists for those that can afford it and/or feels worthwhile to whomever is spending the money to go there.
It was pointed out that recreation is included in CPI calculations, but it was once again ignored.We can say that it is getting to expensive for many to go there but it does not now nor has it ever had any connection to inflation and it never will.
This is just as false as the first time he said that "stuff" wasn't included. Furthermore, proof was provided that it was used in the government calculation. That proof was ignored.If stuff like that were to be included inflation rate would be double digit. It is not, at least no as figured by the government.
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