markjohns1
Member
I think the reason their logic is elusive is because we are looking at this as an isolated move with no real idea of the inspiration or reasoning behind it. It's like taking a piece of a puzzle and trying to guess what the entire picture is. We have no idea regarding the big picture. The only thing we know for sure is that the hours are changed. And if we want to lump the PI and LTT changes into this, fine, but that may have nothing to do with the Fantasmic situation. Determining it was a cost-cutting move is an assumption, based on the current economic situation and the assumption that attendance is going to be low this year. And assuming it is solely a cost cutting move makes us the short-sighted ones. It is hard to see their logic because we don't know where this is going or any of the actual reasoning behind it.Really...if that were the case, why didn't they do this years ago? Millions and miliions of dollars could have been saved with little impact on guests to the park.
Many of the things Disney does with their parks I agree with and see logic in. This is not one of those things. I think Disney is taking a huge risk on this move, and I think they know they are too. Disney is trying to make more money any way they can...I just think they are giving some guests excuses to spend some of their Disney money elswhere. I think they believe it is worth the risk. We shall see.
I said this earlier, but what if their plan is to start a park-wide nighttime event? That way they aren't limited to a crowd of 10,000 enjoying the show, and they eliminate the need for guests to queue way in advance.
What if they are wanting DHS to be an attraction-oriented park? The current rumors indicate we're about to see an increase in the strength of the attraction lineup at DHS. And when you look at attractions like ToT, RnRC, and TSM combined with the rumored MI coaster, Star Tours 2.0, and the possibility of the Cars attraction coming if successful in DCA, and you've got a hefty lineup of repeatable attractions for guests to go on. When combined with their shows, you may not need a nighttime event to keep people in the park.
Exactly. Accuse me of wearing rose-colored glasses, but I can't believe that this decision was made simply to reduce costs. I've got more faith in the execs then that. This move has strategic or vision-related written all over it.It just seems to me that the WDW marketing execs already know that the way to bring in more business is to offer deals like that to entice people to come down. So if they really were facing a bleak forecast for attendance, I don't see why they wouldn't employ that strategy again to combat it, rather than doing things like cutting popular attractions, which won't even save that much in the grand scheme of things, anyway.