CleveRocks
Active Member
Let me try to respond in an unemotional, non-passionate way, in hopes of effectively communicating my point.I respect your passion, and I guess your points make sense taken individually...but when you put them together, the only conclusion seems to be that no one can ever criticize Disney for not offering a service, because either
(a.) they knew ahead of time it wasn't offered and still paid, so they can't complain.
Or
(b.) they didn't know ahead of time it wasn't offered, meaning they didn't do their homework, so they can't complain.
Put it all together and it seems like the company has a pretty effective shield against any complaint (related to lack of a particular service, anyway) by any customer...ever. :lol:
Maybe I have your meaning wrong, though.
Let's say you expect a king-size bed. It's very important to you to sleep in a king-size bed. You arrive at your resort, and the resort has no king-size beds ... not that none are available right now, but that there literally is not one king-size bed in any room at the resort, occupied or not.
I don't think it's being lawyerly to say that the guest should have known that in advance. I don't think it's lawyerly to say that the guest doesn't have a legitimate complaint with the management. The guest certainly should write a letter and suggest that the management has their heads up their you-know-whats for not offering that amenity, but there is not a valid complaint that there was no king bed available and thus it nearly ruined the guest's vacation. If it's important to the guest, he should have checked it out ahead of time.
I hope you can appreciate the difference between those two scenarios.
I live in a beach town right next to Atlantic City. What do most people know about Atlantic City. Besides casinos, most people think of beach and boardwalk. Probably the best place in town is the Borgata ... the nicest amenities, the highest high-rollers, the coolest crowd, lotsa celebrities, etc. Well, let's say you make reservations at Borgata and then arrive and are SHOCKED to find out that it's nowhere near the beach or boardwalk, not even walking distance. You were counting on rolling out of bed for a stroll on the boardwalk and a quick morning dip in the Atlantic Ocean. You just can't do it that easily at Borgata, since it's not right near the beach.
Would you be justified in complaining to Borgata that they aren't near the beach??? In my opinion, of course not ... it truly is something you should have known, and if proximity to the beach was important to you, you should have considered that prior to making the reservation. To me, it's exactly the same situation with the lack of continental breakfast at WL ... it's just not offered, period ... is EXPECTING that it's offered the fault of the guest or of the management? In my opinion, the WL management owes no apology for not offering something they never even alluded that they offered.
Peace.:wave: