RandySavage
Well-Known Member
I like a few of Igor's (best part of this thread) big picture investments & decisions (eg, going big and using an original locale for Star Wars Land).
But here's an analogy for his IP-centered vision for the parks:
There are only two movie studios in the world with the resources to make Big Budget Blockbuster Movies. The Presidents of those two studios both decide that making Sequels to already established movies is now the safest way to make short- and mid-term returns, so they mandate that only Sequels can be made at their Studios from now on. So, for the rest of your life, the only Big Budget movies you'll get to see are sequels or spin-offs to established popular franchises.
That is the themepark IP-mandate in a nutshell. Many are clearly fine with that, but themeparks in the macro and micro were and can be so much more if there was leader with Vision (the kind of vision described in the "Walt Disney's Disneyland" book just released by Taschen). The vaults in WDI are filled with original concepts - particularly from the great Gen II of Imagineers) that would blow everyone's socks off to the point that no one would be care about Frozen or Marvel or parks shoehorned with Disney movie rides and characters.
All of that park-centered creativity (the kind that gave us Haunted Mansion and Animal Kingdom) has been stifled - especially domestically - by Igor's IP Mandate.
But here's an analogy for his IP-centered vision for the parks:
There are only two movie studios in the world with the resources to make Big Budget Blockbuster Movies. The Presidents of those two studios both decide that making Sequels to already established movies is now the safest way to make short- and mid-term returns, so they mandate that only Sequels can be made at their Studios from now on. So, for the rest of your life, the only Big Budget movies you'll get to see are sequels or spin-offs to established popular franchises.
That is the themepark IP-mandate in a nutshell. Many are clearly fine with that, but themeparks in the macro and micro were and can be so much more if there was leader with Vision (the kind of vision described in the "Walt Disney's Disneyland" book just released by Taschen). The vaults in WDI are filled with original concepts - particularly from the great Gen II of Imagineers) that would blow everyone's socks off to the point that no one would be care about Frozen or Marvel or parks shoehorned with Disney movie rides and characters.
All of that park-centered creativity (the kind that gave us Haunted Mansion and Animal Kingdom) has been stifled - especially domestically - by Igor's IP Mandate.