TalkingHead
Well-Known Member
It's funny you mention that, because two years later, I still tell people to visit WWoHP, and to check out the new projections on The Mummy and Spiderman. This is a guy who used to loathe the family trips to Universal because Disney did it so much better. Did, not does. I still love Disney, but I can't help but rave about how great Forbidden Journey is and how excited I am for Transformers. Whether or not they want to, people notice things, and it affects their decision making as far as theme parks go (and in everything, really).
I think one thing that separates Disney even further from the other companies is that Disney markets the crap out of everything. They make an enormous deal over a one-night flying dragon for the opening of an expansion that has so far only added an attraction and a half while ignoring the rest of the parks, while Universal, SeaWorld and Busch Gardens work hard on strengthening the upkeep, customer service, variety in mechandise, and overall experience of their parks, and stay quiet until they can unveil something top-tier (such a Forbidden Journey, Antarctica, Cheetah Hunt, Turtle Trek, Despicable Me, etc.) If Disney didn't call so much attention to themselves, it would be a lot harder to notice the declining details.
I agree with this whole post, but the second paragraph makes a great point. Disney seems to live to promote -- even when what they're promoting is new benches or a fancy restroom.
I have no problem with hyperbole when it's backed with a high-quality product. But when it's empty words, that's a major turn-off for a lot of consumers.