Good, because from Shark Encounter to Shamu feels like a dead zone.
Uni has Steve Jayson, who is very talented in picking good people who care about the food served on the property, and then he actually walks around to check quality every so often. Universal is also good at making sure the kitchens are properly planned, and if not, they fix quickly. But mostly they can get away with buying a lot of mid-upper level filets and then serving them spot on, subsidized by the tons of pizza and chicken they serve to the masses. Universal's very proud of Mythos and that culture hasn't yet diminished, so the quality stays. Kind of like how Disney used to think of CA Grill and is now talking up BOG, but they aren't executing as well as they could. Disney's culinary division, of which the fine dining really looks down on the parks - it's like they're different companies - really needs a SQS group that actually goes out and samples, which they really don't any more. Disney now relies almost exclusively on surveys, which is never a good idea.
Too bad mythos is like an island in a sea of mediocrity tho. I like Mels for what it is.. but honestly food in the park is nothing to pound their chest over at UNI IMO. I found Mythos nice for what it is in a theme park, but average compared to stand-alones.
WDW has all of the capacity it needs. There's already enough entertainment (and more) to keep the average family 100% occupied during the average vacation. WDW, unlike its competitors, is a mature investment.
Agreed. It's that massive difference in quality between full and quick serve. There is absolutely no reason WDW cannot do decent fries or burgers at QS. None. Every fast food chain does it worldwide every day, at a fraction of the price. DLR does a better burger at Taste Pilots by a mile. It's just a lack of someone taking charge and fixing it at WDW.Disney can still do quality food, especially at the full serve locales. Victoria and Albert's is the best food I've ever dined on in Florida. But WDW's general price points are absurd to push people into the DDP and further streamline dining at the resort to a cruiseline type model.
I just don't understand why fans ignorantly defend them. I get full serve quality food at a price slightly higher than typical quick serve at WDW.
Oh, and I'd gladly volunteer to be VP of Quality for Food and Beverage!
WDW intentionally serves less than stellar Counter Service to push people towards their many Table Service restaurants. But to be honest, I usually do table service at both WDW and URO. I LOVE Fennigan's. And I love that they have an actual Happy Hour. Universal's counter service is pretty hit or miss. The Chimichurri Skirt Steak at the recently reopened Cafe La Bamba is fantastic as are the Chipotle BBQ Ribs. And right now Universal is redoing 2 Counter Service Restaurants, Monsters Cafe to Transformers and the IFFF into multiple Simpson's based food options. I am very interested to see these new options.Also I am intrigued by the fact that Springfield will also include 2 Food Trucks. With the recent trend of getting unique high end food offerings at food trucks this could be really cool.Agreed. It's that massive difference in quality between full and quick serve. There is absolutely no reason WDW cannot do decent fries or burgers at QS. None. Every fast food chain does it worldwide every day, at a fraction of the price. DLR does a better burger at Taste Pilots by a mile. It's just a lack of someone taking charge and fixing it at WDW.
Glad to hear about La Bamba. Finnegan's will always be one of my favorites. And I can say that Simpsons is going to be very cool.WDW intentionally serves less than stellar Counter Service to push people towards their many Table Service restaurants. But to be honest, I usually do table service at both WDW and URO. I LOVE Fennigan's. And I love that they have an actual Happy Hour. Universal's counter service is pretty hit or miss. The Chimichurri Skirt Steak at the recently reopened Cafe La Bamba is fantastic as are the Chipotle BBQ Ribs. And right now Universal is redoing 2 Counter Service Restaurants, Monsters Cafe to Transformers and the IFF into multiple Simpson's based food options. I am very interested to see these new options.Also I am intrigued by the fact that Springfield will also include 2 Food Trucks. With the recent trend of getting unique high end food offerings at food trucks this could be really cool.
Just like evolution.The whole "decling by degrees" concept is nothing more than a myth
Yes, it's unfortunate that you were unable to ride Toy Story Mania, but it's high demand Fastpass is much more a function of a lack of family friendly rides in DHS than it is a Fastpass issue. The same attraction in Magic Kingdom might have a Peter Pan level Fastpass demand, but not a "gone by 11 AM" level demand.4th- fastpass- Kevin cannot possibly have children or he would never besmirch the wonderful joy that is fastpass. With kids that need to potty, eat, diaper change constantly, etc., being able to walk on popular rides is priceless. I can't wait for fastpass plus so I can pre-reserve wait times- this was the second trip where Toy Story Mania was not an option- we just can't get the kids to HS in time to get a regular fastpass.
According to this post, the price of Horizons was $85 millionI've been on both sides and I agree with you on some of your points. I've posted many times regarding the hacks at WDI that produce mostly unimaginative, dull and trite work because the HR idiots hire them due to their education credits rather than their actual talent. WDI is full of them and it's obvious looking at the WDW projects from the past 15 years. I've worked on big budget projects as well as low budget attractions and sometimes the lower budgets force you to be more creative. A good example I use a lot is Cranium Command. In my opinion that was a brilliant theme park show and its development was certainly marked by a low budget and tight schedule. While this is a valid point that's not what I'm focusing on in this thread. I'm focusing on the Disney Company philosophy of today vs. the "golden age."
Every attraction goes through some value engineering and other changes. The difference is that Horizons still ended up with about a $55 Million budget which in today's dollars equals approximately $122 Million. That's a nice hefty budget for an elaborate omnimover. Back then most attractions were in that range and most of those were higher. Im not sure where you got the idea that they were working with severe budgetary restraints for EPCOT.
WDI has shown that they can produce top quality product but it requires hefty budgets to do it. The payoff is obvious looking at Tokyo and Cars Land but TDO is unwilling to give up their short-term thinking and they are running the property into mediocrity.
Because the biggest weakness of the Universal Parks is a lack of family friendly attractions.It's really a pity the way strollers crap up the landscape at WDW. I don't see the equivalent at Universal. Why is that?
I'm a big fan of Confisco GrillToo bad mythos is like an island in a sea of mediocrity tho. I like Mels for what it is.. but honestly food in the park is nothing to pound their chest over at UNI IMO. I found Mythos nice for what it is in a theme park, but average compared to stand-alones.
I think Sea World has something else up their sleeve after Antartica. Just an intuitionYou do indeed.
Antarctica opens next summer. An E Ticket reason to pay a visit!
Though its more than worth it already.
A few years back I had a copy of the project budget spreadsheets. I'm not sure if it was the final post mortem but if I remember correctly it was dated sometime in 1983 so most likely it was late in the project at least. Unfortunately that was one of the things I lost when I last moved so I can't look at it to verify. If Martin got that number from what the company has made public it may be exaggerated. Regardless if the number is closer to $85 million it shows even more that the company used to spend more for top-grade attractions on a regular basis.According to this post, the price of Horizons was $85 million
I think Sea World has something else up their sleeve after Antartica. Just an intuition![]()
Whatever it is, it's going into the former hospitality house plot.Do you have any more information on this?
Whatever it is, it's going into the former hospitality house plot.
Agreed. It's that massive difference in quality between full and quick serve. There is absolutely no reason WDW cannot do decent fries or burgers at QS. None. Every fast food chain does it worldwide every day, at a fraction of the price. DLR does a better burger at Taste Pilots by a mile. It's just a lack of someone taking charge and fixing it at WDW.
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