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Jrb1979

Well-Known Member
Low is Not a walk on… and thats all im saying and again. This original debate was about Thanksgiving week and somehow the goal posts moved to Christmas day 🤷‍♂️. Again. Todays waits lines have ZERO i repeat Zero to do with what my statement was
I get it. You're saying since the average wait for Thanksgiving was 45-75 minutes it was busy.

All some are saying is parks today aren't busy compared to what they were built to be.
Back in 2019 a 45-75 minute wait would be a slow day.

For today's Disney that is considered crowded and busy.
 

Mr. Sullivan

Well-Known Member
To me, a 35 minute wait time can be low in some places, and high in others. If this were somewhere like Dollywood or Six Flags, I'd consider it low because the park I am in is much smaller and is a lot less of a challenge to get everything done in a day.

In a Disney park, to me anything above 20-25 minutes is what I'd consider long and would make me ask myself to what degree I want to do the attraction because then you are committing half an hour or more of your day to wait in line in a park that takes a lot more to get through because it is so much denser than your average park. Those half hours to 45 minutes start to add up, especially when you add in parades and dining, and next thing you know it's almost fireworks time and you've not done nearly the amount you hoped you would.

This is why I don't do Disney without LL. I know that for how I am as a guest, I will never see standby lines at the wait time I'm willing to take a bite out of my day to commit to.
 

Splash4eva

Well-Known Member
I get it. You're saying since the average wait for Thanksgiving was 45-75 minutes it was busy.

All some are saying is parks today aren't busy compared to what they were built to be.
Back in 2019 a 45-75 minute wait would be a slow day.

For today's Disney that is considered crowded and busy.
No offense. Anyone comparing things to their highs is foolish. Its like someone comparing wait times to Disneys lows during the recession of 2009? So using the 2019 “comparison” why not compare to 2009? Bc its foolish. When people say the parks are empty that means to me walk ons and waits 15 minutes with the exception to an E Ticket being max 30 minutes. Thats simply not the case. Want to say it slower fine i have no issue with that but reports of Thanksgiving being a semi ghost town is plain false
 

Jrb1979

Well-Known Member
No offense. Anyone comparing things to their highs is foolish. Its like someone comparing wait times to Disneys lows during the recession of 2009? So using the 2019 “comparison” why not compare to 2009? Bc its foolish. When people say the parks are empty that means to me walk ons and waits 15 minutes with the exception to an E Ticket being max 30 minutes. Thats simply not the case. Want to say it slower fine i have no issue with that but reports of Thanksgiving being a semi ghost town is plain false
It's not empty but they are also far from full. It's not walk oms but it's not crowded either. It's in the middle.

Personally I would rather heavily crowded parks with 2019 prices then the high prices today and lower crowds.
 

Splash4eva

Well-Known Member
It's not empty but they are also far from full. It's not walk oms but it's not crowded either. It's in the middle.

Personally I would rather heavily crowded parks with 2019 prices then the high prices today and lower crowds.
And you just basically agreed with what was my point from the beginning sans with what we prefer. When people were saying it was dead… case and point.
 

Chi84

Premium Member
I get it. You're saying since the average wait for Thanksgiving was 45-75 minutes it was busy.

All some are saying is parks today aren't busy compared to what they were built to be.
Back in 2019 a 45-75 minute wait would be a slow day.

For today's Disney that is considered crowded and busy.
They were built a long time ago. Things change.
 

Chi84

Premium Member
Things do change your right. For how parks are run they haven't changed at all. Disney is the outlier in that they suppress attendance. Even Universal wants high attendance.
I'm not sure what point your'e trying to make. Disney is the subject matter of this site. It's not an outlier - it's the center of the universe of what we're discussing.

If other parks are different, they're simply irrelevant to the discussion.

It doesn't matter what the attendance goals are at other parks.

This isn't a thread about other parks.
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
Things do change your right. For how parks are run they haven't changed at all. Disney is the outlier in that they suppress attendance. Even Universal wants high attendance.
They absolutely do not suppress attendance

They convinced themselves that they don’t adhere to market principles…and now it’s becoming apparent that “wasn’t wise”

When sales fall…you don’t increase prices. Doesn’t take Keynes to tell you that
 

Jrb1979

Well-Known Member
They absolutely do not suppress attendance

They convinced themselves that they don’t adhere to market principles…and now it’s becoming apparent that “wasn’t wise”

When sales fall…you don’t increase prices. Doesn’t take Keynes to tell you that
They definitely don't go out of their way to increase attendance much. They do the odd Florida ticket deal but you never see deals like Universal did with their buy 2 days get 2 days free.
 

monothingie

Dynamically Raising Prices Excites Me
Premium Member
My rubric:

Less then 30 min=always ride if you want
30-60 min=Maybe ride, try to do this less then 4 times in a day
>60 min= Probably don’t ride, you only do this once a day at most.
I guess everyone slept in this morning.
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Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
They definitely don't go out of their way to increase attendance much. They do the odd Florida ticket deal but you never see deals like Universal did with their buy 2 days get 2 days free.
…if you loop in all the clips from
CNBC, Sun valley, and every investor symposium that emperor Igatine and his stormtroopers Have given over the last 10-12 years…there is a little bit of a pattern. It’s all about some wonky “we determine our situation”‘nonsense. Hogwash…you sell non essential leisure and entertainment. They won’t move off it now because you’d have to remove a 75 year old whose luck has run out. Dyed in the wool.

Maybe force lightning?

They don’t believe in ANY moves to draw in people…becuawe the philosophy is they’re above it. But the margins behind the scenes and “udged” quarterly outlook has an extreme vulnerability.

They have to and try to disguise it…

Woukd I love absolutely no one in a park in June? Hell yeah…but that’s not a realistic strategy.

Investors haven’t made a dime
Since obama in real terms…unless you were holding it since 2002 and dumped it. 🥸
 

larryz

I'm Just A Tourist!
Premium Member
How is it logical to say lines are required at amusement parks in a thread about a service that allows you to skip lines at an amusement park?
Because without the "required" lines, the whole "skip the line" money machine doesn't work. You can't monetize a demand that doesn't exist.

So I get it when people point out that Di$ney has zero monetary incentive to reduce stand-by line wait times. The longer they are, the more "Really Ultimate, Best Possible, No Kidding, Fastest Fast Pass We've Ever Sold" upcharges they sell the rubes, at least up to their arbitrarily determined "sell out" point (which means they realize they can't push the rubes' patience too far, or they'll zip up I-4 to Universal).
 

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