I don’t buy the DEI angle either, this is purely a financial issue, they’ll make more money off this land as cars than they do as scenery, that’s all modern Disney cares about.
I’m hopeful they’ll surprise me and come up with a land that’s better utilized and beautiful but recent history isn’t on their side, we’ll likely have show buildings visible from the whole park that are simply painted go away green
The visible show building trend does haunt me, most egregiously at my favorite, EPCOT, with Cosmic Rewind and Soarin. Not to mention the eyesores in World Showcase Lagoon for Harmonious… I’m most grateful the barges were removed, though nothing will ever conceal the gravity building towering over Spaceship Earth. I try to relate to the dramatic reactions I read by thinking of how I would feel if that were SSE, which is most important to me. Much of what I read still strikes me as shallow, immature and in bad faith.
Who cares about the name if it means nothing? I want the Old West.
Disney hates Americana. They didn't replace "To Honor America" in MSEP for profit, it was an ideological statement, just like the systematic removal of the Old West from Frontierland.
If the loss of Rivers of America was the only change to Frontierland, then I could believe this, but given the removal of Splash, the Shooting Gallery, and the classic CBJ, I don't see how anyone can deny that Disney is deliberately trying to distance Frontierland from the Old West.
Oh brother. Who cares what you want? What else has remained virtually unchanged since the 1950s or even the 1970s? Especially something so popular in the modern zeitgeist. I‘m going to challenge you to think critically instead of appealing to your worst instincts, the same way I challenge myself. TWDC is a publicly traded Fortune 100 company that is increasingly globally relevant. You can only think of one reason they would change a 50 year old parade float? Are they trying to sweep patriotism under the rug? I lost count of the number of American flags I saw last time I visited Magic Kingdom. It was in no way ambiguous. Have you been? I can think of a number of higher priority hit list items for removal if their motivation is ‘hating Americana‘ as you say. Most curiously, they are replacing it with… more Americana. Cars is Americana.
I’m not denying they are
expanding the theme of Frontierland, the same way they have expanded the themes of Adventureland, Fantasyland and Tomorrowland since the 1950s (1970s in FL). There have also been some changes to our understanding of American expansion in the last 50-70 years. If I spell them out, mods will probably delete my post. Can you think of why expanding its theme might increase Frontierland’s appeal? The parks are not for me anymore because they don’t sell Crockett caps.
But I find it incredibly difficult to believe that concerns about inclusion were not at the heart of the Frontierland/Cars decision. I disagree with characterizing this as a conspiracy theory. Even Len Testa (not a conspiracy theorist, as far as I'm aware) discussed forthcoming changes to Frontierland in this exact context in last week's Disney Dish ep.
Again, not saying it's a bad thing to update attractions/lands due to concerns about inclusion, which are legitimate in the context of theme parks that date back to 1955. Not saying "DEI has gone too far!!!" I don't know if anyone said TWDC hates America. But I do think Disney is lazy and doesn't want to engage with the complexity of American history in their parks because it's too difficult for them. In fact, there seems to be a squeamishness within WDI to anything even remotely challenging, and for several years now it has repeatedly resulted in short-sighted knee-jerk decisions (see also: Jessica Rabbit and her trench coat in Car Toon Spin). The DEI committee is relevant to the discussion to the extent that they (supposedly) flag the attractions with problematic elements; from there, WDI puts forward its bone-headed solutions. This is why they are systematically replacing the Americana stuff. It's just easier to shrug and bulldoze and build a lowest-common-denominator Cars attraction.
I think you argue in good faith, but I think finances are actually at the heart of these changes. MK’s major expansion pad is behind ROA, and I’m sure there are myriad reasons for replacing ROA. Ultimately it’s less expensive and will make more sense for wayfinding and guest flow. I think the emphasis on Disney’s approach to cultural sensitivity (or whatever you want to call it) is borne of ignorance. If folks sat in legal/PR/Marketing discussions for any company of Disney’s size and caliber, I think there would be a better understanding of what the problems are and how they ultimately factored into the changes being made.
They don’t hate Americana. It’s just that they happen to find every single thing in Frontierland celebrating or showcasing Americana “problematic.” Lol
The ROA though. I mean it’s a river. What did rivers do to anyone?
Do you see how your own logic doesn’t make any sense? Or is your question rhetorical?
I could see it being a factor, nowhere near what that tweet inferred though.
DEI was likely 99% of why Splash was changed, probably 50% of why the shooting gallery disappeared (the other 50% being DVC $), but I just don’t see it with ROA, maybe 10% because of Tom Sawyer with the other 90% being it was simply the cheapest and easiest way to make space for new revenue generating lands.
You are making too much sense.
The funny thing about this is that they had the concept art ready to show off but were too afraid to display it during the D23 presentation. They knew it wouldn't go over well so they just dumped it into a parks blog post. They know it's a bad move but the Cars merch sales will more than make up for the temporary backlash they're receiving.
I think you are conflating fan backlash with a bad move. You are mistaking savvy PR for fear. The D23 Presentation served one purpose and the Disney Parks Blog served another.
"Disney hates Americana" is silly in the sense that, like.. how can a corporation hate a concept?
But it's valid (in a flippant sense) in the same way it'd be valid to say "Disney hates sex," "Disney hates the macabre," "Disney hates anything violent."
It's why WDI removed the skulls on sticks in Adventureland, it's why they put a trench coat on Jessica Rabbit, it's why they're removing the hanging man from Haunted Mansion, it's why one day they'll remove the Hell finale from Mr. Toad. This stuff is just too challenging for Disney and so it needs to go.
Some stuff just isn’t appropriate anymore. When’s the last time you had a cigarette on an airplane?
I don’t think it’s about challenge, I think it‘s about basic PR. I think societal progress, customer satisfaction, lines at city hall, liability, etc all play a role. Toad is so irreverent and confounding that I really hope it stays, and I’d be super sad to see it go.