BuddyThomas
Well-Known Member
Hoping that a Blue Bayou res opens up, but Carnation is historic, so that will be fine too.I hope you enjoy Carnation! Have a drink for me lol.
Hoping that a Blue Bayou res opens up, but Carnation is historic, so that will be fine too.I hope you enjoy Carnation! Have a drink for me lol.
This is the same as Disneyland.I meant outside of TSRs.
Anyone who thinks that Disney won’t be selling alcohol all over the park in the next few years isn’t paying attention and/ or fooling themselves. They re just rolling this out in phases. Baby steps. The next time they need a little bump in revenue we’ll see alcoholic beverages being served at Bengal BBQ and other counter service spots. Everybody always wants to think that things will suddenly stop changing just because it’s reached the limit of the what they’ll tolerate. What will stop them from selling more alcohol when they can just point to DCA and say “see everything is ok.” They’ve proven that they don’t care about the Disneyland mystique or even know what that is. Now they ll suddenly stop at only serving alcohol at table service restaurants? Why?
Please correct me if I’m wrong, but Disney began selling alcohol in Magic Kingdom over a decade ago, and it’s still restricted to table service restaurants. I don’t see that this will necessarily be a slippery slope.
Personally, I wouldn’t mind this. Again how many drunken people do you see in DCA? How many people drink in DCA/Downtown Disney/Anywhere else and head on over to Disneyland after? I’d quite enjoy sitting with a beer by the New Orleans Square waterfront on an evening truth be told.
There is no proof and that doesn’t matter. The simple fact that alcohol is served in Disneyland is enough to be a problem and no longer makes it a special and different place.There is no evidence that we're going full Universal on the booze except in some of your own heads and projections.
Also, Disneyland Paris has had alcohol for like twenty years and still hasn't gotten to that point, even in a culture where there's much less of a taboo associated with alcohol.
So I ask again: where is the proof that this is the inevitable way in which the parks will march? Not just feelings. 100% objective evidence only, please.
There is no proof and that doesn’t matter. The simple fact that alcohol is served in Disneyland is enough to be a problem and no longer makes it a special and different place.
I’d volunteer to find local AA meetings for us all! We can create a separate chat and share our progress there.Don't forget the fact that anybody who finds themselves sipping a white zin over lunch at Carnation Café is automatically a total drunk who needs to find an AA meeting immediately!
1956... "Serving booze at the Disneyland table service restaurants breaks with an alcohol prohibition instituted by Walt Disney — who worried about attracting the wrong crowd who frequented seedy seaside amusement parks in the 1940s and ‘50s.
“ 'No liquor, no beer, nothing,' Walt Disney told the Saturday Evening Post about Disneyland in 1956. 'Because that brings in a rowdy element. That brings people that we don’t want.' ”
Disneyland expands booze to 3 more restaurants – against Walt Disney’s wishes
Select alcoholic beverages will be introduced on Sept. 12 in tandem with new seasonal menu items at Cafe Orleans, River Belle Terrace and Carnation Cafe.www.ocregister.com
I’m sure there have been times when alcohol has caused an issue on Disneyland property and the OC Register probably forgot that galaxies edge was even back there, just like many guests! (Ohhhh!!!! Take that Kylo!).I love how the OC Register talks about Disneyland going “against Walt Disney’s wishes,” by serving alcohol and the “crumbling” of the original rule, but fails to list numerous, or even one, event where guests got belligerently drunk and got rowdy, all while acknowledging that DCA has been serving alcohol for over 20 years and alcohol was introduced in Disneyland years ago.
Yup the prices are more expensive than Manhattan, which I didn’t think was possible. A sampling from Wine Country Trattoria at California Adventure. Are they insane?I think the price of drinks keeps things more under control.
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