Can you imagine a day in the MK without any children or strollers? Check out the photo I found from a trip in 1977. Not a child in sight, although I do see a couple of strollers. It looks like there must have been an AARP convention in town :ROFLOL:
That's not a kid over the shoulder of the guy with the hat standing behind the lady with the yellow scarf on her head? Under the "us" in mouse on the attraction sign.
My guess this was in the winter months while school still in session within a few years of park opening?
In the light blue? Could be...but they're NOT in a stroller
It's not the kids themselves - the sight and sound of happy, playful children has the effect of making me happy.
I do however so very much wish that WDW would finally halt their project to turn the MK into Toddler Cartoon Kingdom. The Magic Kingdom is for the young at heart of all ages, not for adults to sit on a bench while the young play.
The MK was not build for children to have kiddie fun. But for children to have (pretend) adult fun - pirates, forts, jungle exploration, astronauts, history. It is not meant for 'coloring cards with Rapunzel' or 'visiting clowns from the circus'.
I want my children to dream in Disney of Buzz Aldrin, not of Buzz Lightyear.
Aye! I'd love an 'adults only' day or evening at the MK.I agree....although I said it was a "dream" for a child free Kingdom for a day, it just wouldn't be the same. What I'd really like would be a day free from screaming children (the unhappy kind), parents screaming at children, and strollers rear-ending me (let's make it a stroller free day while we're at it!) That would be a wonderful dream.
Secondly, to remedy this, the MK is slowly being transformed into Toddler Kingdom:
Anything 'scary' is ripped out, from the orginal Snow White to Alien Encounter.
Anything 'educational' is off limits - guests complain if their child learned something.
Kiddie cartoon franchises are installed everywhere.
Spinners have to be build everywhere. Adventureland was ruined for it. And Dumbo was so popular - and consequently resulted in so many unhappy children - it had to be doubled and made the marquee attraction of an entire land. The MK is now the laughing stock of global theme parks: it's new land, it's 'Potter beater', is a roadside carnival spinner ride.
My wife and I have joked about this for a while now, but we have no kids. I have a different take on it, and it's just my opinion. I'm 40, and some of the best memories I have of childhood happen at Disneyland. It was the only place our family went together, where there wasn't some sort of work involved. There was no sibling fighting or pecking order. We just enjoyed being a family in the happiest place on earth. Even my stoic, drill seargent dad relaxed and let us kids dream while in Disneyland. I think a lot of people my age come to either Disneyland or Walt Disney World wanting and expecting the same experience with their children, that they had growing up. The problem is, they don't have a relationship with their kids before they get here. The kids are texting and tweeting, which only irritates the parents more. The parents are short with the kids for not doing what we did 30 years ago, and it costs a lot more to do now. Disney can't make magic memories for disfunctional families, but it still is magical for a family to spend time together here outside of the worries of the world. It's almost like we just magnify the relationship you already bring with you.
Yep. But still agree that there were not nearly as many as you would find today.
I love old photos like that. Most people dressed up to go to WDW. Now some people barely wear clothes. :ROFLOL:
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