Um..... How many of us here know what the Pixar campus looks like in Emeryville? How many of us know where Emeryville is? How many of us have been to Emeryville?
I'm a big Pixar fan, seen and own all their movies, I live in California and have been to the Bay Area and in and around Emeryville proper repeatedly. But, I had
no clue what their campus looked like until this WDW construction entered the final phases. And I googled up some real pics of the Pixar facility in Emeryville, and I must say it looks like any other business park in America.
Except for the rust brown Pixar sign at the main entrance, the facility is rather bland and boring and looks like they could be making toothpaste or computer chips or tennis shoes or Korean cars. It's no different from any other business park in the suburbs anywhere in America.
So if a certifiable Pixar fan and Disney park geek like myself had no point of reference for this building before doing online research about it, how many average tourists visiting WDW are going to understand what this building is supposed to look like and why it's significant?
I imagine a majority of the CM's working there are going to have to be specifically told that
"this building is like the Pixar campus out in California", as they won't know the significance either.
It is a studios theme park, so overall this "theme" works, don't get me wrong. But I bet 99.5% of WDW visitors have no idea what the Pixar campus in Emeryville, California looks like. And if it's explained to them that the Pixar campus looks like your standard bland business park in the suburbs, that's not going to impress them much either.
This concept seems to me as something that only a Pixar executive could be excited about;
building a theme park ride based on our offices in Emeryville! The rest of the paying visitors to WDW, and many of the CM's themselves, aren't going to pick up on this concept very easily. It just seems an odd thing to me.