CaptainAmerica
Premium Member
Except that similar softness is being reported at UOR. I have no idea how to explain how Orlando tourism could be strong while Disney and Universal are both soft, but it's inaccurate to frame it as a uniquely Disney problem.The only common sense interpretation is to agree with your assessment of the data.
I can’t explain this enough - to have any “softness” in the business in a “boom” economy in WDW is just impossible to explain away. There are not 10s of millions of people “waiting for galaxys edge”...
1. Normal people don’t care enough...that’s becoming a weboard excuse/myth
2. It’s not the hottest property out there currently
3. If the prices were attractive...they would have backfilled the void.
It’s a combination of prices, the state of the experience, and twdco shrinking its customer pool through a mix of the two prior reasons.
That's lazy, you're a better poster than that.Ohai middle manager for TDO. Nice of you to bless us pleebs with your presence. If you could, tell us many more business 101 anecdotes. We are all made wiser for these types of dynamite drop ins.
1. "Everyone who disagrees with me works for TDO" is the WDWMagic equivalent of "everyone with different politics than me is Hitler."
2. Consider the total population of people who post here. We have teenagers, art teachers, retirees, pastors, college students, and high school dropouts in addition to doctors, lawyers, MBAs, and CPAs. There are lots of people who read and post here who have never taken anything resembling "Business 101," so the interactions between corporations, management, boards of directors, and shareholders isn't always apparent to everyone. Just because YOU understand the basics of the corporate form of ownership and are therefore thinking of second- and third-order implications of Disney's business decisions doesn't mean everyone is.
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