Sir_Cliff
Well-Known Member
I don't think most outsiders look at Disney as tacky in any way. If anything, in my opinion, those who don't intend to visit view it as unaffordable but the gold standard of family Instagram vacations. I think that guys with a Grumpy T shirt love the character they're playing, though I may resemble that remark.
My impression is something of a mixture of these two. I do think there is a large group of people who could easily afford even the current prices who would simply never consider a WDW vacation and probably do see it as a somewhat tacky tourist trap. Their kids are probably having Italian or French vacations if they want to splurge, but they're also not going to consider Universal.My experience with people that have the money that have never been to a particular Disney Park and that Disney is salivating to capture just don't perceive the experience to be worth the money that they could spend on a trip to, say, another country for a vacation. They think that the parks are just something for small children and see it as an experience that would be unpleasant for them. I think these people see the advertising and perhaps went to some other amusement park and had a bad experience, so they expect all amusement parks to be mostly the same.
I do think, though, Disney still has a somewhat unique place in the culture that includes the perception that its theme parks are on a different level from its competitors. That's reflected in the notion a visit to DL or WDW is some kind of rite of passage, which is not something you hear about Universal Orlando. This, I think, helps them attract an audience that's more generally ambivalent to theme parks that I'm not sure Universal would be attracting on its own.
I think this is a real issue with things like the Harmonious barges and, perhaps to a lesser extent, the Guardians show building. If people show up and are greeted by concrete and steel painted brown as "Polynesian" theming at their super expensive resort, then take a monorail to Epcot and find ugly show equipment sitting out all day in the middle of the park and a huge, barely concealed show building looming on the horizon, the difference and attention to detail Disney promotes and charges a premium for suddenly rings a little hollow. Any one of those things is not exactly going to ruin a vacation, but they can have a cumulative effect on perceptions of how premium an experience is being offered. I guess the question is whether such people still go home happy and say nice things about their vacation, or if they come back never to return telling everyone it was over-priced and not as good as they thought it would be.
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