disneylandcm
Well-Known Member
Her lips look to be saying “raspberries!” Is she actually shouting “ka-chow!”?Wouldn’t you know- my avatar is actually a video of Ms. Channing riding radiator springs racers!
Her lips look to be saying “raspberries!” Is she actually shouting “ka-chow!”?Wouldn’t you know- my avatar is actually a video of Ms. Channing riding radiator springs racers!
Right now at 10:00am:Yup! The public is not going crazy for Star Wars Land, on either coast. That is the shocking story of 2019.
Another busy holiday weekend at Disneyland for Veteran's Day! Sunny and beautiful fall weather. The crowds are big, and yet Disneyland's first E Ticket in 25 years has a wait time equal to that of Pirates of the Caribbean.
Thank goodness they cancelled Fastpass for Pirates at the last second, or this comparison wouldn't work so perfectly.
E Ticket wait times just before 4:00pm today...
Submarine Voyage - 30 Minutes
Grizzly River Run, Splash Mountain, Jungle Cruise - 35 Minutes
Millennium Falcon: Target Run (1,600 riders per hour) - 40 Minutes
Pirates of the Caribbean (2,800 riders per hour) - 40 Minutes
Small World Holiday, Chase-A-Baby! - 45 Minutes
Star Tours - 55 Minutes
Haunted Mansion Holiday, Soarin', Guardians of the Galaxy - 60 Minutes
Hyperspace Mountain, Big Thunder Mountain - 80 Minutes
Matterhorn Bobsleds - 95 Minutes
Radiator Racers - 120 Minutes
Right now at 10:00am:
Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run - 55 Minutes
Pirates of the Caribbean - 20 Minutes
So I'm not sure what you're trying to prove. That you can pick and choose a time of day to push a narrative? People rush to Galaxy's Edge in the morning and do other things in the afternoon. This shows nothing.
Those are all attractions (including Space Mt. which has a high wait right now) that people run to in the mornings. Probably more than Pirates. People tend to ride Pirates in the late afternoon when it's warmer outside and want to get off their feet for 15 minutes.Right. I guess this was also the case with RSR, Star Tours and Indy 5 months after they opened.
Chapek needed to go before SWL. SWL was the death knell
Those are all attractions (including Space Mt. which has a high wait right now) that people run to in the mornings. Probably more than Pirates. People tend to ride Pirates in the late afternoon when it's warmer outside and want to get off their feet for 15 minutes.
My whole point being that not all situations are equal all the time and you can't pinpoint one specific time of the day to use as a guide to prove something is failing or succeeding. You wouldn't use 10pm on a Winter's night to prove Splash is a failure.
For the sake of argument, based on what?
I'm not a fan of his, but I don't believe he is any better or worse than his predecessors. If he leaves, he will probably be replaced with a like minded individual.
Pixar Pier
GOTG: MB
Axing all life out of Galaxies Edge
To name a few
Right now at 10:00am:
Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run - 55 Minutes
Pirates of the Caribbean - 20 Minutes
So I'm not sure what you're trying to prove. That you can pick and choose a time of day to push a narrative? People rush to Galaxy's Edge in the morning and do other things in the afternoon. This shows nothing.
Valid point on timing. Tourists, bless their little Birnbaum reading hearts, rush to the Falcon ride in the morning to "beat the crowds!", not realizing the wait time will be lower by early afternoon.
I'm not one who thinks Star Wars Land was a total failure like DCA 1.0 was. But I think it's very obvious now that the public has not gone crazy over it like we all thought they would. I thought they would. TDA thought they would. Burbank thought they would. We all thought they would.
That's the story here, the tepid crowd/consumer response to the $1 Billion Star Wars Land opening Disneyland's first E Ticket rides in 25 years. With Hong Kong Disneyland now suffering attendance dives that won't be easy to recover from, 2020 should be a very fun year to watch for us Disneyland observers. If the Resistance ride doesn't knock it out of the ballpark, I don't think it's alarmist to say that heads will probably roll and execs will depart in Burbank.
That wasn't how 2019 was supposed to go for them.
They won't fire Chapek because they already let Catherine Powell take the fall.
You know... Equal Opportunity and all.
I thought she was dead.
I think ROTR will be a hit ( I hope). I think the real hit will be MMRR.
For gits and shiggles I grabbed the observed wait times from Touring Plans for yesterday. Their observed times are the light purple lines:Valid point on timing. Tourists, bless their little Birnbaum reading hearts, rush to the Falcon ride in the morning to "beat the crowds!", not realizing the wait time will be lower by early afternoon. At 2:15pm its now posted at 35 minutes.
I'm not one who thinks Star Wars Land was a total failure like DCA 1.0 was. But I think it's very obvious now that the public has not gone crazy over it like we all thought they would. I thought they would. TDA thought they would. Burbank thought they would. We all thought they would go crazy over this thing.
That's the story here, the tepid crowd/consumer response to the $1 Billion Star Wars Land opening Disneyland's first E Ticket rides in 25 years. With Hong Kong Disneyland now suffering attendance dives that won't be easy to recover from, 2020 should be a very fun year to watch for us Disneyland observers. If the Resistance ride doesn't knock it out of the ballpark, I don't think it's alarmist to say that heads will probably roll and execs will depart in Burbank.
This wasn't how 2019 was supposed to go for them.
With Hong Kong Disneyland now suffering attendance dives that won't be easy to recover from
though I still don't believe SR is at 1600, perhaps closer to 1800, but I'm gonna do some timing experiments when I'm there in a couple weeks to try and gauge it better.
She obviously messed up Chapek's morning order from Starbucks one too many times.My favorite part of that sad tale is how the day before Ms. Powell was fired, Bob Iger had a glowing puff piece written about him in the Sunday New York Times where he gushed that they were looking to promote women executives in all divisions of the company. And then the next morning they fired Catherine Powell as the highest ranking woman in the Parks & Resorts division and announced she was going to "do something different". Ouch.
Although, almost no one even knew she existed as Mr. Chapek's second in command. Which generally isn't a good thing and kind of proves you are worthless to the organization and the running of theme parks. They didn't even backfill her role, they just eliminated it off the books entirely. Double Ouch.
I swear that park is cursed. It's such an underrated gem. Hopefully their luck changes soon.As a Hong Kong Disneyland supporter, that's basically just another year in the life of Hong Kong Disneyland. That park never catches a break.
Regardless, I see Fast Pass coming sooner than later.
My favorite part of that sad tale is how the day before Ms. Powell was fired, Bob Iger had a glowing puff piece written about him in the Sunday New York Times where he gushed that they were looking to promote women executives in all divisions of the company. And then the next morning they fired Catherine Powell as the highest ranking woman in the Parks & Resorts division and announced she was going to "do something different". Ouch.
Although, almost no one even knew she existed as Mr. Chapek's second in command. Which generally isn't a good thing and kind of proves you are worthless to the organization and the running of theme parks. They didn't even backfill her role, they just eliminated it off the books entirely. Double Ouch.
Valid point on timing. Tourists, bless their little Birnbaum reading hearts, rush to the Falcon ride in the morning to "beat the crowds!", not realizing the wait time will be lower by early afternoon. At 2:15pm its now posted at 35 minutes.
I'm not one who thinks Star Wars Land was a total failure like DCA 1.0 was. But I think it's very obvious now that the public has not gone crazy over it like we all thought they would. I thought they would. TDA thought they would. Burbank thought they would. We all thought they would go crazy over this thing.
That's the story here, the tepid crowd/consumer response to the $1 Billion Star Wars Land opening Disneyland's first E Ticket rides in 25 years. With Hong Kong Disneyland now suffering attendance dives that won't be easy to recover from, 2020 should be a very fun year to watch for us Disneyland observers. If the Resistance ride doesn't knock it out of the ballpark, I don't think it's alarmist to say that heads will probably roll and execs will depart in Burbank.
This wasn't how 2019 was supposed to go for them.
As a Hong Kong Disneyland supporter, that's basically just another year in the life of Hong Kong Disneyland. That park never catches a break.
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