PiratesMansion
Well-Known Member
Counterpoint: a lot of people would rather get something that they can't get in their hometown. Something that is, or at least appears to be, distinctive or novel.What Downtown Disney needs are some normal restaurants. I don't care at all for Applebee's, but an Applebee's at Downtown Disney would actually get people to go there. Having a bunch of high end, overpriced restaurants that nobody has ever heard of isn't going to cut it. CityWalk understands this. Why doesn't Downtown Disney have a Claim Jumper for instance? It would be a perfect match with the Grand Californian right there.
While there will always be some people unwilling to stray from their old reliable chain restaurants for whatever reason, I think a lot of people over the age of twelve have finally realized that it's dumb to travel somewhere only to eat at the exact same restaurants they could at home. As more and more businesses/restaurants/aesthetic trends neutralize and become indistinguishable from each other, many are being drawn to the new, novel, or distinctive, especially when on vacation.
Why travel all the way to a place that's ostensibly trying to be a worldwide tourist destination just to go to Applebee's? Or Cracker Barrel or Bdubs or Wingstop or whatever? Wouldn't you want to experience a new place that is ostensibly trying to serve more interesting/unique/high quality cuisine?
Even at CityWalk, there are some known quantity fast food restaurants (Burger King and so on), but none of the sitdown places are places that have tons and tons of locations. CityWalk also doesn't have Harbor right there with McDonald's, Starbucks, Panera, and lots of other middlebrow chains competing for business; arguably the need for such restaurants is filled by the ones on Harbor.