All we have beyond theme parks are beaches (some great to be fair), outlet malls, strip centers, roads in constant states of construction and Indian casinos. Bars and chain restaurants too. Add in bugs the size of VW bugs and gators and other critters ... oh, and backwards voters and politicos ... and, great college football ... and that about covers it.
I still don't get what is so appealing and I'm almost a native.
That could be because you don't live up north. I can remember coming down from Vermont in February and feeling like I was in heaven. I love exploring the country side and seeing a standard of living so much different then what I was used too. The palm trees, the orange groves, the gators, yes, even the bugs. All those things get taken for granted and become either a massive pain or just plan boring to those that see that everyday.
To those of us with very short seasons, a place like WDW is indeed a fantasy land. But, getting to the place, for me, was always as good as the main destination. From the very beginning, I never spent my whole time just at the parks. I made side trips to the gulf coast, went to Cyprus Gardens, up to Silver Springs, over to the Kennedy Space Center and even Universal and Sea World. I even made a two day trip to Key West, with my base point in Kissimmee. On days when I was just tired of being on my feet all day, I would go to some of the flea markets and just look at what was there. Or I would take a Helicopter tour over WDW and Kissimmee. I'd wander around in the neighborhoods, the back roads. The time that I went to Key West I came back late and there I was riding through the Everglades after midnight. Not another car in sight for the whole distance. Bok Tower and the new Sunshine Skyway Bridge in Tampa Bay. Sunken Gardens in St. Peterburg.
As an example of how people that live to close to stuff never appreciate it, for the 60+ years I lived in seeing distance of Lake Champlain, I hardly ever went near it. Yet, people from out of state flocked to the place to see historic Lake Champlain (the sixth largest fresh water lake in the country and major player in the war of 1812) People from Maine would come to see the area. We residents, usually passed them on the road when we were on the way to Maine and the Ocean. Florida has a lot to offer people that are not accustomed to what is there. That said, I wouldn't want to live there, but, I always enjoy my limited trips to Florida. It's none of my business, but, to me people that just want to be sequestered, with no real options, to WDW no matter how nice it seems to be, frustrate me, because I don't understand the logic. Heck, I even have a daughter that, I'm thinking about cutting out of my will, just wants to stay onsite and never leave. She must have been adopted!