Point 1: It's not a single piece of concept art. There are full scale models, several pieces of concept art, and details about Avatar Land. It will deliver just like Cars Land delivered and you know damn well that it will.
Neo, it seems your only purpose here these days is to bash a CEO was was replaced almost nine years ago. You aren't living in the past, you're living in the ancient past for the purposes of a vast media empire like Disney. Even if everything you say is right (and it isn't), what the eff does that have to do with the management team of Iger, Staggs and Rasulo over the last nine years? What does it say about THEIR leadership, THEIR work, THEIR mindset that WDW is in the shape it is in now -- in 2014?
As to your point above, Cars Land absolutely delivered. But I don't know that Pandora will ... neither do you ... neither do any of the people working on it. Let's talk in 2018 or 2019.
Point 2: As you yourself said Horizons already existed before Eisner entered the picture. He and his team were the ones that ruined Epcot because it wasn't "hip" enough and had Horizons and World of Motion replaced with bare bone thrill rides, set up that ugly fiesta crap in the plaza, ruined Universe of Energy with a stupid ellen degeneris tie-in, etc.
Yes, Horizons existed for the vast majority of his tenure. And when it was removed, it was removed for a $200 million attraction (you can argue the merits of it, but it isn't a situation where nothing replaced it ... like WoL, which will sit empty for Bob Iger's entire tenure as head of TWDC).
There was nothing at all wrong with UoE's redo in the 90s. It increased numbers and guest satisfaction and didn't come off as a commercial for an evil company like Exxon. The issue with it is that it should have been replaced/refreshed as soon as Bob came in. It still will be in its current Eisner-era form when Bob leaves the company in two years.
Oh, and that ugly stuff in the plaza was widely lauded for bringing life to the area. It was supposed to be temporary for the Millennium Celebration ... again, you're blaming the old leadership's creative choices for the current leadership's inertia.
Point 3: Your playing games. Eisner's boys are the ones that ruined Imagination in the first place in 1999 and even if he didn't like the end result the second version (JIYI W/ Figment) was just as awful. Arguably more so since it turned figment into an obnoxious character.
The point was that a CEO can't control every aspect of everything a company the size of Disney does. MDE hated the Imagination redo. That wasn't on him, that was on creatives that sold a bad project and underdelivered on it.
Eisner's boys, as you call them, are still making the decisions today. That would tend to make me believe that the current CEO likes them and the way they think and the decisions/choices they make.
All on Iger.
Point 4: Eisner and his team are the ones that neutered Baxter in the first place and had him just sitting in a corner not doing anything for a DECADE. At least Iger had the decency to let him supervise the Disneyland portfolio for his last few years and gave him authority to green light pet projects like Sleeping Beauty Castle Walkthrough, reopening Captain EO, etc.
Eisner is the one who allowed Baxter to create most of his greatest projects, including designing DLP. ... Tony was not easy to work with and T-land '98 in Anaheim was his project and was a disaster. He survived that based on his talent and savvy and the fact Michael didn't want him to leave. But his pouting over not being included on any aspect of DCA largely kept him doing nothing for the last 3-4 years of MDE's tenure. ... But even with John Lasseter in his corner, Iger did nothing to change that. Instead, he marginalized Tony so that all he did was make a huge salary to tinker until finally being pushed out last year.
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