The Spirited Sixth Sense ...

WDW1974

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
I vote for a Fun With Tweets thread!!!! or just keep posting them here... They are a fun read... 74 do not Walmart your thread!!!! Do not take away like TDO does... Fun With Tweets ENHANCES the guest experience....

I have to be blunt, beyond my really serious posts that require lots of time, research and thought ... Fun With Tweets posts take the most amount of time and judging by how few comments I get and how few 'likes' they garner, I am having a hard time keeping them going. I've had time of late, unfortunately three plus weeks of being quite ill will do that for you, but am anticipating a full recovery and not having as much time to sit and search for the crazy stuff. ... And if folks don't even care ... well, why should I?
 

tirian

Well-Known Member
Now I have a headache.

Because it beats getting into bed, rolling over and bursting out in a 20-minute coughing fit, I present a special ...

LATE NIGHT Fun With Tweets: (special shoutout to this Westcot guy who apparently makes Amity, Merfie and Mrs. Ricky sane by comparison)

Westcot Center ‏@WestCotCenter 4h
I took down my tweet calling Andy Castro a giant douchebag because I should be more about evidence than namecalling.

Theme Park Review ‏@ThemeParkReview 6h
@SpaceScreamJohn @WestCotCenter "Everyone on the internet is now dumber for reading a Kevin Yee article..."

Westcot Center ‏@WestCotCenter 12h
The broken Yeti is a big middle finger to Walt himself, the man who definitely did NOT leave the Matterhorn unfinished his entire life.

Westcot Center ‏@WestCotCenter 13h
I know experience is subjective, but if going to Disney World "leaves you cold," do you honestly think Universal is going to warm you up?

Tom Corless ‏@TomAmityCorless 11h
Test Track 2.0 essentially matches plans for the Matterhorn at Epcot... I'm not joking...

Ricky Brigante, Host ‏@InsideTheMagic 7h
Watching "John Carter" on @SpikeTV and the ending still angers me that there won't be a sequel. It's just begging for more.

Ricky Brigante, Host ‏@InsideTheMagic 23h
Despite the glitz and glamor, there is very little "fun" to be found on red carpets. It's a battle to get the shot and *maybe* an interview.

***Spirited aside: Ricky, there is lots of fun to be had on red carpets ... but I am guessing you've never actually walked one, you've stood behind barricades and begged for attention like a puppy at the pound.

Scarlett Litton ‏@scarlettashley1 8h
Oh fun. My dad decided to start actually looking at Facebook the same week that I posted naughty pictures of me and a mannequin. Oops.

Scarlett Litton ‏@scarlettashley1 Mar 2
Sally Field is just so freaking classy. Adore her.

***Spirited aside: I am liking Scarlett more all the time ... and this is a good example why. Sally indeed is classy and talented and incredibly down to earth too! Someone might have called her a goddess before. Sorry, that I haven't been able to spread your amazing posts on va-jay-jays. They have made me smile ...

Mark ‏@MarkWDW85 Mar 2
Cue all the Disney fans who didn't see any other shorts claiming that "Get A Horse" was robbed. #Oscars #Oscars2014

Brandon ‏@DCAlover Mar 1
It was pretty hard to know what to do and where to go in Disneyland without an app that doesn't work.

EPCOT Explorer ‏@EPCOTExplorer 12h
@parkscopejoe @OhMeylaWeyla That's on my legs, dude. Get it together.

EPCOT Explorer ‏@EPCOTExplorer 16h
@YoPaulieNJ @TheWickedWench that implies I want others to feel the same way. In reality, I don’t care what others think.
 

WDW1974

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
It is very silly. The preso isn't even on the drive. And it doesn't install anything. Just a waste o $$

It does make you wonder.

Look at the materials used. The box, the characters, the individualized fridge magnets ... the 30-plus page glossy booklet (take a look at what they give shareholders now ... ) ... there is one helluva cost invested in making this look good. Beyond the incessant Lumiere commercials inviting me to be their guinea pig.

Why is NGE being run as 'too big to fail'? What does it mean?
 

Captain Chaos

Well-Known Member
I have to be blunt, beyond my really serious posts that require lots of time, research and thought ... Fun With Tweets posts take the most amount of time and judging by how few comments I get and how few 'likes' they garner, I am having a hard time keeping them going. I've had time of late, unfortunately three plus weeks of being quite ill will do that for you, but am anticipating a full recovery and not having as much time to sit and search for the crazy stuff. ... And if folks don't even care ... well, why should I?
Sounds like someone from TDO talking there... If guests don't noticed the small things, why add them in SAVE MONEY!!!

Get better, first and foremost... Then exercise those demons... I swear Meg took over your body... LOL
 

WDW1974

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
This is the only part of the column that stuck out to me and does have me curious. Universal was able to make the jump from large format film to 4K digital (times four) in 2008 when Back to the Future: The Ride became The Simpsons Ride.

Has Simpsons been open that long already? Doesn't feel like it ... but, yeah, I agree and wonder what exactly is going on. This thing has to be ready for SDL's Opening Day, so if there are serious issues ... legal issues ... and Todd and Norm know about them, they shouldn't be teasing this. This is their chance to shine away from Al's spotlight.

You either tell what you know or you stay quiet until you can. No one likes a tease ... that's what some of my Imagineer pals tell me anyway!
 

WDW1974

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Sounds like someone from TDO talking there... If guests don't noticed the small things, why add them in SAVE MONEY!!!

Get better, first and foremost... Then exercise those demons... I swear Meg took over your body... LOL

The last time I was this ill was 13 long years ago ... when Disney almost killed me.
 

lazyboy97o

Well-Known Member
Has Simpsons been open that long already? Doesn't feel like it ... but, yeah, I agree and wonder what exactly is going on. This thing has to be ready for SDL's Opening Day, so if there are serious issues ... legal issues ... and Todd and Norm know about them, they shouldn't be teasing this. This is their chance to shine away from Al's spotlight.

You either tell what you know or you stay quiet until you can. No one likes a tease ... that's what some of my Imagineer pals tell me anyway!
To me, the simplest explanation would be that Disney does not see the benefit in paying to upgrade the current film when it will only play for a brief period before being replaced.
 

Rodan75

Well-Known Member
It does make you wonder.

Look at the materials used. The box, the characters, the individualized fridge magnets ... the 30-plus page glossy booklet (take a look at what they give shareholders now ... ) ... there is one helluva cost invested in making this look good. Beyond the incessant Lumiere commercials inviting me to be their guinea pig.

Why is NGE being run as 'too big to fail'? What does it mean?

All of that is high perceived value at a relatively low cost. Not quite sure it fulfills a conspiracy outside of the one where they prefer onsite guests to offsite guests. It adds to the perception of Luxury and that you are getting what you paid for...blah blah blah
 

TinkerBelle8878

Well-Known Member
Are you serious?

And why has no one explained why Disney needs to send flash drives to guests to begin with? I am sure everyone isn't glued to the CNN 'coverage' of the 'situation' in Ukraine.

Flash drives... The first thing I thought of was a way to back-up any 'reservations' on the bands from your home computer. That's essentially the only use for flash drives that I'm aware of. So if for some reason something fails, you have the Flash drive of everything you saved. Maybe for those whose phones aren't smartphones or don't want to use them in the parks as the only form of proof of reservations?
 

stevehousse

Well-Known Member
All the new stuff they r mailing out is a huge overkill. The only thing I actually liked was the personalized magnets with all the dates for bookings and such. It comes in handy, but everything else is just a waste!
 

bhg469

Well-Known Member
We never got a thumb drive, just the stiff bands. Not very comfortable for long periods but they are handy for entry. The linking of tickets didn't work properly at first but as I noted in my trip report, there is a shockingly large amount of staff on site to fix these issues. They are literally everywhere. If anyone was wondering if they are making standby times longer? They sure are!
 

Mr Bill

Well-Known Member
When I saw/heard about the flash drives being sent out, I thought it seemed weird, wasteful, outdated and unnecessary. Didn't really consider any nefarious motives. Could they have an ulterior motive for getting you to plug their flash drive into your computer? Possibly.

Could they just be simply wasting money sending out hardware to everyone when they could get the same results sending out an e-mail with a URL in it? Wouldn't shock me.

It's the old incompetence vs. malice battle. They're tough to differentiate.
 

the.dreamfinder

Well-Known Member
From Brooksie


BURBANK, Calif. — The gathering at Walt Disney Animation here was supposed to be a giddy celebration. The studio had achieved the ultimate validation for its hard-fought creative rebirth: “Frozen,” its Nordic tale of two sisters and a wisecracking snowman, won two Oscars on Sunday, the same day the film crossed $1 billion at the global box office.
Disney's Frozen Official Trailer Video by Walt Disney Animation Studios
Blue snow cones for everyone! But the party Monday afternoon grew unexpectedly serious, as multiple Disney executives became overwhelmed recalling just how far the studio had come after a harrowing transition to computer-aided filmmaking. “There was talk of closing this place,” John Lasseter, chief creative officer for Pixar and Disney animation, said through tears. “And we said: ‘Not on our watch. We will never allow that to happen.' ”

Winning an Academy Award is a coup for any movie company, but the “Frozen” honors carry extra weight for Disney. Ever since the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences created the best animated feature prize in 2001, Pixar has dominated the category, winning seven times. Rivals including DreamWorks Animation have won all other years.

Photo
JP-DISNEY-master180.jpg

Left to right, Peter Del Vecho, producer of “Frozen”; John Lasseter, chief creative officer for Walt Disney Animation Studios; Jennifer Lee, the film’s co-director and writer; and Chris Buck, its other co-director. The movie has sold $1 billion in tickets globally.CreditWalt Disney Animation Studios
Never winning was a humiliation for a lot of artists at Disney, the shop where the art of mainstream animation was essentially born and home to such classics as “Dumbo,” “Cinderella” and “The Lion King.”

With “Frozen,” which also won a best song Oscar for the power ballad “Let It Go,” Walt Disney Animation can claim to be officially, absolutely and at long last back in the animation saddle. It also represents the payoff of a high-stakes bet that dates to Disney’s 2006 acquisition of Pixar for $7.4 billion. Two Pixar co-founders, Mr. Lasseter and Edwin E. Catmull, were put in charge of Disney’s legacy studio, where layoffs and creative misfires had resulted in a crisis of confidence.

Disney’s hand-drawn pictures suddenly seemed hopelessly outdated as Hollywood and audiences moved toward computer animation. Disney also became unsure of its storytelling, worrying that even young moviegoers had become too cynical for the company’s signature brand of upbeat fairy tales. A parade of new films, including “Meet the Robinsons,” “Home on the Range” and “Chicken Little,” failed to impress.

Anxiety inside the animation studio increased with the arrival of mighty Pixar as a corporate sibling, recalled Andrew Millstein, general manager of Walt Disney Animation, as he spoke to his 800 or so assembled workers on Monday. “There was a little fear,” he said, recalling the grim vibe that prevailed. “There was a little touch of envy.” Maybe Walt Disney Animation was too broken to fix?

Instead of pulling the plug, Robert A. Iger, who orchestrated the Pixar acquisition after he took over as Disney’s chief executive in 2005, asked Mr. Lasseter and Mr. Catmull to step in. The two men, in concert with Mr. Millstein and Alan Bergman, president of Disney’s broader movie operation, started by ordering up a full restart of a gestating film that became “Bolt.” It took in a relatively modest $310 million at the global box office in 2008.

Then came “The Princess and the Frog,” a musical without many memorable tunes that became a box-office disappointment, taking in just $267 million, less than it cost to make and market. (The well-reviewed movie did, importantly, give Disney its first black princess.) But the 2010 release of “Tangled” finally started to reveal some real creative spark; the operational changes that Mr. Lasseter and Mr. Catmull put into place were working.

“Tangled,” an expensive, semi-musical retelling of the “Rapunzel” story, took in $592 million.

Last year, “Wreck-It Ralph,” which took in $471 million, became a serious Oscar contender, losing to Pixar’s “Brave” in a tight race.

Disneyphiles started referring to the turnaround work of Mr. Lasseter and Mr. Catmull as a “second renaissance,” a reference to a pre-Pixar fertile period in the 1990s when Walt Disney Animation delivered megahit musicals like “Beauty and the Beast” and “The Lion King.”

But the retooled Walt Disney Animation still lacked a true smash hit, a film that not only ignites a box-office inferno but becomes a cultural phenomenon.

Enter “Frozen.” Directed by Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee and produced by Peter Del Vecho, the film captivated women and girls in particular, thousands of whom started posting videos of themselves online singing “Let It Go.” The soundtrack, with original musicwritten by Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, spent five weeks as No. 1 on the Billboard album chart, beating a new release from Beyoncé.

“We knew that you had it in you,” Mr. Catmull said on Monday, his voice cracking.

“I don’t know that everybody else knew.”

Mr. Lasseter did him one better: “Let it go,” he advised the crowd of the studio’s dark period. “We’re never going back there.”

The path ahead may be only slightly easier for Walt Disney Animation.

Competitors are growing stronger all the time — witness “The Lego Movie,” the current hit created by Warner Bros. — and Disney’s next few animated movies are risky, ambitious endeavors. “Big Hero 6,” scheduled for release in November, is an action comedy about a robotics prodigy trying to save a high-tech city called San Fransokyo.

As Pixar has learned, running at the front of the pack can be mighty challenging, as consumers, Hollywood and the news media begin to hold output to a higher standard.

But rather than dwelling on all of that, Disney’s animators on Monday ultimately started partying hearty. Staff members rowdily posed with the Oscar statuettes, while two voice actors from “Frozen,” Josh Gad and Jonathan Groff, gave bear hugs to Mr. Lasseter, who snapped photos with his iPhone.

Along with Champagne and snow cones, the studio served a buffet that featured blue candy and Blue Moon beer. An in-house band, the Steamboat Strummers, played a ukulele version of “Let It Go.” (Mr. Iger had to miss the celebration because he was en route to Shanghai, but Mr. Millstein assured the group that he had “beamed like a Cheshire cat” when “Frozen” won.)

Still, the festivities never veered too far from deep appreciation for the attention Mr. Lasseter and Mr. Catmull had lavished on the studio. Ms. Lee, who based her “Frozen” screenplay on Hans Christian Andersen’s “Snow Queen,” summed up her feelings on the matter by quoting from a “Frozen” song.

“People make bad choices if they’re mad, or scared, or stressed,” she recited. “Throw a little love their way, and you’ll bring out their best.”

Correction: March 4, 2014
An earlier version of this article misspelled the surname of the writer of “The Snow Queen.” It is Hans Christian Andersen, not Anderson. The earlier version of the article also referred incorrectly to the box-office take of the film “Bolt.” It earned $310 million globally, not domestically.
 

ThemeParkJunkee

Well-Known Member
Flash drives... The first thing I thought of was a way to back-up any 'reservations' on the bands from your home computer. That's essentially the only use for flash drives that I'm aware of. So if for some reason something fails, you have the Flash drive of everything you saved. Maybe for those whose phones aren't smartphones or don't want to use them in the parks as the only form of proof of reservations?

All the flash drive does is bring you to the MDE site and open the video of Edna talking about magic bands (according to others reports). I haven't even taken it out of the box and its been sitting in my house for a couple of months. Others have re-formatted the drive to use for other purposes because it is shaped like a magic band reader.
 

WDW1974

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
To me, the simplest explanation would be that Disney does not see the benefit in paying to upgrade the current film when it will only play for a brief period before being replaced.

Yep. Makes sense and dollars and cents ... a bit surprised that hasn't been brought up by Todd and Norm ... although I wonder if they plan on bringing the old film back (especially at DCA where it has always ... well, pre-2012 been the signature attraction).
 

lazyboy97o

Well-Known Member
When I saw/heard about the flash drives being sent out, I thought it seemed weird, wasteful, outdated and unnecessary. Didn't really consider any nefarious motives. Could they have an ulterior motive for getting you to plug their flash drive into your computer? Possibly.

Could they just be simply wasting money sending out hardware to everyone when they could get the same results sending out an e-mail with a URL in it? Wouldn't shock me.

It's the old incompetence vs. malice battle. They're tough to differentiate.
Disney officially loading in something else would be a HUGE issue and I think it would surface given the wide array of people that visit Walt Disney World. The bigger concern would probably be somebody along the line tampering with the drive to include malware.
 

WDW1974

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
When I saw/heard about the flash drives being sent out, I thought it seemed weird, wasteful, outdated and unnecessary. Didn't really consider any nefarious motives. Could they have an ulterior motive for getting you to plug their flash drive into your computer? Possibly.

Could they just be simply wasting money sending out hardware to everyone when they could get the same results sending out an e-mail with a URL in it? Wouldn't shock me.

It's the old incompetence vs. malice battle. They're tough to differentiate.

Oh, I am not stating it is one or the other. I just think it's one or the other or a combo and as a stockholder and consumer it bothers me on multiple levels.

The biggest point here is there is absolutely no good reason for sending them out. Plenty of possible suspect reasons, including simply throwing away a large sum of money.

But I also am not sticking any Disney flash into my computer unless it is from a source and has all sorts of high level proprietary items that I should not be looking at ... and in that case, it really isn't a Disney flash, is it?:devilish::greedy::cool::D
 

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