Midwest Elitist
Well-Known Member
Yes, the ride is closing, even Tony Baxter knows it. Fun fact: his favorite version of the ride is Tokyo's. He's also not involved with TBA.You mean like what is EXACTLY happening now with it?
That is all
Yes, the ride is closing, even Tony Baxter knows it. Fun fact: his favorite version of the ride is Tokyo's. He's also not involved with TBA.You mean like what is EXACTLY happening now with it?
I see what you’re saying but I feel like the changes they’ve made the last few years kind of show us they don’t care what us fans think. Granted, none of them have been on the level of Splash.
It is hard to believe that the same company removing Zip from the music loops could make a turn on this but then again it’s been open for three years since the announcement featuring songs and characters from the movie in the same park. As much as I’d like to believe it’s sticking around I believe it will close but my ears will start to perk up if it’s still running in May. It’ll get really interesting if Splash is still open in June.
So far every rumor has been wrong about Splash's closing date. I mean we're almost to April and the thing is still open, and they're somehow gonna do a complete retheme by 2024?
That was an obvious stunt to generate hype. Since the response was still mixed at best, they don't care what the actual timeline is. The fans of the ride will be mad for the same amount of time.Right. Of course, they could just move the Fall 2024 date. They’ve done it before.
Replacing a carpet is nothing like fixing a broken effect that has not worked in close to 10 years for a ride you plan on closing down forever. Not even in the same ballpark. Not even the same sport.Ellen's Energy Adventure had the carept in the preshow area replaced less than a month before it closed, and that ride had a much much shorter announce - close span than Splash Mountain, and was much less beloved. Effects being fixed dont mean a ride is safe.
Replacing a carpet is nothing like fixing a broken effect that has not worked in close to 10 years for a ride you plan on closing down forever. Not even in the same ballpark. Not even the same sport.
I disagree, they likely replaced the carpet because it was on hand and they knew they wouldn’t need it once the ride closed, may as well use it rather than just tossing it in the trash. They’re likely fixing the effects because they suddenly have parts on hand from the FL ride… it’s the same thing, it’s on hand so they may as well use it rather than chucking it in the trash.Replacing a carpet is nothing like fixing a broken effect that has not worked in close to 10 years for a ride you plan on closing down forever. Not even in the same ballpark. Not even the same sport.
A carpet is not on the same level as fixing a broken animatronic. Nope. That would be like fixing the yeti in Expedition Everest before closing the ride foever because the part finally came in. You don't go through the effort of fixing something you plan to never use again because it requires time and money.I disagree, they likely replaced the carpet because it was on hand and they knew they wouldn’t need it once the ride closed, may as well use it rather than just tossing it in the trash. They’re likely fixing the effects because they suddenly have parts on hand from the FL ride… it’s the same thing, it’s on hand so they may as well use it rather than chucking it in the trash.
Hopefully I’m wrong because poaching parts is a pretty big indicator they’re not planning on reusing the animatronics in the new ride.
I disagree again, it takes a whole lot longer, and a whole lot more effort, to rip out and lay new carpet than it does to bolt in a new part.A carpet is not on the same level as fixing a broken animatronic. Nope. That would be like fixing the yeti in Expedition Everest before closing the ride foever because the part finally came in. You don't go through the effort of fixing something you plan to never use again because it requires time and money.
I don't really believe the FL -> DL parts theory. The animatronics are more different and complex in the Florida one.I disagree, they likely replaced the carpet because it was on hand and they knew they wouldn’t need it once the ride closed, may as well use it rather than just tossing it in the trash. They’re likely fixing the effects because they suddenly have parts on hand from the FL ride… it’s the same thing, it’s on hand so they may as well use it rather than chucking it in the trash.
Hopefully I’m wrong because poaching parts is a pretty big indicator they’re not planning on reusing the animatronics in the new ride.
A well thought criticism. The animatronics on Disneyland's Splash were built in 1974. The animatronics on Magic Kingdom's Splash were built in 1990. That's 16 years of animatronic technology separating the two. Could the two share identical mechanisms? Hypothetically, but I suspect not.I don't really believe the FL -> DL parts theory. The animatronics are more different and complex in the Florida one.
that is not how it works. Like..at all.it’s pretty easy to throw it in a box, pay FedEx $10 to ship it, and have a maintenance guy spend 2 minutes swapping it out.
I've thought about this too. That the longer it is open, the less time they have to meet the 2024 deadline and not rush it and make it look crappy.So far every rumor has been wrong about Splash's closing date. I mean we're almost to April and the thing is still open, and they're somehow gonna do a complete retheme by 2024?
Let me add- and we're supposed to believe they can do a retheme in that short timeline that's actually good?
I'm mixed on this. On one hand, they're actively doing things that diminish Disneyland and what the place represents. Most of the new additions range from unnecessary to completely ridiculous and poorly done.. Especially with operations. The complete removal of the Disney Look, Genie+, the decreased maintenance, The Jungle Cruise changes, Galaxy's Edge. No more ladies and gentleman. And I know there's more I'm blanking on right now.
But then we get stuff like the new Lincoln preshow. Getting rid of the french fry rocks and bringing back the '60s planters at the Tomorrowland entrance (the ones by Star Tours and Buzz). The rumored return of the PM. Bring back the Swiss Family Treehouse in some form. A Toontown overhaul that was done mostly well. Snow White's redo that was done decently well.
It almost feels like there's two camps at Disneyland- one that cares about the place's history and wants to bring us closer to the Disneyland of old, and the camp that wants to use the place to further social agendas and promote whatever IP Disney+ is developing right now.
If they weren't changing Splash Mountain I'd be more positive about the future outlook for the park, as I believe the staff issues can be fixed in time- but right now it definitely feels like one step forwards and about 10 steps back.
At this point, just close the thing.
I'm tired of talking about it and hearing about it and explaining it and the subject of the ride's closure invading into 1/3 of the other threads and people pontificating about how it's the bestest ride in the history of ever and, my new favorite, having to listen to delusional people launch their crackpot theories about how the ride will magically be saved at the last minute. The bulk of which has been happening for well over two years.
It's exhausting, and all of the above has sapped away any of the positive feelings I once had for the ride. I'm over it all.
I'd rather have Iger get replaced now, so the next CEO (still betting on Dana Walden and Alan Bergman as co-CEOs) of Disney can stop "IP-ifying" classic Disney rides, like Splash Mountain.Disney isn't making the change to appease people, they are making the change to introduce a "NEW" attraction for a fraction of the cost as well as the merch that can be sold/Disney + subs. The feel-good spin is just icing on the cake. This is just the same as TOT becoming Mission BO, Maelstrom becoming Frozen Ever After, Alien Encounter becoming Stitch Encounter, Screamin' becoming Incredicoaster. This is a new MO for Disney imagineers; find how we can update attractions to push newer IP's without spending too much.
Not going to happen IP is the way of the future.I'd rather have Iger get replaced now, so the next CEO (still betting on Dana Walden and Alan Bergman as co-CEOs) of Disney can stop "IP-ifying" classic Disney rides, like Splash Mountain.
I personally feel they're just saying "Late" 2024 to give themselves an excuse to move to 2025 if need be and not too many eyes would bat.So far every rumor has been wrong about Splash's closing date. I mean we're almost to April and the thing is still open, and they're somehow gonna do a complete retheme by 2024?
Let me add- and we're supposed to believe they can do a retheme in that short timeline that's actually good?
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