Tiana's Bayou Adventure: Disneyland Watch & Discussion

Too Many Hats

Well-Known Member
I'm still eeking out hope that the pacing will be better at Disneyland, without as many weird gaps in dialogue and show scenes, as that was the ride complex this Tiana concept was mainly designed for in a silly self-induced panic.

Me too. The “They can play!” dialogue should feel less asinine at Disneyland, where the logs speed past the show scenes.

Too bad WDI can’t do anything at this point about the lift hill, where Charita’s team apparently shrugged and gave up. “Good enough. If we leave now, we can be home by 6.”

No kidding. I did nearly back-to-back Viking cruises; one river journey on one of their longships and one ocean journey on a cruise ship. Both were incredible because of the storytelling that Viking weaves into all their journeys; the brilliant lecturers and multi-media presentations delivered onboard by subject matter experts paired with perfectly aligned port visits and countryside tours that build upon and bring to life all the incredible stories and information you are learning simultaneously. From the Normandy invasion (I got teary thinking of how America and Great Britain saved the world!) to wine making and cooking classes to architecture and dance, it was all plussed up by incredible storytelling. Plus a gaggle of like-minded fun folks who can follow a dress code to chat with it all about over dinner and laugh and learn.

I’m not much of cruise guy, but this sounds fantastic.

But Disney has really lowered their standards in the past five years, and allowing a group of professionals like Viking to educate and entertain you through the power of modern storytelling really makes that point painfully clear. :oops:

It’s sad to see. But to your point, high standards are alive and well elsewhere. Disney is practically begging us to spend our money at those places instead.
 

PiratesMansion

Well-Known Member
It’s sad to see. But to your point, high standards are alive and well elsewhere. Disney is practically begging us to spend our money at those places instead.
Are they, though?

Apart from maybe Universal and parks that almost no one here actually cares about like Dollywood and Silver Dollar City, where are these high standards alive in the amusement park industry in this country that are stratospherically higher than Disney's? Who is objectively beating Disney at their own game?
 

DarkMetroid567

Well-Known Member
Are they, though?

Apart from maybe Universal and parks that almost no one here actually cares about like Dollywood and Silver Dollar City, where are these high standards alive in the amusement park industry in this country that are stratospherically higher than Disney's? Who is objectively beating Disney at their own game?
Yeah, the international equivalents would be some of the euro parks like Europa, Phantasialand, and Efteling, and even then I would probably stop the list there. Dollywood and SDC are great examples but even they have some annoying operational struggles.

Even if the argument is alluding to Universal, their rides still suffer from some quality issues too. VillainCon was a dud, and I recently visited Universal Beijing which, while an awesome park, already had stuff not working on some of their major rides.
 

Too Many Hats

Well-Known Member
Are they, though?

Apart from maybe Universal and parks that almost no one here actually cares about like Dollywood and Silver Dollar City, where are these high standards alive in the amusement park industry in this country that are stratospherically higher than Disney's? Who is objectively beating Disney at their own game?

Oh, I was referring to other industries entirely (for example, Viking cruises, as TP2000 was discussing). Disney is still the leader in theme parks by all metrics. It makes their declining standards and soaring prices even more depressing, IMO.

That said, in terms of customer service specifically, I really don’t think Disney is doing anything in 2024 that Universal isn’t also doing. I think nostalgia is the only difference at this point.

Honestly, I’d argue even Cedar Point may have higher standards than Disney for its employees. It’s something of an apples/oranges comparison, but in my experience CP employees are incredibly present/focused, proactive, professional in appearance, and friendly. There’s clearly a standard to which they are held, and it’s taken seriously. At Disneyland (in 2024), many CMs are good, but many others are subpar; there doesn’t appear to be some standard everyone is striving to meet.
 

EagleScout610

These cats can PLAAAAAYYYYY
Premium Member
Is the children's garden a playground? Or just more "storytelling".
Just a prop/set in the queue-
tiana-bayou-adventure-queue-exterior-06042024-38-2000x1333.jpg
 

Too Many Hats

Well-Known Member
Have to admit, I actually think these bears are pretty cute. Their limited motion is super disappointing (they're not AAs; they're moving figures), but at Disneyland they might still read as "joyful and kinetic" as we speed past them at about 80mph.

Bear Band.png


Well, I guess when I say "these bears are cute," I'm referring to the bear in front and the bear on the right. We can't really see the face of the bear in the back. This is a staging issue throughout this ride; the critters frequently have instruments in front of their faces.

Also we're left to wonder why the gray fox is there. Why not an all-bear band? Maybe the gray fox could've shown up as drummer for every group of musicians, as a recurring bit (in the shrunken scene, we could see giant AA fox feet tapping along to the frogs). Louis could say, "Boy, that gray fox can't turn down a gig!" I guess humor was off the table for this attraction.

Actually, do Tiana and Louis ever shout out specific critters? My brain typically becomes numb when I try to watch POVs, but my sense is that their dialogue is limited to the "They can play!" stuff. It might be a subtle plus-up to have Louis instead say, "I can bear-ly contain myself listening to this trio! Tiana, what's this party's budget for honey?" or "These bobcats got me bobbin' along!"
 

Too Many Hats

Well-Known Member
I loved Splash at Disneyland, but the "How Do Ya Do?" section had some dead spaces that were a little too dark. Really hoping WDI tastefully implements these screens/projections to brighten up those spaces (or at least make them a little more interesting) on Disneyland's TBA. I'm not holding my breath, but it'd be an excellent way to overcome the limitations of the layout.

Bayou.png


Also, I wonder if they'll use screens/projections to enclose this moment (the gap in the sets just prior to Br'er Rabbit's intro)? Or is it perhaps a maintenance necessity?

Screen Shot 2024-09-29 at 10.27.34 AM.png
 

DarkMetroid567

Well-Known Member
Oh, I was referring to other industries entirely (for example, Viking cruises, as TP2000 was discussing). Disney is still the leader in theme parks by all metrics. It makes their declining standards and soaring prices even more depressing, IMO.

That said, in terms of customer service specifically, I really don’t think Disney is doing anything in 2024 that Universal isn’t also doing. I think nostalgia is the only difference at this point.

Honestly, I’d argue even Cedar Point may have higher standards than Disney for its employees. It’s something of an apples/oranges comparison, but in my experience CP employees are incredibly present/focused, proactive, professional in appearance, and friendly. There’s clearly a standard to which they are held, and it’s taken seriously. At Disneyland (in 2024), many CMs are good, but many others are subpar; there doesn’t appear to be some standard everyone is striving to meet.
Cedar Point attraction ops are always top-tier, but just about everyone else tends to not be the best. Cedar Fair parks, with the exception of Knotts and maybe Kings Island, in general kinda feel this way.
 

PiratesMansion

Well-Known Member
Yeah, the international equivalents would be some of the euro parks like Europa, Phantasialand, and Efteling, and even then I would probably stop the list there. Dollywood and SDC are great examples but even they have some annoying operational struggles.

Even if the argument is alluding to Universal, their rides still suffer from some quality issues too. VillainCon was a dud, and I recently visited Universal Beijing which, while an awesome park, already had stuff not working on some of their major rides.
Right. It's pretty easy to think of International places that uphold these standards, but domestically not so much.
Oh, I was referring to other industries entirely (for example, Viking cruises, as TP2000 was discussing). Disney is still the leader in theme parks by all metrics. It makes their declining standards and soaring prices even more depressing, IMO.

That said, in terms of customer service specifically, I really don’t think Disney is doing anything in 2024 that Universal isn’t also doing. I think nostalgia is the only difference at this point.

Honestly, I’d argue even Cedar Point may have higher standards than Disney for its employees. It’s something of an apples/oranges comparison, but in my experience CP employees are incredibly present/focused, proactive, professional in appearance, and friendly. There’s clearly a standard to which they are held, and it’s taken seriously. At Disneyland (in 2024), many CMs are good, but many others are subpar; there doesn’t appear to be some standard everyone is striving to meet.
Ok, that makes sense then.

Unfortunately, Disney still probably has better customer service than many operators out there even with the declines of the last decade.

Cedar Point operationally is nothing compared to what it was a decade or so ago. Now, their employees are professional and friendly, but alas, their ops are largely indifferent. Better than Knott's, but not a patch on what they once were. Kings Island has better ops and service now than Cedar Point (and also benefits from not having perpetual, ongoing staffing issues to the same degree that CP does).
 

Vegas Disney Fan

Well-Known Member
Not to be a Disneyland homer, but I feel more and more like we got the better version out here.
When we saw it in person a few weeks ago we said the same thing, our “barn” looks so much better with the yellow and green trim vs WDWs yellow, brown trim, and their murals. I still prefer their side by side seating though, and their view of the castle from the ride is incredible.
 

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