It doesn't.Please explain how EEA works with one screen.
It doesn't.Please explain how EEA works with one screen.
I've received plenty of HD video of the attraction from early last Saturday morning (for no reason at all) and have to say it looked fantastic.If they could just keep the Laughing Place functional...
Disneyland isn't perfect, but on a recent trip I noticed almost everything worked right. Animatronics were smooth and even the little things, like the fiber optics in Pinocchio, were fully functional and bright.
WDW can't even keep the planets spinning on the Astro Orbitor. It's a simple mechanism that roadside diners have kept up for decades.
This.I like how people want to lecture those to make a difference. Nine times out of ten actually saying something means squat to the CM or MGMT. I've had folks shrug at me, I've had folks say there's just nothing they can do. So it makes wanting to say something a little difficult, don't you think? Maybe THEIR attitudes should change. No, not everyone reacts that way but it seems to be a lot more common than some want to admit.
So what would cause more complaints? Stopping/closing the ride in the middle of the day to fix a show scene or leaving the ridopen with a show scene problem until it can be fixed that night?
This is actually a trick question....because people will complain about something even if the rides are operating 100%
Start the thread then.i wish there was a topic here about how bad thing are at Universal instead of Disney then i could list major items faults that i found last week. rides breaking down dues to lost of powers. how inaccurate any backdrops in the New York section were (Macys never look like that). missing lightbulbs etc.
Agree, its not like its gonna hurt to create a new thread.Start the thread then.
If that's all you took away from my posts, then you completely missed the point.Especially when you come down to complaing about how sally's car looks. Lol
It's hard to put money back into the parks when you have to pay all those huge yearly bonuses to the executives for NOT spending any money.The problem I see with WDW is that there used to be a high standard of quality that is slowly fading. I could understand if budgets are tight then they need to focus on doing the most that they can to keep the whole together rather than a few individual things. Unfortunately for Disney, they keep turning record profits. So, where is the excuse of not having the means to keep a decent budget for maintenance?
It's hard to put money back into the parks when you have to pay all those huge yearly bonuses to the executives for NOT spending any money.
This post should be required reading.This. I've talked to a lot of managers around the property and the more I hear, the more it sounds like the resort is set up so that the real decision-makers are financially motivated NOT to spend money. It sounds horrible at first, but if you're told that at the end of the year you'll make an additional $75,000 if you can spend less than _____ on lightbulb replacements and AA refurbishments, what would you do? Or maybe you'll be out of the job next year, and you think you if the AAs and burnt-out lightbulbs can make it just one more year before you're transferred to your next job, and then it'll be someone's else problem... except then the next guy ends up making the exact same decision.
At a certain WDW attraction I worked which shall unnamed, a guest approached me and let me know of a major show quality concern I thought warranted immediate attention (something floating in the flume which should NOT be floating in a flume), which I knew would require the ride would to be briefly shut down. I found a manager right away and told him, and he said he would pass the memo onto HIS managers (the big guys). We waited and waited and the final decision was that it would have to wait til after park close, during closing procedures (this was mid-afternoon). I asked why we had to wait (I was confident I could get it out and the ride up and running in 20 minutes flat) and my manager quietly told me that the managers' bonuses are contingent on meeting a certain ride capacity, and that dropping below that capacity could mean a significant loss in income. Apparently even just 20 minutes of basic maintenance was a challenge for this management team. I transferred to merchandise and heard much of the same, although obviously more finance/retail-based.
I think the real tragedy of the resort is that it has created such an incentive structure in the first place, prizing capacity and maintenance costs over show quality. It sounds to me like this issue could be largely resolved if managers had separate, equally-sized bonuses that were dependent on show quality to be earned.
Merely suggesting that managers should get bonuses for putting show quality and guest satisfaction at the bottom of things to do should be a firing offense. Disgusting.This. I've talked to a lot of managers around the property and the more I hear, the more it sounds like the resort is set up so that the real decision-makers are financially motivated NOT to spend money. It sounds horrible at first, but if you're told that at the end of the year you'll make an additional $75,000 if you can spend less than _____ on lightbulb replacements and AA refurbishments, what would you do? Or maybe you'll be out of the job next year, and you think you if the AAs and burnt-out lightbulbs can make it just one more year before you're transferred to your next job, and then it'll be someone's else problem... except then the next guy ends up making the exact same decision.
At a certain WDW attraction I worked which shall unnamed, a guest approached me and let me know of a major show quality concern I thought warranted immediate attention (something floating in the flume which should NOT be floating in a flume), which I knew would require the ride would to be briefly shut down. I found a manager right away and told him, and he said he would pass the memo onto HIS managers (the big guys). We waited and waited and the final decision was that it would have to wait til after park close, during closing procedures (this was mid-afternoon). I asked why we had to wait (I was confident I could get it out and the ride up and running in 20 minutes flat) and my manager quietly told me that the managers' bonuses are contingent on meeting a certain ride capacity, and that dropping below that capacity could mean a significant loss in income. Apparently even just 20 minutes of basic maintenance was a challenge for this management team. I transferred to merchandise and heard much of the same, although obviously more finance/retail-based.
I think the real tragedy of the resort is that it has created such an incentive structure in the first place, prizing capacity and maintenance costs over show quality. It sounds to me like this issue could be largely resolved if managers had separate, equally-sized bonuses that were dependent on show quality to be earned.
This follows my suspicions. Thanks for sharing.This. I've talked to a lot of managers around the property and the more I hear, the more it sounds like the resort is set up so that the real decision-makers are financially motivated NOT to spend money. It sounds horrible at first, but if you're told that at the end of the year you'll make an additional $75,000 if you can spend less than _____ on lightbulb replacements and AA refurbishments, what would you do? Or maybe you'll be out of the job next year, and you think you if the AAs and burnt-out lightbulbs can make it just one more year before you're transferred to your next job, and then it'll be someone's else problem... except then the next guy ends up making the exact same decision.
At a certain WDW attraction I worked which shall unnamed, a guest approached me and let me know of a major show quality concern I thought warranted immediate attention (something floating in the flume which should NOT be floating in a flume), which I knew would require the ride would to be briefly shut down. I found a manager right away and told him, and he said he would pass the memo onto HIS managers (the big guys). We waited and waited and the final decision was that it would have to wait til after park close, during closing procedures (this was mid-afternoon). I asked why we had to wait (I was confident I could get it out and the ride up and running in 20 minutes flat) and my manager quietly told me that the managers' bonuses are contingent on meeting a certain ride capacity, and that dropping below that capacity could mean a significant loss in income. Apparently even just 20 minutes of basic maintenance was a challenge for this management team. I transferred to merchandise and heard much of the same, although obviously more finance/retail-based.
I think the real tragedy of the resort is that it has created such an incentive structure in the first place, prizing capacity and maintenance costs over show quality. It sounds to me like this issue could be largely resolved if managers had separate, equally-sized bonuses that were dependent on show quality to be earned.
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