1HAPPYGHOSTHOST
Well-Known Member
Your numbers are waaay off.Did I say they didn’t get visitors from all over the world? Of course they do. However, 80% of visitors are from Southern California. Sorry if that fact is inconvenient for you.
Your numbers are waaay off.Did I say they didn’t get visitors from all over the world? Of course they do. However, 80% of visitors are from Southern California. Sorry if that fact is inconvenient for you.
Then consider me a fool.
Disney World doesn't have the "too many passholders" problem. Just look at how the two products were priced pre-pandemic for proof. Why would WDW APs include more parks but be less expensive for locals than Disneyland passes if Disney was concerned about WDW having too many passholders?
I'm sure the price of WDW APs will go up, but they're not trying to thin the AP herd like Disneyland.
Disney considers a lot of the vloggers to be a source of revenue for them. That’s why they give them press passes and invite many of them to media events. The thinking is the vloggers (who for the record I largely dislike) provide them with lots and lots of free advertising.The price of WDW's AP is the biggest issue. I don't think Disney sees Florida AP as a good deal (for Disney) anymore. At less than $900 a year, it allows vloggers to get into the parks, let's say 4/7 days a week, making their actual ticket price under $5.00 a visit (annualized). They pay Disney $5.00, to profit off of the parks.
Disney should require a (paid) media pass for Vloggers, separate from APs. And restrict media passes from FastPast (or its replacement) - make them wait in long lines. Plus, Disney should put Vloggers on their own ride vehicles, where appropriate. It is SOOOOO distracting to be sitting in a boat (ie Na'vi River) having someone narrate the ride - especially when they turn the light on their phones!The price of WDW's AP is the biggest issue. I don't think Disney sees Florida AP as a good deal (for Disney) anymore. At less than $900 a year, it allows vloggers to get into the parks, let's say 4/7 days a week, making their actual ticket price under $5.00 a visit (annualized). They pay Disney $5.00, to profit off of the parks.
I guess that's my cue to renew before they announce anything else, I expire in SeptemberDisney World APs coming back before the 50th!
"And for those wondering about Walt Disney World Annual Passes, new pass sales will become available in time for the start of the 50th anniversary celebration! Walt Disney World Resort will be sharing additional information and details later this month, so be sure to stay tuned to DisneyWorld.com and the Disney Parks Blog."
I guess that's my cue to renew before they announce anything else, I expire in September
I wonder if it will be the same as it used to or like the Disneyland system.Disney World APs coming back before the 50th!
"And for those wondering about Walt Disney World Annual Passes, new pass sales will become available in time for the start of the 50th anniversary celebration! Walt Disney World Resort will be sharing additional information and details later this month, so be sure to stay tuned to DisneyWorld.com and the Disney Parks Blog."
Reservations are baked into this one from the word go, though, so Disney has actually officially solved its AP crowding problem forever. If too many APs are showing up, just ratchet the reservation supply down. If "legacy passholders" are mad that they paid $1400 to be told they can't go unless they fight for an open slot three weeks out, well, they knew that was what they were paying $1400 for.$1400, with a payment plan and free parking. Do they really think the core DL AP park goers will bite on the lesser offerings in Disney’s folly of “reducing AP crowds”? The top pass pays for itself in roughly 11-12 visits over a year.
Excellent point. I’m sure TDA thinks they can limit the number of AP guests on any given day and have little blowback. Grab your popcorn.Reservations are baked into this one from the word go, though, so Disney has actually officially solved its AP crowding problem forever. If too many APs are showing up, just ratchet the reservation supply down. If "legacy passholders" are mad that they paid $1400 to be told they can't go unless they fight for an open slot three weeks out, well, they knew that was what they were paying $1400 for.
EDIT: To provide an illustrative example, let's pretend for a moment that the ideal operational load (which is NOT the maximum capacity, just the point at which every additional head starts degrading service below an acceptible minimum) of DL is 25K. So Disney, vastly preferring resort guests or single-day ticket purchasers, sets the reservation count for magic keys at 15K, then subtracts the number of ticketed guests - pretend for a moment that August 20th already has 15K reservations between sold day tickets and booked resort guests. The system goes live and it looks like, whoops, Magic Key availability for the 20th is already gone! So even though you paid $1400 for the ability to reserve August 20th or any other day, you're staying home, because you only paid for the chance to book a slot not the guarantee that one is there when you want it. If you really insist on being there August 20th, you're welcome to pay the single day rate up to Disney's actual capacity limits - and of course, if you're flying in from out of town, Disney will happily sell you that ticket, and you can feel better about crowd projections knowing that even if 100K magic keys are out there in the world, no more than 15K of them (and depending on other attendance bucket fills, potentially as few as 0 of them) will be packing the park.
That’s a completely different thing.This is very similar to the old annual pass program minus the reservations and price hike. Kind of why I think everyone losing their minds about what the new Fastpass program at WDW might look like should chill out a bit.
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