I am very disappointed in this entire message board that it took until the 5th page that I (of all people) had to get this posted.
Very disappointed in you all. Especially you @Bob !
I was waiting for @Me 'Earties to post that video.
I am very disappointed in this entire message board that it took until the 5th page that I (of all people) had to get this posted.
Very disappointed in you all. Especially you @Bob !
Did the author of the article not know the countries that were built has sponsors and that's why they were built? As for Africa, the pavilion was to be Equitorial Africa (so a very specific area) with parts dedicated to various countries and exhibits on animals and history. Whats there was supposed to be temporary. What I heard (I dunno if its true, but probably) is one of the holdups at the time was people thought Africa = South Africa which was in the midsts of the whole aprartied thing so Disney decided to not go there.It’s not just Disney. But Disney does more than its fair share to contribute
“But this is precisely the problem with these cultural products: they paint this “Africa” as an imaginary space but nevertheless use broad, stereotypical tropes about the continent (animals and warrior tribes and mangled accents). This inaccuracy is longstanding and pervasive in Hollywood,”
Trademarking ‘hakuna matata’ is a tipping point in Disney's portrayal of Africa | Namwali Serpell
Hollywood has long used stereotypical tropes in depicting Africa, says the writer Namwali Serpellwww.google.com
Disney’s EPCOT and African Culture: A Look Into Corporate America’s Point Of View — The Observer
www.theobserver-qiaa.org
Americans Think Africa Is One Big Wild Animal Reserve
Delta and 'The Lion King' are part of our long history of stereotyping the continent.newrepublic.com
One of my friends (from France) remarked "Oh, it's just like France... only clean"I’ve always found the World Showcase representations to be presented through an American lens. The things that are highlighted (as being interesting, beautiful, curious, or unique) about each country seem to be selected for the contrast they provide to typical American culture. Cultures have unique perspectives on other cultures, after all. But I think this is behind much of the “stereotype” accusation comes from. Thoughts?
One of the original future countries was Iran. That would have been.... interesting. Later evolved in to an Arbian area pavilion before being abandoned. But one of the future countries actually advertised as Israel.If memory serves, sponsorship played at least a partial role in which countries were chosen for representation. I seem to recall something about wanting to avoid countries that could be "problematic" due to politics, as well.
We've already got Mexico, Norway, China, Germany, Italy, United States, Japan, Morocco, France, United Kingdom, and Canada in World Showcase.
What about Peru? Madagascar or Mozambique? Egypt? Sri Lanka? Thailand? Australia? (Please be nice...I don't know if there would be any potential issues with any of these countries, except that there were tourism issues with Sri Lanka up until 2009 because of civil war. I went around the globe and tried to get a country from each region...I'm sure I overlooked at least a few that would be possible but I did leave some out on purpose...political issues.)
It's too bad they couldn't use part of The Land and The Seas to represent land-based Australia and the Great Barrier Reef.
One of the original future countries was Iran. That would have been.... interesting. Later evolved in to an Arbian area pavilion before being abandoned. But one of the future countries actually advertised as Israel.
One of the original future countries was Iran.
The Israeli exhibit is among those of 24 countries invited to showcase their cultures and histories at Epcot as part of a 15-month millennium celebration that opens to the public today. Its theme is "Celebrate the Future Hand in Hand."
The Israeli exhibit has been under fire for several weeks as Arabs and Muslims feared it would depict Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. That's a thorny issue in the Middle East because Arabs view the eastern section of the city as the capital of a future Palestinian state.
At a meeting in New York City last week, Arab foreign ministers decided not to call for a boycott against Disney, saying the company had allayed their concerns.
But a coalition of American Muslim groups remains dissatisfied after seeing the exhibit on Thursday.
"The average person will leave this exhibit with the impression that Jerusalem is the undivided capital of Israel," said Khalid Turaani, executive director of American Muslims for Jerusalem, which last week called for a boycott of Disney. "The Israelis designed it to further their own political agendas, not to educate Disney's guests."
Disney World spokesman Bill Warren denied that exhibit was offensive, saying "it does not have the feel of a political venue."
As Disney officials announced earlier, there is no explicit reference to Jerusalem in the exhibit as the undivided capital of modern Israel.
The beginning of the preshow movie includes a disclaimer that the exhibit is sponsored by the Israeli Foreign Ministry and is "based on their perspective."
I am very disappointed in this entire message board that it took until the 5th page that I (of all people) had to get this posted.
Very disappointed in you all. Especially you @Bob !
Ironically it seems we might need that right now more than ever.EPCOT used to be aspirational and inspirational as both a look towards the future and the unity of all nations..
Same with "educational".Ironically it seems we might need that right now more than ever.
Ironically it seems we might need that right now more than ever.
Are you sure you’re not thinking of the Persian Resort (link below)?
If memory serves me the countries rumored (maybe even announced at some point) were Spain, Israel and maybe Switzerland.
These were the announced but never built pavilions.If memory serves me the countries rumored (maybe even announced at some point) were Spain, Israel and maybe Switzerland.
These were the announced but never built pavilions.
Prior to the parks opening Venezuela signed a letter of intent, but it obviously didn't happen. Switzerland with the Matterhorn was drawn up but abandoned in favor of Germany and retheme the Matterhorn to Mt Fuji. Russia was also a serious contender. More recently Brazil and India are the rumors.
Edit: looks like @_caleb beat me to it.
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