WDWLOVER1957
Active Member
Really??? Well please be kind enough to give me a clue :shrug:
will pm you
Really??? Well please be kind enough to give me a clue :shrug:
As too alienating DVC and Passholders that is ridiculous. Disney caters to these solid repeat spenders. I am both and I get so many discounts and opportunities that I actually lose track of all of them. If anyone is getting the sweet deal it is DVC and PHer's.
A giant ad for movies that have been out of theaters for several years?The park is also a gigantic advertisement for it's movies. You can't quantify that effect even on people that don't spend money in the parks. There certainly are some people that go to Disney that most of the rest of us would prefer don't because of bad attitudes or hygene. However that does not mean all people on a tight budget are a problem. As we all know Disney wants as many people in the parks as possible regardless of how much they spend. I personally am fine with any one that wants to go being able to go. Too many people want the parks empty so it is easier for them. If that happens there will be no Disney World.
A giant ad for movies that have been out of theaters for several years?
IThe same is true, to a lesser extent if you have an Annual Pass. You paid a big chunk of change for that pass... now you watch people get ridiculous package deals, you start to question the logic of buying the pass since you don't get the discounts everyone else is getting.
I wanna stay at that resort! Disco Stu says, "Studio 54, here I come!"Disney always increases their prices from year-to-year. And they've always charged Red Lobster prices for Burger King-quality food and Ritz-Carlton prices for Hampton Inn-quality hotel rooms. Nothing has changed. The recent spate of discounts were an aberration in the 40-year history of the Florida property.
Sure, there are folks who remember when a room at the Poly cost you $20 a night, and cheerful CMs would read you a story and tuck you in when you went to bed, but that was back when Richard Nixon was President and the inside of the Contemporary looked like this:
Just like this ad...No Special Promotion, no discount, Just new rides and telling you Come to Disney!
[YOUTUBE]
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[/YOUTUBE]
That only applies when there is no room-only discount. Disney doesn't really discount its admission tickets. The only exception that I can recall was to the 7 for 4 deal...but even that deal wasn't a significant savings on park admission alone. There's the kids play and eat free deal too...but that is a bit restrictive for a comparison.
In general, the room-only discounts pale in comparison to the deals available with packages, be it 7 for 4, free dining or just % off.
If you have an annual pass or DVC, you don't need a package deal so you can't take advantage of the best deals available. From a strictly financial perspective, this diminishes, to some extent, the value of the AP or DVC. Having both, like I do, makes it that much worse.
I was so pleased with my last trip, I'm already making plans to return in 2011. But the discounts have made me much less enthusiastic about recommending DVC or AP to family & friends... so I agree with the post that continued heavy discounts will eventually hurt these programs.
Just read Disney's recent qtr results and our good friend Jay Rasulo said that the company is going to "Ween" us off the deep discounts and return to normal pricing as early as October 2010.
Just read Disney's recent qtr results and our good friend Jay Rasulo said that the company is going to "Ween" us off the deep discounts and return to normal pricing as early as October 2010.
Disney always increases their prices from year-to-year. And they've always charged Red Lobster prices for Burger King-quality food and Ritz-Carlton prices for Hampton Inn-quality hotel rooms. Nothing has changed. The recent spate of discounts were an aberration in the 40-year history of the Florida property.
Sure, there are folks who remember when a room at the Poly cost you $20 a night, and cheerful CMs would read you a story and tuck you in when you went to bed, but that was back when Richard Nixon was President and the inside of the Contemporary looked like this:
Right, how dare the plebians dream of visiting WDW?
Actually, I remeber 1976 when the Contemporary was about 95-120 dollars a night and the HoJo off 192 was about 25 dollars a night. (we stayed HOJO) Hah! Of course, the MK was the only park and we were bored. Went two days and the only coaster was Space Mountain.
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