Sorry to miss out on the fun - but real world stuff, you know.
So I'm to take it that the week before Chiristmas is, according to the websites, so dead that any can prance on any ride without any kind of wait.
BUT
The the hotels are so booked people are willing to sell their childern on eBay to afford sleepping on the floor in the All Star's lobby.
Which is it people? Or is everyone spending their time at Gatorland?
As to the hotel rooms - reservations work just like trying to book an airline ticket. You know, you find out that the person sitting next to you paid half of what you did, but you feel better becasue the person across the ailse paid more than first class?
Blocks are rooms are assigned to different sales channels - some to the web, some to call centers, some to agencies, some to airlines, some to Expedia, some to the nephews of some V.P. in the maintenance department. Just becaue the block your tapping is "booked" doesn't mean all of the rooms at the hotel are filled - any more than just because you can't get that $99 round trip ticket doesn't mean the plane's full.
The more rooms Disney holds out of the system, the higher price they can get for them. It's a yield management game - trying to juggle the demand for the rooms against the highest price you can get for them. Disney doesn't like Annual Passholders, DVCers or "frequent" guests buying rooms during heavy periods. These guests don't spend as much money as the blow-it-all-on-the-big-trip crowd, and just like retail that "brand" you sell things through has a lot to do with it. Disney can get a lot higher price by selling a room through the American Express Gold Card website than it can through a
travel agent.
Seriously - look at the situation. If rooms were so hard to come by why hasn't the second half of Pop Century been started? Numbers can always be twisted, especially if the numbers are incomplete and subject to wild speculation. But Disney's actions - closing wings and knocking down rooms - can tell you a lot about what's going on.