The rest seems thrown together with random songs about California thrown in, just in case you forgot the state you're in by any chance.
In fact, California Adventure really is a collection of ideas for other projects that had been floating around the company for a long time.
Paradise Pier is the original concept for the Boardwalk section of WDW. Michael Eisner had this thing for Coney Island (the joke around the company was that he had overheard all the family servants talking about it growing up and was still upset daddy had never told the chauffer to take little Mikey there). A Boardwalk amusement zone ended up in plans at one time or another for WDW, for Euro Disney, for Disneys America, for the Disney/MGM Studios Backlot in Burbank and at Port Disney. Sure, California had a couple of ocean side parks in the early twentieth century, but its not something people think about when they hear California. DCA was Eisners chance to finally get his project built and so it happened.
The Hollywood Blvd. Section is identical to the plan for the Disney/MGM Studios Backlot project in Burbank, except the old plan had a clone of Great Moments at the Movies er, I meant The Great Movie Ride (So Eisners son would
know it was a ride). The old farm exhibits and the Grizzly Mountain river ride were direct lifts from Disneys America only Lewis and Clark were kicked out and nothing much was put in their spots along the river. The only original bits are the Whoopie Goldberg movie (titled Were all victims of The Man here in California) and overbuilt restaurants that Wolfgang Puck and Mondovi were conned into building and believing hordes of fashionable yuppies would wallow in the irony of eating $75 sushi next to a roller coaster.
The California aspect was just a thin layer of paint to cover over the slapdash nature of the place. Another company joke said the DCA was Disneys first park built entirely with computer assisted design software. It took an entire afternoon and a copy of Rollercoaster Tycoon.
The real killer for the project, however, was the overall attitude Disney management took to it. The place was built by and for people who thought they were too good for Disneyland. Michael Eisner himself made the famous quote about with California Adventure they finally had a place that his wife and her friends would actually want to visit. At the same time, they figured that anything with the Disney brand on it would sell to all us brand loyalists.
They honestly thought that "Disney" was more iimportant than quality - that we buy the brand not the product. Upper management truly dislikes people who go to the theme parks Disney has developed a nasty mixture of Hollywood arrogance combined with Manhattan Island snobbery. It shows in almost everything they do. Even the chief designer of California Adventure blamed its failure on the public were too stupid to understand the hip, cool and cutting edge irony of the park. DCA turned into a game of how little they could offer but still make it "brand" enough to attract the "
WalMart shoppers" to buy an annual pass.
What all this means is that fixing the park is a massive undertaking. The place is flawed down to its very core. Its not a matter of adding enough rides the whole background and underpinning of the park has to be changed. The most basic rule in show business is understand your audience. Walt was a genius because he understood us better then we did, thats the magic of Disneyland its full of wonder in ways we never could have anticipated. DCA was a creation by people who didnt understand us and who had no respect for us. Disneyland enchants its guests, DCA panders after our money.
Until thats fixed, no Midway Madness or Phiarmagic or place making is going to work.