Admit it, you've been that rude guest!

I'm the guy who will exclaim loudly, "There's no reason to walk six wide at all times!" when I get herded all the way up against a wall because the family coming toward me refuses to go two by two by two or three by three even though there is oncoming traffic.
YES!!
SO much yes on this! lol
I dont know why it is a hard concept to grasp. The parks are EXTREMELY crowded. you do NOT need your whole family to walk side by side.
 
My moment of rudeness isn't so bad compared to banging somebody's head up against glass. :crutches::scared: :)

Disclaimer: It was June which equals hotter than Hades. It was also our travel/arrival day and I'd been up since 3:30 am and I was really, really exhausted and cranky.

We arrived mid-day at the MK on a Saturday and the crowds were out of control. The line at the Haunted Mansion was so long it had stretched from beyond the actual covered entrance and had spilled over into the walkway where ropes had been set up. The problem was that the designated entrance of the roped area was sooooo wide that I'm sure ten people standing elbow to elbow could have easily passed through it. As we made our way into the line there were streams of people pouring in with us from every direction.

After standing in line for a couple of minutes, my sister must have overheard the people behind us talking to the people standing in front of us and surmised that they were together. I was hot, cranky, and totally oblivious. My sister nudges me and says "I think we stepped in between somebody's party."
I shrugged my shoulders and replied "oh well." I know, that was rude, but I honestly didn't mean it as 'I don't give a crap about separating somebody's party', I really meant 'oh well, they didn't say they were together and I'm really hot and cranky and I- ok FINE! I don't care that we separated their party!!!!'

A moment later I hear a woman's voice coming from very close by saying "Wow. That was rude." I look to my right and see this woman with a sour look on her face, but she's staring straight ahead so I said "Were you talking to me?" and she replied (still staring straight ahead refusing to make eye contact) "Yes! She just told you that you broke up our party and you shrugged your shoulders and said 'oh well'. We have a party of 19 and we'd like to stay together!"

At this point my sister and I exchange looks that say "What?!? A party of 19?!?" I'm not sure how this lady thought anyone would know they were all together, for crying out loud. My niece and my kids were standing there looking a little bit scared like maybe they thought were we going to throw down. One of the sour-faced lady's group members was whispering to her "shhhh!! shhhh!!!"

My sister and I stepped off to the side and began gesturing (somewhat dramatically) and saying (somewhat sarcastically) "by all means, go around us! Go ahead! Go ahead!" The members of their group standing in front of us then starting yelling at US "No! You just go around us!" It turned into this brief stand-off between parties that made me feel like we were the polite gophers from the Looney Toons cartoons:
After you!
No no, after you!
Oh no, I insist!

We finally gave in and went around them. My sister and I decided that they had to have been WDW newbies if they really thought all 19 of them were going to remain together through the entire line leading into the HM. Even if they'd somehow managed to stay together into the stretching room there's no way that they'd make it through the mass exodus of people from the stretching room to the Doom Buggies. Were all 19 of them planning on piling into one Doom Buggy? :tongue:

Ah yes, we can laugh about it now....

:p
We went as a party of 9 and on a few rides that everyone wanted to do did manage to stay together. Its not actually that hard... in the case that you witnessed the faster walkers ahead of you would have turned around said something and let you in front immediately so we were together. Coming out of haunted mansion (which not everyone did but I think it was like 6 of us) we just hung back towards the end of the exit from the stretching room so we stayed together there.
 
There are times that 2 is too many, and 4 is always too many for me. 19? Aw heck no. I'd just tell them I can be found by the pool and then go do my own thing in another park.

Exactly this. I'm worried enough about our family of 5.5 (we will have a two month old in October)...let alone our BOG ADR that's for 11. Ugh.
 
One thing happened to me and my boyfriend that wasn't exactly rude but we could have handled the situation better. Maybe some people would considered it rude? I don't know...anywho we were trying to get to the Polynesian from the Grand Floridian (we weren't staying at either just wanted to check it out and get a drink). We got to the monorail station and were waiting for the next one to come. We were standing behind a family and for some reason my boyfriend and I were kind of standing far apart from each other. So he walks towards me so he can stand with me and the dad in front of us goes "Are you kidding me? We've been waiting in line for 20 minutes!". My boyfriend says "Uhh I was just trying to stand next to my girlfriend who's behind you...no ones trying to cut in front of you relax". My boyfriend and I at this point started laughing. Not loud and obnoxious but they guy definitely heard. We just thought it was ridiculous, we came nowhere near the guy and it seemed like being a foot near him was invading his personal bubble. I kind of took it as this pompous rich guy doesn't want us peasants breathing his air-which is silly now that I think about it because we don't know for sure that they were staying at the Grand Floridian they could have been exploring as well. Anyway, we couldn't help snickering at the situation and he heard and said "I'm just tired of rude people trying to cut ahead"-which wasn't really an apology so we said 'Okay buddy" in a sureeeee whatever you say kind of way. We kept kind of laughing-really not trying to on purpose we just thought it was funny and then his wife turns around looks at us and says "sorry" in a hushed tone. That's when I started to feel bad. Not for the dad he was a tool- but for his family. I've had to apologize for other people and have to feel uncomfortable by the actions of the people I am with sometimes. So I felt bad and told her no worries.
 

When my family went on a cruise years ago (I think I was 14 or 15?) I accidentally walked in on a woman in one of the bathrooms. The stalls have full length doors so it's not like I could see feet. She, probably due to embarrassment, snaped "I'm in here! Don't you knock?!" to which I replied "You're supposed to lock it" and got a "didn't your mother teach you any manners" tirade in reply, then spent the rest of the time til dinner crying in my room because I was a shy, well behaved kid generally and being told off by an adult was the worst thing that could ever happen. Now I maintain that she was being a witch though. Who yells at a kid in the bathroom for not psychically knowing you're in the stall?
 
I did that once at the MVMCP parade...... let someone's snowflake in front of me next to my daughter. Never again. She was sitting and he practically trampled her, was out in the street, jumped between me and every float I was trying to photograph. I won't do it again.
I've let people ahead of me in lines because they said they were trying to catch up with their kids only to have them be joined by the rest of their family. Of course if you put up a fuss after letting 1 through you're going to get attitude. And then everyone behind you hates you to.
 
I was an accessory to rude behavior a couple of years ago! It was late afternoon in the Magic Kingdom and my niece and I were getting an ice cream from the shop on the corner of Main Street. There were only a few tables (foretelling) so we asked an older couple if we could join them since they had two extra chairs. They said sure and we sat down and exchanged pleasantries. Very soon, my niece realized she needed napkins and stood up to get some from inside the store. As soon as she walked away, a CM grabbed her chair and started carrying it away. I was flabbergasted! The gentleman at the table said, "Hey we aren't finish with that chair. She will be right back!" The CM was very snotty and said that she was under orders to take the chairs away as soon as they were vacated. (I guess the parade was coming up soon and they don't want people to use those chairs?). Her response really ticked off my new "friend" and he had some choice words for her as he walked to summon her manager. Voices were definitely raised. My niece comes back outside to see all this commotion over her chair! The manager quickly replaced the chair and told us to use it for as long as we wanted. It was a bit awkward to say the least!
 
The last time we went to WDW, I called it the "year of the squeeze." Cast members kept trying to squeeze people on rides to fill every last inch. I am claustrophobic and don't like strangers' legs touching mine. My family of four was comfortable on a bench on the Great Movie Ride and they tried to squeeze a family of three next to us. I told the cast member "no" I would not move. If they wanted to squeeze more people in, I would get out and wait for my family. The row behind me said the same thing. I did not enjoy many rides due to having strangers practically in my lap. I hope things have changed!
 
I love staying in Fort Wilderness. I truly do. Checking-in, however, is a whole ‘nuther ballgame …

1985: After two short, introductory trips to WDW by just the two of us, I began planning months in advance for the first truly on-site visit for my husband, my parents and me. My father had just retired and he and my mother had very recently purchased an RV after years of vacationing across the country in a succession of ever-longer and more curve-challenged recreational trailers. And it rapidly became apparent that the principal consideration as I put together ten days in Fort Wilderness would be the care and feeding of an exceedingly sanitary and sensitive motor home and the mandatory deployment of its awesome awning.

Because, my father had begun to say at every opportunity, it was absolutely critical that there be room on our campsite to ‘put out the awning’. There was, it would seem, no reason at all to travel a thousand miles to the rumored-to-be Happiest Place On Earth if he couldn’t fully extend the mystical, magical canopy. Evidently, the RV and its master and mistress were incapable of functioning in a state of rest unless that ridiculously-expensive rectangle was properly taunt. Might as well stay home and kick the equally ridiculously-expensive tires, don’t you know.

Note: It is my firm belief that the primary reason that campers camp their way through their leisure lives is their unwholesome fascination with process and tyranny. That, and their astounding prissiness. Example: Mother often remarked to rather startled bystanders that, when traipsing merrily about the countryside, she ‘certainly did not sleep in beds previously occupied by strangers’. The clear implication being that, if her listeners were among the unfortunates reduced to transient slumbering in commercial chambers … Well, bless their hearts!

So, budding little Disney aficionado that I thought myself to be, in every correspondence – oral and written – and there were many of them - with WDW regarding our impending arrival, I dutifully made only the one permitted request: ‘Please’, I implored – furnishing in every instance the exact dimensions of the blasted thing – ‘Please make certain that we are assigned a site large enough for my father’s awning. Pleeeze!’

And, of course, when we arrived in the dead of the night - Note: it is considered terribly impolite to disturb a sleeping campground - and pulled in as silently as possible and my parents had done all of those things that must be done to complete that sacred ritual - including unhitching the little VW that they always pulled along for side-trips - and I saw the set of my father’s jaw and the tremble of my mother’s chin, I knew …!

I grabbed the keys to the VW and told my father to go get in. And I’ve tried, unsuccessfully, for all these years since to remember that tone of my voice, because for the first and only time in my life, my father did what I asked him to do.

Now, I do not drive a stick-shift well. So, I’m certain that the rest of the campground woke up as we made our grinding and thrashing way to the office.

I slammed one door shut. I slammed through the next. ‘Why', I demanded in that same pater-mobilizing voice, ‘can’t my poor, exhausted, fragile and absolutely impossible father get his blasted awning out?’. ‘What’, they said, innocently, ‘are you talking about?’ ‘The awning!', I screeched. ‘The awning! That precious awning that I’ve been telling you people about for months. The one prominently mentioned in every scrap of paper you have about our reservation!’ ‘Awning?', they feinted again.

‘Call a manager’, I growled. ‘Heck, call Eisner, if you must! But, in the end, you are going to take us to an awning-lovin' patch of moonlit ground … tonight!’, I roared (stretching menacingly to my full 4 feet and 11 inches of imposing stature).

And I’ve often wondered if they might have honestly thought that the miniature madwoman before them actually knew the Disney CEO. However, pointing out the ungodly - for a righteous campground - hour, ‘Would the morning do?’, they asked. ‘No, it won’t', I replied (by then my father had left to scrunch down as far as humanly possible into the VW’s upholstery), ‘No’ (and by now I was blubbering fairly copiously), ‘it just won’t’.

And that is how it came to be that a small caravan of golf cart, motor home and brilliant German engineering made its way through grumbling pathways to a preferred site with a lovely view of the lake and a marvelously-broad expanse just beggin’ for an awning to fill it. And we all lived happily ever-ten-days-after.

1986: Back in Fort Wilderness the following year, all went beyond well. So far beyond well, in fact, that some of the visitors to Magic Kingdom on a certain day could be heard wondering if our family might, indeed, know Mr. Eisner. But that’s another story … :)

2003: I had no Fort Wilderness plans.

Following stays at several other WDW resorts, this was to be the Grand Visit. Nine days (December 27 - January 5) at The Grand Floridian. The (Grand) Platinum Plan . Paid in full.

But the gods will have their way with those who get too big for their britches and so, one fine day, in one fine conversation with Concierge Services, I casually mentioned smoking on our room’s guaranteed-to-be-grand balcony. ‘Oh, no’, she said, aghast. ‘You can’t do that!’

‘But’, I sputtered, ‘I smoked on the balcony at the Boardwalk Villas without any issues. So, if one can smoke on those balconies, then why not on The Grand Floridian's grand balconies?’

‘Fire codes’, she said sternly. ‘They can be different at various resorts. Something to do with the roofs, I think’, she said. ‘Piffle!', I said. ‘I’ll go back to The Boardwalk!' But, of course, when I called the hotel several days later to confirm that it was still permissible to smoke on their balconies, it wasn’t. And I couldn’t. And so I wouldn’t. Go back to The Boardwalk, that is.

Nor, after prolonged conversations and several made-to-be-unmade reservations, would I go to The Polynesian, or to The Beach or Yacht Clubs, or to The Wilderness Lodge - almost made it there, until someone checked the roof for the nefarious code - or to The Animal Kingdom Lodge, or even to the concrete and glass Contemporary.

But, I could go back to Fort Wilderness. To a cute - presumably asbestos-roofed - little cabin with a wonderfully-welcoming - bring-your-own-ashtray - deck. Parking at the door for our golf cart and car. And the all-paid-for (Grand) Platinum Plan.

There were no actual Smoking cabins still available, but, as I explained, I didn’t need one. My daughter wouldn’t permit me to smoke inside even if I wanted to. And I didn’t want to. So, despite the circuitous and rather aggravating route required to reach that state, I was, once again, a pretty happy camper. Until …

The phone call to inform me that I couldn’t have my all-paid-for (Grand) Platinum Plan. ‘Fort Wilderness simply can’t provide you Platinum Service’, he intoned. ‘There would be no Nightly Turn-Down, or Chocolates, or In-Room Dining, or Club Amenities, or Itinerary Planning, or ….’

‘I don’t care’, I said (as calmly as possible), 'about any of it other than Itinerary Planning and Concierge Services during our stay. And you certainly can do that! There actually are phones in Fort Wilderness and on my own and on my daughter’s persons. And you, or other officious souls, already have my lists and so I expect all of my dining, shows, cruises, tours and recreation to be booked and to be able to call the number that I already have for any assistance that I might need before or during my stay in Fort Wilderness. Have a magical day.’ And I hung up.

And darned if they couldn’t do every last bit of that … :) So, I was actually, once again, circuitously, a pretty happy camper. Until …

We arrived a bit late again. And when my daughter went in to pick up our keys and cart, I thought it was taking far longer than it should. So, I went in. To find my daughter crying.

Now, she doesn’t blubber as I do. She cries silently. And rarely. But she had done all of the driving for the past two days and now she was crying so loudly that I could actually hear her if I listened carefully. And she was crying, it seemed, because they had no Smoking cabins available. And, given that I had so strenuously demanded one - at this point, I’ll remind you, gentle reader, of my earlier testimony concerning that - they felt that, in fairness to their non-smoking guests, they could not offer me a Non-Smoking cabin unless I paid the assessment for my fully-expected non-compliance with the no-smoking-inside dictum - in advance of - my eagerly-anticipated transgressions.

I sent my daughter to our Detroit, USA car. I called the number and briefly, but colorfully, explained my uncomfortable circumstances and - I thought - my quite justifiable reluctance, at the moment, to pay anyone Disney any other Dollar.

But, in 2003, I didn't mention Michael Eisner.

And then I let their people talk to their people. And, very shortly, a caravan of two – golf cart and car (sans motor home) – wound its way to another – really – wonderful stay in Fort Wilderness.

2016: We’re headed once again to The Beach Club. No Awning. No Smoking. No Platinum Plan. No Fort Wilderness, perhaps. And, perhaps, I won’t ever be rude in WDW again.

 
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One incident weighs heavy on my mind. We were leaving Animal Kingdom after a rainstorm. I was pushing a stroller while attempting to get my over excited son to stop skipping ahead. Of course, as I am saying to him, "stop! You need to stay on this side, other people are on that side!", he plows through a group. I can still see the look of disgust on that lady's face even though I apologized. "How dare he" said the look. She didn't accept the apology. I still feel bad that I couldn't get him to stop. yet part of me says, "oh, well. He is just a kid. I tried. What more can I do?"
 
I have really enjoyed these stories. Sometimes I have unintentionally rude, usually in the situation of lines where there is a large group, and there are stragglers. Now, I will voice an opinion, which might be construed as rude. When we are traveling in a large group, and going to a particular attraction, ride, lunch, whatever, we wait by the entrance, outside the line, until we all get there. Then, we all go in together. People need to keep in mind that if I am by myself in line, and I entered the line alone, that I don't necessarily know that the person behind me is with the people in front of me. Once a teen accused me of trying to block him from being with his family in the fast pass line at Star Tours. The ride wasn't crowded. I was just taking my time walking to meet up to the rest of the line. The kid entered after I did, and really, I don't think anything of a teen riding alone, since my son has gone on rides independently since he was about 12.

Then there was a lady who got into a major snit because our family either got on or off the monorail car before hers. Once again, we weren't intending to be rude, we all just wanted to stick together, since I had everybody's ticket. And, then there was the woman who got upset because I was in line on the opposite side of the table at security. Apparently she thought that everybody in her party should be inspected first instead of alternating sides as they do. The irony of this situation was once again, it was late in the day at Epcot, it wasn't crowded, there wasn't a long line at the inspections, and we just went up to the open table. The other party had a stroller, with multiple bags on it, and several family members with bags. I was with my son, who didn't have a bag, and had a small crossbody bag containing my phone, camera and wallet. A 15 second inspection,if that.
 
I don't think I have ever been rude in all my visits, certainly not intentionally. The closest was probably on our last night of our last visit I set up my camera at a good spot outside Caseys about 3 hours before the fireworks. A nice American couple then stood next to us for a couple of hours until a few English people came along about 30 minutes before the fireworks and basically forced their group of six into a gap of half a person. One of the Americans was in a mobility scooter and could not see over the tree they were forced behind.

A couple of the kids stayed at the spot while the rest of the group went to Caseys. One teenager sat on the railings blocking my view. I politely asked that he did not sit there during the fireworks as I had been setup for hours to get that shot. He apologised and moved immediately. However, when the father returned I could hear him and the other teenager present say to the father that they were tired and would like to sit on the railing. However apparently I had threatened them and been really aggressive. I heard all this and awaited the angry loutish behaviour from the parents. However, either they knew the kids were liars or I was obviously intimidating enough to avoid.

I still get angry thinking about it. Had they challenged me, I would have verbally destroyed the entire family. Luckily it never came to that.

And those that say they did not allow children/those on mobility scooters in front of them, that is not being rude. Having children or mobility issues does not give people the right to force others to give up parts of their holiday. If you are desperate for a good view of a parade turn up and wait like rest of the guests have to. As a child there's no way I would have asked somebody to move who arrived before me. If we wanted a great view our parents made us wait like everyone else. My mother often uses a mobility scooter, but she would never expect somebody to give up their place that they have waited for, when she turns up late (which has happened to me on many occasions).
 
I've made more than one cranky comment at the people at FP+ kiosks who use it like they've never seen a computer before. Oh it angers me so much.

I'm also prone to giving up politeness when I find a crowd that just won't move and I put an arm out across my chest and barrel through them.
 
I was told I was being rude by the family who was in front us on the down escalator in the Land Pavilion. They got off the escalator, several adults and a bunch of children, and just stood there, at the bottom of the escalator. I shouted out "Please move, I'm headed right at you". This evidently was rude in their world. They took great offense that I told them to move. I responded that I didn't want to run into them, but it didn't matter.
 
I work close to Ground Zero in NYC and there are a slew of tourists here. I swear that I go overboard when I'm asked for directions just so they don't go home and say that new yorkers are rude.

My mom might win the rude guest award. I'm bi-racial. My mom is black and my father is italian. On a lovely visit to the disney villas I believe in 1988, my mom got into an argument with my dad because he wouldn't admit that he couldn't dance. My father can't dance but that's irrelevant just let him that man live his dream of being John Travolta.

So she threw him and his bike (he used to be big time into cycling) out of the villa until he would admit that he couldn't dance so our neighbors were subjected to a grown begging to be let back in while refusing to admit that he couldn't dance. This all occurred around midnight.
 
I was told I was being rude by the family who was in front us on the down escalator in the Land Pavilion. They got off the escalator, several adults and a bunch of children, and just stood there, at the bottom of the escalator. I shouted out "Please move, I'm headed right at you". This evidently was rude in their world. They took great offense that I told them to move. I responded that I didn't want to run into them, but it didn't matter.
Escalators can be dangerous in the wrong circumstances...
 
I work close to Ground Zero in NYC and there are a slew of tourists here. I swear that I go overboard when I'm asked for directions just so they don't go home and say that new yorkers are rude.

My mom might win the rude guest award. I'm bi-racial. My mom is black and my father is italian. On a lovely visit to the disney villas I believe in 1988, my mom got into an argument with my dad because he wouldn't admit that he couldn't dance. My father can't dance but that's irrelevant just let him that man live his dream of being John Travolta.

So she threw him and his bike (he used to be big time into cycling) out of the villa until he would admit that he couldn't dance so our neighbors were subjected to a grown begging to be let back in while refusing to admit that he couldn't dance. This all occurred around midnight.


That's hilarious! :worship:
 
This one still haunts me nine years later... My then 12-year old daughter and I were walking quickly through the Magic Kingdom to meet up with my husband and sons. It had just finished raining. We were talking and laughing and not paying a lot of attention to where we were walking. Well, my daughter hit a puddle in flip flops, and the water splashed so far. It hit a man wearing shorts, so his lower legs were wet. As my mortified daughter tried to apologize, he started screaming about us being white trash and that it wasn't funny. I don't know if he heard us laughing about something totally unrelated just before it happened or what. She kept trying to apologize, but he just kept screaming. She was in tears and I was close, so we just walked on and tried our best to ignore him. I know that we should have been paying more attention to where we were walking, but it really was completely accidental.
Hi Beth,
You wouldn't happen to be a DJ for a radio station in Atlanta, GA would you?
 
I'm sure that last trip I was rude at some point (probably in line for characters because I paid good money for vacation and I'm not letting your kid cut the line just because they're 5) but if so I don't remember it because another guest in our party (who had been to Disney at least 27 times at 20 years old) was so over the top inappropriate at times it was embarrassing. The top examples of this were whenever we were on the buses she would get really pissed off if a small child screamed or cried (it was summer and Disney so it happened often) which on the one hand I understand, I don't really enjoy the crying of children but we were on vacation in Disney and loudly talking about how you wish "they'd shut the f up" is not helping. We got numerous dirty looks from parents. She also tended to walk around the parks on her phone which was annoying but not overly intrusive except at meals. The worst probably came when we were on the Backstage Magic tour (which she wanted to do so badly when we were planning) and she didn't want to get off the bus or when she did she would ignore the guides and talk on the phone. When we asked her what was wrong she said "I already know most of this stuff from online so it's boring."
 
I probably shouldn't tell this on the board, but my DH swiped a car in the parking lot of our resort (the car was definitely still totally operational, it was just a scrape, but still). We told the security at the resort, left our information, and our insurance took care of it, but I really hope we didn't ruin their vacation.

I also took a 9 year old and 2 toddlers by myself to Yachtsman. This was not the plan (DH got suddenly sick...he wanted us to leave the room plus $50 cancellation fee plus $65 cake we had ordered), I was nervous about it WITH my husband, but everyone was nice. The kids were mostly quiet (we had like two loud outbursts, but I got it in check immediately). Our reservation was VERY early, and the kids were not loud or horrible, but I can imagine if I was on my honeymoon or something and I had to sit next to the crazy lady with her 3 kids when I'm paying $50 for a steak.

When getting a bus (we only to it to and from MK), DH had the stroller, 9 year old was responsible for himself, I had the toddlers. DH made a run for the bus, and totally got ahead of people in line, and then I had to run to keep up because I didn't want to get separated. It didn't cause anyone not to get on the bus, but I felt so bad. To be fair, DH just didn't notice.

After that, I tried to give people the benefit of the doubt.

On our trip, we saw a few line cutters and the like, but overall, people were so gracious. It was the one place where I could be with my twins and people would consistently try to be helpful (retrieve things they dropped, gave up seats on the bus, etc.) vs. at home where people often look at me like I shouldn't have had so many kids (I only have 3) or take them in public.
 












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