as long as it's not a room full of video games, but instead, a true hall of "Innoventions" there's so much potential for Epcot, but it requires the investment to continue evolving.
Evolution is what keeps families coming back. They see something spectacular EVERY time they come.
Why can't that translate to tomorrowland at the MK? Or (dare i say it?) a beastly kingdom at AK or an interactive "movie making" experience at MGM?
why are MGM and AK ho-hum to some? because they are HALF-FINISHED - the bean-counters closed the checkbooks!
MK is dangerously close to becoming stagnant - especially if they keep shuttering attractions and unique shops, ruining classics with annoying birds, and opening things like Stitch.
Disney is a multibillion dollar entertainment conglomerate whose reason for existance is to create experiences that excite the imagination. Saying it's too hard in this day and age to truely excite people is ridiculous and laughable.
People do it all the time. People whose first goal isn't their golden parachute or their "industry clout."
But by all means, continue to make excuses for why Disney can't be what it used to be, why we should come to expect Mission: Space to have it's budget slashed and any actual learning removed and The Seas to get nothing innovative, but a weak Nemo overlay. How dare we expect more from them?
Of course, Even Disney sneaks one through. Soarin Over California is really amayzing. Too bad they couldn't afford to finish of the theming.
Oh and lets not forget Indy in 1996. Didn't have any problems wowing guests. Still doesn't have any problems wowing guests. And that's to say nothing of Spiderman, it's protege' over at Universal. Even Pirates and Haunted Mansion still spark the imagination after 40 years.
Good points made by all here and some don't want to admit or realise that Disney is starting to make the same mistakes that is currently dooming the Six Flags company. Also a reason why attendance figures are down at Universal Orlando. I understand you have to please the shareholders more than ever in this day and age, but Disney is in danger of becoming stale and just another theme park that you can find anywhere in America. I don't scrimp and save and pay a small fortune to find that at WDW, I go because there's nothing else quite like it. When I go to MK and see more attractions being removed than being built and older ones becoming stale like Indy Speedway, then I worry. Kevin Yee of Mice Age writes a great column named "Declining by Degrees" and points a lot of this out in his regular columns. I understand some attractions come and go and cost too much to be maintained, but you just don't remove them and let the buildings just sit there. The Sky way ride for example, I understand some of the reasoning for removing it, but are you telling me Disney can't come up with a newer, high tech version of it? Same with the area that held the "20,000 Leagues under the Sea" ride, that is now a cheap looking Winnie the Pooh play area for little kids. That's not imagination or wowing your guests, that's becoming scared, cheap and running you product into the ground for the quick, short term profit. Why can't WDW have the Hunny Pot ride that Toyko
Disneyland does? It's an awesome ride from what I've seen and here's a video of it below. When I look at that ride it makes me mad that we can't have that here in America, where the Disney theme parks were invented.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K01-kPT4t8I&mode=related&search=
Nothing would be cooler than to go to MK and see the version of the HKDL Autopia that is state of the art compared to the noisy, smelly Indy Speedway we currently have. I've seen pictures of their version of Autopia and it's futuristic and environmentally friendly. They use quiet, basically pollution free electric cars and it's one of the few good things people write about concerning that park. The track lay out is pleasant and the landscaping is unique. Here is video that I found on You Tube and I think that ride looks a lot better than the version currently in Florida. Just ignore the people talking in the video though.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qIOYcGhgcrU&mode=related&search=
Or how about an updated, high tech version of the Sky way ride that would make people look up and be amazed at the beauty and design of it. Disney could easily build it, but I think is happier with keeping the costs down and staying with the status quo. They probably figure the guests have enough to do, why spend more and throw in a "Stitch's Great Escape" type of attraction here and there to fill the void. I understand a park getting mature, but that doesn't mean if has to get cheap and stale.
In the Chicago land area in the mid 70's Marriott built a theme park near my hometown and for the most part, they copied Disney's design in a lot of it. My sister and I worked in that park for many summers when Marriott owned it and while it wasn't Disney world, it still was a fairly nice place to go. Marriott sold the park in the mid 80's to the Six Flags group and it's been down hill ever since. I bought season passes a couple of years ago for my kids and was shocked at the condition of that place. It looks like a dirty
Walmart with giant roller coasters that most family members can't go onto together. I see Papa Johns pizza places selling food in the park and employees don't wear themed outfits anymore, but blue shirts and tennis shoes, plus have bad attitudes to match it. The food isn't good anymore, it's all the same, but just as expensive and there's nothing special or unique to the place. Sound Familur? The park looks run down in many places and they cut back on so many of the services the used to provide. I don't want Disney becoming another version of Six Flags and they risk doing so, if they allow the prospect of making a quick buck over the ideas that got the Disney theme parks popular in the first place. I'm a big fan of Disney and it's theme parks, but no way am I blinded by my loyalty to see that changes need to be made