va32h
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2005
- Messages
- 4,667
We just returned from a trip to Disneyland...and while we did end up having a good time overall, there were a few unpleasant incidents - and every one of them involving other, adult guests.
It makes me wonder if some grownups aren't spoiling Disney in their quest to make the perfect vacation for their kids, or relive a fantasy perfect vacation from their own childhood.
For the 50th anniversary, Disneyland has a golden vehicle in each of the original 1955 rides - a golden teacup for the Mad Tea Party, a golden Dumbo, a golden boat on the Jungle Cruise, etc. It was great fun to luck into a golden vehicle, but unfortunately, we saw a lot of jockeying for them. At the Mad Tea Party ride, an adult guest was so eager to get the golden teacup that he pushed past my 10yo, who was in front of him in the line. (The ride attendant, fortunately, saw it and told him she could have him kicked out of the park if he did that again).
At California Adventure, a woman literally laid down on the ground, spreadeagle, to reserve spots for the Block Party Bash, and told a little boy, who could not have been more than 4 to "back off" when he wandered into "her space".
And don't even get me started on the characters. If there was no formal line, adults pushed their way up to the front, or pushed their children ahead of others. At our character breakfast, we never did get to meet all the characters, because diners would not stay at their tables and wait for the characters to come to them. They followed the characters around the restauarant, preventing the characters from visiting other tables.
Another thing that annoyed me was the number of guests who refused to share ride vehicles. Lines are long enough as it is. Do grown adults really have to ride in their own Dumbos? Or all drive their own cars on Autopia? Is it so awful to have to share your Matterhorn bobsled with a couple of strangers?
While we did meet a few friendly guests, I noticed a distinct lack of Disney-esque attitude in the air. People seemed to be very much out for themselves, treating other guests as obstacles, not fellow tourists.
It makes me wonder if some grownups aren't spoiling Disney in their quest to make the perfect vacation for their kids, or relive a fantasy perfect vacation from their own childhood.
For the 50th anniversary, Disneyland has a golden vehicle in each of the original 1955 rides - a golden teacup for the Mad Tea Party, a golden Dumbo, a golden boat on the Jungle Cruise, etc. It was great fun to luck into a golden vehicle, but unfortunately, we saw a lot of jockeying for them. At the Mad Tea Party ride, an adult guest was so eager to get the golden teacup that he pushed past my 10yo, who was in front of him in the line. (The ride attendant, fortunately, saw it and told him she could have him kicked out of the park if he did that again).
At California Adventure, a woman literally laid down on the ground, spreadeagle, to reserve spots for the Block Party Bash, and told a little boy, who could not have been more than 4 to "back off" when he wandered into "her space".
And don't even get me started on the characters. If there was no formal line, adults pushed their way up to the front, or pushed their children ahead of others. At our character breakfast, we never did get to meet all the characters, because diners would not stay at their tables and wait for the characters to come to them. They followed the characters around the restauarant, preventing the characters from visiting other tables.
Another thing that annoyed me was the number of guests who refused to share ride vehicles. Lines are long enough as it is. Do grown adults really have to ride in their own Dumbos? Or all drive their own cars on Autopia? Is it so awful to have to share your Matterhorn bobsled with a couple of strangers?
While we did meet a few friendly guests, I noticed a distinct lack of Disney-esque attitude in the air. People seemed to be very much out for themselves, treating other guests as obstacles, not fellow tourists.


(but won't be replacing WDW in my heart, just as
I'm still embarrassed 35 years later.
. We only rode it once, and there wasn't even a line.