WaltD4Me
<font color=royalblue>PS...I tried asking for wate
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2003
- Messages
- 9,703
Article by Ricky Brigante....People are figuring out HP is not a theme park. Of course, Pete is right again...Universal seems surprised by the crowds.
This doesn't sound very good at all.
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As can be expected, many of those who made the trek to Islands of Adventure are not pleased with the result of their journey. This morning on Twitter, @jgat wrote, the line at guest services is huge, full of people wanting their money back. And the complaints are likely to continue as guests continue to wait in near-record Florida heat throughout the day.
Meanwhile some technical difficulties continue at the Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey attraction. One report indicates that the ride shut down briefly once this morning, forcing guests to leave temporarily.
It was only two days ago that Universal Orlando president Bill Davis told the media, Weve done this before. Well get through it. But was Universal truly ready to handle the thousands of fans who showed up today based on Universals own advertisements to come see the Wizarding World? Given that the Wizarding World of Harry Potter is only one section of a much larger theme park, thousands of guests can certainly not all fit comfortably into the area at once. But no one told them that in advance.
Many of those who showed up expecting a grand opening celebration and a theme park within a theme park have instead been met with a seemingly endless line that might not place them into the Wizarding World until much later tonight or perhaps not even at all today.
Some might scoff and say that Universal has done everything they can with crowd control and that they can only safely allow so many guests into the Wizarding World at once. But crowd control is not the issue. The real question is could todays oversized crowd have been avoided? Perhaps Universal should not have publicized a single day as *the* day to be here to see the Wizarding World. Perhaps Universal should not have announced there would be a public grand opening this morning, only to make it viewable for a select few individuals.
Or perhaps this is simply what should be expected from the grand opening of one of the most highly-anticipated theme park additions in history. While lines are long, and will likely continue to be long throughout the busy summer season, the wait for dedicated Harry Potter fans will most certainly be worth it, as Universal has created an immersive and detailed themed environment rivaled by few others.
So, for now, it will be up to each individual guest to decide whether it is worth waiting literally all day to spend a few hours in Hogsmeade Village and Hogwarts Castle. For some who have grown up reading Harry Potter books and watching the film series, it most certainly will. For the rest, waiting a few months to visit, after the initial crowds have subsided, is likely the better choice.
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============= ARTICLE================================
As can be expected, many of those who made the trek to Islands of Adventure are not pleased with the result of their journey. This morning on Twitter, @jgat wrote, the line at guest services is huge, full of people wanting their money back. And the complaints are likely to continue as guests continue to wait in near-record Florida heat throughout the day.
Meanwhile some technical difficulties continue at the Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey attraction. One report indicates that the ride shut down briefly once this morning, forcing guests to leave temporarily.
It was only two days ago that Universal Orlando president Bill Davis told the media, Weve done this before. Well get through it. But was Universal truly ready to handle the thousands of fans who showed up today based on Universals own advertisements to come see the Wizarding World? Given that the Wizarding World of Harry Potter is only one section of a much larger theme park, thousands of guests can certainly not all fit comfortably into the area at once. But no one told them that in advance.
Many of those who showed up expecting a grand opening celebration and a theme park within a theme park have instead been met with a seemingly endless line that might not place them into the Wizarding World until much later tonight or perhaps not even at all today.
Some might scoff and say that Universal has done everything they can with crowd control and that they can only safely allow so many guests into the Wizarding World at once. But crowd control is not the issue. The real question is could todays oversized crowd have been avoided? Perhaps Universal should not have publicized a single day as *the* day to be here to see the Wizarding World. Perhaps Universal should not have announced there would be a public grand opening this morning, only to make it viewable for a select few individuals.
Or perhaps this is simply what should be expected from the grand opening of one of the most highly-anticipated theme park additions in history. While lines are long, and will likely continue to be long throughout the busy summer season, the wait for dedicated Harry Potter fans will most certainly be worth it, as Universal has created an immersive and detailed themed environment rivaled by few others.
So, for now, it will be up to each individual guest to decide whether it is worth waiting literally all day to spend a few hours in Hogsmeade Village and Hogwarts Castle. For some who have grown up reading Harry Potter books and watching the film series, it most certainly will. For the rest, waiting a few months to visit, after the initial crowds have subsided, is likely the better choice.
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