peter11435 said:
You mean off the shelf rides like Walts Dumbo, Mad Tea Party, and Carousel. These things are nothing new. I'll give you stitch and Imagination but to be honest Disney struck out in the past too. I can't even believe you lumped M:S into this.
And how can you mention those "failures" without mentioning Soarin', Expedition: Everest, and Mickey's Philharmagic.
M:S is not a Disney family friendly attraction in the classic sense. Many, many people get sick, feel queasy, have headaches and also say they'll never go on it again. I can think of no other previous Disney attraction that elicits that response from people.
The failures happened at the point when Universal was coming out with incredible new attractions, a whole new theme park and high end resorts. Disney has begun to improve recently, but there's a lot of work to do. Meanwhile when people were upset about the changes at Disney, they tried Universal and found out there's more than just one place in town for a great family vacation.
You could say that Soarin' is one bright spot in the rest of California Adventure which by all accounts was not created in the Disney spirit, once again evidence of Disney's decline in quality and passion at that time.
Then there's all of the imagineers that Disney's let go over the years. By the way, many ended up working at Universal Creative.
How do you know it was not a psychological situation. How do you know they were even Imagineers.
If I have to explain the difference between classic Disney quality and storytelling and what they've been giving us the past few years, then you may not understand what Disney used to represent.
Here is the blog Im referring to, see for yourself:
http://imagineerebirth.blogspot.com/
You have also grown up a lot while going to WDW. You went from child to teen to adult in that time frame. Perception changes.
As for talking to employees. I never said that they have not cut costs in certain areas. I said that the magic is just as strong as ever. Money has nothing to do with magic.
Again, I refer to the blog posted above since those articles written can go into much greater detail about the decline of Disney than I ever could.