nkereina
Last chance to lose your keys.
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2009
- Messages
- 21,037
If you went to starring rolls for your fave cupcake - and they said "we just sold out but in 15 minutes we'll have more" and you love those cupcakes so much you decide to wait the 15 minutes ... and then 40 minutes goes by and they come out and say - sorry but we won'e have the cupcake for you after all with a too bad so sad attitude and a shrug ... would you be annoyed then?
I am guessing you would be irritated - and you're a grown adult - not a three year old.
Beautifully said.
Ridiculous and that isn't what happened anyway.
How about after 40 minutes they say "the cupcake deliver guy fell ill and he won't be coming. sorry".
Are you saying you'd be irritated to the point that you wanted a free cup of coffee or something?
Of course I'd be irritated, but I wouldn't expect anything. I've even been in restaurants where I've ordered something only to have the waitress come back 15 minutes later to tell me they're out of it. Never got a free meal and never expected one. OP has every right to be irritated for making her wait, but no right to be irritated for the lack of compensation for something out of everyone's control. THAT is entitlement. And like I said in my original post, I'd be willing to bet that the CMs that kept OP waiting were trying to deal with the Snow White being sick situation. We don't know that Snow White was actually puking - maybe she had a fever or something and people were assessing whether or not she'd be able to finish her appearance. And like I said, perhaps it was not a quick thinking CM or it was a CM trying to juggle a few things and the thought of compensation did not occur to him or her. Nobody knows. But my point is, if OP had gotten something - it should have been looked at as an extra perk, not expected.
Beautifully said.
Unfortunately I've seen that behavior in the Poly and out front by the Crystal Palace. It just blows my mind that the parents don't even care.


Disney knows what our expectations are because they have put those ideas in our heads. They show us commercials with one little kid walking down Main Street holding Mickey's hand. They show us happy smiling people in spotless restaurants and laughing children meeting princesses. They tell us on every single piece of advertising that Disney is magical -- the happiest place on earth -- where dreams come true -- where magic lives -- and on and on. They have taught us all, over the years, to expect more from Disney than from any other theme park on the planet. And we have bought it all, hook line and sinker. Every time Disney says "Have a magical day" they are telling us exactly what we should expect -- a MAGICAL day. And if we don't have that, then they have not met the expectations that they, themselves, have set up for us.
They've shot themselves in the foot over and over again by promising something that they may not be able to deliver. But I also love them for making that promise and doing their best to convince me that the magic is attainable in a world where we all realistically know it's not.
)Other parks say they're the most thrilling, the wettest, the wildest, the Harry Potterest...okay Universal IS the Harry Potterest, but I'd challenge all those other claims...what if I'm just not thrilled at the most thrilling park. What if I'm pretty tame at the wildest park? Okay...I'm just messing with people now
but you see my point? I fully expect to have a great time at Disney, but why do people hold it above every other corporation just because their ad campaign says it's a magical place. Reality check.

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