park
Places like Kings Island and Cedar Point and Six Flags Over Georgia or Kentucky Kingdom are great places to catch a quick thrill for around 40 bucks or so. But, if you go to these places all they are are a collection of rides placed on top of concrete without any goal other than thrillng the guest.
Frankly, while they do a good job of that (especially Cedar Point), their expectation level is so low that exceeding it hardly takes any effort.
But, this is really that old kumquats argument.
No it's not. You're straying off of the topic is making it that way.
I was asked to backup my statements that other stateside parks were expanding on grand levels to entice their customers back...even in the tough economy.
I gave you an example. Cedar is clearly doing that, as are others. Disney is not.
My point was not whether a certain ride belongs in WDW. I was not contrasting the two parks either. WDW has thier clientele, they are a
theme park. Cedar point is a
thrill park. But I stand by my assertion that business is business.
Cedar could have taken the same approach that Disney has. Do nothing, or do it on the cheap. And their customers would still have come.
But they did not.
Not only did they expand they built the best product for their customers in the world. Disney buys the cheapest possible products for theirs.
Finally, things like Mickey's Philarmagic might be sliced and diced on this board as "Ho-hum" but I guarantee that it will be one of the most loved attractions by kids at MK.
And so will Shrek 4d, Jimmy Neutron, et al. Philarmagic will be nice, I'm sure (although AV's musings about possible cost cutting scare me), it's the same old, same old.
So, while it isn't groundbreaking, and might not stir all of our interests on this board, I have a 15 month year old who could care less about Tower of Terror or M:S...but, thought that he'd died and gone to heaven when he headed into the Playhouse Disney show or the Boneyard...
As does my 4 year old scoop. And he loves the spinners, etc. But what happens when he grows up? What happens when he outgrows playhouse disney? Are there other things for him as a tweener? Will they still be there when he's old enough to enjoy them (although he did just about all the rides on our last trip)?
What will be left for my grandchildren when they go, if things keep going at the current rate?
That's why I'm in car 4.