Perhaps, but I dont care what carnivals do, I care what Disney does. Killing fewer people than a carny roadshow is not an acceptable standard. Disney needs to ensure the safety of its guests. Period.
Disney didn't kill anybody. Pre-existing medical conditions - of which Disney could not reasonably have any knowledge - combined with decisions made by the Guest (recent) or the Guest's parent (original) to ignore NUMEROUS warnings about the attraction is what killed each of them.
Drop the silliness. Take a real look at the demographics of guests at carnival and thrill parks - then compare them against Disney's numbers. Then take a look at the absolute number of guests going through each park. It's simple math and simple statistics - Disney places more guests "at risk" than carny rides do.
P.S. - I don't see a four year old in the picture. Nor do I see a sixty year old. Nor do I see people undergoing 2+ Gs. Nor do I see an enclosed cabin. Nor do I see that the guests are unable to signal someone to stop the ride. In fact, the mere fact the picture even exists shows that it would have easier to spot an unconcisous child in this attraction than on 'Mission: Space' - so you've actually PROVEN this barrel ride is a safer ride than Disney's latest.
True, the absolute number of guests going through A carnival can't compare to Epcot on a given day; but the number of guests visiting ALL carnivals that same day would come much closer to, if not exceed, Epcot's attendance that same day. Similarly, not every Guest will ride Mission: Space and not every guest will ride the Gravitron. As for the ability to stop the ride? As far as I know, if the (many) monitoring CMs at M:S see a problem, they will stop that ride vehicle. Similarly, I'd think if someone IN that vehicle yelled "stop!", they'd be able to do it. I can't see a Gravitron-type ride being that controllable - you can't just push a button and instantly the floor pops back into place and the ride stops.
If we can't accept that Disney has different demographics than carnivals, and we don't believe that M:S is any more intense physically and visually than the other rides mentioned, then that means the deaths are essentially coincidental.
Okay, fine. Disney does have different demographics from all the carnivals around the country/world, and M:S is physically and visually more intense than the Gravitron-type rides. The deaths are STILL essentially coincidental.
Another interesting thing about that case that no one seems to remebers is that the person had 2nd and 3rd degree burns as well as permanent scarring. You should not get that from hot coffee.
Of course, one shouldn't be driving around in a vehicle with a cup of coffee between one's knees, either...
Tink's Tormentor said:
Disney asks the guests to keep their head on the back of their seat and looking forward at the screen at all times... thus aligning their inner ear with the spinning motion.. This takes away the feeling of spinning while on the ride. However, if you lean forward and turn your head side to side you break up this alignment and your body becomes disoriented about what is going on causing you to get dizzy and and possibly sick.
dbm20th said:
Which sounds like the teacher in Charlie Brown to a group full of cheerleaders are Pop Warner darlings, and even less to someone who speaks Swahili. If these instructions are needed to reduce a risk, that's negligence.
I don't recall - do the ride warnings actually go through that ENTIRE explanation? I thought they pretty much just instructed Guests WHAT to/not to do, not that they explained the physiology.
DancingBear said:
Once you acknowledge that Disney has an obligation to warn, then you have to look at the effectiveness of the warnings. Certainly if they only had index-card signs with fine-print warnings, that wouldn't be sufficient, right?
Possibly... but more than one person has counted (no, I don't know where I've seen the results, either here or on AOL forums or both) and there are a total of ELEVEN warnings between the entrance to the queue (outside the M: S building) and the actual ride vehicle.
Tink's Tormentor said:
With that said, I think these amusement parks should be held to some sort of liability if people CONSTANTLY get sick on their rides.. People who ARE in good health.. Which happens to be the case here in M:S... True, the two people who have passed away had pre-existing health conditions.. But what about the other people who are healthy and still need serious medical attention after this ride??
What proof is there that those people were healthy at the time they rode Mission: Space? Even motion sickness is a physical condition; isn't that one of the groups that's warned against riding this attraction?