Again you appear to be intentionally misrepresenting what was posted for some odd reason. What was said, was that Florida tourism predates WDW.
I
If someone park hops, they are counted as 2 visitors in the TEA/AECOM annual report. If someone visits all 4 parks in 1 day, they are counted 4 times. If they are a local eating dinner in Epcot, they are counted. If they are live in FL they are counted. CM's who visit a park on their day off are counted.
The Visit Florida report gives a pretty detailed breakdown of many aspects of FL tourism though. I happened to pull up the 2019 report, page 30-31 gives a host of interesting breakdowns for that year. (see below) In 2018,
FL had 125million visitors.
[That same year,
MK had an estimated 20,859,000 visits according to TEA/AECOMM, which is probably a bit closer to the actual number of people who visited WDW, but
with no breakdown for how many were in-state. Anyone who entered the gate for any length of time = a visitor, even if they left after 5minutes, or after eating dinner in Epcot.
Under primary/Secondary reasons people visit FL (From Visit FL 2019 report
https://www.visitflorida.org/media/84139/yearinreview2019.pdf )
Visiting friends/Relatives - 44%
Beach 30%
shopping 9%
Theme parks - 8%
Fine Dining 8%
They categorize visitors into 2 profile groups : Adventure and Experience:
Adventure:
Beach 56%
State/National Parks 41%
Theme parks aren't listed.
Under
Experience seekers:
Fine Dining tops the list 50%
shopping -39%
Beach 37%
theme parks is 4th at 23%
Museums 21%
Nightclubs 20%
ALso:
44% visit in summer, 24% in Spring, 15% fall and 18% winter.
the top 6 markets are: NYC, Atlanta, Philly, Chicago, DC, and Boston.
Secondary are: Nashville, Houston, Detroit, Indianapolis, Dallas, Raleigh, Baltimore, St. Louis, and Los Angeles =16% of Florida’s domestic visitation.