I recently was in the park on a two day ticket and on each of the days we had issues with people cutting in line. The first time, we were waiting to get in to the blue area of the Fantasmic showing. It wasn't quite time yet, but we wanted to get good seats so we made sure to ask the cast members where they were going to start letting people in and started to form a line. Many people saw that there was a line and naturally followed formation. However, 15 minutes before the cast members said they were going to let us in to the blue area, a group of people just came and stood in front of us. We told them that this was the start of the line and that there were many people behind us. They group said that the cast member told them to wait here and that's what they were doing and then proceeded to sit down.
The second time, we were at the Aladdin show and there were a lot of people milling around the entrance to the theatre. We made sure to ask everyone that were already waiting to see if there was any kind of line going. The people in front of us let us know that they were the end of the line and we got in behind them. Again, about 5 mins before they started letting people in, this couple just gets in front of everyone. The group in front of us informed them that there was a line and the couple gave the same answer as the group the previous day. The cast member told me to wait here, so we are. The group in front of us were so angry and rightfully so that they told a cast member, but the cast member just told them to move along. We ended up being behind the couple and overhead them complaining about the other group and why they were overreacting. I had to chime in and say that they are angry because they and everyone behind us waited almost an hour and you just cut us.
I just don't get it. Isn't it common knowledge that you have to stand in line for everything at Disneyland? How can one assume that you can just walk in when there's clearly many people around? Isn't it common courtesy to ask if there's a line? Or when someone tells you there's a line, one doesn't automatically go to the end of it? It's baffling to me. I mean when you're at the grocery store and you're ready to pay but don't know where the cashier is, and the clerk tells you that the cashiers are over there, you don't just bypass all the people gathered there and throw the cashier your money, right?
The second time, we were at the Aladdin show and there were a lot of people milling around the entrance to the theatre. We made sure to ask everyone that were already waiting to see if there was any kind of line going. The people in front of us let us know that they were the end of the line and we got in behind them. Again, about 5 mins before they started letting people in, this couple just gets in front of everyone. The group in front of us informed them that there was a line and the couple gave the same answer as the group the previous day. The cast member told me to wait here, so we are. The group in front of us were so angry and rightfully so that they told a cast member, but the cast member just told them to move along. We ended up being behind the couple and overhead them complaining about the other group and why they were overreacting. I had to chime in and say that they are angry because they and everyone behind us waited almost an hour and you just cut us.
I just don't get it. Isn't it common knowledge that you have to stand in line for everything at Disneyland? How can one assume that you can just walk in when there's clearly many people around? Isn't it common courtesy to ask if there's a line? Or when someone tells you there's a line, one doesn't automatically go to the end of it? It's baffling to me. I mean when you're at the grocery store and you're ready to pay but don't know where the cashier is, and the clerk tells you that the cashiers are over there, you don't just bypass all the people gathered there and throw the cashier your money, right?