SnackyStacky
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 29, 2002
- Messages
- 6,799
Well, if you chose your words carefully, then you really can't get away from the "Disney ride" thing.
Let's suppose that the measure of success is that people enjoy the ride. More people like it than don't. Is that the success you were looking for?
Let's start with the lowest of the low, a church lawn fete. A few rides, and some carnival games. People get off of those rides, and there would be more that enjoyed those rides than didn't. But I think we can agree that if they plopped one of those rides in the middle of a Disney park, it wouldn't get the warmest reception.
Moving up a step, look at Six Flags. Lots of rides there that I "enjoy". But I would never ever spend any kind of money to pay for a hotel, airfare to get there, and I CERTAINLY wouldn't pay $52 to get in! So those success, again, wouldn't work in a Disney park.
Then we look at Disney. People expect MORE from Disney, because Disney expects more from its guests. It expects them to pay premium prices for admission. It expects them to pay for their pricey hotels. It expects them to pay for transportation to get there. (Because let's face it, the locals can't support the World) So if you take either of those first two examples and plop it down in the middle of the Magic Kingdom, I don't think it can nearly be considered a success. Because the fact that they ARE Disney raises the standard. Because Walt raised the standard. (And because Eisner raised the prices)
So if you're talking about success in a Disney park, the measure of success is different from any old amusement park, and I contend that the measure of success is if it lives up to those 5 criteria that I mentioned. Miss even one of those, and it fails as a "Disney" success. That's not to say that people won't enjoy them. Look at all of the failures that I mentioned:
Small World
Rio de Tiempo
Muppets
Primeval Whirl
With the exception of the first two (I'm not entirely sure why Rio de Tiempo sticks around....Small World has the nostalgia factor working in its favor) you could put Muppets and Primeval Whirl into a Six Flags park and they're pretty cool rides! Most people would "enjoy" them. Does that say that they're successful for a Disney attraction? (the original wording of your thread title) I don't personally think so. (And I like Muppets and Whirl!)
Let's suppose that the measure of success is that people enjoy the ride. More people like it than don't. Is that the success you were looking for?
Let's start with the lowest of the low, a church lawn fete. A few rides, and some carnival games. People get off of those rides, and there would be more that enjoyed those rides than didn't. But I think we can agree that if they plopped one of those rides in the middle of a Disney park, it wouldn't get the warmest reception.
Moving up a step, look at Six Flags. Lots of rides there that I "enjoy". But I would never ever spend any kind of money to pay for a hotel, airfare to get there, and I CERTAINLY wouldn't pay $52 to get in! So those success, again, wouldn't work in a Disney park.
Then we look at Disney. People expect MORE from Disney, because Disney expects more from its guests. It expects them to pay premium prices for admission. It expects them to pay for their pricey hotels. It expects them to pay for transportation to get there. (Because let's face it, the locals can't support the World) So if you take either of those first two examples and plop it down in the middle of the Magic Kingdom, I don't think it can nearly be considered a success. Because the fact that they ARE Disney raises the standard. Because Walt raised the standard. (And because Eisner raised the prices)
So if you're talking about success in a Disney park, the measure of success is different from any old amusement park, and I contend that the measure of success is if it lives up to those 5 criteria that I mentioned. Miss even one of those, and it fails as a "Disney" success. That's not to say that people won't enjoy them. Look at all of the failures that I mentioned:
Small World
Rio de Tiempo
Muppets
Primeval Whirl
With the exception of the first two (I'm not entirely sure why Rio de Tiempo sticks around....Small World has the nostalgia factor working in its favor) you could put Muppets and Primeval Whirl into a Six Flags park and they're pretty cool rides! Most people would "enjoy" them. Does that say that they're successful for a Disney attraction? (the original wording of your thread title) I don't personally think so. (And I like Muppets and Whirl!)