As for the crowding, or perception of crowding ... remember that Disney can either operate all the rides, restaurant, lunch counters, shows at high capacity, or they can cut back on staff and reduce the number of tracks, vehicles, tables, servers, cashiers, cooks and adjust individual venue operating hours and schedules. Plus bus and monorail schedules. Mode 'B' might give the feeling of huge crowds due to people milling around. Waiting for the parade starting over 1 hour before because they're not certain of being able to get in and out of Pirates in that time ... for example.
It may be that there really is an unprecedented surge of travelers to Orlando this autumn ... or it may be Mode 'B'.
I'd be interested in hearing evidence to support either theory. Are the resorts super busy, in the places where it would show like around the pools (assuming pools aren't roped off and in mode 'B')
Is Universal crazy busy this month? Are the offsite resorts full and is I-Drive jammed most of the time? (compared to previous autumns)
A Disney-only surge would tend to make me suspicious. I know about pixie dust and everything but ... what about flue powder. And we know that announcements of future attractions (Frozen, Avatar, Toy Story, Star Wars) don't cause a surge of visitors, they tend to cause a drought as people "save up" and wait in the weeds for the new thing.
Can totally believe this is possible, but just can't quite get my arms around the reason.
Sept/Oct attendance only has 3 scenarios, either it went up, down or stayed the same.
Using an example
If there were 10,000 guests on a day last Sept/Oct.
Prices went up, park was not updated-so this September/Oct there were 9,000 guests..BUT.. manipulated to look much busier.
Now they raise prices even further so next Sept/Oct there will be 8,000?
OR:
There were 10K last Sept/Oct.
This year again 10K but looks more like 12K
Raise prices to make it 9K?
OR:
There were 10K last Sept/Oct
This year 11K looks more like 15K
Raise prices and "only" increase it to 12K (when it might have went to 13K, 15K)?
So depending on the "cover charge" and the "in park guest spending" and the "resort occupancy" the dining/drinking/souvenirs etc-find the same revenue from the fewest possible guests correct?
Keeping in mind many will leave/not come back simply because it was soo busy (even if that was intentional) no matter how expensive/cheap and/or because its become too expensive.
Which one do you think it is?