I think you’re still missing the point about the debate in general. It’s not about whether the event is great or not. It's Disney’s decision to basically go cheap with regards to ‘new’ items (although there’s really nothing new here) in the park and the folks out there that feed into that decision. The efforts behind the hard ticket items aren’t nearly as taxing financially as the efforts behind what most of us would call ‘attractions’, so Disney has taken the short cut to earn cheap money fast. Disney is mastering the idea of delivering very little or repackaging old items and putting a new price on them, oftentimes with little or no regard to the customer base (has everyone already forgotten the Villians debacle in Hollywood Studios?). Some people may think this particular item is ‘worth it’, but what it boils down to is that it is more expensive than a visit to the entire Magic Kingdom. You’re basically paying 165 bucks (got to count the admission cost for the Halloween party) for some dessert and a few meet and greets for a couple of hours whereas you pay a 100 to have access to the entire park all day long. To some of us that borders on absurdity. I don’t agree with repackaging of anything and charging for it, but I could forgive it somewhat if the cost was around 20 to 25 dollars.
As you have stated before no one is forcing folks to buy into this, however guests continue to line up. The more people do, the more Disney is going to go this route and have no incentive to build anything new or fix those attractions that are in need of fixing. Why fix something when the suits in Burbank are busy counting greenbacks? That’s what’s frustrating to me and perhaps a few others.
And to your question, yes, I think that there are people out there that will say any paid event is going to be great because it has Disney's stamp on it. For me, that's not good enough. For me, Disney's stamp used to mean wildly creative items and experiences that, while expensive, you felt you more or less got your money's worth. Unfortunately those days are gone. They can come back, but only when the customer decides it's time.