I've gone to WDW as a kid, as a teen, and now as an adult w kids of my own. I don't think the experience has gotten worse. I'd say it's gotten better. I don't seem to have the trouble you do getting on rides. On a 6-day trip, we have no problem riding everything at every park, most things multiple times, and taking in most of the shows.
I think this goes to my earlier point, and you stated it perfectly. Repeat visitors, and those who have "done it all" can easily find ways to have a great time, even if it means spending only 4 hours at a park. Rent a speed boat. Play golf. Ride horses. Swim at the pool. Lots of stuff to do. But trying to convince first-time visitors to do this is next to impossible. ....
Excellent point. I think that one thing MM+/FP+ has done (for the first time for many) is give a glimpse at the "man behind the curtain", so to speak. And, it's an uncomfortable view for many to see the raw corporate side of the company known for selling magic and pixie dust.
Yeah, I don't think it's anything like unanimous upset at the Dis and the other two Disney boards I (sort of) frequent are pretty mellow right now. But when you're talking the number of people who go to Disney, a small percentage can still be a pretty big number of people!
Which means you are happy with 3 rides a day without standing in long lines. Surely you realize that many folks would be very unhappy with that number.
The other option is that you were there when FP wasn't needed at all, so any discussion about the awesomeness/suckiness of FP in your opinion, based on that visit, are exceedingly meaningless.
Jason
Glad to know my opinions are meaningless to you, Jason. If you time it right and don't go on the 4th of July, you can actually do it. It's not impossible. We didn't show up at rope drop and set our FP+ for the afternoon. The longest SB wait we had was half an hour at Test Track at around noon. But hey, I'll stop giving my opinion if it's meaningless.
Those of us who've read some of the background---Neil Gabler's excellent Walt biography, or the even more revealing "Married to the Mouse" understand that there is nothing to reconcile. The company has always worked this way.where it can be hard for many to reconcile "the Walt's Disney" with the "Rasulo Corporate Disney" of - "MM+ is designed to get an extra 10-11% more money out of you."
There was still the problem of who would govern the municipalities, of how the Disney landowner could permit popular government and not be bound by it. The law was constraining, explained the attorney. They could name the initial members of the municipal governing boards, possibly for as long as four years, but after that residents would elect the board. He cautioned against a property qualification for voting, an idea that Disney executives had discussed, saying it was unconstitutional.
Walt's response to the memo clearly indicates his thinking on these issues. He wrote comments directly on the memo, which was found in his desk when he died. Every place where Helliwell referred to the problem of "permanent residents," Walt crossed it out and wrote "temporary residents/tourists." Despite his fanciful mind, he clearly grasped the political reality---if people lived there, they could vote there, undermining the company's political control. And where the memo explained that, legally, their private government could not exercise planning and zoning powers unless it was popularly elected, Walt switched from lead pencil to red grease pencil, writing "NO" in inch-high letters at the margin. The message, extremely important for later events, seems clear: Walt wanted no permanent residents in his model community.
I believe that's what shalom is saying.It's not unanimous.
Glad to know my opinions are meaningless to you, Jason.
If you time it right and don't go on the 4th of July, you can actually do it. It's not impossible. We didn't show up at rope drop and set our FP+ for the afternoon. The longest SB wait we had was half an hour at Test Track at around noon.
But hey, I'll stop giving my opinion if it's meaningless.
I never go on holidays (well, I did, once, many years ago). I'm well aware of the tricks of the trade. But your comments based on a mid January trip are meaningless to anyone not going during quite possibly the slowest time of the year.
I would hate someone with a Spring Break trip scheduled to read your comments and think "great, it sounds like our trip is going to be pretty flawless afterall".
The number of people who keep posting how wonderful FP+ is, based on double dipping October trips, or super cold, light crowd January is getting comical. Myself, and the other members of the He-man Woman and FP+ Haters Club (that does include that mom2k woman too, she seems cool), will be eating crow in April if there still exists an endless stream of people saying their trip was great because of the FP+ changes. I know many people think complaining means you're negative. In my world complaining means you don't feel you are getting the value you expected, and want to change that.
As another poster said, nothing that the pro FP+ crowd say is great about FP+ wasn't doable with FP- (especially before return time enforcement). Well, I guess maybe getting Toy Story and Soarin' FPs without getting to RD, but besides those ridiculous extremes, anyone could visit WDW, show up late, get a few FPs to use later in the day, stroll around enjoying the "magic", and not caring about lines for rides. Maybe you spend a bit less time in some lines, but you aren't spending that extra time in shorter lines elsewhere, so again, it is a zero sum game.
FP+ didn't all of a sudden make these things possible. It did, however, make EVERYONE have to be happy with such a day, not just those with APs, who live a few miles away, or have fairly unlimited disposable income and vacation time, who have an entirely different set of expectations for a trip to WDW that are not shared by the vast majority of WDW visitors, or DISers.
Jason
I've been to DW over 10 times in my 40+ years and the experience just gets worse each year. I really wanted to believe that each bad visit was just an anomaly...maybe bad luck, or the wrong time of year, but I've learned that it doesn't really matter when you go, the Disney Magic is long gone.
The root of all the problems are the crowds, or more specifically the over demand/ under supply imbalance related to their most popular attractions. Even in the "slow" months ( I just got back yesterday), the parks are so crowded you are forced into full Disney combat mode to make sure you have a " fun" time at the park. You all know what that is... Get there at rope drop, get your fast passes, plan your route, make ur adrs months in advance, eat early, ride while others are watching parades. It's INSANITY! But not doing all that is even more insane because you'll be stuck in lines all day and maybe even miss riding certain attractions all together if you don't follow THE plan. There has got to be a better way. A way for an average family to have a fun, relaxing, enjoyable time at a DW park without having to read the Disboards for a month, make adrs months in advance, get up at 6am to beat rope drop, or need a precise touring plan to stay one step ahead of the masses all day long.
I think it's time for a rebellion. It's time we let disney know that their parks are broken. That the experience has lost a lot of its fun. THat we are tired of them allowing more people into the parks then their attractions and restaurants can comfortably accommodate. That we expect some drastic rethinking of what sort of experience they are attempting to provide.
To address these problems won't be easy or cheap, and disney has absolutely no incentive to even try unless we make our displeasure known. So if you too found your disney vacation more of a stresscation than a vacation, speak up, let us know what you think could be done to make things better.
I'll start with my 2 cents.
1. In busy periods, far fewer people should be let in. It's that simple. Just because they are legally allowed to jam a zillion people into the park, doesn't mean they should.
2. Even in slower periods, you're still stuck in crazy long lines for the main rides or forced to get there at rope drop to ensure fast passes. This has to end. How? I don't know, but I'm sure they could try something. Maybe they change park pricing to discourage multiple rides on popular rides. How about $60 park admission, but $10 extra for each ride on splash mountain, space mntn, soarin, test track, tot, and any other super popular ride. Or maybe they offer fast passes only to those who pay like at universal, or maybe they build a second soarin, test track, etc to cut lines down.
These might all be lousy ideas, but the point is, there has to be a good idea out there somewhere. It's time disney started trying harder to find it.
Please add to this post with your comments/ideas if you too would like to see change. Dis execs do read these boards and will notice this thread if it gets big enough.
I was slightly terrified the first time we walked into MK for another two reasons: 
Those of us who've read some of the background---Neil Gabler's excellent Walt biography, or the even more revealing "Married to the Mouse" understand that there is nothing to reconcile. The company has always worked this way.
My favorite example is from Married to the Mouse. There is written evidence that Walt knew that the Reedy Creek Improvement District would never have permanent residents before the company screened the "Florida Project" film, and almost certainly before Walt even recorded it. This was the film that introduced EPCOT as the "city of tomorrow", and was one of the biggest reasons Disney was given its very own private government to play with.
Here is the passage from that book:
That memo was dated May 23rd, 1966. Walt recorded the "Florida Project" film on October 27, 1966. I suppose there is no definitive proof that he read and annotated the memo before recording the film, but it sure seems unlikely, doesn't it?
No way do i have time to read through 365 posts, but I will say that my family has been there twice and would like to go back again because neither time we have been there has it been as crazy as you describe. I read these boards for years before actually getting to the point where 1. We could afford to go, and 2. DH agreedI was slightly terrified the first time we walked into MK for another two reasons:
1. Being trampled in a crazy crowd or being stuck in a line for 2 1/2 hours or picking the wrong CS to have lunch.
2. Breaking any of the "DIS-Laws of conduct presented by the posters here on this board". I walked in a straight line, made sure not to cross in front of a stroller or hit anyone with mine, waited for DH and DS6 to get back from the bathroom before getting into the Peter Pan line, and made sure we all had our food before finding a table.
You know what??!! None of it mattered! We didn't do fastpass the first time and were still super happy with all we did and saw. I hadn't been to DW since the white plates were being placed on the Epcot "ball" when it was still under construction (I was in 1st grade!), but I still remembered Dumbo, Peter Pan, Snow White, It's a Small Word, Haunted Mansion, Hall of Presidents, etc and made sure we hit those. Everything else was a bonus, and there was a LOT of everything else, culminating with Wishes - which made me cry because I was so emotional just to BE ABLE to share that moment with my kiddos.
The 2nd time, we did ADR's and FP+, and got to the parks early and I even had a color-coded spreadsheet that I brought with me to keep it all straight. We even had a bonus FP for BOG, where we were the very first family in the Beast's castle on Nov. 17, 2013. Pretty awesome! We were still at the point where we could double-dip for reg FP, but we did not. My boys' favorite thing of the entire trip was Star Tours in DHS, and although we had a FP+ for about 9:45am, they went back and rode that ride about 6 more times, not waiting more than 15 minutes per time. The longest wait we had for anything was maybe....15-20 minutes? Except for our ADR for Ohana. That was about 45 minutes. And we were starving. And it was our first night. at 8:05pm. And we were starving. And excited to be in WDW. (and did I mention that we were starving??!! LOL)
So, for anyone to say a blanket statement that DW is ruined, that makes me sad. Maybe it isn't DW that is ruined....maybe it is ruined because a fairly small percentage of people cannot stand the thought of not planning every second of their vacation and Must See EVerything or Bust that are ruining it....
We certainly seemed to have a pretty good time both times!![]()
FP+ didn't all of a sudden make these things possible. It did, however, make EVERYONE have to be happy with such a day, not just those with APs, who live a few miles away, or have fairly unlimited disposable income and vacation time, who have an entirely different set of expectations for a trip to WDW that are not shared by the vast majority of WDW visitors, or DISers.
we are surrounded by other people who are right there with us, mainlining pixie dust like it was weak coffee.
Great line, and sadly true.No way do i have time to read through 365 posts, but I will say that my family has been there twice and would like to go back again because neither time we have been there has it been as crazy as you describe. I read these boards for years before actually getting to the point where 1. We could afford to go, and 2. DH agreedI was slightly terrified the first time we walked into MK for another two reasons:
1. Being trampled in a crazy crowd or being stuck in a line for 2 1/2 hours or picking the wrong CS to have lunch.
2. Breaking any of the "DIS-Laws of conduct presented by the posters here on this board". I walked in a straight line, made sure not to cross in front of a stroller or hit anyone with mine, waited for DH and DS6 to get back from the bathroom before getting into the Peter Pan line, and made sure we all had our food before finding a table.
You know what??!! None of it mattered! We didn't do fastpass the first time and were still super happy with all we did and saw. I hadn't been to DW since the white plates were being placed on the Epcot "ball" when it was still under construction (I was in 1st grade!), but I still remembered Dumbo, Peter Pan, Snow White, It's a Small Word, Haunted Mansion, Hall of Presidents, etc and made sure we hit those. Everything else was a bonus, and there was a LOT of everything else, culminating with Wishes - which made me cry because I was so emotional just to BE ABLE to share that moment with my kiddos.
The 2nd time, we did ADR's and FP+, and got to the parks early and I even had a color-coded spreadsheet that I brought with me to keep it all straight. We even had a bonus FP for BOG, where we were the very first family in the Beast's castle on Nov. 17, 2013. Pretty awesome! We were still at the point where we could double-dip for reg FP, but we did not. My boys' favorite thing of the entire trip was Star Tours in DHS, and although we had a FP+ for about 9:45am, they went back and rode that ride about 6 more times, not waiting more than 15 minutes per time. The longest wait we had for anything was maybe....15-20 minutes? Except for our ADR for Ohana. That was about 45 minutes. And we were starving. And it was our first night. at 8:05pm. And we were starving. And excited to be in WDW. (and did I mention that we were starving??!! LOL)
So, for anyone to say a blanket statement that DW is ruined, that makes me sad. Maybe it isn't DW that is ruined....maybe it is ruined because a fairly small percentage of people cannot stand the thought of not planning every second of their vacation and Must See EVerything or Bust that are ruining it....
We certainly seemed to have a pretty good time both times!![]()
, etc, but honestly I can't wait to go again.