Ok, back with another respone (you can see my original at the bottom of page 3 in this thread).
I believe much of this revolves around the fact that
Disneyland is just outside of Los Angeles/Hollywood/Malibu and see's it's fair share of celebrities on any given day. I've seen celebs at WDW and never saw a paparazzi, but I believe that's because paparazzi would be wasting much of their time trying to track celebs in WDW.
At DLR though it can be a daily occurrance. Frankly, I as an amateur photographer with a Nikon D300 agree with them that SOMETHING has to be done about the paparazzi. I know most celeb are asking for it, even though they get upset (they really do need the paparazzi in many cases), but, DlR is a business entity and when they do this in the parks, they are doing it on private property. I think it hurts Disney if celebs stop going to the parks. I think it's great for Disney when celebs go on shows like Jay Leno and talk about their vacation at Disneyland. If that were to stop due to paparazzi, from a business perspective, that would be unacceptable.
Just last week pics of Lindsay Lohan surfaced from California Adventure. THIS is what has to STOP! I know they are celebs but seriously, the circus that follows paparazzi these days is out of hand.
First: Disney needs to devise a creative way to handle this. What is happening is, a small percentage of people are ruining it for all of us, and any of us who visit sites like TMZ are part of the problem. Every time you hit their site, it makes them money through ads and keeps their mission going forward.
I just wish they could think of a way that didnt punish all of us who love the place, find it beautiful and like to take the high qauality memories with us. HOWEVER, I DO NOT BLAME THEIR REASONING!!!!!! Frankly, forget the celebs, I'M SICK OF SEEING THE PAPARAZZI! They have caused celebrities to hate any of us who even so dare to ASK for a photo!, not to mention there's no way they could say "yes" because there'd be 50 other morons around us trying to snap away and ask mocking questions.
I think this could be satisfied by engaging a rule that does not allow any person to purposely take photos of othr individuals as the main subject in a photo. As with eveything security could monitor the situation and if an issue arises, it could be dealt with. I know this has holes in it, but I'm just thinking off the cuff. Im sure if I were in a board meeting with bright people something could be devised.
HOWEVER, as someone who is in management, I can say this. Where Disney is failing horribly here is, sending mixed signals. Anyone in business or marketing knows that when you release something you must have everyone trained and everyone must be relaying the same message. This is a failure and needs to be dealt with.
Lastly I'll smply repeat, I'm disappointed because I'm going next month and now won't be able to take my D300. However, I completely understand the reasoning and agree with it. I simply wish a different solution could be reached.