Captain_Oblivious
DIS Dad #257, Galactic Salad Dodger
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2008
- Messages
- 13,440
Me at rope drop.
Me at rope drop.
Every DISer at rope drop.Me at rope drop.
That's fair.Every DISer at rope drop.![]()
Not me!![]()
I dunno, she can mow down people in that scooter.Every DISer except Alison.
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Hey! That's right!I dunno, she can mow down people in that scooter.
I won't say that I purposely stayed behind her when we were there....but I won't say that I didn't, either.Hey! That's right!
I'm okay with that... she's a friend so she'll make sure I'm behind her... right, Alison?
Right??
Right??????
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There is always the excitement of discovery. Hey, what’s behind this door? (Sorry ma’am, didn’t mean to disturb you).
I am familiar with this feelingThere’s also the sense that I’m going to get caught and/or kicked out.
That's only because everyone is watching you, waiting for the inevitable breach of etiquette.I generally end up feeling self-conscious, afraid that no matter what I do, everybody in the room is going to be watching me, waiting for me to make some breach of etiquette.
Never happen. They have someone dedicated solely to sore thumb care.And so I find myself sticking out like a sore thumb.
and whenever my wife makes me enter a Michael’s or a Hobby Lobby store.
Nah. I'm sure Julie and the kids were well behaved.Bob was probably going to regret bringing us in here.
Very clever. Hiding in plain sight a la Scarlet Pimpernel.At the end of our tour, Jeff led us to the secret entrance of Club 33, which is completely hidden and impossible for anyone to find, except for those people who look for it. I was sworn to secrecy and told not to reveal anything about the hidden door, especially not that there’s a “33” clearly displayed in the frosted glass above it.
Sweet! Now we can all get in. Need to hurry before they change the code.Jeff called in with the secret code to enter (“Donald has no pants”)
Nice shot of you guys.
Vestibule: Vest-I-bule. Noun. Vest from Olde English for a sleeveless front buttoned top. I, first person singular. Bule, from ancient Hollywood movie lore:Exhibit #1 that I don’t belong: I don’t typically go anywhere that has a “vestibule”. I’m not even sure I could define “vestibule”.
I Googled. That's exactly what they are.This was two glasses of Pinocchio’s Blood With Fruit and the one in the middle is Blue Fairy’s Tears.
I'm curious now how much that burger was.there was only one thing that could stop us from devouring as much as possible:
The prices of the food.
So... you're saying it was not like that? How do you know? You just visited. You didn't fall 5 stories and get paddled, did you?I was kind of hoping that Club 33 would be like the Stonecutters in the Simpsons,
Wait... you didn't order PB&Js??? Think how good they'd be!We stuck with the lounge menu and ended up ordering 3 burgers to split, so everyone got half a burger.
Is that already cut or was it served on some kind of croissant shaped bun?
mmm... beg to differ. Commoners and riffraff typically don't have VIP tours...away from the commoners and riffraff, of which we were a part not even one hour earlier.
Can you imagine? I mean... let's just say that we were all back in time to the 1960s... If you were doing this exact thing, then... you really could have seen him.We could imagine what it was like to be invited back there by Walt Disney, to be wined and dined and spend time with the creator of this magical place.
I really like the look of those. Totally cozy and inviting.There were four private booths along the entrance hallway, and I believe each painting was rigged up with some sort of Imagineering magic. Something would change over time in the painting as you sat and enjoyed your food and cocktails.
So cool.In the main lounge, this painting featured several musicians. At any point in time, one of the instruments would magically disappear from the painting and be featured in the music being played in the lounge. When the song was over, the instrument would magically appear back in the painting, waiting to be played once more.
Like you have to ask...So: did enjoying an evening of respite in a private, exclusive club make us any more cultured or refined?
It could happen.any more than sitting in a garage makes you a car.
I can neither confirm nor deny that any or all of these items found their way into Julie’s backpack to go home with us.
I can also neither confirm nor deny that Alison, Jenny and Jill were egging us on, piling more coasters and towels on the pile.
But if any of that actually did happen, it went in to Julie’s bag for two reasons: one, it made it easy to carry, and two, she would take the fall if we got caught with the goods.
I had no idea they even had a Fantasmic there!The show was so much more powerful to me in that setting. I liked it a great deal more than the Florida counterpart.
It is. It's in the charter and everything.Before saying goodbye, Bob had gifted us some magic fastpasses we could use (Bob is the gift that keeps on giving), so we couldn’t really leave the parks anyway. You can’t let fastpasses go unused. I’m pretty sure that’s a rule.
Another rule is: if you have the opportunity to ride Big Thunder Mountain Railroad at night, you gotta do it. Hey, I don’t make the rules.
Sure sounds like the best Disney day ever.It was an incredibly fulfilling day in the parks.
Let her part the seas!I won't say that I purposely stayed behind her when we were there....but I won't say that I didn't, either.![]()
I can relate to this so much.There’s also the sense that I’m going to get caught and/or kicked out. I know I don’t belong there, and I’m sure everybody else in the room knows that too. I generally end up feeling self-conscious, afraid that no matter what I do, everybody in the room is going to be watching me, waiting for me to make some breach of etiquette. We all know that in many of these types of places, people are expected to act a certain way, right? But no one tells you the rules ahead of time. And so I find myself sticking out like a sore thumb. The place feels like a foreign country. I’ve had this feeling numerous times over—in posh restaurants, private country clubs, and whenever my wife makes me enter a Michael’s or a Hobby Lobby store.
I mean... had to know what he was getting into inviting your family. Probably hoping to be featured in the next "and then Scotty happened" story.Bob was probably going to regret bringing us in here.
That's why I don't belong in those places. The price makes me lose my appetite.And then we got down to the business of eating. We were all very hungry after a full day of touring Disney parks, and there was only one thing that could stop us from devouring as much as possible:
The prices of the food.
Yeah, yeah... rub it in. You get to go behind the curtain and it even gets a drooling Homer.The prices were crazy, but the food was tasty enough to warrant a Drooling Homer Award.
I love imagineering that makes you wonder how they did it.I have no idea how they pulled that trick off, but I was more grateful to hear about small feats of Imagineering magic in the lounge than I was interested in trying to figure it out.
I mean, it's your one opportunity to go. Gotta have proof to show off with back at home.All of our drinks were served on Club 33 coasters. The bathrooms featured exclusive Club 33 paper towels to dry your hands. And the checks were presented with Club 33 pens. I can neither confirm nor deny that any or all of these items found their way into Julie’s backpack to go home with us.
I can also neither confirm nor deny that Alison, Jenny and Jill were egging us on, piling more coasters and towels on the pile.
Before saying goodbye, Bob had gifted us some magic fastpasses we could use (Bob is the gift that keeps on giving), so we couldn’t really leave the parks anyway. You can’t let fastpasses go unused. I’m pretty sure that’s a rule.
Another rule is: if you have the opportunity to ride Big Thunder Mountain Railroad at night, you gotta do it.
I don't think I've actually gone that far to embarrass myself. I know there have been a couple of times when I wasn't paying attention and accidentally walked into the ladies' room, but luckily no one was there at the time.
Ever actually done that? I think I have, but don't remember the details.
Most likely it's because I did... and then got pummeled within an inch of my life, causing memory loss.
I suspected a lot of us have been there.I am familiar with this feeling![]()
That was my number one fear!That's only because everyone is watching you, waiting for the inevitable breach of etiquette.
"Tsk. Did you see that? He ate his terrine with his densuke spoon."
Wouldn't shock me, honestly.Never happen. They have someone dedicated solely to sore thumb care.
You are correct!Nah. I'm sure Julie and the kids were well behaved.
Very clever. Hiding in plain sight a la Scarlet Pimpernel.
I bet it gets randomized daily.Sweet! Now we can all get in. Need to hurry before they change the code.
Thanks!Nice shot of you guys.![]()
Wow. It seems so complicated, yet when you break it down like that, it's all so simple and easy to follow. I can't see any other possible explanation.Vestibule: Vest-I-bule. Noun. Vest from Olde English for a sleeveless front buttoned top. I, first person singular. Bule, from ancient Hollywood movie lore:![]()
Ergo, Vestibule. What you (I) wear when skipping school or work and it's tad chilly out.
You're welcome.
I knew it! Man, I'm good.I Googled. That's exactly what they are.
I'll give you a hint: the price is in the name of the club.I'm curious now how much that burger was.
So... you're saying it was not like that? How do you know? You just visited. You didn't fall 5 stories and get paddled, did you?
Oh, absolutely! But it would be much more likely that the chefs would refuse to make something so gauche.Wait... you didn't order PB&Js??? Think how good they'd be!
I mean... you'd expect them to be the best PB&Js you've ever had, wouldn't you?
It was already cut. I'm guessing due to the prices they're used to a lot of sharing going on.Is that already cut or was it served on some kind of croissant shaped bun?
Good point. Should have changed that to "24 hours earlier". (or a few hours later)mmm... beg to differ. Commoners and riffraff typically don't have VIP tours...
Yeah...That is one of the cool things about visiting Disneyland as opposed to other Disney parks. You do get a sense of history and can ask questions like that.Can you imagine? I mean... let's just say that we were all back in time to the 1960s... If you were doing this exact thing, then... you really could have seen him.
Whoa.
As always, the design is top notch.I really like the look of those. Totally cozy and inviting.
That's my favorite kind of Disney Imagineering magic. It doesn't have to be there, no one would notice if it weren't. But someone had a cool idea to make it special and they ran with it.So cool.![]()
Hey, hope springs eternal.Like you have to ask...
Wow...that's quite the deep cut there. Had no idea that existed.
Thanks! I figured it would be a good idea to keep it a secret.
I won't tell anyone if you don't tell anyone.
Well, now you do! And it's better!I had no idea they even had a Fantasmic there!
I thought I had read that somewhere. Glad we could be in full compliance.It is. It's in the charter and everything.
I mean...it was pretty great. I was especially glad Sarah could do that with us before she had to go back home.Sure sounds like the best Disney day ever.![]()
Exactly! I'm not nearly as good of a fullback as a scooter is.Let her part the seas!
Seriously, those places feel like they're from another planet.I can relate to this so much.![]()
I have a hard time believing anyone reads these TR's and thinks, "Yeah, I'd like to be a part of that."I mean... had to know what he was getting into inviting your family. Probably hoping to be featured in the next "and then Scotty happened" story.
We had to share burgers and it was still ridiculous. The price gouging has always been bad, but now it seems insane.That's why I don't belong in those places. The price makes me lose my appetite.
Heck, that's almost every regular Disney restaurant anyway. I can only imagine a private classy one.
Gotta call it as I see it!Yeah, yeah... rub it in. You get to go behind the curtain and it even gets a drooling Homer.
Me too. I especially love it when they do it just because. Nobody asked for it, it would have been perfectly fine without it. Somebody just decided to add some more magic.I love imagineering that makes you wonder how they did it.
Exactly! Gotta prove we were there!I mean, it's your one opportunity to go. Gotta have proof to show off with back at home.
Got to appreciate the enablers.
TruthIt was Walt Disney’s private VIP club in the park, formed in 1967 and named for its original address in New Orleans Square: 33 Royal Street.
Not Truth. The club opened on June 15, 1967. Walt Disney died December 15, 1966 six months before the Club opened. He never got to see it completed. This "imagined" painting of Walt dining at the club was done in 2005 and it's the closest he ever got to dining there.Disney himself would entertain his VIP guests here.
Nice picture of you all!Jeff snapped a few photos of us on the spiral staircase in the vestibule.
The two red ones are Hurricanes (a New Orleans specialty) the Green one was a Tropical Lily Pad a special drink for the 55th Anniversary, no longer on the menu.I don’t have any idea what those drinks are called, so I’m just going to make up my own names for the drinks. This was two glasses of Pinocchio’s Blood With Fruit and the one in the middle is Blue Fairy’s Tears.
Yeah, you and me both!I was kind of hoping that Club 33 would be like the Stonecutters in the Simpsons, where everything is free and they have all sorts of secret perks and giveaways, but no. Club members get charged a ridiculous amount of money for their food too.
I believe that was the "Tropical Storm".And Julie ordered Maleficent’s Revenge, which I think was a non-alcoholic drink that may or may not have actually been called Maleficent’s Revenge.
Even I don't remember what it was other than a filet.Alison got some sort of steak.
Actually the player would leave the painting as well.When the song was over, the instrument would magically appear back in the painting, waiting to be played once more.
It's not just reserved for Club Members, but other VIPs as well!After saying our goodbyes to the ladies at the club, we go to sit in the reserved area for club members in order to watch Fantasmic!
I totally agree. Never liked DHS's F!It always seemed to me like a waste of the stage, water, and investment in that whole theater and set.
See that's why Disneyland's is so cool. Back when Indiana Jones was under construction they Imagineers were told "you need to come up with something new to tide over the summer season until we can open Indy." You have a tiny budget and you have no new land or vehicles to put to use."And that intimate setting really transforms the show. Now, instead of being a far-off dim water screen, everything feels much larger than life. It happens almost right in front of your face. The show was so much more powerful to me in that setting. I liked it a great deal more than the Florida counterpart.
You can’t let fastpasses go unused. I’m pretty sure that’s a rule.
I'm so glad they got the pyrotechnics working again! They were down for a long time. Thats the best part of the ride!The Disneyland version of this ride is also superior to Florida. The ride is virtually identical, but the DL version has explosions in the cave. Pyrotechnics always = win.
Oh, well, there you go. I guess it really was that magical of a day.
That’s okay. I have no idea what I said either.Actually, my number one fear was that someone would say a sentence like that and it would be immediately apparent I had no idea what they were talking about.
What?You are correct!
Wait a minute...
That's a cool story, by the way.
Always come to me when you need some ‘splainin done.Wow. It seems so complicated, yet when you break it down like that, it's all so simple and easy to follow. I can't see any other possible explanation.
Third of a dollar? Cheap!I'll give you a hint: the price is in the name of the club.
Actually… now I’m wondering…I’d bet in a club like that they’d try to make any request. And they would make a high end pb&j.Oh, absolutely! But it would be much more likely that the chefs would refuse to make something so gauche.
It was already cut. I'm guessing due to the prices they're used to a lot of sharing going on.
And you were probably better off for not knowing.Wow...that's quite the deep cut there. Had no idea that existed.
Like what exactly? What could possibly have been more important than my TR? And don't give me this "I was out of the country" nonsense.I've been meaning to get over here and comment, but well ya know I had a little bit going on for the past week!
Whew. Got one right.Truth
Oops. Clearly I mis-remembered a story. Or heard what I wanted to and printed it as truth. You know, like the rest of the country operates.Not Truth. The club opened on June 15, 1967. Walt Disney died December 15, 1966 six months before the Club opened. He never got to see it completed. This "imagined" painting of Walt dining at the club was done in 2005 and it's the closest he ever got to dining there.
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Thanks! Jeff can do no wrong, as you know.Nice picture of you all!
Thanks for picking me up!The two red ones are Hurricanes (a New Orleans specialty) the Green one was a Tropical Lily Pad a special drink for the 55th Anniversary, no longer on the menu.
Hey, at least we got to go inside.Yeah, you and me both!
Thanks again! I'm glad you remember these things.I believe that was the "Tropical Storm".
Mmmm...steak...Even I don't remember what it was other than a filet.
Man, my memory is really not what it used to be.Actually the player would leave the painting as well.
Great! I should be able to go back anytime, then.It's not just reserved for Club Members, but other VIPs as well!
It's just totally wrong for the scale of that theater. Glad I got to see DL's version.I totally agree. Never liked DHS's F!
That's really great work. Sometimes I think constraints that seem impossible end up producing the best creativity.See that's why Disneyland's is so cool. Back when Indiana Jones was under construction they Imagineers were told "you need to come up with something new to tide over the summer season until we can open Indy." You have a tiny budget and you have no new land or vehicles to put to use."
"Talk amongst yourselves....."
And Fantasmic is what they came up with. It's organic and just springs out of the existing Rivers of America using the ships they already had, and once it's over, everything goes back like nothing every happened. That's why I think it's so cool. It comes out of nowhere and then it's just gone.
It's so cool! Again more points for the DL version!I'm so glad they got the pyrotechnics working again! They were down for a long time. Thats the best part of the ride!
I'm so glad neither of us was paying attention.That’s okay. I have no idea what I said either.
Do I have to pay attention then?Always come to me when you need some ‘splainin done.
Um...it's a third of something, anyway.Third of a dollar? Cheap!
I could definitely see that, given the usual Disney customer service standards. I'm sure they would make a good one! It would be on brioche or something.Actually… now I’m wondering…I’d bet in a club like that they’d try to make any request. And they would make a high end pb&j.
Well, at least you didn't make me watch it.And you were probably better off for not knowing.
Huh?I'm so glad neither of us was paying attention.
You never have before so why change now?Do I have to pay attention then?
Boy when you go down... you drop off a cliff!Where do you go after a long, nearly perfect day after Disneyland? Well, honestly there’s nowhere to go but down after that. So you head to the airport. Sarah had to catch her flight home.
This is a truism.We figured we couldn’t visit the Los Angeles area and not do at least one movie studio tour. I mean, what kind of tourists would we
Have done that one. Yours differed from the one I took, but that's probably a good thing. Variety being the spice of and all that.The Warner Brothers Studio Tour takes roughly two hours,
Nope. Hadn't noticed.this is probably a must for anyone who loves movies, and our family fits the bill there (as you may have noticed by picking up on the various movie references I like to slip into my TR’s)
Huh. See? Didn't know that/see that on my tour.As it turns out, this dirt road was where they filmed the T-Rex chasing the jeep in the original Jurassic Park.
Can't see the link (at work), but will look out for it next time I watch.if you look closely, you can see the jeep pass the same area two or three times.
I found that our guide asked us how many people saw certain shows and then geared the tour towards what seemed the most popular amongst the riders.I generally know more movies than TV shows, but they seemed to gear the tour towards promoting whatever was using the lot most recently. If you are a fan of Gilmore Girls or Pretty Little Liars, this was the tour for you. I lost count of how many sets and buildings were mentioned in the context of those shows.
Had a similar experience. We saw lots of stuff that I didn't know anything about.We got to visit the set of “Call Me Kat”, another sitcom I have never watched. We weren’t allowed to take any photos in there, just in case some of us worked for Disney or Universal and went running back to show those companies what a soundstage looks like.
Top left. Singing frog. Quite possibly one of the funniest animated skits ever.
I was very disappointed by that. It's obviously not the real set. Not even all that close.we got to sit in the couch on the set from the coffee shop in Friends,
Was that an actual set? Seems off, somehow?And I took a photo of the Big Bang Theory set just for @franandaj .
Huh. I don't remember that. Cool!They also had a fun demonstration of sound mixing in a separate theater. We were shown an intense scene from the movie Gravity. They ran the scene a few times with just certain tracks isolated--the actors, sound effects, and musical score. Then they combined all of them to show the full effect. Neat stuff.
As you can see, Andrew had quite the time re-creating Harry Potter’s entire existence.
All in all, it was interesting and a lot of fun. As fun as Disneyland? No. But worth the time? Definitely.
I really wanted to get there, but got turned around in the hills, ran out of time, and completely missed it.We had another tourist destination to check off the list: the Griffith Park Observatory.
. The bad news was that we had to hike a mile back up the mountain.
Nah. I don't believe you.It was the brainchild of a man named Griffith J. Griffith. I am not making that up.
"Griffith Observatory...where we go to gaze upon the wondrous future ahead of us...looking out for other things...that we're...trying to figure out what they are."
Profound, isn't it? With a soul-stirring description like that, we had to see it for ourselves.
Hah! Jokes on you. I love stuff like that.In the interest of science and the promotion of learning, I made it my mission to chart as many facts and figures about the various planets so I could share them for the benefit of you, my loyal reader. No need to thank me—I’m just doing my job.
I dunno. Maybe you can fit 63 Earths there but I know I couldn't.
Nice view.
Pro tip: Next time, walk backwards while zooming in. You can keep them the same size while increasing the background size.This was an attempt at a photo in front of the Hollywood sign, but it’s really hard to see over Julie’s head.
Always a good rule of thumb.I’d chosen this place mainly because it looked like they had plenty of artery-clogging meat options on the menu.
Holy crap.This is an unholy wrap filled with beef brisket, mac and cheese, sauce, cheese and cilantro.
Sounds almost as good.In similar fashion, Scott got the Nashville burrito, which replaced the brisket with Nashville hot chicken tenders.
Well, that's a shame. They sure looked amazing.These were tasty but a little disappointing.
As it turns out, whenever Disney property is within walking distance, it’s very hard to stay away.
Looks pretty impressive. I won't be silly and ask if it got completely finished.Best $17 we ever spent? No, but it was up there. Really yummy. I’d go broke paying that much for dessert every night, though.