It's not misleading at all. A hot dog meal does cost $7 (or, it does at DL, Hotdog, Chips, no soda) and a single day ticket is $71.
LAter on in the article when she actually discusses purchasing tickets, she recommends a 3 day pass. I suppose you could claim that singling out WDW's price is misleading, but really, come on reading intentional bias into it is a bit much.
It's misleading because she is not recommending buying single-day tickets, she's recommending buying a 3-day ticket, which is $203, or $67.67 per day. Sure, only a 4$ difference, but the point is not that tiny $4, it's that
she never even mentions that the price per day drops when you add more days, even if you're only buying a 3-day ticket. Nor does she mention the actual price of the 3-day ticket she's reccomending, a tidbit that can be found in about 1 minute online if she had bothered to do even 10 minutes of research before writing a 3-page article.
Heck, I've checked 3 different web sites to get facts just to write this post!
And I'm sorry, but #1 she specifically recommends not seeing all the parks, so how many days you need to see all of them is completely irrelevent.
Further, MGM and AK are both largely considered half day parks. A problem that is only accentuated by the age of the children involved. She recommends 2 days for MK and 1 for AK. That sounds perfectly fine.
It wouldn't be relevant if she wasn't recommending skipping entire theme parks and water parks just because she and her children don't like them. I don't care for the water parks, but I would never presume to recommend that people skip them just because I don't like them - instead, I recommend that people look at the water park maps and planning materials, and decide for themselves whether there is anything there, since I understand that my opinion means nothing; it's the FACTS that are important.
And yet they are low rent, cheap and unthemed Motels. A little Hyperbole never hurt anyone....except for that one time, but she deserved it.
That's a gross misrepresentation. You think a hotel (NOT motel) with 40-foot tall statues of Disney movie characters, musical instruments, pop culture icons, or sports equipment is "unthemed"? You think they're low-rent or cheap just because they're not $300 a night? Think again.
All-Star Sports has a Sports theme.
All-Star Music has a music theme.
All-Star Movies has a Disney movie theme.
Pop Century has a 20th century American popular culture theme.
Perhaps not physically, but they would have the advantage of not using the Disney branded Cattle cars err, busses. In some cases it is certainly faster then trying to get places from the Values.
And of course, none of this addresses her main point which is the true value in improved accommodations per dollar spent offsite.
Oh, so if we twist the whole deal around then you can justify a completely untrue statement as being a matter of opinion? Well, it's my opinion that if you put a scale on a map and measure the distance from the parks to the Values and to the nearest off-site hotels, you'll find that the Values are closer. That's my opinion, and I'm sticking to it.
Now, to the other issue - "value" is a measure of what you pay vs what you get. Off-site places give you larger rooms for less money. On-site rooms give you more perks and more atmosphere, and closer proximity to the parks, for more money. "Value" in this case depends entirely on what each person values - location, perks, room size, cost, food options, or atmosphere, or some combination thereof.
But that's a completely different topic - the original topic was that Pauline said that
"They're cinderblock motels, packed with loud school groups for much of the year, that are located farther from the Disney attractions than most of the (often nicer) motels that are clustered around the gates of Disney World." And all three of those assertions are completely untrue. They're not matters of opinion - they're inaccurate facts.
AND, she goes out of her way to mention the camp ground and even to sing it's praises. Perhaps you missed that. The campground is demonstratively more Disney then the Values.
Fort Wilderness Campground is a wonderful place. I don't know any avid camper who has stayed there without being very impressed by every aspect of FW. But "more Disney than the Values?" Again, that's a matter of opinion. I dunno; maybe Pioneer Hall seems more Disney to you than Classic Hall or Cinema Hall, but hey, more power to ya.
This is her opinion and your opinion. this isn't an inaccuracy. Get over it.
That's your opinion and I disagree with it. Get over it.
because she's recommending only spending 3 days at WDW so a 5th day is not a good value at any price.
Recommending skipping half of what WDW has to off is no value, when you consider that you could add the extra days needed to experience that stuff for 1/10th of what it would cost to experience her alternatives at SeaWorld or Universal.
Says her the experienced travel writer and mother of young children. Again, this is an opinion and she has a right to it. It isn't in any conceivable way an inaccuracy.
She's stating opinion as fact, which makes it inaccurate - it's not a fact, it's her opinion.
She is in this case pretty wrong, but in fact I think she's erring on the side of being too nice. The DIsney Dinning Plan has ruined the restaurants and made it nearly impossible to get a table unless you call months in advance. Neither of these things used to be true. The money saved is offset by the time needed to plan the vacation (something hard to do with young children) and the reduction in quality of the food. And that's not to say anything of the difficulty of actually using all your credits, especially given the small children involved.
Have you not read the many threads on bilking the system on this very site?
Value can be measured as time wasted on the phone at 7am 6 months before the vacation too.
I haven't been thrilled with how the
DDP has filled up the restaurants, either, since I'm the type who prefers not to plan my meals more than a day in advance, but I wouldn't say that it's "ruined" the restaurants. It's just made them really difficult to get into.
For me, the DDP is not a good value and I never use it. But it IS a good value for many people. If it wasn't, the restaurants wouldn't be so full, capice?
Well, you've said itself and made yourself look bad in the process. This is an opinion. There's no facts to be erroneous.
Yeah, I have egg all over my face. I'm slime. I'm a maroon.
But that's my opinion, and I'm entitled to it, no matter what yours is.
And most Americans talk about going to Walt Disney World and Epcot too. She probably meant to imply both parks.
Well that's just silly. Have you met most Americans and discussed WDW and Epcot with them?
And let's stick to what she
wrote, not what you
think she meant, okay?