Ms. Tiffany, I am never bothered to answer honest questions and I'll give you an honest answer.
I think that Mr. Pirate had it best Im fighting for my memories. I have seen Disney for my entire life, both from the outside and as part of the inside. I know what Disney can accomplish when they really, really try; and I painfully know how much the world really needs magic to make it a better place.
I could go on for a long time and become very maudlin, but no one wants to read that. So Ill stick to one memory.
Its the memory of a bunch of animators watching the first cut of a scene. Everyone in the room was in tears because they were so full of pride. For most of them, working on Disney animated movie was the goal of a lifetime. And now, not only had that dream come true but they thought they had actually created something that was finally worthy of the name Disney. It made them part of the legacy, it gave them something to point to and say there I created that, it gave them the understanding that people will be watching that scene long after we are all gone.
That sense of pride earned pride caused people to work even harder. It filled their work with a sense of purpose and passion, emotions that carried down to the watching the first paying audience for the film laugh and scream and cry and applaud to the very end.
That is Disney to me: the ability to create the impossible, the willingness to put in all the effort to make it happen, the ability to communicate all that passion to the people who watch or visit. Walk through
Disneyland or the Magic Kingdom or EPCOT Center and you can feel that surround you, you can feel the joy of creating real magic, the excitement of making the impossible.
Do you get that feeling walking around Pop Century? I dont, theres no magic there. I get associations a fifty foot Mickey Mouse Phone tells me this is a Disney branded establishment but the place doesnt stir anyones soul. Theres no sense of pride in the place. Theres a sense of balance sheets and PowerPoint presentations but no sense of someone standing there saying only we at Disney could have pulled this off.
Sure, some people will like the place. People watch American Idol, eat Cheez Whiz and follow the careers of professional wrestlers too. But thats not the standard I want Disney to follow. Just good enough isnt good enough; but children like it means the place is fell on the wrong side of "childish" and "child-like".
You dont get 14 million people to visit a swamp in central Florida just to see the average, or the adequate or the this-is-what-we-had-in-the-budget. People want to feel the passion that Disney productions used to possess. They want to experience the real magic of true artists at work. They want more than just seeing characters fiberglass or otherwise. They need more than just Disneys in front of a hotels name for the place to feel special. They want to experience all that Disney used to produce, but so rarely does these days.
I want Disney to be great. I believe that is the best way to ensure the future success and growth of the company. Revenue management techniques will not get a single new visitor to WDW, but a brilliantly created unique attraction will bring them in the by the millions. Its time that Disney and its fans expected more from the company. It's time that Disney actually created something they can be proud of again.
Im just here doing my best to keep the bar raised.