Pkltm
Canadian Mouse Girl
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2013
- Messages
- 1,455
I beg to differ. While you don't have to choose to pay for a dessert party, $80 for a few pastries and a view of fireworks that you already paid for with your admission is a ripoff no matter how you look at it.
If you're a family of four, that's $320. No way can you say that someone is "cheap" for not wanting to spend that on top of what a Disney vacation costs without it.
Have you been to a dessert party? We are done done two and just booked the frozen one, so I can saw from my opinion that I did not find them to be a rip off, the Star Wars one was exactly what we needed that day, it had been a long very stressful spent at the hospital and the opportunity to sit and relax, enjoy not only desserts but flatbreads, hummus, cheeses and cocktails, then leisurely helmet out spot for great viewing was worth every penny.
If I choose to spen $160 for DH and I to celebrate our 20th anniversary by eating and Elsa cupcake and some cheese fondue, I feel as though I will enjoy it.
Disney's stock price is infinitely more impacted by opening new gates (like Shanghai) and upgrading the core of their existing gates (Pandora, Toy Story, and Star Wars) than it is by some dessert party upcharge.
And, yes, Disney can enhance the overall experience without upcharging. The Food & Wine Festival is perfect example. It's evolved over time to bring hundreds of thousand of extra visitors to WDW without a special upcharge, and without taking away anything from another segment of the customer base.
Edit: And Disney is not the only stock price that has increased significantly since 2010. Let's not overreact to what that means.
The F&W festival has many upcharges from brunches to seminars to a burger black party.
Disney has been doing iocharges for years, behind the scenes tours are just that. We have done a few, some I thought was worth the money, other honestly not so much.
Disney vacations are for anyone who wants to go, parts of it will cater to kids others to teens and some to adults. Every time I hear "Disney is for kids" I die a little inside, if that was true why do we all still go?
We have kids and we choose not to take them until they were old enough to walk the parks all day and tall enough to ride what they wanted.
We all choose what we want to spend on our vacations, many are limited by budget, some by time. At the end of the day, I won't judge Disney for making profit and I won't judge people on how they spend their time and money.