Wow, well I guess the negative reviews would not make it to this board because you might not normally post under a subject that doesn't interest you. But I submit to your tastes and the fact that a majority love the show. You are probably the same people who think that Bob Saget is a brilliant host and that America's Funniest Home Videos is the most intelligent, well-written show on TV. <big wink, but go ahead and blast me.

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Maybe the day I went the audience was not as enthused, many of the adults moved to the back so they could talk while the kids interacted with Crush. About half the show was pretty funny, but it severely lagged though the rest, and Crush was having to explain to the assistant which person he was pointing to, getting the kids to have to repeat things, etc.
I don't like the character greetings either and use that time while people are waiting in line to take advantage of the things they are not doing, but I realize that a LOT of people go through a lot of trouble to greet the characters and that is their thing, which is the great thing about variety and Disney, something for everybody. When my 2 year old turns 3, I will be sitting there in the character greeting line with the rest of you.
Robo, me too.

I worked in Hollywood for a number of years, and actually did some work with Disney. So I do have an appreciation for theater, make-believe and special effects. We were pioneers in digital photography and worked with Panasonic and Sony in the design of their newer cameras that will mostly replace 35mm film cameras. George Lucas is one of my heros for his work to advance the technology in the face of everyone telling him "film is superior! Film will never die!", including a guy I hired who was the Director of Photography for a major TV show! He is probably out of work now.
The reason I even mentioned the effects was not to downplay them, I made mention of how cool the technology was, though like all technology it loses it's cool factor quickly as we want bigger and better thrills. I was just mentioning that it seems to be a phenomenon that people really wonder how this is done. Most things I have seen or read about the show always has questions about how the trick was done. "How can a computer generated image move in real-time?" "How can his lips sync up to what he is saying?", "How does the turtle know what color shirt the kid has on?". You can even hear people saying this stuff out loud during the show. I expected a lot of people to ask that in this thread, so I mentioned you could lookup Disney patents. Maybe this group is different and wasn't going to ask that.
All I was saying is that if you are more the ride/thrill type and less the character greeting type, then this might not be as exciting as some make it sound. I still don't understand how after seeing it once, you would ever want to see it again (unless, as I mentioned you have small kids and are doing it for them to watch their wonder), but I respect that a decent percentage of you do. Depending on the interaction with the audience, there can be new laughs, but to our family it was like a puppet show. If there were no children in the audience, especially your own children, how much fun would it be? I guess the Muppets might be funnier and more entertaining than Punch and Judy, but given the choice of that or watching a live show like the Ariel show, or riding Rock'n RollerCoaster, I would pick the latter two, especially when considering the wait times for Crush.