Peter Pirate 2
<font color=red>I may be a Disney curmudgeon but I
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2006
- Messages
- 2,839
You're getting carried away here. It's a figure of speech, not some legal definition.
When your table is ready at a restaurant, no one is sitting in it while the host finds you and seats you. It's an empty table, waiting for you, until you arrive (unless they can't locate you and have to give it away). That truly prevents someone else from being seated.
When you are not in your fastpass line or not getting on the attraction, there are no empty seats. The line keeps moving.
Additionally, if there was no fastpass, it's not like FP users would stop riding. They'd get in line, and they'd still be in line ahead of you. The only difference is now everyone is spending all their time in line instead of off doing other things.
I can't believe anyone who saw the lines pre-fastpass would argue that the lines -- even standby -- are longer now. They're not. They're often shorter, and when crowds are bigger the wait times are roughly the same -- but you don't have the mobs of people spilling out of every queue, and Disney has said on the record that their own research shows this to be true.
PERFECT Explanation! It can be spun to be negative in appearance if you so choose to do so but the facts are FP does not increase wait times for anybody.