DancingBear
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2001
- Messages
- 6,167
I disagree; I think there was a change in fact, and not just in perception, after Wells' death.
Re WDW, I don't have much problem with the development there anyway, particularly through 1994, when a lot of attractions were being added to the parks. Again, we could revive the master plan debate, but that likely won't lead anywhere. I also don't have any problem with the Studios and AK opening as half-parks, in the WDW context (as opposed to HK, for example). The problem came later, in using EuroDisney's problems and the Studios/AK model to justify the DCA and HK half-park plans.
What mistakes in animation precede 1994? I suppose you might say Pixar, but, IMO, the Pixar relationship itself was not the problem, but the fact that it later (AFTER the success of Toy Story) lead to taking animation in bad directions.
CapCities was after 1994. Whether Eisner had a hunger for a media empire in 1994 or not is immaterial; nothing bad had happened in fact to the Company yet related to such a hunger.
Re WDW, I don't have much problem with the development there anyway, particularly through 1994, when a lot of attractions were being added to the parks. Again, we could revive the master plan debate, but that likely won't lead anywhere. I also don't have any problem with the Studios and AK opening as half-parks, in the WDW context (as opposed to HK, for example). The problem came later, in using EuroDisney's problems and the Studios/AK model to justify the DCA and HK half-park plans.
What mistakes in animation precede 1994? I suppose you might say Pixar, but, IMO, the Pixar relationship itself was not the problem, but the fact that it later (AFTER the success of Toy Story) lead to taking animation in bad directions.
CapCities was after 1994. Whether Eisner had a hunger for a media empire in 1994 or not is immaterial; nothing bad had happened in fact to the Company yet related to such a hunger.