If I think that there are many, many things that I find terrific produced over the last 15 years, do I then have to except the motivation was artistry and innovation?
No - they are separate issues.
In the first case you are judging what interests
you - what at WDW makes you buy the DVC membership and visit the place multiple times in a year. If something doesn't matter to you, then it doesn't matter in your opinion. It doesn't matter how it's produced, you are only judging the outcome
Now that's a great way to look at the world if you're trying to figure out how you're going to spend your $5,000 in vacation money. But it also limits your view.
WDW gets about 14 million visitors a year. Each one has a different set of likes and dislikes. But the success of the business means that you have to generally please all those 14 million people - not just you.
But to those of us interested in the survival and growth of Disney - we worry about those 13,999,999 other people. It's an issue that goes beyond my personal likes and dislikes as a consumer. I hate seafood, that doesn't mean I want to banish all fish dishes from all the restaurants; I like roller coasters, but I understand that WDW is not the place for a mega coaster with a 400 foot vertical drop.
It's impossible for a group of people to
know how to please a lot of others. The best we can do is learn from the past. Disney was successful over the long run becasue it developed a set of rules and traditions that resulted in a large number of shows that pleased a large number of people. It doesn't matter that I like each and every one of them - only that they pleased a large chunk of Disney's guests.
What we in 'The Element' see today is that those rules and traditions have been abandoned. The guidelines that helped Disney achieve success in the past have been replaced by ideas to make a quick buck or in a shortsighted attempts to save costs. There is a reason that the "midway ride" Dumbo has a longer line than ubermegaextreme 'Mission: Space'. That reason is found in Disney's motivations which in turn impacted how those rides were constructed.
Just as "motivation" doesn't matter to your interest, a success here and there doesn't much impact our concern for the bigger trends we're seeing. Getting 14 million people to do anything is more difficult than you can image. Disney is making its job much more difficult than it needs to be - and that endangers everything.