When it comes to Disney I don't miss a beat. It is all well and good if you are satisfied with the new FL, and the promise of Avatar Land. The reality of the situation is that the FL improvements have done little to satisfy the majority of Disney's customer base who are weary of paying more and getting less. The MK is screaming for major new attractions, and the 7DMT is clearly not in this category, and don't even get me started on EPCOT. It will take a considerable amount of time before we see Avatar or Star Wars attractions, and I have serious reservations about the whole Avatar idea

.
I have yet to experience NFL (that will be next month!), and I'm looking forward to that, as well as the new parade. Besides that, the only new offering at WDW, since our last visit in 2011, will be the revamped Test Track. Is that enough new stuff for a three year gap? I don't know. Universal does seem to be adding to their parks at a faster clip (Diagon Alley, Transformers, Despicable Me, and the new Simpsons stuff all opened since 2011).
It seems that Comcast/Universal is taking a "build it and they will come" philosophy on faith, whereas Disney is taking a cold, calculating "let's do a careful cost/benefit analysis before greenlighting anything" approach. And Disney pulled the trigger on MM/MB/FP+, when that billion+ (is it closer to $2 billion by now?) could have bought a bunch of great new E Tickets. That was their priority, because this new system allows them to track our preferences, and treat the parks even more like giant malls.
When it comes to adding to park infrastructure, this company seems to consistently do the minimum they think they can get away with. Even the massive DCA expansion was practically forced on them -- we never would have gotten Cars Land if DCA had been a hit right out of the box (which they inexplicably seemed to expect at the time).
Speaking of Cars Land, that is an example of what they're capable of, when they finally decide to commit the resources necessary to create something great. Yes they add to their parks, but it all seems to be so grudging, so gradual, and never matches the blistering pace of new DVCs, new hard ticket events, and new hotels.
I'm not one to criticize everything Disney does; they
have done some things right. But competition is biting at their heels, their most loyal fans are grumbling, and it's time for more forward, long term thinking from this company. Time to tune out the bean counters and the hotshot MBA grads spouting the latest corporate buzzwords.
Disney, start listening to your fans and guests. When it comes to what we want, and what we are willing to pay for, we're the
real experts.