Unfortunately when you do job interviews they don't show their "sour attitude". From my experience doing interviews anyway. It is easy enough to fake it until you are hired. And then, the attitude can quickly surface, along with all sorts of crazy.
Oh yeah. Crazy is right!
You can work for minimum wage at a lot of places where a sour attitude isn't a problem. Disney is not one of them. If you don't want to be good at customer service, look elsewhere for a job.
Ok. Number of things wrong with that:
1. If Disney wanted GREAT customer service, they'd pay more than minimum wage. They'd treat their workers better. I think they've got the College Program basically so they can get workers. I mean, half the bad service stuff complained about here is not bad service- it's more like staff in training problems. It's a high turnover rate job; they've just found a way to keep wages low and still pump new meat into the system. The amount they charge cp kids to live in the dorms is hilarious; the reason kids put up with it is because it's Disney and many of them aren't dependent on their wages.
2. Everyone has bad days. My weirdest moment last trip was when a CM in a gift shop greeted me, I gave her my best smile and asked how she was doing, and she told me a beloved friend had died so not so good. I gave her a hug and she actually teared up. Like super awkward, ok? And as a kid I would have not understood. I would have quietly slunk away. But I've worked when I had pneumonia, I've worked when I was worried about my sick dog, I've worked when I felt actively threatened by a coworker. And 5 years ago, I was at my customer service job when my father called me on break to tell me mother had had a stroke and was lying nonresponsive in the hospitable. I could not leave. I had no way home anyway. I have no idea what my customers thought but I do know I didn't look right. My coworkers took one look at me and knew something was really off. I mean really off.
When it comes right down to it: good customer service is what we expect. To keep the machine well greased and running on time is what Disney expects. That means they've probably got a strict attendance policy- which, guess what, means that folks show up to work even though they darn well know they shouldn't be there. Because Disney knows they can replace workers, they don't work particularly hard at retaining them. And then they do replace them, and the new staff will be incompetent for a while.
I guess my point is: that yeah, you should only work in a CS job if you like customers. But I seriously think that a lot of the CS problems that people see are at root Disney's fault. They could spend a lot more money and invest in their staff if customer satisfaction was that important to them. The fact that they laid off (or were going to layoff, not sure if it happened) those local tech workers in favor of H1Bs from India shows you where their priorities lie.