Again, what is innovative about WOC?
It is wildly successful (which should be a note to Disney about quality vs. cheap), it looks really great but what are the innovations?
Just like WWoHP, it builds on prior innovations while taking things in a new direction.
Take WWoHP for a moment. There's nothing radically new about creating a themed environment. Disney has been creating stylized shops and restaurants for over 50 years now.
Forbidden Journey itself is a leap forward, but it still leverages many technologies that have been seen before. Themed queues are nothing new. Much of the ride is reminiscent of Spider-Man which is over 10 years old. Its specific use of the Kuka robotics system is unique, but the system itself is available in other parks. Legoland CA has had a Kuka implementation for several years and Disney opened Sum of All Thrills a year before WWoHP.
All of the pieces were brought together in a unique fashion but you can clearly see how it leverages what has come before.
The same can be said for World of Color. It isn't just a copy of the Bellagio water show in Vegas. WoC combines many different shapes and sizes of highly maneuverable water jets, lasers, music, video and other elements in a manner which has never been done before. That's enough to make it innovative.
Again you two are crazy and putting words in my mouth I never said anything bad about WOC I agreed with you so what are you talking about? All I said is it's a show not an attraction.
It is not a RIDE but it certainly qualifies as an attraction.
Those semantics aside, the statement you keep making in this thread is that Disney is no longer an innovator. I pointed to multiple examples from the past several years including World of Color. What I don't understand is why you feel it's appropriate to arbitrarily dismiss WoC. No WoC isn't a RIDE but it most certainly is an ATTRACTION which draws guests into the park gates. The quality of WoC is worthy of inclusion in any discussion of Disney's recent theme park innovations.