Originally posted by gcurling
Searcher, you are telling part of the story.
Yeah ... you're right. I guess I was reacting more to pheneix's argumentative tone than to the actual comparison. Although ... I do think we can all agree that it's really hard to compare numbers from pre-9/11 with numbers from after, since attendance was higher, in general, at any given tourist spot prior to the terrorist events.
Still, in the interest of fairness and with a modicum of objectivity, here are perhaps some better comparisons (all still from Amusement Business):
DISNEY
Disney-MGM Studios -- 8,031,360 (2002); 8,366,000 (2001); 8,900,000 (2000)
Disney's Animal Kingdom -- 7,305,586 (2002); 7,771,900 (2001); 8,300,000 (2000)
Disney's California Adventure (opened 2/8/01) -- 4,700,000 (2002); 5,000,000 (2001)
Disneyland -- 12,720,000 (2002); 12,350,000 (2001); 13,900,000 (2000)
Epcot -- 8,289,200 (2002); 9,010,000 (2001); 10,600,000 (2000)
Magic Kingdom -- 14,044,800 (2002); 14,784,000 (2001); 15,400,000 (2000)
Tokyo Disneyland -- 13,000,000 (2002); 17,708,000 (2001); 16,507,000 (2000)
Tokyo DisneySea (opened 9/4/01) -- 12,000,000 (2002); 4,000,000 (2001)
UNIVERSAL
Universal Studios at Universal Orlando -- 6,852,600 (2002); 7,290,000 (2001); 8,100,000 (2000)
Universal Studios Hollywood -- 5,200,000 (2002); 4,732,000 (2001); 5,200,000 (2000)
Universal Studios Japan (opened 3/31/01) -- 8,010,000 (2002); 9,000,000 (2001)
Islands of Adventure -- 6,072,000 (2002); 5,520,000 (2001); 6,000,000 (2000)
So ... while it's certainly true that Disney attendance has gone down annually (with an anomoly here and there), the same is also true of Universal parks. And pheneix's contention that "Disney's parks [are] plummeting downward as Universal's parks increase" isn't exactly correct. "Plummeting" can be applied to Epcot (-22% over the three years) as well as to Tokyo Disneyland (-21%, due, I suspect to the opening of Tokyo DisneySea). But Universal Orlando took a 15% attendance hit between 2000 and 2002, up against only 9% for the MK, and 12% for DAK. Even Universal Japan lost 11% between 2001 and 2002, and it wasn't even open for a full year in 2001.
Also, an earlier claim that "All of Universal's parks are now on the rise in attendance, even the Studios in Florida which has had a rough time of it's own since IOA opened," is untrue, based on this info. USF didn't post a gain last year, rather a 6% loss.
The numbers I've been searching for and haven't been able to find are those that speak to how much local business each chain had before and after 9/11. Chances are, Disney took a much greater hit on international visitors than did Universal. Which adds yet another layer.
