This thread does crack me up.
For all of those out there condemning the "bean counters", I am one of them. That is my job. Yes, it's my job to make sure my company does not overspend. I am called a "pitbull" (no offense to that animal) and I do my job extremely well. And yes, I would say using plain napkins would be the best call if it saved the company money and no one minded. And who is minding it? People who take the darn things home! We are two people who take two napkins when we eat. Why take more? It's this waste that causes prices to go up. If you want cute napkins, go to the dollar store, get a big container and stamp "Disney World 2012" or whatever on the things. PAY FOR IT YOURSELF.
And I can guarantee you my grandkids have absolutely no idea what was on the napkins on their trip earlier this year. They just enjoyed the time spent there. I don't think my dad cared. Nor my stepmother. Nor anyone else. Come on - a Disney World vacation is much more than a freaking napkin!
I spend thousands of dollars at Walt Disney World every single year.
I am paying for the napkins myself. And I am also joining in the condemnation of the the bean counters at Disney.
From the early 1980s, Disney World has been a place where I could go on vacation and enjoy products and services that are not essential, but rather luxurious.
I loved being entertained by the latest technology in the theme parks.
I loved the attention to aesthetics and art on the grand scale AND in every little detail.
I loved the high quality, resort specific merchandise--not the stuff with a generic Disney Parks logo.
I loved the little touches, like the small pats of butter shaped like Mickey Mouse at every restaurant and the orange juice that was fresh squeezed (that morning) from Florida oranges at every breakfast.
Those things have been slipping away for years, and I miss them, each and every one of them. Maybe everyone does not notice the little details,
but I do! And for me, that is where quality is found. It is in those details.
I do not want my Disney World vacation to turn into some discount special. Discount stores are fine, and they have their place in society, but that has never been what Disney was about, until now.