That is our date as well and I too feel the same as you but my concern is it will get very crowded from 7:00 pm and Wishes will be impossible to see. Chances for getting a 4th FP after 7:00pm may be non existent. Not sure if we should switch our date to Saturday May 14th. Not sure which would be the best option as far as crowds
Feeling better and better about buying another year of a Universal Studios Annual Pass. Come to the Dark Side, we have Butterbeer!![]()
I have plans that are set in stone. Included among those plans is a full day at the MK on 4/21. There is an Electrical Parade scheduled for 11:00 p.m. and I plan on attending that. But now, a few thousand people will be added to the park. So while my original hours have not been taken away from me, something just as valuable has--space. I planned to stay for the 11:00 parade because it is far less crowded. Now? Maybe not so much. We'll see. But space is a valued commodity at WDW, and from 7:00pm-11:00pm, and then again during the parade, space has been taken away from me and sold to others. I consider that "losing something". I would be much happier as a "regular guest" if they didn't allow the hard ticket people in until 10:00pm. Taking space away from me in the park and in the restaurants for dinner is a significant loss.You don't have fewer hours in the park, nothing is taken away from your park day.
You don't even know the recommendations will change. Even if they do it's not taking anything away from what you have paid for
I'm in the same boat. Just when you think you have done what Disney asks and "locked it in", Disney comes along and picks the lock. I suppose that Disney owes me nothing in this regard, but it is still frustrating.So, thanks Disney for making me plan out my trip months in advance, then add these events all under 60 days for on-site guests who have already made their plans. Total Fail!
Given? For how long? When will off-site guests have to pay an extra $12 for their armband?Guests will be given arm bands.
While that may be true, how many of your middle class friends and how many middle class posters are going to bite on this event? While it is too broad to suggest that Disney does not market to the middle class, it is certainly not a stretch to suggest that this event thumbs its nose at the middle class.I don't see that as accurate at all either. We are most certainly middle class. As is everyone I know who goes to Disney. I'd venture to guess the majority of the posters here are also.
Agree completely. Odd that they would create an event that so obviously limits families of young children. Especially when the event includes no uniquely "adult" offerings. At DHS or Epcot, this type of thing would make more sense. But ice cream and soda isn't going to lure me into a park for an "adult evening".Guessing they're not marketing to families with young kids either; hazarding another guess that most young families won't pay $150 per child for a late night offering.
Agree. As I noted above, if the guests with the deepest passion for Disney aren't going to bite, who will?I don't know ANY megafans that are even thinking about purchasing this.
Sometimes that is exactly what it means. If you can't sell something to the people who already drop the most money into your pockets, who do you think is going to pay the price? I suppose we will soon find out.Just because most here hate it, doesn't mean it's not going to work.
We've been given good reason of late.Most posters here don't trust Disney anymore and are willing to anticipate the worst possible outcome.
I think it has to be true. As noted above, I am going on a day when the hard ticket event begins at 11:00, and there is an Electrical Parade scheduled for 11:00. I can't imagine that I am going to be kicked out before the parade starts. If so, you will be reading about me in the police blotter in the Orlando Sentinel.A phone cm told a caller that day guests just won't be able to ride but will be able to stay.
Who knows if that's actually true.
This, to me, proves that there is no actual "limit". If there really were a limit, it would be in Disney's best interest to broadcast what that limit is so that people can rush to get in on the action before the sell-out. There is no reason why the total number would be a closely guarded secret. To the contrary, you would want people to know that the commodity is limited.Disney is not revealing how many After Hours tickets will be sold.
UNBELIEVABLE. Caseys and Starbucks will be OPEN if you want to PURCHASE food? For the price you should receive a sit down dinner at the restaurant of your CHOICE. Bad Disney!!!
I could see conventioneers being an audience for this - company paid for airfare, hotel and food. This is only $150 total for them to go out after their day conference, shorter lines, longer hours still left of park time.
If I was there for a convention, I'd buy the discounted convention ticket or not go at all. But...that's just me. I must be missing something, because this idea just baffles me.
Based on recent events I'm curious how easy it will be to get those Mickey Ears. I'm afraid the line for the "free" items will be longer than the line for Buzz.Well, I think they are predicting that folks will use the 3 hours for rides, characters and non-eating. I wouldn't waste that time eating. So makes no sense to keep many eateries open.
But sadly if I were hungry, I wouldn't eat at either of those anyway - so guess I would just have to fill up on my free Mickey Ears!
Not that I'm going.
Whew. Just got finished reading the whole thread. I bury my head in work for a week and don't skim the boards and the whole World changes while I am gone. It took me a "heads up" email from Touring Plans to bring this who issue to my attention. Lots has been said. Not sure what I can add. But here are some random thoughts and some replies to previous posts.
- I am a little surprised at the skepticism some showed toward the OP before it became "official". The "rumor" was broadcast simultaneously by several sources that have proven to be very reliable in the past. As much as we all like to challenge the authenticity of things we read on the internet, when it comes to WDW, rumors posted by certain sources prove to be true far more often than not.
- For the same price as the ticket for 3 extra hours in the MK, (a park that most people will be going to already at some point in their trip), that same family could spend an entire day at Universal with Two-Park Passes.
- I know that there has been no suggestion that EMHs are going away, but it seems to me that if Disney really wants to sell tickets to this event, it is doing itself no favors by having EMHs at the MK on Wednesdays that don't cost on site guests extra. And as for the argument that the After Hours event allows off-site guests to get in on the action, well, for as long as the earth has been cooling, Disney has been doing its level best to attract people to its on site hotels. If the After Hours event is being marketed to off-site guests, that seems to undercut their strategy to lure people on site. Unless, of course, if on site hotels are at full capacity and they no longer need to attract more guests. But I don't think that is the case.
- This Board is comprised of some of the most hard-core Disney fans on the planet and the enthusiasm for this event is sorely lacking here. If the staunchest supporters cannot get behind this idea, will the casual fan?
- I attended many E-Ticket Nights. They were great. But I paid between $8-$12 for each of those. $149 is way beyond my comfort level for the joy of riding Splash Mountain 4 times in succession without getting out of the log.
- As for "very limited capacity", will the first person who calls for a ticket and is told that the event is sold out please come back here and post that fact. I won't be holding my breath.
I have plans that are set in stone. Included among those plans is a full day at the MK on 4/21. There is an Electrical Parade scheduled for 11:00 p.m. and I plan on attending that. But now, a few thousand people will be added to the park. So while my original hours have not been taken away from me, something just as valuable has--space. I planned to stay for the 11:00 parade because it is far less crowded. Now? Maybe not so much. We'll see. But space is a valued commodity at WDW, and from 7:00pm-11:00pm, and then again during the parade, space has been taken away from me and sold to others. I consider that "losing something". I would be much happier as a "regular guest" if they didn't allow the hard ticket people in until 10:00pm. Taking space away from me in the park and in the restaurants for dinner is a significant loss.
I'm in the same boat. Just when you think you have done what Disney asks and "locked it in", Disney comes along and picks the lock. I suppose that Disney owes me nothing in this regard, but it is still frustrating.
Given? For how long? When will off-site guests have to pay an extra $12 for their armband?
While that may be true, how many of your middle class friends and how many middle class posters are going to bite on this event? While it is too broad to suggest that Disney does not market to the middle class, it is certainly not a stretch to suggest that this event thumbs its nose at the middle class.
Agree completely. Odd that they would create an event that so obviously limits families of young children. Especially when the event includes no uniquely "adult" offerings. At DHS or Epcot, this type of thing would make more sense. But ice cream and soda isn't going to lure me into a park for an "adult evening".
Agree. As I noted above, if the guests with the deepest passion for Disney aren't going to bite, who will?
Sometimes that is exactly what it means. If you can't sell something to the people who already drop the most money into your pockets, who do you think is going to pay the price? I suppose we will soon find out.
We've been given good reason of late.
I think it has to be true. As noted above, I am going on a day when the hard ticket event begins at 11:00, and there is an Electrical Parade scheduled for 11:00. I can't imagine that I am going to be kicked out before the parade starts. If so, you will be reading about me in the police blotter in the Orlando Sentinel.
This, to me, proves that there is no actual "limit". If there really were a limit, it would be in Disney's best interest to broadcast what that limit is so that people can rush to get in on the action before the sell-out. There is no reason why the total number would be a closely guarded secret. To the contrary, you would want people to know that the commodity is limited.
I am glad you have had that experience. We've had APs at DLR since 2004 and the closest we've come to seeing a character on a ride is Darth Vader, on Dumbo, on a T-shirt
Feeling better and better about buying another year of a Universal Studios Annual Pass. Come to the Dark Side, we have Butterbeer!![]()
Whew. Just got finished reading the whole thread. I bury my head in work for a week and don't skim the boards and the whole World changes while I am gone.
I am a little surprised at the skepticism some showed toward the OP before it became "official" ... when it comes to WDW, rumors posted by certain sources prove to be true far more often than not.
I have plans that are set in stone. Included among those plans is a full day at the MK on 4/21. There is an Electrical Parade scheduled for 11:00 p.m. and I plan on attending that.
I think it has to be true. As noted above, I am going on a day when the hard ticket event begins at 11:00, and there is an Electrical Parade scheduled for 11:00. I can't imagine that I am going to be kicked out before the parade starts. If so, you will be reading about me in the police blotter in the Orlando Sentinel.
But it leaves them wide open to grab as much $$$ as they can on those early events, and keep selling more until they get enough complaints to dial the number back, a la the ToT 10-miler after party and the subsequent Villain Bash. The ToT party was clearly oversold, but they went ahead with the free event anyway ("free" still meaning tons of $$$ of regular admissions, plus any food and merch). They pushed up to the point that the complaints made it very clearly "not worth it," and I'll be surprised if they do this any differently.They don't ever publicize ticket limits on events. This is no different and it doesn't mean they will sell unlimited tickets. Or that there will be enough purchasers to crowd the park. But it's a crap shoot until you see how the first parties go.