His crummy attitude all around really left a sour taste in my mouth: it seems as though he was either making obviously poor choices (even for a cruise novice) and griping about them, or displaying a grossly inflated sense of privilege and entitlement.
Example No. 1: He says he bought the vacation protection plan, but then proceeded to travel to miami and board the boat even though his daughter had a fever and cough (and as a parent, he shouldn't have been surprised when his wife came down with it the next day). I thought the ability to reschedule a trip due to illness is what that plan is for!
Example No. 2: On the first day, instead of taking advantage of the many onboard entertainment offerings and free lunch on the ship, or, at least, spending time with his family, he wanders off solo into Key West for a "mediocre Cuban lunch." Why on earth would anyone think that leaving your family for an unplanned, aimless excursion and random meal alone is a good idea on A FAMILY VACATION.
Example No. 3: His eye-rolling at a fellow guest who didn't know much about whiskey at a whiskey tasting (is he really that surprised that a class to LEARN about whiskey might include some novices?). So mean.
Example No. 4: His complaint that his daughter had a small sofa bed when the verandah on his neighboring stateroom was much longer. To begin with, I am guessing that his neighbor had one of the oversize veranda rooms that is actually smaller inside, so his sense of injustice at the thought that his stateroom might be unfairly small is misplaced. But more to the point, does he seriously think that Disney has a bunch of randomly sized staterooms for the same price and he got screwed over with a bad room? If he participated AT ALL in booking the room it would immediately be obvious there are different layouts, with different average price points.
It seemed like his takeaway was that the cruise was stressful and awful, but seeing his wife and daughter happy made it not horrible. But since the stress and awfulness was all of his own making, it was hard to sympathize.