I'm a bit late but finally making it back to report on our cake that was delivered to Whispering Canyon from the Contemporary's bakery on 11/11/10.
Here's what I learned: do NOT approach ordering a cake the way you would any other piece of art by allowing the artist creative freedom. I've always subscribed to the belief that a true artist who is given creative freedom will produce their best work. Not so with cakes, I suppose.

I ordered a chocolate cake with buttercream frosting/filling with Steamboat Willie for the theme for my 13 yro's belated birthday. Fondant was okay as long as there was a good buttercream coat underneath. I didn't request a specific budget when ordering. I was willing to pay a heckuva lot more than the $65 I was quoted. Anywhoo, here's what we got:
I was a tad disappointed after seeing so many amazing, creative cakes come from the Contemporary's bakery. I can't really complain, tho, considering I wasn't specific down to every minute detail. That was my mistake. I thought I was being nice by not being a nit-picker.

Was it $65 worth? The cake wasn't but my son's excitement at seeing his favorite SBW image on a cake was. The cake just seemed like a bunch of elements tossed onto a cake. There's no real thought or design, no cohesion with the decorative elements. I've certainly made much better creative themed cakes. LOL! As for the cake taste/flavor...hhmmmm...it was moist. The cake part tasted okay. The frosting...not sure what that was...it was somewhat sweet so it wasn't that whipped icky stuff but there wasn't much buttery flavor so I wouldn't call that buttercream. I think I'm spoiled to true buttercream (I make my own whenever I bake cakes).
Sooooo, lesson learned: be specific and be the annoying nit-picker on the details. Do NOT do the creative freedom thing. Would I do it again? Probably not. Just on taste alone, I can do waaaay better with a couple boxes of Betty Crocker & my buttercream recipe for less than $10.