Roxyfire
Is butter a carb?
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2015
- Messages
- 2,989
Sure when you watch regular tvSeeing as character meals are in all the WDW ads.....

Sure when you watch regular tvSeeing as character meals are in all the WDW ads.....
THIS is what I was getting at with my experiences with reactions to all the preplanning for a trip to Disney!!! You nailed it. I hear this a lot from people who have returned. I hope someone is listening!
I can't believe I've read all these posts for 41 pages! My head is swimming! It all boils down to this for me: The OP had a valid experience and post. It is their opinion!!!! This is a discussion board,so all posts should be valid and not jumped on when someone doesn't agree with you. I enjoy reading ALL the opinions and experiences good or bad of the posters. Please people, let's not endlessly jump on others who post something you don't agree with. off my soapbox and on to watch Thursday nite Football![]()
I have tried to use words like 'probably' or 'IMHO' when referring to what I believe these revenues will be used for- whereas your statement was definitive. .... Gate admissions that occurred a few days ago are going to be used for- then our dialogue is over on this subject.
But they are, sort of. On-site guests get ADR and FP+ earlier than local AP holders and other off-site guests, not just even 60 day advance, but up to 70 days depending on length of stay and park tickets etc.I am pointing out that they don't have to raise ticket prices to keep big spenders out of lines. They have the infrastructure already to keep big spenders out of lines, yet they choose not to. Interesting.
According to several Orlando Sentinel articles I found, park attendance for all of WDW was 33.7 million in 1990 and then started to drop. By 1994, "Annual attendance at Walt Disney World has dropped by nearly 5 million since 1990, according to figures obtained by The Orlando Sentinel."
http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/19...-disney-officials-specific-attendance-figures
18 million of those numbers being MK isn't hard to believe.
I've seen it in multiple places, but the one I can think of off the top of my head is HydroGuy's post here on WDW Info. @HydroGuy is a very informative, well respected poster on the Disneyland forum who wrote this blog for the DIS earlier this year. It is consistent with what I've read elsewhere, so I have no reason to doubt its authenticity. I've tagged him so that he can provide any more source information you may require.
I don't think it was 18 million either. This is a link to some numbers I had pulled years ago, when I was more involved with this sort of discussion. Only goes through 2005, because that's when I stopped caring. I sourced all my numbers. Put it on GoogleDocs when it came up in WDWMagic discussion.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1t2lLi0gOU4gOb3HDpLv5bZPTWY_JfBC3sbgkEvAunR0/edit
That number is no more questionable than the recent estimates given for current attendance. They are all estimates!Either way, a statement that attendance at the MK has just recently reached the totals from the early 90’s is pretty questionable.
The 18 million figure for 1991 does appear in the chart included in the HydroGuy blog. That chart also shows the attendance that year for Epcot at about 14.5 million and for MGM at about 7 million. That would produce a total attendance of 39.2 million, which is obviously substantially higher than the peak attendance of 33.7 million reported by the Orlando Sentinel.
An "aberrational spike in attendance" is also not out of the question. 1991 was Disney World's 20th anniversary. It's more than possible that would contribute to a spike in attendance, especially as they advertised it being a "Year of Surprises", which lasted 15 months.
I think this may be the source of the confusion. I think someone along the line confused "during the 20th anniversary there were 18 million visitors" as that's what the attendance was for 1991. But no, the 18 million would represent attendance for the entire 15 month period. 18 million over 15 months would be 1.2 per month, multiply that by 12 and you'd get 14.4 million for closer to a possible real figure for 1991. Do the same for their 14.5 Epcot number and 7 million for MGM and you'd get 11.6 million, 5.6 million for a total of 31.6 million. Those sound a lot more in range to me, but the actual numbers would depend on how many people actually ended up in 1991 vs 1992.
EDIT: Forgot, that it started in 1991, but 1992 would have been the year that "benefited" from the celebration. It makes no sense that people would have jammed 1991, just before the celebration. Oct-Dec were probably higher than usual, but Jan-Sept, might have been slightly down. Anyway, I think there were probably 18 million visitors to the MK during 15 months, but not that they visited in 1991.
If you want to believe the numbers from that chart, then the "Year of Surprises" that began October 1, 1991 was a phenomenal flop. They show that total attendance at the WDW parks went from 39.5 million in 1991 to 29.5 million in 1992, when most of the surprises took place, a drop of about 25 percent.
I'm not about to try to track down all of these sources and get into a debate about which estimates are correct and which aren't. I'm just pointing out that there are some inconsistencies in the numbers that have been reported, and those numbers for 1991 stick out like a sore thumb.
I think this may be the source of the confusion. I think someone along the line confused "during the 20th anniversary there were 18 million visitors" as that's what the attendance was for 1991. But no, the 18 million would represent attendance for the entire 15 month period. 18 million over 15 months would be 1.2 per month, multiply that by 12 and you'd get 14.4 million for closer to a possible real figure for 1991. Do the same for their 14.5 Epcot number and 7 million for MGM and you'd get 11.6 million, 5.6 million for a total of 31.6 million. Those sound a lot more in range to me, but the actual numbers would depend on how many people actually ended up in 1991 vs 1992.
EDIT: Forgot, that it started in 1991, but 1992 would have been the year that "benefited" from the celebration. It makes no sense that people would have jammed 1991, just before the celebration. Oct-Dec were probably higher than usual, but Jan-Sept, might have been slightly down. Anyway, I think there were probably 18 million visitors to the MK during 15 months, but not that they visited in 1991.
There were other world issues at the time that, from articles from that time I read earlier today, were essentially the cause of the downturn in attendance, much as what happened after 9/11. I don't think it had anything do with the anniversary.
You actually asked for my source. I gave it. If you have further things to discuss regarding that source, it would be more appropriate to do so with the author, seeing as how he is easily contactable here. I am not disagreeing that there are inconsistencies. I was asked for my source, I provided it.
Until you purchase your own points I really wouldn't say anything. Right now youare still on your father in laws dime.Disney owes you the ability to use your points for the same value that you could in 2001. They are giving you that. There was nothing about joining DVC that required Disney to give you anything else.
But that's the thing you don't vote with your wallet you stay in your father in laws DVC room and maybe purchase tickets. How you can you comment on anyone else's comments when you haven't been in their shoes? After you've been a DVC member and a pass holder then your statements may hold some validity, until then they hold about as much as a bucket with a hole in the bottom.And what would be more constructive, offering a bunch of "oh dear I am so sorry that you are upset, those evil corporate types are just the worst" statements? Thats a bunch of BS. The most constructive comments on this thread are the ones that point our you basically have two options, stop going and vote with your wallet, or keep going and again vote with your wallet.
I suspect that the goal is not to totally get rid of AP'ers but to tone them down? Maybe limit them more?Not to add another log to the fire here, but.......my husband brought up this point as I was annoying him with my complaining:
Do you think Disney is doing this as a elimination method to get rid of AP'ers so that when Star Wars land actually arrives they can keep crowds down and basically print their own money as Star Wars looney fans just empty their life savings to visit? (Holy run on sentence Batman!) Cause if you think HP at Universal was a license to print money, then you ain't seen nothing yet with Star Wars fanatics! Look at how MGM crowds up with SWW. Then quadruple that amount of people. Then quad again - and keep on doing that. HP is classic, but Star Wars is almost eternal. Now Disney has something to really go up against HP, not just dumb Avatar. Maybe that's why they are doing this, to gently frog in pot boil us AP'ers up with rates?
Still not saying it's right. Iger can burn as far as I'm concerned. But it is a possibility. And maybe Disneyland is a little to blame? (Hey, I love you DL guys! Really!). But their park can get really crowded, so maybe the Devi--err, Iger decided to raise prices in the US to be "fair" to each park? The other countries aren't having issues like this, are they?
I don't know any numbers at all, this is just an X-Files conspiracy theory stuff.