So does this mean someone actually is going to buy them? When they first announced that it had a new owner, it didn't seem like anyone wanted to buy it. I hope that they keep the parks open, I love Sea World.

I guess I'm a little clueless, because I don't understand why Disney would be interested in the Busch Parks financials. Can somebody explain?
Off the top of my head, detailed attendance numbers. Exactly how many people go off-site to SW any given day? Which days are busier? How do those numbers compare with AK on any given Thursday? Do more APs go to SW or MK on the weekends? What effect does the free Halloween event have? The various concerts?
Or, performance of shops and restaurants. If SW shops are making more than MK shops, than clearly Disney needs to learn a few lessons.
A lot of this competitive information is played close to the vest--keep in mind, the attendance numbers released every year are just estimates, and last year Busch claimed they were off. No one, not even the Mouse, really knows how Sea World and the other parks have been doing.
I find it hard to believe that they would disclose all of that. I would expect, simple, summarized financial and attendance numbers, but not the details of which days are busier, when APs are more likely to attend, etc. But then, I've never seen one of these packets, so maybe you're right.
This would be a great move for Disney. All these parks are top shelf, quality wise and lets face it "Disney quality" is little more than branding these days anyway.
All of the Parks could be "disneyfied" easily to whatever degree they would choose to do it.
I agree that it's highly unlikely that this would happen but a poor economy is certainly the time to solidify the future. It would take insight, saavy and daring to pull off ... Not qualities current Disney management is known for, however.
![]()
Ignoring the bulk of your last paragraph, which is quite true. I'd argue that given the current slump in construction and the associated lower costs, it would be in Disney's best interests to build their way to expansion rather than to buy up existing infrastructure. They will get more bang for their buck building attractions in existing parks on existing land with existing tax bases et al.
That's actually the only reason I can see that they actually finally started work on Carsland. It became cheaper to do so.
