MarylandPirate
Por favor manténganse alejado de las puertas
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2004
- Messages
- 355
Kungaloosh! 

Stupid question but Adventurer's Club is like an actual club with a bar?
First, it was a club...
Second, it did have a bar, but it was more of an experience - actors playing various parts come out and interact with the patrons and put on a comedy show around the club's theme - a 1930's era adventurer's club where the characters are all great adventurers (or at least think they are...)
First, it was a club...
Second, it did have a bar, but it was more of an experience - actors playing various parts come out and interact with the patrons and put on a comedy show around the club's theme - a 1930's era adventurer's club where the characters are all great adventurers (or at least think they are...)
Wow. That actually sounds like a lot of fun. To bad it isn't around anymore.
Stupid question but Adventurer's Club is like an actual club with a bar?
First, it was a club...
Second, it did have a bar, but it was more of an experience - actors playing various parts come out and interact with the patrons and put on a comedy show around the club's theme - a 1930's era adventurer's club where the characters are all great adventurers (or at least think they are...)
It was great fun, but most importantly, it was a truly uniquie experience. All the other clubs on PI, you can find similar places in every city and most major tourist destinations. However the AC truly was a one-of-a-kind experience you couldn't find anywhere else - and that is why it had/has such a following and is missed so much.
Wow. That actually sounds like a lot of fun. To bad it isn't around anymore.
Yeah, but I made up for them.
What I don't understand about the AC is that, if they felt they could generate more revenue from that particular storefront, why couldn't they move it to a top floor of somewhere else, or to an underused portion of a hotel? Perhaps they could have experimented with other income generation strategies first. It just seems like it was here one day, then gone.
What I don't understand about the AC is that, if they felt they could generate more revenue from that particular storefront, why couldn't they move it to a top floor of somewhere else, or to an underused portion of a hotel?
It just seems like it was here one day, then gone.
Two big reasons spring to mind:
As King Bob points out, it stood in the same location for 19 years. I think this shows, though, how horrible WDW was at marketing PI. When people on a Disney message board (Rutgers, you're hardly the only one) never heard of the place until it was about to close, clearly they were not getting word of all the Island had to offer out there.
As King Bob points out, it stood in the same location for 19 years. I think this shows, though, how horrible WDW was at marketing PI. When people on a Disney message board (Rutgers, you're hardly the only one) never heard of the place until it was about to close, clearly they were not getting word of all the Island had to offer out there.
I think if forums like these, plus all the other social media, had been out there more 6-7 years ago (I know the DIS has been around for more than 10 years, but even it has grown more recently), a lot more people would have known about the finer details of PI and especially the AC, and I think it would have done better, especially when they went to club-centric admission. No one was willing to pony up the cash to just "check it out".
We only discovered it in '99 when one of our group had heard something about it and we decided to check it out. Then we checked it out several more nights that week.But if you had just wandered in and took a quick look, it probably looked a bit like a more brightly lit Fridays with just a bar and quirkier stuff on the walls. And that's if you even looked downstairs...