DoomBugger
<font color=teal>Have another turkey leg buddy...<
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2008
- Messages
- 804
Are you sure, DoomBugger? I definitely read in a couple of articles that a name change is very likely going to be phased in over the next few years. It may not be a drastic name change, could be subtle, but different, from what I read. And when I heard that, I thought to myself, "Well, they changed Disney MGM and they changed EuroDisney, so it is not unheard of." So unless that plan has been changed in the last couple of months, then the last I read was that a name change of some sort is on the horizon eventually...which would make sense because they are trying to make it less about California specifically and more about Disney, right? So if that is still the plan, then a name change would make sense. In fact, aren't they eventually getting rid of the California letters at the entrance to the park? That was in the article I read too. It is just that this is not going to all happen overnight. It will take a few years for everything to subtly unfold.
Yes, I have heard that too but I have my doubts. What would be the point? The confusion they would create and all the explaining about the reasoning for the name change would just be a waste of time. Plus, when you think about it there really isn't a great name out there to justify it anyways. Whenever a name change happens I'm always worried it is going to be a corporate naming-rights cross-promotion deal like if they renamed it "Pixar California Adventure" or "California Adventure Miramax Studios."
California Adventure it is and should always be and no matter how many Pixar / Disney additions they make there is still more than enough California in there that can't and won't be removed. Even Carsland, the future area is total California with the Mojave Desert setting and the cars... LA is Carsland.
The Hollywood backlot, the Condor Flats area, The wilderness area and SF area and the Paradise Pier area are all direct references to California. Hollywood obvious, Condor Flats as a tribute to California's leading place in aviation history, The wilderness / Grizzly Peak area like the Sierra Nevadas / Yosemite areas and Paradise Pier is a tribute to the old boardwalk amusement parks that were very common up and down the California coast during the first half of the 20th century. The Santa Cruz boardwalk is the only surviving example today and PP pays homage to it and the other now lost parks that were the original fun parks of the West Coast.
Plus, the new entrance they are going to build will be a theater and street resembling Los Angeles in the 1920s when Walt first arived in California to begin the dream we are all still celebrating, and living!
I seriously doubt they will change the name of California Adventure but only time will tell.