HopperFan
"It's a bug-eat-bug world out there, princess."
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2003
- Messages
- 27,946
I’m saying it. I was there with my kids last week and I find it incredibly strange that adults spend their time at a children’s park. It’s their money and if they feel more comfortable reliving their childhood at an amusement park, hugging on other adults in costumes, then more power to them.
It becomes a problem when these large “children” almost run down my kids or shoulder in front of them in line. I’m sensing that these “caught on camera” physical confrontations will become more and more prevalent as this type of attitude grows.
Disney has never been a “children’s park” and it never will be. Walt wanted to create a themed amusement park that adults would enjoy, along with their children. He had taken his children to an amusement park which was fun for them, but he wanted to build something fun for adults, that the whole family would be excited to go together. Walt called his guests “children of all ages” and I think this quote says it all …
“Why do we have to grow up? I know more adults who have the children's approach to life. They're people who don't give a hang what the Joneses do. You see them at Disneyland every time you go there. They are not afraid to be delighted with simple pleasures, and they have a degree of contentment with what life has brought - sometimes it isn't much, either.”
― Walt Disney
Disney grew bigger than I think even he could imagine, and the parks grew, and the attractions became more and more sophisticated. All the details and story lines in many attractions are way above young children’s heads, but there for the adult guests. Adult geared attractions recently built and coming up far outnumber the number of child attractions. The dining, the festivals, the late hours party – all geared for adults. While some people view the parks as for children, that is not what Disney planned or how they have evolved for decades. Their ultimate goal is for families to visit and each generation continue to come, spending money as adults and hopefully pass the love on to the next generation. I honestly think the current path of most construction is geared for the 38-40" and taller, that is where the profit is. I've been going since 1971, my kids went from birth ... but if I weren't a regular and contemplating a big Disney trip for the first time, I'd wait until my kids were 8-9+ so they could handle the lines, crowds and all the rides.
I do agree with you that NO ONE should be running, pushing, cutting lines and having bad attitudes. Unfortunately most of my experiences with this have come from parents who bully CMs, claim to have FP+ (or Genie+ or DAS) but don't - holding up lines, who convince their kids to slide ahead cutting line, who claim they need to catch up with others in lines, who refuse to wear masks, who don’t remove screaming children from restaurants and best of all yell at their kids in front of everyone …
There is no monopoly on bad behavior. It is a sad commentary, but we see it everywhere, not just Disney. It reflects on those individuals behavior, not that fact that there are adults at Disney.
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